Chiara Gambacorti
Blessed Chiara Gambacorti O.P. | |
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Religious | |
Born |
1362 Venice, Republic of Venice |
Died |
17 April 1420 Pisa, Republic of Florence |
Venerated in | Roman Catholic Church |
Beatified | 4 March 1830, Saint Peter's Basilica, Papal States by Pope Pius VIII |
Feast | 17 April |
Attributes |
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Blessed Chiara Gambacorti (1362 - 17 April 1420) - born Vittoria - was an Italian Roman Catholic professed religious from the Order of Preachers.[1] Gambacorti was born to rich merchants and was left a widow after a brief marriage and she escaped a second marriage after becoming a professed religious despite her father's fierce resistance.[2]
Her beatification received ratification from Pope Pius VIII on 4 March 1830 after her local 'cultus' received confirmation.
Life
Vittoria Gambacorti was born in the Republic of Venice in 1362 - when her father was sent into political exile - to Pietro Gambacorti who was a rich merchant. In 1369 political circumstances of Pisan politics saw them relocate to Pisa where her father was appointed as chief magistrate.[1]
Gambacorti was a pious child who seemed to be destined for an arranged marriage that would bring with it numerous political advantages not for her benefit but rather for the benefit of her father and brothers.[1] She accepted this as the will of her father and was married to Simone Massa in 1374.[2] Sometime after this her father met with Saint Catherine of Siena to discuss politics and the saint met with Gambacorti and offered her both advice and encouragement on being a good wife and above all a dedicated Christian. Her time as a wife was cut short when her husband died of the plague in 1377 and despite her happiness as a wife she was more than reluctant to enter marriage again while being aware that her father was negotiating another marriage for her. Not long after the death of her husband she received a letter from Saint Catherine who exhorted her to follow her faith.[1]
The frightened girl fled her home and sought refuge with the Poor Clares at their convent of Santa Croce and assumed the religious name of "Chiara". Her brother found her and removed her from the convent so that the arranged marriage could go ahead.[2] Her father locked her in a dark room and kept her isolated from her friends and church life. But she - with the aid of her mother - managed to smuggle jewels out from her room to friends so the proceeds of the jewels could be used for the poor while her mother smuggled her out on one occasion to Mass when her father and brothers were not at home.[1] Her father soon invited a visiting Spanish bishop - a former confessor to Saint Bridget of Sweden - to persuade her to accept his views but the bishop went against this and encouraged Gambacorti to pursue her call to the religious life prompting her father with no other choice but to allow her to leave the home. Her time as her father's captive was spent from 29 June 1376 to 30 November.[2]
Gambacorti did not return to the Poor Clares but entered the Order of Preachers due to being inspired from Catherine's example; she made her profession in December 1378. The convent she joined was weak in its observance to the rule of Saint Dominic so she - who favored a strict and rigorous implementation - arranged with her new stepmother a new convent for them. At the beginning of 1377 her father welcomed Pope Gregory XI in Livorno after the pontiff was moving back from Avignon to Rome and so her father began work on a new church to celebrate the pontiff's return.[2] The church of San Domenico was constructed in 1385 - her father ordered it to be so - adjacent to her convent and she moved into the new convent that was also constructed on 29 August 1382.[1] Gambacorti knew Marie Mancini around this time.
On October 21, 1392 thugs murdered Giovanni Lanfranchi and his son and sought refuge at the home of Jacopo d'Appiano who was plotting an insurrection against Gambacorti's father. Her father was killed (after several blows of a sword and dagger) in the street outside her convent after this mob chased them - Pisan politics against him - and two of his sons (Lorenzo and Benedetto) who were attacked in the fight as well; Benedetto died in the skirmish. But Lorenzo was wounded and rushed to the convent and pleaded his sister for refuge though she refused him due to her earlier familial memories and was forced to leave him to die out in the streets.[2]
After it seemed that she would die she asked for food to be sent to her from the home of her father's murderer and the man's wife obliged after which the man was killed after she was healed from these pieces of food. The widow and her daughters were then allowed to reside in the convent.
Gambacorti died in Pisa on 17 April 1420 and a legend stated that when one of the sisters at her convent was at the verge of death her bones would begin to rattle in her coffin.
Beatification
Her beatification received confirmation on 4 March 1830 from Pope Pius VIII after he confirmed the late nun's longstanding local 'cultus' (or popular devotion).