Chapter 9 : Devotion – an eighth feature of the gratitude we owe the Mother of God
Continuing our translation of the 1845 reprint of Fr François Poiré’s Triple Crown of the Mother of God (1643 French edition).
§ 6. Sixth sign of devotion : frequent recitation of the Franciscan Crown of the Virgin
1 Most of what has been said about the Rosary may also be applied to the prayer known as the Crown of the Holy Virgin. All that remains for us to consider here can be covered under two headings, namely how it was first instituted and certain miracles God performed to show how this devotion was pleasing to Him.
2 As far as its institution is concerned, it is accepted that the Crown imay be seen as an hereditary pledge of the love of the MOTHER OF GOD towards the Order of Saint Francis, just as the Rosary is a sign of her love towards that of St Dominic. Blessed John of Capistrano was a Franciscan friar and priest who died in Hungary with a wide reputation for holiness in the year 1456. He was chosen by the MOTHER OF GOD to make known this devotion in the same way that blessed Alan de la Roche spread the Rosary.
This devout servant of the Holy Virgin, filled with zeal for her honour, was preaching one day outdoors in the city of Aquila, which is in the Kingdom of Naples. All those present at his sermon saw a very bright star over his head at the same time and place it had appeared over the head of St Bernardine of Siena. Because of all the commotion, he looked up to see what it was and he saw it as clearly as everyone else. The same star accompanied him from Aquila as far as Rome where he was going in order to move forward the cause for the canonisation of Blessed St Bernardine.
Friar Pelbart was a pious member of the Order of St Francis who not long after this dedicated a beautiful book to Pope Sixtus IV in which he writes of the origin, and progress of the Crown of the Holy Virgin, together with the miracles associated with the devotion. He declares that this same Priest frequently attributed its origin to what I am now going to describe.
A certain young man was in the habit of placing a crown of flowers each day on a statue of Our Lady. He entered the Order of St Francis but then began to experience great distress because now that he was a friar he did not have the freedom to continue with his pious practice. He began to plan his departure from the Order when the Mother of Mercy appeared to him and encouraged him not to leave but to pursue his vocation. He should not worry himself about the service he used to perform for her before since she would teach him a way of presenting another sort of Crown to her which would be incomparably more pleasing.“This will be,” she told him, “a crown of prayers in honour of the seven principal joys which I received : at the conception of my beloved Son, at the visitation of my cousin Saint Elizabeth, at the Nativity of the divine Word, at the Adoration of the Magi, at the Coronation of my Son, at the news of His Resurrection and at my Assumption into Heaven. After each of these seven joysthou art to say the Lord’s prayer followed by ten Ave Marias.”As soon as this devotion started to be made known, it was received with open arms and it soon became the common belief that the number of decades asked for by the Holy Virgin was to honour the number of years that she had lived in this world. As it became clearer later on that the MOTHER OF GOD actually lived seventy-two years here on earth, some people have sought to show their loving respect for this and have added another decade[1].
Footnotes
[1] The French text literally read says: “and have added an entire decade, making the Crown consist of seventy-three Ave Marias and eight Lord’s Prayers.”
3 As for the miracles confirming the holy Virgin’s approval of this way of prayer and the pleasure she derives from it, these are fully reported in the Chronicle of the Friars Minor[1] and in the book which I cited above dedicated to Pope Sixtus IV. Here are two examples that I have taken from these sources demonstrating the favour she shows to those who take up this devotion.
There was a friar of the Franciscan Observance who would never fail to follow this devotion by praying the Crown every day before meal time. On this particular occasion, after the Friars had assembled for their meal he remembered he had omitted to perform his duty. He explained his situation to the Superior and easily obtained permission to go and render his homage as usual to the MOTHER OF GOD. When he seemed to be taking longer than expected to return, the Guardian sent one of the brothers to fetch him but when he arrived at the place where the friar was reciting his prayer, the brother noticed a great brightness in the room. It surrounded the MOTHER OF GOD who was accompanied by two angels and each time the friar said an Ave Maria, they received from him a beautiful, fresh rose which they placed carefully with others, forming a Crown on the Queen of Heaven. He also noticed that each and every time the adorable name of Jesus was pronounced, the Holy Virgin bowed her head, as did the two Angels at her side. Finally, once the Friar had completed her Crown, the vision disappeared.
Footnotes
[1] Par. III, lib. I, c. 36 et 37.
4 Here is the second.
A most wise and virtuous young lady had instructed her children so well that they would never leave the house in the morning without previously reciting the Crown, kneeling before an image of the glorious Virgin. One day when they were on their way to school, one of the children crossed over a bridge and whilst he was playing, as children do, he fell from the bridge into the river. While some people rushed to the river to see if they could save him, others ran to tell his poor mother what had happened. She then gave a beautiful proof of her virtue because, instead of falling into despair and filling the house and street with her cries, she went straight to the image where her children were accustomed to prey and there she earnestly commended this little servant of hers to the Holy Virgin, praying an Ave Maria to her. Then she made her way to the bridge where she had no sooner arrived than her son appeared on the surface of the water. He told her to be of good heart because she would suffer no more than a fright from his accident. He was helped to the river bank and found to have suffered no ill effects before being taken home where he revealed to his dear mother that it was the Lady to whom they prayed every day who had appeared to him and pulled him out of the water. I shall say nothing of the public rejoicing and the way they offered blessings and thanksgiving to the Mother of gentleness for having saved him, since all this is easier for the reader to imagine thand it would be for me to represent in words.
© Peter Bloor 2026
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SUB tuum præsidium confugimus, Sancta Dei Genitrix. Nostras deprecationes ne despicias in necessitatibus, sed a periculis cunctis libera nos semper, Virgo gloriosa et benedicta. Amen.
The Virgin of Tenderness. >12th century.
Totus tuus ego sum
Et omnia mea tua sunt;
Tecum semper tutus sum:
Ad Jesum per Mariam.
He that hearkeneth to me, shall not be confounded: and they that work by me, shall not sin. They that explain me shall have life everlasting. Ecclesiasticus (Sirach) xxiv. 30-31.

