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The
Black Madonna
of Rocamadour

Feastday: August 20
Rocamadour owes its origin to St Amadour, who, according to tradition, chose
the place as a hermitage for his devotions to the Virgin Mary. This famous place of pilgrimage, is most strikingly situated. Its
buildings rise in stages up the side of a cliff on the right bank of the Alzou
(Dordogne - France),
which here runs between rocky walls 400 ft. in height. Flights of steps ascend
from the lower town to the churchesa group of massive buildings half-way up the
cliff. The chief of them is the church of NotreDame (1479), containing the
wooden figure of the Madonna reputed to have been carved by St Amadour.
Rocamadour (250 km east from Bordeaux) became as important pilgrimage place in the Christian West as
Santiago de Compostella, thanks to the progress of the Marian cult and thanks to
the discovery, in 1166, of the body of St. Amadour. Tradition records that he was a servant in
the house of the Holy Family. St. Amadour, who was none other than Zacheus of
the Gospel, husband of St. Veronica, who wiped the Saviour's face on the way to
Calvary. Driven forth from Palestine by persecution, Amadour and Veronica
embarked in a frail skiff and, guided by an angel, landed on the coast of
Aquitaine, where thy met Bishop St. Martial, another disciple of Christ who was
preaching the Gospel in the south-west of Gaul. After journeying to Rome, where
he witnessed the martydoms of Sts. Peter and Paul, Amadour, having returned to
France, on the death of his spouse, withdrew to a wild spot in Quercy where he
built a chapel in honour of the Blessed Virgin, near which he died a little
later. The shrine, called Rocamadour, sanctuary of the Blessed Virgin, has
attracted pilgrims for centuries from every country, among them kings, bishops,
and nobles.
Reports of miracles happening at the site spread rapidly. King
Henry Plantagenet was one of the first pilgrims to come to Rocamadour to find a
miraculous cure. St. Louis IX of France followed in the next century, and
Rocamadour became as important as Mont St. Michel as a pilgrimage destination.
Few people know that Rocamadour has thus become the second most visited site in
France – after Mont St. Michel’s 12th century monastery.
Today’s visitors is advised to avoid the traditional activity of climbing up
the 216 stone steps on one’s knees, but instead to sign up for a guided walking
tour on one’s feet. This fascinating tour will take you to four of the seven
medieval chapels built into the rock, one of which contains the mysterious Black
Madonna, venerated for over a thousand years. You’ll hear wonderful legends of
how the body of St. Amadour was miraculously preserved for 1.100 years; how the
ancient bell rings itself when a miracle occurs at sea; how the sword in the
rock you see in front of you is really the famous sword of Roland. . . . Near the tomb of St. Amadour is
the Church of the Black Madonna and the Mircaulous Bell.
Rocamadour official Web Site
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