Gallery of Francis of Assisi (Giovanni di Bernardone)
1200
St. Francis and scenes from his life, 13th century.
Gallery of Francis of Assisi (Giovanni di Bernardone)
1229
The oldest surviving depiction of Saint Francis is a fresco near the entrance of the Benedictine abbey of Subiaco, painted between March 1228 and March 1229. He is depicted without the stigmata, but the image is a religious image and not a portrait.
Gallery of Francis of Assisi (Giovanni di Bernardone)
1270
Saint Francis preaching to the birds outside of Bevagna by Master of Saint Francis, between 1260 and 1280.
Gallery of Francis of Assisi (Giovanni di Bernardone)
1300
Pope Innocent III approving the statutes of the Order of the Franciscans by Giotto, 1295-1300.
Gallery of Francis of Assisi (Giovanni di Bernardone)
1431
Saint Francis of Assisi Receiving the Stigmata by Jan van Eyck, circa 1430-1432, Turin version.
Gallery of Francis of Assisi (Giovanni di Bernardone)
1440
Saint Francis Abandons His Father. Francis of Assisi breaking off his relationship with his father and renouncing his patrimony, laying aside publicly even the garments he had received from him. Painting by Stefano di Giovanni around 1437-1444.
Gallery of Francis of Assisi (Giovanni di Bernardone)
1444
The Ecstasy of Saint Francis by Stefano di Giovanni, 1444.
Gallery of Francis of Assisi (Giovanni di Bernardone)
1445
The Stigmatization of Saint Francis by Domenico Veneziano, 1445.
Gallery of Francis of Assisi (Giovanni di Bernardone)
1474
This miniature shows St. Francis and others treating victims of leprosy. Some writers identify these patients as suffering from smallpox, given the symptoms illustrated. However, the image is mistakenly used to illustrate the Black Death. It comes from a manuscript of La Franceschina, (circa 1474), a chronicle of the Order by Franciscan Jacopo Oddi of Perugia.
Gallery of Francis of Assisi (Giovanni di Bernardone)
1480
Saint Francis in the Desert by Giovanni Bellini, circa 1480.
Gallery of Francis of Assisi (Giovanni di Bernardone)
1500
Saint Francis with the Blood of Christ, Carlo Crivelli, circa 1500.
Gallery of Francis of Assisi (Giovanni di Bernardone)
1500
Honorius III Approving the Rule of Saint Francis of Assisi by Bartolome del Castro, circa 1500.
Gallery of Francis of Assisi (Giovanni di Bernardone)
1590
Saint Francis Receiving the Stigmata from the Studio of El Greco, 1585-1590.
Gallery of Francis of Assisi (Giovanni di Bernardone)
1595
Saint Francis of Assisi in Ecstasy by Caravaggio, circa 1595.
Gallery of Francis of Assisi (Giovanni di Bernardone)
1620
Francis of Assisi with angel music by Francisco Ribalta, circa 1620.
Gallery of Francis of Assisi (Giovanni di Bernardone)
1639
Saint Francis in Meditation by Francisco de Zurbarán, 1639.
Gallery of Francis of Assisi (Giovanni di Bernardone)
1639
Saint Francis of Assisi in Ecstasy by Jusepe de Ribera, 1639.
Gallery of Francis of Assisi (Giovanni di Bernardone)
1650
A portrait of Saint Francis by Philip Fruytiers, 17th century.
Gallery of Francis of Assisi (Giovanni di Bernardone)
1699
Saint Francis by Cigoli, 1699.
Gallery of Francis of Assisi (Giovanni di Bernardone)
1911
Saint Francis talking to the wolf of Gubbio by Carl Weidemeyer, 1911.
Gallery of Francis of Assisi (Giovanni di Bernardone)
1926
Francis of Assisi visiting his convent while far away, in a chariot of fire by José Benlliure y Gil.
Gallery of Francis of Assisi (Giovanni di Bernardone)
1956
Saint Clare is received by Saint Francis by Josep Benlliure.
Achievements
Membership
Order of Friars Minor
Francis of Assisi was a founder and member of the Order of Friars Minor.
Other photo of Francis of Assisi (Giovanni di Bernardone)
1229
The oldest surviving depiction of Saint Francis is a fresco near the entrance of the Benedictine abbey of Subiaco, painted between March 1228 and March 1229. He is depicted without the stigmata, but the image is a religious image and not a portrait.
Other photo of Francis of Assisi (Giovanni di Bernardone)
1440
Saint Francis Abandons His Father. Francis of Assisi breaking off his relationship with his father and renouncing his patrimony, laying aside publicly even the garments he had received from him. Painting by Stefano di Giovanni around 1437-1444.
Other photo of Francis of Assisi (Giovanni di Bernardone)
1474
This miniature shows St. Francis and others treating victims of leprosy. Some writers identify these patients as suffering from smallpox, given the symptoms illustrated. However, the image is mistakenly used to illustrate the Black Death. It comes from a manuscript of La Franceschina, (circa 1474), a chronicle of the Order by Franciscan Jacopo Oddi of Perugia.
The Works of Saint Francis of Assisi: Admonitions, Prayers of Saint Francis Assisi, Six Letters of Saint Francis Assisi
(This collection gathers together three works by Saint Fra...)
This collection gathers together three works by Saint Francis of Assisi in a single volume: Admonitions, Prayers of Saint Francis Assisi, and Six Letters of Saint Francis Assisi.
Francis of Assisi an Italian Catholic friar, deacon, mystic, and preacher. He was a founder of the Franciscan orders of the Friars Minor (Ordo Fratrum Minorum), the women's Order of St. Clare (the Poor Clares), and the lay Third Order. He was also a leader of the movement of evangelical poverty in the early 13th century.
Background
Ethnicity:
Francis of Assisi was of Italian and French descent.
Francis of Assisi was born Giovanni di Pietro di Bernardone in late 1181 or early 1182, in the town of Assisi in central Italy to the family of Pietro di Bernardone, a prosperous silk merchant, and his wife Pica de Bourlemont, about whom little is known except that she was a noblewoman originally from Provence. At Francis's birth, his father was away on a business trip to France, and his mother had him baptized Giovanni. On his return, however, Pietro changed the infant’s name to Francesco because of either his interest in France or his wife’s background. His youth was most likely without serious moral lapses, and his exuberant love of life and a general spirit of worldliness made him a recognized leader of the young men of the town.
Education
Rebellious toward his father's business and pursuit of wealth, Francis would spend most of his youth lost in books. Ironically, his father's wealth afforded his son an excellent education, and he became fluent in reading several languages including Latin. Francis learned to read and write Latin at the school near the church of San Giorgio.
Career
In 1202 Francis took part in a war between Assisi and Perugia, was held prisoner for almost a year, and on his release fell seriously ill. After his recovery, he attempted to join the papal forces under Count Gentile against the emperor Frederick II in Apulia in late 1205. On his journey, however, he had a vision or dream that bade him return to Assisi and await the call to a new kind of knighthood. On his return, he dedicated himself to solitude and prayer so that he might know God’s will for him.
Several other episodes contributed to his conversion to the apostolic life: a vision of Christ while Francis prayed in a grotto near Assisi; an experience of poverty during a pilgrimage to Rome, where, in rags, he mingled with the beggars before St. Peter's Basilica and begged alms; an incident in which he not only gave alms to a leper (he had always felt a deep repugnance for lepers) but also kissed his hand. Among such episodes, the most important, according to his disciple and first biographer, Thomas of Celano, occurred at the ruined chapel of San Damiano outside the gate of Assisi when Francis heard the crucifix above the altar command him: "Go, Francis, and repair my house which, as you see, is well-nigh in ruins." Taking this literally, Francis hurried home, gathered some fine cloth from his father’s shop, and rode off to the nearby town of Foligno, where he sold both cloth and horse. He then tried to give the money to the priest at San Damiano, whose refusal prompted Francis to throw the money out the window. Angered, his father kept him at home and then brought him before the civil authorities. When Francis refused to answer the summons, his father called him before the bishop of Assisi. Before any accusations were made, Francis "without a word peeled off his garments even removing his breeches and restored them to his father." Completely naked, he said: "Until now I have called you my father on earth. But henceforth I can truly say: Our Father who art in heaven." The astonished bishop gave him a cloak, and Francis went off to the woods of Mount Subasio above the city.
Francis renounced worldly goods and family ties to embrace a life of poverty. He repaired the church of San Damiano, refurbished a chapel dedicated to St. Peter the Apostle, and then restored the now-famous little chapel of St. Mary of the Angels (Santa Maria degli Angeli), the Porziuncola, on the plain below Assisi. There, on the feast of St. Matthias, February 24, 1208, he listened at mass to the account of the mission of Christ to the Apostles from the Gospel According to Matthew (10:7, 9–11): "And as you go, preach the message, 'The kingdom is at hand!' ...Take no gold, nor silver, nor money in your belts, no bag for your journey, nor two tunics, nor sandals, nor a staff; for the laborer deserves his food. And whatever town or villa you enter, find out who is worthy in it, and stay with him until you depart." According to Thomas of Celano, this was the decisive moment for Francis, who declared, "This is what I wish; this is what I am seeking. This is what I want to do from the bottom of my heart." He then removed his shoes, discarded his staff, put on a rough tunic, and began to preach repentance.
Francis preached to townspeople - even though as a layperson he was without a license to do so - and he soon attracted followers. In 1209 he composed for his mendicant disciples, or friars, a simple rule (Regula primitiva, "Primitive Rule") drawn from passages in the Bible: "To follow the teachings of our Lord Jesus Christ and to walk in his footsteps." He then led the group of 12 disciples to Rome to seek the approval of Pope Innocent III, an important step that demonstrated Francis's recognition of papal authority and saved his order from the fate of the Waldensians, who had been declared heretics in the late 12th century. At first, Innocent was hesitant, but, following a dream in which he saw Francis holding up the church of San Giovanni in Laterano, he gave oral approbation to the Franciscan rule of life. This event, which according to tradition, occurred on April 16, 1210, marked the official founding of the Franciscan order. The Friars Minor, or Lesser Brothers, as they came to be known, were street preachers with no possessions and only the Porziuncola as a center. They preached and worked first in Umbria and then, as their numbers grew rapidly, in the rest of Italy.
In 1212 Francis organized a second order, one for women, that became known as the Poor Clares. He gave a religious habit, or dress, similar to his own to the noblewoman later known as St. Clare (Clara) of Assisi and then lodged her and a few companions in the church of San Damiano, where they were joined by women of Assisi. For those who could not leave their families and homes, he eventually (circa 1221) formed the Third Order of Brothers and Sisters of Penance, a lay fraternity that, without withdrawing from the world or taking religious vows, would carry out the principles of Franciscan life. As the friars became more numerous, the order extended outside Italy.
Determined to bring the Gospel to all God's creatures, Francis, on several occasions, sought to take his message out of Italy. In the late spring of 1212, he set out for the Holy Land to preach to the Muslims but was shipwrecked on the east coast of the Adriatic Sea and had to return. A year or two later, sickness forced him to abandon a journey to the Muslims in Spain. In 1217 he proposed to go to France, but the future Pope Gregory IX, Cardinal Ugolino of Segni, an early and important supporter of the order, advised Francis that he was needed more in Italy. In 1219 he did go to Egypt, where the crusaders were besieging Damietta. He went into the Muslim camp and preached to the sultan al-Kāmil, who was impressed by him and gave him permission (it is said) to visit the sacred places in the Holy Land.
News of disturbances among the friars in Italy forced Francis to return. Although the Order of the Friars Minor had grown at a faster rate than any previous religious order, it had not experienced similar organizational growth and had little more than Francis's example and his brief rule of life to guide its increasing numbers. To correct this situation, Francis prepared a new and more detailed rule (Regula prima, "First Rule," or Regula non bullata, "Rule Without a Bull"), which reasserted devotion to poverty and the apostolic life and introduced greater institutional structure but was never officially sanctioned by the pope. He also appointed Peter Catanii as his vicar to handle the order's practical affairs; after Peter's early death in 1221, Francis replaced him with Brother Elias of Cortona. Two years later, Francis submitted a further revision of the rule - known as the Regula secunda ("Second Rule"), or Regula bullata ("Rule with a Bull") - to Pope Honorius III, who approved it in the bull Solet annuere ("Accustomed to Grant") on November 29, 1223. As the official rule of the order, Regula bullata enjoined the friars "to observe the holy gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ, living in obedience without anything of our own and in chastity." It also outlined regulations for discipline, preaching, and entry into the order. After his rule received a papal sanction, Francis withdrew increasingly from external affairs.
At Christmastime in 1223, Francis participated in an important ceremony when he celebrated the birth of Jesus by recreating the manger of Bethlehem at a church in Greccio, Italy. This celebration demonstrated his devotion to the human Jesus, a devotion that would be rewarded in most dramatic fashion in the following year. In the summer of 1224, Francis went to the mountain retreat of La Verna (Alvernia), not far from Assisi, to celebrate the feast of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary (August 15) and to prepare for St. Michael's Day (September 29) by fasting for 40 days. He prayed that he might know how best to please God; opening the Gospels for the answer, he came upon references to the Passion of Christ three times. As he prayed during the morning of the feast of the Exaltation of the Cross (September 14), he beheld a figure coming toward him from the heavens.
For the remainder of his life, Francis took the greatest care to hide the stigmata (marks resembling the wounds on the crucified body of Jesus Christ). After the death of Francis, Brother Elias announced the stigmata to the order by a circular letter. Later, Brother Leo, the confessor and intimate companion of the saint who also left written testimony of the event, said that in death Francis seemed like one just taken down from the cross.
Francis lived two years longer, in constant pain and almost totally blind (he had contracted an eye disease while proselytizing in the East in 1219). He was buried temporarily in the church of San Giorgio at Assisi. On July 15, 1228, concluding a process of unprecedented speed, Francis was canonized by his former protector, Pope Gregory IX. On the following day, the pope laid the foundation stone for the basilica that Brother Elias would build in Francis's memory, and in 1230 the saint's body was transferred to the lower church of the basilica.
Francis of Assisi was baptized Roman Catholic and connected his life with preaching.
Politics
Francis of Assisi didn't present any political program and concentrated on clerical activities. Nevertheless, after his death, his order gained political weight.
Views
Probably no one in history has set out as seriously as did Francis to imitate the life of Christ and to carry out so literally Christ's work in Christ's own way. This is the key to the character and spirit of St. Francis and helps explain his veneration for the Eucharist (the body and blood of Christ) and respect for the priests who handled the elements of the communion sacrament. To neglect this point is to present an unbalanced portrait of the saint as a lover of nature, a social worker, an itinerant preacher, and a celebrant of poverty.
Certainly, the love of poverty is part of his spirit, and his contemporaries celebrated poverty either as his "lady," in the allegorical Sacrum commercium, or as his "bride," in the fresco by Giotto in the lower church of San Francesco at Assisi. Indeed, poverty was so important to Francis that in his last writing, the Testament, composed shortly before his death in 1226, he declared unambiguously that absolute personal and corporate poverty was the essential lifestyle for the members of his order. It was not, however, mere external poverty he sought but the total denial of self (as in the Letter of Paul to the Philippians 2:7).
Francis considered all nature as the mirror of God and as so many steps to God. He called all creatures his "brothers" and "sisters," and, in the most endearing stories about him, preached to the birds and persuaded a wolf to stop attacking the people of the town of Gubbio and their livestock if the townspeople agreed to feed the wolf. In his "Canticle of the Creatures" (less properly called by such names as the "Praises of Creatures" or the "Canticle of the Sun"), he referred to "Brother Sun" and "Sister Moon," the wind and water, and even "Sister Death." He nicknamed his long and painful illnesses his "sisters," and he begged pardon of "Brother Ass the body" for having unduly burdened him with his penances. Above all, his deep sense of brotherhood under God embraced his fellow men, for "he considered himself no friend of Christ if he did not cherish those for whom Christ died."
Quotations:
"Start by doing what's necessary; then do what's possible, and suddenly you are doing the impossible."
"Men lose all the material things they leave behind them in this world, but they carry with them the reward of their charity and the alms they give. For these, they will receive from the Lord the reward and recompense they deserve."
"A single sunbeam is enough to drive away many shadows."
"We must not be wise and prudent according to the flesh. Rather, we must be simple, humble, and pure."
"No one is to be called an enemy, all are your benefactors, and no one does you harm. You have no enemy except yourselves."
Membership
Francis of Assisi was a founder and member of the Order of Friars Minor.
Order of Friars Minor
Personality
Francis was especially fond of the Provencal culture of the troubadours. He liked to speak French (although he never did so perfectly) and even attempted to sing in the language.
Physical Characteristics:
During his last years Francis in constant pain and almost totally blind (he had contracted an eye disease while proselytizing in the East in 1219). Medical treatment at Rieti was unsuccessful, and after a stay at Siena, he was brought back to Assisi, where he died at the Porziuncola.
Interests
music, poetry
Connections
Being a Roman Catholic clergyman Francis of Assisi didn't marry and didn't have any known legitimate children.