Our Lady of the Rosary of Chiquinquirá | |
---|---|
Location | The Basilica of Chiquinquirá (Boyacá), Colombia |
Date | 26 December 1586 |
Witness | María Ramos, Isabel (an Indian servant), Joana de Santana |
Type | Prodigious renovation and effulgence of the painting of the Virgin |
Approval | Liturgical Feast granted 12 April, 1825, during the pontificate of Pope Leo XII ; proclamation by act dated 18 July 1829 of the Virgin of Chiquinquirá as Patron of Colombia, during the pontificate of Pope Pius VIII ; canonical coronation on 9 July 1919, during the pontificate of Pope Pius XI (following approval given on 9 January 1910 by Pope St Pius X) |
Shrine | The Basilica of Chiquinquirá (Boyacá), Colombia |
Our Lady of the Rosary of Chiquinquirá (in Spanish, Nuestra Señora del Rosario de Chiquinquirá) is a title under which the Blessed Virgin Mary is particularly venerated in the South American countries of Colombia and Venezuela, through her association with a reputedly miraculous pictorial image.
The archetype of the image is a painting executed in tempera on cotton cloth in about 1562 in what is now Colombia by a Spanish silversmith and painter born near Seville, Spain, named Alonso de Narváez. This man is the first artist known by name to have been active in the Spanish colonial dominion later known as New Granada.[1] No other works by him are known.[2]
According to contemporary records, the painting was installed in a rustic chapel in Suta (present-day Sutamarchán)[3] for which it was commissioned. Twenty years later, adverse environmental conditions in the chapel (which was roofed over with straw thatch) had caused the image to degrade to such an extent that the local priest, Juan de Leguizamón, sent it to the widow of Antonio de Santana (the man who had commissioned it and who had died in 1582), she, by then, residing with her family in Chiquinquirá, where it was relegated to a store-room.[4] Although the image on it was faint, the painting was recovered in 1585 by María Ramos, de Santana's sister-in-law who had recently come out from Spain. She hung it on the wall of an oratory, above the altar, where she came to pray every day to the Virgin. In the first deposition taken for the purposes of an ecclesiastical inquiry into the reported prodigy, she stated that she had just completed her devotions on the morning of 26 December 1586 when the painting mysteriously fell from the wall to hover over the place where she had been kneeling. She testified that the Virgin's face shone with bright colours and that the painting emitted a dazzling light throughout the rest of that day.[5]
Since that time, the painting has been the continuous focus of prayer to, and veneration of, the Virgin Mary in Colombia through whom, under the title of Our Lady of the Rosary of Chiquinquirá, miracles of healing were also reported. The prodigious luminescence of 1586 was repeated on two subsequent occasions, in 1588 and 1589 respectively.[6]
In 1709, a second image, substantially the same as that painted by Narváez, reportedly manifested itself in miraculous circumstances on a wooden panel in the town of Maracaibo in the state of Zulia in what is now Venezuela, causing the cult of the Virgin under the title of Chiquinquirá to spread to that country where the populace know her as “La Chinita”[7] and where she is the Patron of the city of Maracaibo, of the state of Zulia, and of the Armed Forces of Venezuela.[8]
In 1529, a knight adventurer from Spain, named Don Antonio de Santana, arrived at Santa Marta on the northern coast of South America in the company of Governor García de Lerma and a large group of Dominican friars.[9] He slowly made his way up-country, and in 1540 established himself in Tunja, founded as a Spanish city in 1539 the year after the founding of the city now known as Bogotá which later became the capital of the vast Spanish territory known as the New Kingdom of Granada, or New Granada. In 1560 Don Antonio obtained an encomienda of Chibcha-speaking Indians in the region of present-day Sutamarchán in the valley of Saquencipa. Pursuant to this grant, he employed the Indians in erecting, in addition to buildings for his own use, a rudely-built chapel at a place called Suta in and from which the Indians might be catechized and perform their devotions. Some time later, his encomienda was extended to Chiquinquirá where another chapel was built. He died in Tunja in 1582.[10]
Evangelization of the Indians in what became New Granada was first undertaken by Dominican friars who established a base at Santa Marta in 1536.[11] From there, they spread out west and south. By 1571 there are said to have been 176 Dominican mission stations (or doctrinas as they were called) in New Granada.[12] An important priory was founded at Tunja in 1551 from which base they erected doctrinas at, among other locations, Suta.[13] Although there is no historical justification for attributing it to Saint Dominic Guzmán himself, the practice of the Catholic Marian devotion known as the Rosary was particularly promoted by the order of mendicant friars he had founded, the Order of Preachers (or Dominicans as they are popularly known), including, from the start, in what became New Granada.[14]
In these circumstances, when Don Antonio sought in 1560 to commission a painting for the chapel at Suta, it would have been foreseeable that Fray Andrés de Jadraque, the Dominican priest charged with the spiritual care of the Indians there, would arrange, as he did, for the painting to depict Our Lady of the Rosary. Moreover, the painter Narváez who received the commission was, or became, a member of the Confraternity of the Rosary and, possibly, a Dominican tertiary for, in his will dated 12 October 1583, he requested to be interred in the Dominican habit.[15] Upon its completion, the painting, for which Don Antonio paid Narváez 20 gold pesos, was hung in the chapel of the doctrina of Suta.[16]
Since the painting had been executed in tempera on a cotton support,[17] and since the chapel was rudely-built and the roof of thatch leaked, years of exposure to bright sunlight and to high levels of humidity caused the organic pigments gradually to fade to such an extent that Juan Alemán de Leguizamón, a secular priest who had arrived at Suta in 1578, ordered its removal from its place of honour in the chapel. Aware of its origin, he sent it to Chiquinquirá where Don Antonio's widow, Catalina García de Irlos, had removed herself together with all her family.[18] Upon, or soon after, its arrival at the Santana residence in Chiquinquirá, it was relegated to a store-room.[19]
Although in some quarters the prodigious renovation of the painting on 26 December 1586 is said to have extended beyond the painted image to the cotton support (allegedly marred by rents and holes, or torn into pieces or used as a rag),[20] and although the term "renovation" when applied to a painting might be intentionally ambiguous as to the precise point or points of reference,[21] in this section, "renovation" applies to the appearance of the painted image and not to the condition of the cotton support, unless the context requires otherwise.
The existence of a extensive contemporary dossier compiled by the ecclesiastical authorities between January 1587 and the end of 1589 both permits and requires a cautious approach when describing the prodigious renovation. This dossier comprises the transcript of depositions by numerous protagonists and eye-witnesses taken down initially for the purposes of, and later in the course of, a proceso eclesiástico (or inquiry), instigated by the local bishop, Luis Zapata de Cárdenas, Archbishop of Santafé de Bogotá. An official inquiry of this sort was mandated by the Council of Trent in directives issued at its twenty fifth session, in 1563.[22] Although its contents were selectively diffused, interpreted and elaborated upon both through and in books published from the late 17th century onwards, a complete transcription of the proceso manuscript was first published only in 1950.[23]
Maria Ramos, who was still alive in 1623,[24] was the wife of Pedro de Santana, the brother of Don Antonio. Following her husband, who had preceded her to the Americas, she had left Seville and arrived in Tunja in 1585. Estranged from her husband on account of his infidelity in Tunja, she then came with her two children to live in Chiquinquirá with her sister-in-law.[25]
It is stated in the depositions that Ramos and other eye-witnesses made in course of the proceso, that Ramos was a devotee of Our Lady of the Rosary from her childhood. She had recovered the painting from its obscure location and, despite its greatly faded condition, hung it up by a cord on the wall of the oratory of her sister-in-law's residence, just above the altar. She was accustomed to spend hours kneeling in front of it, praying to the Virgin. On the morning of 26 December 1586, she had been praying as usual for about two hours, and was on the point of leaving the oratory when an Indian woman named Isabel called out to her : "See! See, madam! Our Lady, the Mother of God is standing in your place!" Ramos looked back, saw the painting standing on end at the place where she habitually knelt for prayer, and exclaimed : "Mother of God, My Lady, how do I deserve that you would lower yourself to take my place!"
She called Isabel in to help her - for the painting was leaning back slightly, suspended above the ground without any visible support. The two of them were attempting to put it on the altar when a third person, Juana de Santana, alerted by the noise, came in to assist. They all particularly noticed that the cord was not frayed or broken. As the three of them were in process of laying the painting on the altar, they saw the colours renewed and shining resplendently. Throughout the rest of the day the painting continued to emit a dazzling light.[26]
This occurred in three stages. The first, preliminary, stage took place in January 1587, fifteen days after the reported prodigy, on the initiative of the local priest, Juan de Figueredo. He took with him to Chiquinquirá Diego López de Castiblanco, an accredited notary, and took depositions on oath from the main eye-witnesses. The second stage was initiated by Luis Zapata de Cárdenas, OFM, the Archbishop of Bogotá, who commissioned Fr. Jerónimo de Sandoval, a priest of the town of Leiva, to attend at Chiquinquirá to take further depositions from the witnesses (again, with a notary - this time, one Andrés Rodríguez). These depositions were taken in September 1587. Finally, in 1588 the same Archbishop established a commission of distinguished ecclesiastics sitting at Tunja, who took depositions from, among others, that same Juan Alemán de Leguizamón who had been priest at Suta and who had removed the painting from its place above the altar in the chapel there and sent it to Chiquinquirá.[27]
The prodigious events of 26 December 1586 were not the only supernatural manifestation attributed to the intercession of the Virgin on behalf of those who venerate her before her image at Chiquinquirá.
Miracles of healing : numerous miracles of healing of mind and body were reported in the years 1587 onwards.[28]
Supernatural effulgence : apart from the renovation of 26 December 1586, other instances were reported of a miraculous effulgence emitted from the painting. On the morning of Saturday, 30 July 1588 at 8am the painting began to shine and the phenomenon lasted sufficiently long for all the inhabitants of the village to observe it. On 14 August of the same year the effulgence was repeated, this time in the presence of Archbishop de Cárdenas, several priests and numerous faithful. A third supernatural effulgence was reported for 5 January 1589 on which occasion it lasted from 8am until 5pm in the evening of the following day. Contemporary eye-witness accounts were taken of these events. Similar events continue to be recorded.[29]
The integrity of the cotton support : the mere survival of the painting after its numerous vicissitudes is taken as further confirmation of the Virgin's intercession by, among others, the 19th century Colombian historian Don José Manuel Groot (1800-1878). Writing in the middle of the 1850's he reported that the painting had been touched daily for at least 270 years by bundles of rosaries, bunches of herbs and other objects which, in his time, were attached to a hook on the end of a long pole which was then raised up and pressed on to its surface.[30]
The oblong painting by Narváez is 119cm high by 125cm wide.[31] It was executed with organic pigments in tempera on a cotton cloth support said to have been (or formed part of) an Indian manta or oblong cape.[32] An ocular inspection and technical analysis conducted in 1986 by the art restorer Cecilia Alvarez White established (through radiographic and other means) that the paint was applied directly to the cotton support without any ground.[33]
The Virgin stands in the centre of the painting on a crescent moon. The Infant Jesus is on her left arm and she is flanked by two standing figures of more or less equal height with her : on her right is Saint Anthony of Padua (a 13th century Franciscan friar born in Portugal in 1195), [34] and stooping slightly on her left is Saint Andrew, the Apostle. Each saint is accompanied by his traditional iconographic attributes. [35]
The three standing figures occupy the whole of the pictorial space. Since the traditional place of honour is on the right hand, and since the Apostles are of higher rank than all other Saints except the Virgin and St Joseph, the iconography would be heterodox if it were not for the fact that an image of the Christ Child is one of St Anthony's attributes.[36] Nevertheless, following the explanation first offered by Tobar in 1694 (and affirmed by Zamora in 1701), the identity and arrangement of the supporting saints is generally ascribed to the fact that the figure in the place of honour is the patron saint of the man who commissioned and paid for the work, and the secondary place is given to the patron saint of the priest who acted as intermediary and arranged for the work to be done.[37]
The Infant Jesus gazes at a finch tied to a finger of His right hand. This bird is a symbol frequently associated with Him, especially in Italian Renaissance art, and is taken to represent, variously, the soul, sacrifice, death and redemption.[38]
At various stages in its history, the painting was embellished by the gilding of the hems of the clothes and halos of the two flanking saints,[39] and by the affixing of gilt, gold or other precious objects to the surface and frame.[40] Honorific medals and civil decorations are attached to the top margin of the painting, the whole of which is enclosed in glass by means of a magenta-coloured inner frame overlayed with a sequence of perforated silver hemi-discs interspersed with gilt stars. The painting and inner frame are enclosed in a massive silver outer frame to the top of which are affixed heraldic shields of the archdioceses and dioceses of Colombia.[41]
For very many years pilgrims and grateful devotees repeatedly pinned jewels and other votive objects to the painting. This pious practice was already a source of anxiety to the custodians of the painting in 1756, but it was not until 1897 when the painting was put behind protective glass that the danger it posed was finally eradicated. The existing jewels were removed at this time, leaving numerous small punctures in the cotton, visible to the naked eye.[42]
Within a very few years of the first reports of its prodigious renovation, copies and free versions of Narváez' painting began to be produced for private and public devotional purposes.[43] There are said to be hundreds of copies all over Colombia, Venezuela, Ecuador and Central America.[44] Where securely dated, these enable scholars to trace the changing appearance of the original over the last four centuries.[45]
The painting is displayed in a neo-classical marble retable above the high altar of the Basilica of Our Lady of the Rosary of Chiquinquirá in the town of Chiquinquirá, the principal settlement in the Western Province of the civil political and administrative unit of the Department of Boyacá, the capital of which is Tunja.[46] Since 1977, Chiquinquirá has been a suffragan diocese in the ecclesiastical province of Tunja.[47] Chiquinquirá lies approximately 120 kms north-east of Bogotá, the capital of Colombia.[48]
Shortly after the first reports of the renovation of 1586, the local Indians had built a more ample chapel for the painting on the site but, having regard to the great processions of pilgrims coming to Chiquinquirá, Archbishop Cárdenas directed in 1597 that it be replaced by a larger building on the same site.
In 1636, the painting, the shrine, and the doctrina of Chiquinquirá were confided, by order of the then Archbishop of Santafé de Bogotá, Cristóbal de Torres, OP, to the custody of Dominican Friars, and in 1760, Archbishop José Javier de Arauz y Rojas of Bogotá elevated the doctrina to the status of parish under the title and patronage of Our Lady of the Rosary of Chiquinquirá.[49]
Dominican custody was interrupted between 1757 and 1764 (during which time the parish was transferred to secular priests), and more radically when, in the middle decades of the 19th century, successive anti-clerical governments suppressed religious orders such as the Dominicans, culminating, in 1861, in their expulsion from Colombia and the confiscation of all their property.[50]
High humidity caused by subterranean aquifers, the instability of the ground in the vicinity of the shrine (manifested when it was irreparably damaged in an earthquake in 1794, the epicentre of which was Quito, Ecuador), and the need for even larger premises, induced the Dominican custodians to build a new shrine on a new site. Work started in 1796 following plans drawn by the famous Spanish Capuchin architect, Fray Domingo Buix de Petrés, whose masterpiece it is considered to be.[51] An earthquake on 29 July, 1967 destroyed about a third of the buildings in Chiquinquirá, killed one person and injured 500. It caused serious damage to the basilica, particularly to its dome and towers which were rebuilt on a modified scale.[52]
The building was sufficiently complete for the painting to be installed in 1813. Consecration of the shrine-church (since 1928, a minor basilica) followed on 11 September 1823 when Bishop Rafael Lasso de la Vega (then bishop of Mérida in Venezuela, and at that time the only bishop in what had been New Granada) came to perform the ceremony.[53].
The basilica is the centrepiece of the National Marian Sanctuary of Colombia which also comprises Marian museums and the modern parish church of La Renovación built in place of the previous churches successively erected over the site of the reported prodigy and where the painting was kept until 1794.[54]
As early as the late 16th century, a copy of the image was taken to Quito in Ecuador, and in the mid-17th century Chiquinquirá was described as a place notable for the numbers of persons who come from "all the parts of Perú and of the Kingdom of New Granada to visit the temple of the Mother of God where there is a miraculous portrait of her for them venerate".[55] Modern sources report that the cult is present in all of South America and that in Lima alone there are various churches with altars dedicated to her, with other images in the Peruvian town of Caraz (which celebrates her feast on 20 January) and in the mining settlement of Algamarca in Cajamba province.[56] Chiquinquirá itself is known variously as "the town of Mary", "the religious capital of Colombia", and "spiritually enchanting".[57] The diocese of Chiquinquirá proclaims itself the diocese of Mary".[58] Within Colombia generally, Our Lady of Chiquinquirá is venerated and honoured as the Queen and primary Patron.[59]. Apart from the Basilica in Chiquinquirá, the Virgin is honoured under the title of Our Lady of the Rosary of Chiquinquirá by the dedication to her of three cathedrals in Colombia, namely at Garagoa, Santa Rosa de Osos, and Sonson, and of another basilica at La Estrella.[60]
Acts and statements by successive popes from 1596 until 1986 pay particular honour to the Virgin of Chiquinquirá. The following can be adduced:-
These are of two types : the public occasions on which Colombian civil leaders themselves venerated the Virgin (or associated themselves in person with honours paid to her by others), and the conferring of national decorations or other honours on her. In the 19th and 20th centuries there have been at least six notable instances of the former, and three of the latter. In the 21st century, the Colombian Congress approved a law denominating La Estrella (Antioquia province) as a Shrine City. This was by way of commemorating the golden jubilee of the coronation of that image of the Virgin of Chiquinquirá which is located in that city's basilica. In 2010 the Constitutional Court struck down the law, by 6 votes to 3, on the grounds that it infringed article 19 of the Constitution of 1991 which guarantees freedom of religion and establishes Colombia as a non-confessional state.[72]
Pilgrimages and processions : As previously mentioned (see under "Location", above), pilgrimages to Chiquinquirá had already become significant enough by 1597 for Archbishop de Cárdenas to order the building of a larger church to house the painting. In time, Chiquinquirá became the site of the most important Marian shrine in the country[80] and remains one of the most enduring Catholic cults in Colombia.[81] These pilgrimages (or romerías as they are called) have always been occasions for joyful exuberance, where eating, drinking, singing and dancing are present along with prayer and religious devotions.[82] Since the end of the 16th century, pilgrimages to Chiquinquirá have been traditionally made between 22 and 30 December in order to commemorate the original prodigy of 26 December 1586, and during the colonial era devotion to Our Lady of the Rosary of Chiquinquirá was attracting pilgrims from far beyond the immediate locality. In the pre-hispanic era the Chibcha-speaking Indians of the region were already accustomed to make pilgrimages over long distances, and in large numbers, in order to visit sites they held sacred (particularly those associated with water)[83] Pilgrimages of 10,000 to 12,000 people were reported.[84]
Suggestions of syncretism : A major offensive against sanctuaries dedicated to the practice of indigenous beliefs had been initiated in 1577, despite which, denunciations of idolatry were still being made against individuals in the 1630's.[85] Nevertheless, Catholic devotional practices continued to spread among the indigenous population, although more slowly than in México at this time.[86]Some anthropologists and other observers, noting the comparatively smooth transition of devout practices from a pre-Christian to a Christian focus, have speculated that the Indians who came on pilgrimage to Chiquinquirá might have been attracted to the site by virtue of its associations with their ancestral religion, experiencing, perhaps, an ambiguous cultic response. A temple to the god Fu on an island in the lake of Fúquene, not far from Chiquinquirá, was said to have had 100 priests ministering there in pre-colonial times. Proponents of these views have yet to address the fact that the devotion was never confined to the locality (as to which, see under "La Virgen peregrina" below).[87] The view has even been put forward that such beliefs have survived to the present day.[88] Some have suggested that the name Chiquinquirá itself testifies to a pre-Christian cult, but this is not universally accepted.[89]
Indulgences : The enthusiasm of the Indians for going on pilgrimage to Chiquinquirá was intensified by the grant of indulgences to those who devoutly made an annual visit to the shrine and prayed before the image of the Virgin. The first recorded indulgence of this nature was granted in 1596, and indulgences specific to members of the Confraternity of the Rosary were granted in 1613 and 1644.[90]
La Virgen peregrina : From the start of the cult, the painting of Our Lady of the Rosary of Chiquinquirá was, from time to time, taken from the shrine to places where some disaster threatened. This was notably the case during epidemics. The first of these transportations occurred in 1587 when the painting was taken to Tunja during an outbreak of smallpox. In 1633, during a plague, it was taken by way of Tunja to Bogotá where it remained until 1635. Another outbreak of smallpox in 1841 led to the painting being again taken from the shrine for almost four months during which time it was processed by crowds of up to 6,000 carrying candles who stopped to pray at every church en route to the capital.[91]
Centenaries : Elaborate celebrations marked the third and fourth centenaries of the initial prodigy. The celebrations of 1886 lasted two weeks, despite unusually heavy rainfall which deterred the Archbishop of Bogotá and the President of Colombia from attending.[92] The celebrations of 1986 were presided over by Pope John Paul II (as to which see above, under "Ecclesiastical Approbation").
Symbol of National Identity : With the motive of promoting the cult of the Virgin as a symbol of national identity, Colombian poets and writers have celebrated her. Marco Fidel Suárez (1855-1927)[93] invoked her as queen of the fatherland and queen of the world and of the ages ("¡Reina de nuestra patria y reina del mundo y las edades!") ; José Joaquín Ortiz (1814-1892)[94] praised the fervor of the innumerable pilgrims who arrive from the furthest parts of the Republic to venerate her ("innumerables peregrinos que desde las más remotas partes de la república acuden a rendirle culto") and, prostrate before her, pray all hours of the day ("a todas horas del día") ; for Antonio Gómez Restrepo (1869-1947)[95] she is the battlemented castle of the fatherland because she loves freedom, loves the Republic, and divested herself of her jewels to aid the cause of independence ("Almenado castillo de la patria [porque] Ella quiso la libertad, quiso la república; y se despojó de sus joyas para sostener la Independencia") ; Eduardo Caballero Calderón (1910-1993)[96] considers that she is the glue of the national spirit since, along the roads of Colombia, carried on the shoulders of pilgrims, she has been shaping popular music and national poetry from its birth ("el mayor aglutinante del espíritu nacional [pues] a lo largo de los caminos de Colombia, cargados en hombros de los peregrinos, se ha ido formando nuestra música popular y nuestra naciente poesía")[97]