Blessed Veronica of Milan
- Also known as
- Veronica of Binasco
- Memorial
- 13 January
- Profile
- Grew up in a poor peasant family in a small village, doing chores and working the fields.
She had no formal education, and tried unsuccessfully to teach herself to read at night.
She began to have religious ecstasies, visions of the life of Christ, and was taught her catechism by the Virgin Mary.
Our Lady explained it in the form of three mystical letters, one that signified purity of intention, the second abhorrence of complaining, and the third a reminder to daily meditate on the Passion.
Augustinian lay-sister at the convent of Saint Martha, Milan, at age 22, being instructed for three years before she was allowed to join.
Assigned to beg alms in the street for the support of the house.
She suffered alternating bouts of intense physical pain and religious ecstacies for years.
She received a vision of Christ in 1494, and was given a message for Pope Alexander VI; she made a journey to Rome to deliver it.
Following a six-month illness, she died on the date she had predicted.
- Born
- c.1445 at Binasco, Italy, a small village near Milan
- Died
- 13 January 1497 in Milan, Italy of natural causes
- Beatified
- 1517 by Pope Leo X (cultus confirmed);
1672 by Pope Clement X (devotion extended to the entire Augustinian Order)
- Additional Information
-
For All The Saints, by Katherine Rabenstein
Lives of the Saints, by Father Alban Butler
- Translate
-
español | français | deutsch | italiano | português