PATRONESS OF THE PARISH
St. Angela Merici, Virgin
St. Angela Merici, the patroness of the parish, was
born in Desenzano, Italy in 1474. The house in which
she was born is still standing. It is marked by a
plague which states that Angela Merici who founded the
Order of St. Ursula, and died in Brescia in 1540, was
born in the house in 1474 on the second floor. Her
father, Thomas Merici, was a highly esteemed landowner
in the lake Garda District. Her mother was a member of
prosperous Biancosi family, merchants in Salo. Angela
spent her childhood at Grezze, the family farm near
Desenzano. The estate is still a working farm today.
At a time when few books were on print, Thomas Merici
owned a copy of Legenda Sanctorum. He read stories of
the lives of the saints to his wife and two daughters
every day. This early religious education had a
profound influence on Angela. She and her older
sister, who died very young, determined to follow the
example of the saints about whom they were learning.
It was from this book that Angela first heard of the
British princess St. Ursula, a 4th century virgin and
martyr. She is the patroness of the Order which Angela
established near the end of her life. From childhood
Angela lived a life of prayer and penance. While still
in her teens, she became a member of the Third Order
of St. Francis. She lived according to its rule for
the rest of her life.
Before Angela was fifteen both of her parents had
died. She went to Salo to live with her mother’s
family until she was twenty. Angela then returned to
Grezze where she spent the next twenty years managing
the farm which she had inherited. From there she
traveled to the villages and towns around Lake Garda
teaching religion and caring for the sick.
Angela left her farm to live in the city of Brescia in
order to expand her teaching and works of charity. She
dedicated her life to helping people in need. Angela
was assisted in her work by women from influential
families. Many had been widowed as a result of the
continuous warfare in northern Italy.
Germany, France and Venice were fighting for control
of northern Italy. There were many factions among the
citizens of Brescia. The feuding between families
often made it unsafe for residents to be on the
streets. Brescia was a city of towers, each one owned
by a powerful family keeping watch over its enemies.
The women of Brescia called upon Angela to negotiate
peace and she was often successful. She worked with
bishop of Brescia in her role as a peacemaker and her
reputation spread throughout the north of Italy.
When she was fifty years old, Angela made a pilgrimage
to the Holy Land. This was considered the greatest act
of devotion a Christian could perform. It involved a
very dangerous journey which only the most courageous
undertook. At sea, the pilgrims faced shipwreck and
pirates. On land, they had to contend with robbers and
hostile local population.
A statue of St. Angela is in St. Peter’s Basilica in
Rome, among those of other founders of principal
religious orders. She is recognized by the church as
the first woman to establish a religious order in her
own right. The order was founded to continue Angela’s
charitable works in Brescia, which included the
religious education of young women. In 1595, the
Ursulines opened their first school for girls in
Parma, Italy. St. Angela’s care for the Christians
upbringing of the young girls of Brescia grew into a
system of Catholic education throughout northern Italy
and France. Ursulines came to North America from
France. There area now Ursuline schools in many
countries.
Shortly before her death in 1540, one of Angela’s good
friends asked her for a spiritual testament. She
advised: “Do in life what you would wish to have done
at the hour of death.”