Saint Hyacintha  of Mariscotti - The Catholic Church of St. John the Baptist, Edmond, Oklahoma

Catholic Saint

Saint Hyacintha  of Mariscotti

1585 - 1640

 January 30

Profile
Italian nobility. Educated in a Franciscan convent. Franciscan tertiary for 10 years, though with no real enthusiasm; she used her personal funds to insure comfortable lodgings, and none of the privations of the other tertiaries. A serious illness caused Hyacintha's confessor to bring her Communion, which allowed him to see her rooms for the first time. Scandalized at the life she provided herself, the priest told her to live more humbly. Hyacintha took his advice, became humble in her food and dress, did the most menial work in the convent, and replaced her bed with a few bare boards. She became an exceptional mistress of novices, and developed a special appeal for "those who are despised, who are devoid of self-love and who have little sensible consolation." Over the years she developed a special devotion to the sufferings of Christ and, by her penances, became an inspiration to the sisters in her convent.


Born:  1585 near Viterbo, Italy


Died:  1640 of natural causes


Canonized:  1807 by Pope Pius VII

 

source:  http://www.catholic-forum.com/saints/sainth21.htm