Holy Mary of the Oak

Lucignano, Italy (1467)

 

In 1417, Feliciano Batone  painted a fresco of the Pieta on a wayside shrine beneath a great oak. Fifty  years later, there was a surge in devotion to the Madonna of the Oak after the story circulated that on August 8, 1467 a man from Siena, running from his enemies, stopped  there to pray to Mary, who  made him invisible to his  pursuers. A small wooden chapel was built to protect  the image and consecrated  that year. Located on a hill  northeast of the old city center, the present church was consecrated in 1617.  On the third Sunday of  September, near the feast of the Sorrowful Mother on  September 15, Lucignano celebrates St. Mary of the  Oak with religious services, food, games, and fireworks.

 

Text and image used with permission.
Source: "365 Days with Mary" by Michael O'Neill

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