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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 History  





2 Missionary  





3 Veneration  





4 Miracles  





5 Gallery  





6 Mechanical model  





7 See also  





8 Notes  





9 References  





10 External links  














Didacus of Alcalá






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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 

(Redirected from San Diego de Alcala)

Saint


Didacus of Alcalá


San Diego de Alcalá byFrancisco de Zurbarán
Religious and Missionary
Bornc. 1400
San Nicolás del Puerto, Kingdom of Seville, Crown of Castile
Died12 November 1463(1463-11-12) (aged 62–63)
Alcalá de Henares, Kingdom of Toledo, Crown of Castile
Venerated inCatholic Church
Canonized10 July 1588, Saint Peter's Basilica, Papal StatesbyPope Sixtus V
Major shrineErmita de San Diego,
San Nicolás del Puerto, Seville, Spain
Feast13 November,
7 November (Franciscan Order in the United States and the Roman Catholic Diocese of San Diego)
AttributesFranciscan habit
Cross
Lily
PatronageRoman Catholic Diocese of San Diego, Franciscan Lay Brothers

Didacus of Alcalá (Spanish: Diego de Alcalá), also known as Diego de San Nicolás, was a Spanish Franciscan lay brother who served among the first group of missionaries to the newly conquered Canary Islands. He died at Alcalá de Henares on 12 November 1463 and is now honoured by the Catholic Church as a saint.

History

[edit]

Didacus was born c. 1400 into a poor but pious family in the small village of San Nicolás del Puerto in the Kingdom of Seville. As a child, he embraced the hermit life and, later, placed himself under the direction of a hermit priest living not far from his native town. He then led the life of a wandering hermit. Feeling called to the religious life, he applied for admission to the Observant (or Reformed) branch of the Order of Friars Minor at the friary in Albaida and was sent to the friary in Arruzafa, near Córdoba, where he was received as a lay brother.[note 1] As a friar he worked at various manual trades to support the brotherhood.[1]

During his years living in that location, he journeyed to the villages in the regions surrounding Córdoba, Cádiz and Seville, where he would preach to the people. A strong devotion to him still exists in those towns.

Missionary

[edit]

Didacus was sent to the new friary of the Order in Arrecife on the island of Lanzarote, part of the Canary Islands. That island had been conquered by Jean de Béthencourt about 40 years earlier and was still in the process of introducing the native Guanche people to Christianity. He was assigned to the post of porter.

In 1445, Didacus was appointed as Guardian of the Franciscan community on the island of Fuerteventura,[2] where the Observant Franciscans soon founded the Friary of St. Bonaventure. There, though it was an exception to the ordinary rules for a lay brother to be named to this position, his great zeal, prudence, and sanctity justified this choice. His defense of the indigenous people against the colonizers precipitated his return to Spain in 1449.[1]

The Miracle of Didacus of AlcalábyBernardo Strozzi

In 1450, Didacus was recalled to Spain, from which point he went to Rome to share in the Jubilee Year proclaimed by Pope Nicholas V, and to be present at the canonizationofBernardine of Siena. In addition to the vast crowds of pilgrims arriving in Rome for Jubilee Year, thousands of friars had headed to Rome to take part in the celebration of one of the pillars of their Order. An epidemic broke out in the city. Didacus served as infirmarian and spent three months caring for the sick at the friary attached to the Basilica of Santa Maria in Ara Coeli, and his biographers record the miraculous cure of many whom he attended through his pious intercession.[3]

He was then recalled again to Spain and was sent by his superiors to the Friary of Santa María de Jesús in Alcalá, where he spent the remaining years of his life in penance, solitude, and the delights of contemplation. There he died on 12 November 1463 due to an abscess. His body was also rumored to have remained incorrupt, did not undergo rigor mortis and continued to emit a pleasant odor.[4]

A chapel, the Ermita de San Diego, was built in Didacus's birthplace between 1485 and 1514 to enshrine his remains in his native town.[5]

Veneration

[edit]
Saint Didacus in Ecstasy Before the CrossbyMurillo, 1645–46

Didacus was canonizedbyPope Sixtus V in 1588,[6] the first of a lay brother of the Order of Friars Minor. His feast day is celebrated on 13 November, since 12 November, the anniversary of his death, was occupied, first by that of Pope Martin I, then by that of the Basilian monk and Eastern Catholic bishop and martyr Josaphat Kuntsevych. In the United States the feast day is celebrated on 7 November, due to the feast of Saint Frances Xavier Cabrini.[1]

Didacus is the saint to whom the Franciscan mission that bears his name, and which developed into the City of San Diego, California, was dedicated.[7] He is the co-patron of the Roman Catholic Diocese of San Diego.[2]

The Spanish painter Bartolomé Estéban Murillo is noted for painting several representations of Didacus of Alcalá.

Miracles

[edit]
San Diego de Alcalá, Miracle of the roses, Niccolo Betti
[edit]

Mechanical model

[edit]
A wooden figure. Gears are visible on the right.
The monk automaton exhibited in the Metropolitan Museum of Art in 2020.

The Smithsonian Institution holds a clockwork automaton of a monk. The model would perform a number of set actions, including the beating of the breast which accompanies the Mea culpa prayer. A possible provenance would be a presumed model of Didacus, commissioned by Philip II of Spain to Juanelo Turriano, mechanic to Emperor Charles V.[10]

Historical theories for why the friar was built include that: Philip II wished to share the miracle of his son's recovery with his people; or the clockwork friar provided a portable model of "how to pray" which could be displayed around the kingdom.[11]

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ The friary had been founded in 1409 and soon became a major center of the reform of the Order on the Iberian peninsula. It survives as a Parador.

References

[edit]
  • ^ Donovan, Stephen. "St. Didacus." The Catholic Encyclopedia Vol. 4. New York: Robert Appleton Company, 1908. 14 June 2023 Public Domain This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  • ^ a b c Sa-onoy, Modesto P., Parroquia de San Diego, Today Printers and Publishers, Bacolod, Philippines, pp. 176–177
  • ^ "Heritage Building: Ermita de San Diego" (in Spanish). Instituto Andaluz del Patrimonio Histórico.
  • ^ "Saint Didacus"; Franciscan Media
  • ^ Bright, William (1998). 1500 California Place Names: Their Origin and Meaning. Berkeley: University of California Press. p. 130. ISBN 9780520212718 – via EBSCOhost.
  • ^ Halavais, Mary H. (1999). "Rev. of La Historia de San Diego de Alcala. Su vida, su canonizacion y su legado by Thomas E. Case". The Journal of San Diego History. 45 (4). San Diego Historical Society.
  • ^ Tabor, Margaret Emma (1908). The Saints in Arts: With Their Attributes and Symbols Alphabetically Arranged. Frederick A. Stokes. p. 59.
  • ^ a b King, Elizabeth (Spring 2002). "Clockwork Prayer: A Sixteenth-Century Mechanical Monk". Blackbird. 1 (1).
  • ^ Radiolab: A Clockwork Miracle
  •  This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainHerbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "St. Didacus". Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.

    [edit]
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