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Note:
From the Archives of Historic St. Ann Church, Downtown
West Palm Beach, Author Unknown
How
many girls and women bear the beautiful name of Ann
know that the bones of their glorious patroness are
preserved to this day in the church of the little town
of Apt, in the diocese of Avignon, Department of
Vaucluse, France?
The
little town of 5000 inhabitants rests peacefully in
the center of the valley, close to the river Calavon.
Under the sanctuary of the cathedral there are two
crypts, one over the other. The upper one dates back
probably to the Eleventh Century, the lower one is the
cavern, a veritable catacomb, where the first bishops
went into hiding in times of persecution. And it is
there that the body of St. Ann was originally kept.
Are
the relics of St. Ann really there now, in the Church
of Apt? It seems there is very little cause for any
doubt. In a brief of the 30th of October 1533, Pope
Clement VIII recommended to the generosity of the
faithful the venerable Church of Apt in the following
words: “This church where rest the relics of several
saints and in particular the body of St. Ann, the
Mother of the Glorious Virgin Mary.” The authorities
of Rome, before publishing this brief, asked for all
the documents relative to that church, and these
documents must still be somewhere among the Archives
of the Vatican.
In
their study of the same question on the Bollandists
close their study of the Church of Apt in their the
following words: “Let no one disturb their people of
Apt possession of the immemorial sacred treasure. A
possession in which nothing but a direct evidence to
the contrary could ever disturb them.”
How
did it happen that the body of St. Ann found a resting
place at Apt? The tradition of the Provence Country,
backed by numerous documents, assert that the holy
relics were brought to Provence by the first apostles
of this country. St. Paul tells us that some of the
first Christians received in confirmation the gift of
prophesy. Tradition tells us also that these prophets
announced the impending de struction of Jerusalem. In
those days the Christians of Palestine were severely
persecuted by the Jews. Many of them sought safety in
exile. Marseilles in Gaul had been for a long time a
port of exchange in the West and business connections
between that port and Palestine were well established.
It was quite natural that the friends and relatives of
Christ, who were especially persecuted in their
homeland, should find a new safe home in Provence.
Lazarus and his sisters Martha and Mary are claimed to
be the founders of the Church of Marseilles. Lazarus
is recognized as its first Bishop. Mary of James and
Mary Salome, close relations of the family of Christ
are claimed by the Church of Apt to have come to the
country. The historian, L’ Abbe Daras, has no doubt
that they were nieces of St. Ann. What could be more
natural than that they should bring with them the holy
remains of their saintly aunt, when their own country
was to be devastated by a fierce war as foretold. A
“matyrology” (an account of the lives and deaths
of martyrs and saints) of great antiquity, mentions
this translation of the r elics of St. Ann. Most
probably Apt was chosen for the safekeeping of these
relics on account of its position of security behind a
triple chain of mountains away from the sea.
In
these very early days, Apt had a Bishop whose name was
Auspicius. The relics were confided to his keeping. As
a great persecution was raging through the land, the
holy bishop hid the holy treasure in the lower crypt
of the church. This crypt is open to visitors in our
time. The casket was placed behind the wall, the wall
was restored and a lamp was suspended before the
hiding place. Before long the barbarians came and laid
low the city of Apt with fire and sword. Auspicius
suffered martyrdom and those who were in his
confidence disappeared one after another. Thus the
relics of St. Ann remained hidden, and were lost to us
for over 600 years.
In
the year 792, Charlemagne, having driven the last
Sarrasins out of southern France, was spending some
time in the town of Apt. On Easter Sunday,
Charlemagne, surrounded by his knights and the people,
assisted at the solemn mass. The following account of
what took place then is taken from the Pastoral Letter
(1876) of the Most Reverend Dubreil, Archbishop of
Avignon.
“Present
at the mass was a 14 year old boy, blind, deaf and
dumb from birth, the son of the Baron Caseneuve de
Simiane, the host of Charlemagne. All at once as if
inspired, the boy moved toward the steps of the high
altar. He seemed to listen to a voice from on high and
made signs that a flagstone of the floor should be
lifted. Charlemagne gave orders that he should be
obeyed. The stone was lifted and as they dug down they
came upon the crypt of the relics. Instantaneously the
boy was cured of his infirmities and he cried aloud:
“It is She! It is She! They broke into the masonry
and there they found the sacred relics, in a small
casket of cypress wood. In this they found the sacred
relics wrapped in a precious veil on which was
written: “Here rests the body of the Mother of the
Virgin Mary...”
All
these extraordinary events were recorded in a solemn
affidavit. On his own accord the emperor wrote
personally to Pope Adrian I giving him a detailed
account of these marvelous happenings of which he was
an eyewitness. The Bolandists assert that this letter
is still in existence.
It
is an interesting fact that the devotion to St. Ann
spread rapidly along the Rhine countries. The first
place of pilgrimage was in the city of Duren near
Aix-la-Chapelle, the emperor’s residence, and the
name of St. Ann is found in the “Caroline
Litanies” of the French saints, composed at the time
of Adrian I. These litanies used to be chanted in the
imperial chapel.
For
a long time Apt was the national pilgrimage of St.
Ann, even after the events in Brittany that resulted
in a new center of cult of the saint. Anne of Austria,
Queen of France, sent a numerous and brilliant
deputation to the sanctuary of Apt to implore the help
of St. Ann Both the Queen and the nation desired a
male heir to the throne of France. Their prayers were
heard and the child was the future Louis XIV. On the
16th of March, 1660, Ann of Austria went personally in
pilgrimage to Apt to give thanks to the Great Saint.
As a votive offering she built the “Chapelle Royale”
where to this day the holy relics are preserved. Even
before that Popes and kings had come as pilgrims to
offer their homage to the grandmother of the Savior.
Among them were Popes Urban II in 1095 and Urban V in
1365.
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