Chapter 7 : The Sixth Star or Splendour of the Crown of Goodness of the MOTHER OF GOD
She is a true model of generosity towards her children
Continuing our translation of the 1845 reprint of Fr François Poiré’s Triple Crown of the Mother of God (1643 French edition).
§ 5. The Gratitude of the Mother of God towards certain Kings, Queens and other Rulers
Alfonso II
14 Amongst the Kings of Spain, Alfonso II (who was also known as Alfonso the Chaste and popularly regarded as a Saint) had a special devotion towards the MOTHER OF GOD from a very early age.
She it was who placed him on the throne of his father Fruela who had vacated it whilst he was still young (and in the face of efforts by his uncle Mauregatus to seize the crown for himself[1]). She also helped Alfonso in numerous battles against the Moors and the Saracens, notably in 793[2] when their King Mugaït[3] entered the field of battle with an army of more than 70,000. The Holy Virgin appeared in the midst of Alfonso’s standards, filling the enemy with dread and confusion. One of the reasons he had undertaken this war had been to protect the chastity of young women in his country who were at risk from these predatory barbarians. To sum up: in only a short period of time the Holy Mother made the name of Alfonso so famous everywhere that even the great Charlemagne sought an alliance[4] with him and gave him his own sister Bertha in marriage. Perhaps the greatest of the Virgin Mother’s favours was one enabling Alfonso to live with his wife as though she had been his sister[5] – whence he earned the name Alfonso the Chaste. In order that posterity might understand how he attributed all these favours (after God himself) to the Queen of Heaven, he built for her a most beautiful church in Oviedo. He gave the Church marble columns as well as a large quantity of gold, silver and precious gemstones. He chose this Church for his place of burial, as did several of his Royal successors.
He would wear the crown for some fifty-two years and his reign would be marked by hundreds of examples of holiness. Heaven itself bore witness to these. One day[6], for example, he set aside a number of precious gemstones and several bars of gold because he thought they glistered in an extraordinarily beautiful way. His idea was to make a cross which he intended to offer to God and the Holy Virgin. As he left Church after Mass, two Angels appeared to him shortly before his dinner. They were dressed as ordinary men and said they were skilled goldsmiths. Without hesitation, the King handed over his gold and gemstones to them, asking them to make a beautiful work of devotion and providing them with lodgings for the night. Whilst at the dinner table, it was pointed out to him that he had placed his treasure into the hands of complete strangers. He immediately instructed one of his courtiers to go and see what the goldsmiths were doing. The courtier opened the door of their chamber and, finding it radiant with a heavenly light, he quickly went to the King and told him what he had seen. The King arose immediately from the table and went to see the miracle with his own eyes. When he entered their chamber, he could see the brilliant light but could not find anything in the room except a cross just like the one he had imagined and which had been produced with wondrous workmanship. Shortly afterwards, he ordered that it should be borne solemnly into the Church at Oviedo, a precious token of Heaven’s goodwill.With the help of the Holy Mother, he led a life remarkable for its virtues and their sweet odour of sanctity. His end befitted his life and was marked by sweetness and peace.
Footnotes
[1] Baron., an 790 ex Tudensi et aliis.
[2] Baron., eo anno.
[3] Possibly a reference to al-Ala ibn Mughith.
[4] Baron., ibid.
[5] Volaterranus, lib. II Anthropolog. ; Mariana, lib. VII de Rebus Hispaniarum, c. 9 ; Baronius, etc,
[6] Baron., ex Tudensi an. 791.
James the Conqueror
15 James I, King of Aragon and known as the Conqueror, was still young when he received the Kingdom in a poor state from his father, Pedro II. He went on to achieve a great deal through his own prowess and with the help of the Holy Virgin. He rescued three fine kingdoms from the hands of the Saracens and left to his successors a goodly number of well-established States, filled with signs of the successes and victories which, as he explained to everyone, the glorious Virgin had brought him. In memory of this, he built more than two thousand Churches in her honour. This would indeed be difficult to believe were it not confirmed by many credible authors[1], most of whom insist they were all dedicated to the Holy Virgin whilst some say the dedications were divided between Our Lord and His most holy Mother.
Footnotes
[1] Hieronymus Paulus Barcinonens., in Catalogo Regum Aragoniæ ; Bernardinus Gomesius, lib. I de Reb. gestis Jacobi primi Aragoniæ Regis ; Hieronymus Blanca. Cæsar Augustanus, Commentar. Regum Arag. ad 1235, etc.
Philip II
16 It would be most remiss of me if, during a discussion of the Kings of Spain known for their devotion to the Queen of Heaven, I were to pass over in silence Philip II, whose outstanding piety deserves special praise.
This Prince had a special devotion to Our Lady of Valvanera, located in a Benedictine monastery in the Kingdom of Aragon. He gave the Church seven silver lamps which burned night and day in front of the image of the Holy Virgin. Whilst on a journey to Aragon, he was taken ill in a house of the Order of St Jerome called the Monastery of the Star. He expressed a wish that every two days he should be brought water from the spring at Valvanera which is located at the foot of the oak tree where the miraculous image of Our Lady was found. He would not drink anything else during his illness and he would not eat bread unless the dough had been made using water from that spring. Philip III accompanied his father on this journey and as an act of thanksgiving for his father’s recovery, he offered the Virgin two beautiful crowns of solid gold, one for the Infant Jesus and the other for His Holy Mother. Philip II made a one-off gift of 10,000 ducats to the Church of Our Lady of Montserrat, 20,000 to the Church of Our Lady of Guadalupe, along with a grant of 1000 ducats in revenue. He also made very generous gifts to the Dominicans for the Little chapel of Our Lady of Atocha, which is outside the city walls of Madrid.Throughout the course of the long illness which led to his death, he always kept an image of the most sacred Virgin at the foot of his bed. He would often address her in terms so tender that they brought tears to the eyes of all those who were present and he himself frequently wept during his devotions. Four days before his death, he ordered one of his chamberlains to go and get a candle from Our Lady of Montserrat along with the Crucifix he had inherited from his father Charles V (and which he would himself bequeath to his own son, Philip III). When he felt the time had come, he asked to be given these and, holding the crucifix in one hand and the lighted candle in the other, he kissed them, commending himself fervently to Jesus and to Mary in whom he had placed all his trust, and then finally he gave up the ghost.
You have only to read the life of this Prince, who was a truly great man, in order to see how the Holy Virgin rewarded his outstanding piety by taking him into her unique protection and bringing a happy success to his undertakings – as may be seen in the great and remarkable victories he gained so many times against the Moors and the Turks.
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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.
Totus tuus ego sum
Et omnia mea tua sunt;
Tecum semper tutus sum:
Ad Jesum per Mariam.
© Peter Bloor