Monday, March 7, 2011

Tuesday, March 8, 2011: From the Amalfi Coast to Tuscany

On Tuesday, March 8 the Bellarmine University travelers bid farewell to the Amalfi Coast as they travel north. The singers stop for a guided tour and recital at the Benedictine Monastery of Montecassino perched high upon a hill prior to continuing to Tuscany, where they will stay at Siena's Hotel Montaperti through March 10, for dinner and overnight.

Montecassino is a rocky mountain approximately 80 miles southeast of Rome. Saint Benedict of Nursia established his first monastery here, the source and foundation of the Benedictine Order, in 529. The monastery stands as one of the few territorial abbeys remaining within the Catholic Church. According the Gregory the Great’s biography of Saint Benedict, the monastery was constructed on an older pagan sight, a temple of Apollo that originally crowned the hill. The biography claims that Benedict’s first act was to smash the sculpture of Apollo and destroy the pagan altar. He then reused the temple, dedicating it to Saint Martin, and built a new chapel which he dedicated to Saint John the Baptist. Once established at Montecassino, Benedict never left. There he penned the Benedictine Rule which ultimately became the founding principle of western monasticism. Montecassino became the model for future Benedictine developments throughout the world. Unfortunately the Abbey has fallen target to numerous military insurgencies throughout the years, including the infamous 1944 Battle of Montecassino. On February 15, 1944, the Abbey was almost completely destroyed by Allied air-raids after being mistakenly identified as a German stronghold. In fact, the Abbey was being used as a refuge for women and children attempting to shield themselves from the war. The Abbey was rebuilt after the war, financed by the Italian State, and was reconsecrated by Pope Paul VI in 1964.

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