La Trinità della Cava
Territorial Abbey of La Trinità della Cava Abbatia Territorialis Sanctissimae Trinitatis Cavensis | |
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Location | |
Country | Italy |
Ecclesiastical province | Salerno-Campagna-Acerno |
Coordinates | 40°40′55″N 14°41′28″E / 40.68194°N 14.69111°E |
Statistics | |
Area | 10 km2 (3.9 sq mi) |
Population - Total - Catholics | (as of 2004) 7,200 7,200 (100%) |
Parishes | 4 |
Information | |
Denomination | Catholic Church |
Rite | Roman Rite |
Established | 1394 |
Cathedral | Cattedrale di SS. Trinità |
Current leadership | |
Pope | Francis |
Abbot | P. Michele Petruzzelli, O.S.B. |
Bishops emeritus | Benedetto Maria Salvatore Chianetta, O.S.B. |
La Trinità della Cava (Template:Lang-la), commonly known as Badia di Cava, is a Benedictine territorial abbey located near Cava de' Tirreni, in the province of Salerno, southern Italy. It stands in a gorge of the Finestre Hills.
History
It was founded in 1011 by Alferius of Pappacarbona, a noble of Salerno who became a Cluniac monk and had lived as a hermit in the vicinity since 1011. Pope Urban II endowed this monastery with many privileges, making it immediately subject to the Holy See, with jurisdiction over the surrounding territory.
The first four abbots were canonized as saints on December 21, 1893, by Pope Leo XIII.[1]
In 1394, Pope Boniface IX elevated it to a diocese, with the abbots functioning as bishops. In 1513, Pope Leo X separated the two offices, detaching the city of Cava from the abbot's jurisdiction. About the same time the Cluniacs were replaced by Cassinese monks.[2]
The monastery was closed under Napoleon but the community remained relatively unscathed, thanks to Abbot Carlo Mazzacane, and was restored after his fall. The abbey still provides the surrounding parishes with clergy.
The church and the greater part of the buildings were entirely modernized in 1796. The old Gothic cloisters are preserved. The church contains a fine organ and several ancient sarcophagi.
The church of the monastery has the tombs of Queen Sibylla of Burgundy (died 1150), second consort of King Roger II of Sicily, and a number of notable ecclesiastics.[3]
Library
The monastery contains the Biblioteca statale del Monumento Nazionale Badia di Cava with its rich archives of public and private documents, which date back to the 8th century, e.g., the Codex Legum Longobardorum of 1004 (the oldest digest of Lombard law), and the La Cava Bible and fine incunabula. The monastery later became the seat of a national educational establishment, under the care of the Benedictines.
Abbots
- Saint Alferius of Pappacarbona (1011–1050)
- Saint Leo I of Cava (1050–79)
- Saint Peter of Pappacarbone (1079–1122)
- Saint Constabilis (1122–1124)
- Blessed Simeon (1124–1140)
- Blessed Falcone (1140–1146)
- Blessed Marino (1146–1170)
- Blessed Benincasa (1171–1194)
- Rugger Roger (1194)
- Blessed Peter II (1195–1208)
- Blessed Balsamo (1208–1232)
- Blessed Leonard (1232–1255)
- Blessed Leo II (1266–1295)
- Philip de Haya (1316–1331)
- Maynerio (1342–1366)
- Bishop-Abbots
- John of Aragon
- Oliverio Carafa
- Abbots
- Crisostomo d'Alessandro (1512–1517)
- Gerolamo Guevara (1528–1552)
- Pellegrino Dell'Erre (1549–1550)
- Vittorino Manso (1588–1592)
- Giulio Vecchioni (1630–1633)
- Gregorio Lottieri (1640–1642)
- Giuseppe Lomellino (1647–1651)
- Severino Boccia (1671–1677)
- Gaetano Dattilo (1772–1778)
- Raffaele Pasca (1781–1787)
- Tommaso Capomazza (1793–1801)
- Carlo Mazzacane (1801–1824)
- Pietro Candida (1844–1849)
- Onofrio Granata (1849–1858)
- Michele Morcaldi (1878–1894)
- Benedetto Bonazzi (1894–1902)
- Silvano de Stefano (1902–1908)
- Angelo Maria Ettinger (1910–1918)
- Giuseppe Placido M. Nicolini (1919–1928)
- Ildefonso Rea (1929–1945)
- Mauro De Caro (1946–1956)
- Fausto Mezza (1956–1967)
- Michele Alfredo Marra (1969–1992)
- Benedetto Maria Salvatore Chianetta (1995–2010)
See also
- Cava de' Tirreni, Italy (Italia)
- Alferius
Notes
- ^ San Constabile (Costabile)
- ^ Catholic Encyclopedia, "Abbey of Trinita di Cava Dei Tirreni" (1913).
- ^ Burial places of rulers of Sicily