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Jeff Matthews
2002-2012 entry July
2010
The Sanctuary of Montevergine
The
Montevergine Sanctuary sits at 1300 meters (4000
feet) on the eastern end of the Partenio mountains
in the Appenine chain about 35 miles east of Naples.
The structure faces east towards the sunrise and
overlooks the entire valley and the town of
Avellino. In clear weather, you can see the entire
Gulf of Naples: Vesuvius, the islands, the Campanian
plain—everything. The sanctuary is on the site of an
earlier temple to Cybele, an ancient "earth
mother"-type goddess. The site and the area, in
general, were well-known to Virgil,
who trekked up here often, looking for plants to
distill into elixirs of long life. (The Benedictines
who came well after Virgil are also known for
brewing their own potent elixirs from local plants,
if not for long life then at least for good times!)
The origins of the sanctuary go back to the early
years of the 1000s and the devout William of
Vercelli (aka William of Montevergine), who, after a
pilgrimage to Santiago de Compostela decided to
replace the earth-mother shrine with one to Mary,
Mother of Christ. The original church was
consecrated in 1124. William founded his
Benedictine monastic order at Montevergine and
attracted adherents from throughout Europe almost
immediately. The sanctuary quickly became the
"mother church" of many smaller monastic communities
in the area. The sanctuary then enjoyed the patronage
of the Angevin kings of
Naples (1266-1435) who transformed and expanded the
original buildings along Gothic lines. A later
baroque design is by D. A.
Vaccaro, and a new Neo-Gothic basilica was
added in 1961.
The
sanctuary was dedicated not just to the Virgin Mary,
but to a particular version known in Italian as Mamma
Schiavona. That term is generally left
untranslated in English or glossed simply as "the
Black Madonna." It refers to an icon (detail, right)
on the premises that was put in place around 1300,
one of many "Black Madonnas" depicted in Christian
art. The tradition behind this particular version
makes the extraordinary claim that the central
portion, cut out and placed into the larger painting
around it, is part of the original "hodegetria"—that
is, a depiction of Mary holding the Child Jesus at
her side and pointing to him as the source of
salvation for mankind (In Greek, "hodegetria" means
"she who shows the way"). Tradition holds that the
original was painted by St. Luke and that it found
its way first from the Holy Land to Constantinople
and then into Angevin hands in the late 1200s when
the last western emperor of the Byzantine Empire
left Constantinople and took the icon with him. As
noted, it is not clear what schiavona means
in local reference to the icon. It might be
geographical since the term used to mean "from
Dalmatia," an area within the old jurisdiction of
the Venice See, which was in possession of the icon
when it first came from Constantinople. (That is
absolute speculation on my part, but the
alternatives don't make even speculative sense: (1)
schiavona
as a feminine form of the word "slave"; or (2) schiavona as a
type of sword.) Regardless of tradition, at least
some modern art historians think that the icon is,
in fact, the work of Pietro
Cavallini (c. 1250 – c. 1330), a Roman painter
active in Naples at the time. That icon replaced, as
the object of main veneration at Montevergine, an
earlier one of Mary
Nursing the Baby Jesus, a work still
retained in the museum in the sanctuary.
The layout of the sanctuary is interesting in that
the new basilica (built between 1948 and 1961)
actually incorporates the old one, itself still a
repository of significant relics from the early
centuries of the church. The architect for the new
basilica was Florestano
di Fausto (who also designed a number of
buildings abroad, including the Cathedral of Rhodes
in 1925.) The site is accessible by footpath, by car
(on an excellent but winding road), and also by
funicular railway from nearby Mercogliano—a one-mile bit of
spectacular engineering that climbs 734 meters (2400
feet), the second greatest difference in altitude
between base and top stations among European
cable-cars.
There is a rather bizarre episode from World War II
concerning the Sanctuary and the Shroud of Turin. That item is here.)
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