Francesca Bussa de' Leoni (1384 – 9 March 1440), known as Frances of Rome (; ), was an Italian Catholic mystic, organizer of charitable services and a Benedictine oblate who founded a religious community of oblates, who share a common life without religious vows. She was canonized in 1608.

Life

Frances was born in 1384 in Rome to a wealthy and aristocratic couple, Paolo Bussa de' Leoni and Iacobella dei Roffredeschi, in the up-and-coming district of Parione and christened in the nearby Church of St. Agnes on the famed Piazza Navona. When she was eleven years old, she wanted to be a nun, but, at about the age of twelve, her parents forced her to marry Lorenzo Ponziani, commander of the papal troops of Rome and member of an extremely wealthy family. Although the marriage had been arranged, it was a happy one that lasted for forty years.

thumb|left|Santa Francesca Romana e il miracolo del grano

With her sister-in-law Vannozza, Frances visited the poor and cared for the sick, inspiring other wealthy women in the city to do the same. Soon after her marriage, Frances fell seriously ill. Her husband called a man in who dabbled in magic, but Frances drove him away, saying, "Begone, thou servant of Satan, nor ever venture into these walls again!" and later recounted to Vannozza that St. Alexis had appeared to her and cured her.

When her father-in-law died, Frances became the mistress of the household. During a time of flood and famine, she turned part of the family's house estate into a hospital and distributed food and clothing to people experiencing poverty. According to one account, her father-in-law was so angry that he took away her keys to the supply rooms, but gave them back when he saw that the corn bin and wine barrel had been replenished after Frances finished praying.

During the wars between the pope in Rome and various anti-popes in the Western Schism of the Catholic Church, Lorenzo served the former. According to one story, their son Battista was to be delivered as a hostage to the commander of the Neapolitan troops. Obeying this order on the command of her spiritual director, Frances took her son to the Campidoglio. On the way, she stopped in the Church of the Aracoeli located there and entrusted her son's life to the Blessed Mother. When they arrived at the appointed site, the soldiers tried to put her son on a horse to transport him to captivity. However, the horse refused to move despite heavy whipping. The soldiers saw the hand of God in this and returned the boy to his mother.

thumb|right|Sculpture by Giosuè Meli (1866)

During a period of forced exile, much of Lorenzo's property and possessions were destroyed. In the course of one occupation of Rome by Neapolitan forces in the early part of the century, he was wounded so severely that he never fully recovered. Frances nursed him throughout the rest of his life.

Frances experienced other sorrows during her marriage to Lorenzo. They lost two children to the plague. Chaos ruled the city during that period of neglect by the pope, and the ongoing warfare between him and the various forces competing for power on the Italian peninsula devastated it. The city of Rome was largely in ruins, and wolves were known to enter the streets. Frances again opened her home as a hospital and drove her wagon through the countryside to collect wood for fire and herbs for medicine. It is said she had the gift of healing, and over 60 cases were attested to during the canonization proceedings.

thumb|left|Untitled (St. Francesca Romana), c. 1650

In March 1433, she founded a monastery at Tor de' Specchi, near the Campidoglio, to allow for a common life by those members of the confraternity who felt so-called.

See also

  • Oblates of St. Frances of Rome
  • Tor de' Specchi Monastery
  • Saint Frances of Rome, patron saint archive

References

  • Founder Statue in St Peter's Basilica
  • Colonnade Statue in St Peter's Square
  • CatholicSaints.info: Saint Frances of Rome
  • Saint of the Day, March 9: Frances of Rome at SaintPatrickDC.org
  • Santiebeati
  • Website of the Monastery of Tor de' Specchi
  • Saint Frances of Rome at the Christian Iconography web site