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Santo por un Minuto

OSC

Servant of God

Mother Mary Magdalene Bentivoglio

1834 to 1905

“God provides for those who trust in Him completely.”

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Path to Sainthood

Cause introduced 1929, resumed 1969. Body found incorrupt.

Servant of God

1929

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Venerable

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Blessed

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Saint

The Noblewoman Who Brought Contemplative Life to America

Anna Bentivoglio was born on July 29, 1834, in Rome, into a family of Italian and French nobility. Drawn to the contemplative life, she entered the Order of Saint Clare, the Poor Clares, and took the religious name Mary Magdalene. Her sister Constanza joined her in religious life. By 1875, Anna had spent more than two decades in the cloister when Pope Pius IX asked her to undertake an extraordinary mission: establish the Poor Clares in the United States.

The two sisters arrived in America with no money, no contacts, and no English. They were contemplative nuns, not missionaries, and the American Church had little experience accommodating cloistered communities. Bishop after bishop turned them away. They wandered from diocese to diocese, relying entirely on divine providence, sleeping in borrowed rooms, and subsisting on the charity of strangers.

In 1878, after years of rejection, Mother Bentivoglio established the first Poor Clare monastery in the United States in Omaha, Nebraska. From that single foundation, the Order spread. She guided the establishment of new monasteries across the country, adapting the ancient Franciscan rule to American conditions while preserving its contemplative heart.

Mother Mary Magdalene Bentivoglio died on August 19, 1905, in Evansville, Indiana. Today, more than twenty Poor Clare monasteries in the United States and Canada trace their roots to her foundations. When her body was exhumed years later, it was found incorrupt. Her cause for canonization was introduced in 1929 and resumed in 1969.

In Her Own Words

God provides for those who trust in Him completely.

We came with nothing but the will of the Holy Father and the providence of God.

On the mission to America

Timeline
1834Born Anna Bentivoglio on July 29 in Rome, Italy, into a family of Italian and French nobility
1853Enters the Order of Saint Clare (Poor Clares) in Rome
1875Sent by Pope Pius IX with her sister Constanza to establish Poor Clares in America
1875Arrives in the United States with no money, no plan, and no English
1876Rejected by multiple bishops who cannot accommodate a contemplative foundation
1878Establishes the first Poor Clare monastery in the United States in Omaha, Nebraska
1882Foundations spread as new monasteries are established across the country
1897Moves to Evansville, Indiana, continuing to guide the growing network of foundations
1905Dies August 19 in Evansville, Indiana, after thirty years of building contemplative life in America
1929Cause for canonization officially introduced
1969Cause resumed after a long dormancy; body found incorrupt upon exhumation
Support Mother Bentivoglio’s Cause

Mother Mary Magdalene Bentivoglio brought contemplative life to America with nothing but trust in God. More than twenty Poor Clare monasteries trace their origins to her foundations. Her body was found incorrupt. Pray for the advancement of her cause.

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Born

July 29, 1834

Rome, Italy

Died

August 19, 1905

Evansville, Indiana

Cause Introduced

1929

Resumed 1969

Stage

Servant of God

Body found incorrupt

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