Rita of Cascia Saint

Saint Rita of Cascia (Born Margherita Lotti 1381 - May 22, 1457) was an Italian Augustinian nun, widow and saint venerated in the Roman Catholic Church. Rita was married at an early age. The marriage lasted for 18 years, during which she is remembered for her Christian values as a model wife and mother who made efforts to convert her husband from his abusive behavior. Upon the murder of her husband by another feuding family, she sought to dissuade her sons from revenge before their calamitous death.She subsequently joined an Augustinian community of religious sisters, where she was known both for practicing mortification of the flesh and for the apparent efficacy of her prayers. St. Rita is venerated due to various miracles attributed to her intercession, and is often portrayed with a bleeding wound on her forehead, which the Roman Catholic Church claims to have been a partial stigmata.The Roman Catholic Church, under the pontificate of Pope Leo XIII officially canonized Rita on May 24, 1900, while her feast day is celebrated every May 22. At her canonization ceremony, she was bestowed the title of Patroness of Impossible Causes while in many pious Catholic countries, Rita came to be known to be as patroness for abused wives and heartbroken women.

Personal facts

Rita of Cascia
Birth dateJanuary 01, 1381
Birth place
Italy , Province of Perugia , Umbria
Date of deathMay 22, 1457
Place of death
Italy , Province of Perugia , Umbria , Cascia
TitleMother Widow Stigmatist Consecrated Religious

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Saint

beatified by
Pope Urban VIII
canonized by
Pope Leo XIII
canonized dateMay 24, 1900
canonized place
Rome
Vatican City
major shrine
Italy
Cascia
venerated in
Philippine Independent Church
Catholic Church

Rita of Cascia on Wikipedia

External resources

  1. http://www.midwestaugustinians.org/st-rita-of-cascia
  2. http://www.saintritashrine.org