ST. FRANCIS IN NEW YORK
The Canticle of Creatures and other Franciscan manuscripts from the 13th century.
A unique exhibition in the United States.
For the first time at the Brooklyn Borough Hall in Brooklyn, New York.
 
 
 
209 Joralemon Street - Brooklyn, NY Brooklyn Borough Hall (open to the public)
A unique exhibition in the United States.
For the first time at the Brooklyn Borough Hall in Brooklyn, New York.
December 2014 - January 2015

"Friar Francis: Traces, Words and Images." This is the title of an exhibition that will be held in New York, at the Brooklyn Borough Hall (December 2, 2014-January 14, 2015).
It
 is the first time that manuscripts of the 13th and 14th centuries and 
Papal Bulls relating to the Saint of Assisi will be on show in the U. S.
The
 exhibition consists of 19 artifacts from the Ancient Fund of the City 
Library of Assisi, partof the library of the Sacred Convent in Assisi.
The
 heart of the exhibition is the Codex 338, a collection of the first 
writings and documents relating to St. Francis and the order of the 
Friars Minor, containing The Canticle of Creatures, considered the 
starting point of Italian literature. Each year some six million people 
visit the Basilica of St. Francis, about 40 percent of them Americans. 
This is proof that Franciscan spirituality has again become a reference 
point and model for many people, thanks, above all, to Pope Francis, who
 puts the message of the Saint of Assisi into practice. The exhibition 
allows the visitor to get to better know, appreciate and understand 
Francis of Assisi, who is known to the world as a man and saint of the 
people, of peace and fraternity.

The exhibition is divided into three sections.
-
 The first, "Traces", includes documents which closely illustrate the 
historic journey of the saint. The cornerstone of this part of the 
exhibition is the Codex 338, a miscellany that contains the oldest 
existing copies of the writings of the Saint of Assisi. Deriving from 
the 13th century, it contains, among other objects, the 12 chapters of 
the Regula fratrum minorum, o
r,
 the Rule of the Friors Minor, approved in 1223 by Pope Honorius III, 
with which Francis gave to the brothers in the community a spiritual 
direction and a series of practical norms by which to govern their daily
 lives. Manuscript 338 also contains the Laudes creaturarum, better 
known as The Canticle of Creatures, considered the first work in the 
ancient Italian vulgate and which has been recognized since the 18th 
century as the oldest poetic text of Italian literature. 
The
 first part of the exhibition also includes several Papal Bulls, 
including one from the year 1220 where the saint's name appears in an 
official document for the first time.
-
 The second section of the exhibition, "Words," includes the oldest 
biographies of the saint, among them several rare codices and a fragment
 of the Vita beati Francisci by Tommaso da Celano, the oldest work 
dedicated to St Francis. 
This
 section also includes the extremely rare Memoriale in desiderio animae o
 Vita Seconda from 1247, copies from the early 14th century of the 
Legenda Maior e la Legenda Minor by Saint Bonaventure of Bagnoregio, and
 the Fioretti di San Francesco, the celebrated hagiography of Francis in
 the Italian vulgate, which is characterized by a idealized, popular, portrayal of  the saint which is still used today in many languages.
-
 The third section, "Images", consists of a selection of miniature 
illustrated codices depicting the saint of Assisi. Among these is an 
antiphonary, a Franciscan breviary, a missal and the Bible of Giovanni 
da Parma.

Starting
 with words that tell the story of the Franciscan friar, the exhibition 
continues with images that celebrate sanctity with documents that use 
language and beauty to simplify and spread the spiritual physiognomy of 
the saint.
Location of the exhibition
209 Joralemon Street - Brooklyn, NY Brooklyn Borough Hall (open to the public)
December 2, 2014-January 14, 2015
 
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