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See also: ornament made of wrought gold and set with gems, generally sapphires, which is blessed by the See also: pope on the See also: fourth (Laetare) See also: Sunday of Lent, and usually afterwards sent as a mark of See also: special favour to some distinguished individual, to a See also: church, or a
See also: civil community
.
Formerly it was a single See also: rose of wrought gold, coloured red, but the See also: form finally adopted is a thorny branch with leaves and See also: flowers, the petals of which are decked with gems, surmounted by one See also: principal rose
.
The origin of the See also: custom is obscure
.
From very early times popes have given away a rose on the fourth Sunday of Lent, whence the name See also: Dominica Rosa, sometimes given to this feast
.
The practice of blessing and sending some such See also: symbol (e.g. eulogiae) goes back to the earliest Christian antiquity, but the use of the rose itself does not seem to go farther back than the filth century
.
According to some authorities it was used by See also: Leo IX
.
(1049-1054), but in any See also: case Pope See also: Urban II. sent one to See also: Fulk of See also: Anjou during the preparations for the first crusade
.
Pope Urban V., who sent a See also: golden rose to See also: Joanna of Naples in ..1366, is alleged to have been the first to determine that one should be consecrated annually
.
Beginning with the 16th century there went regularly with the rose a letter See also: relating the reasons why it was sent, and reciting the merits and virtues of the See also: receiver
.
When the change was made from the form of the See also: simple rose to the branch is uncertain
.
The rose sent by Innocent IV. in 1244 to Count See also: Raymond Berengar IV. of See also: Provence was a simple flower without any See also: accessory ornamentation, while the one given by Benedict XI. in 1303 or 1304 to the
church of St See also: Stephen at See also: Perugia consisted of a branch garnished with five open and two closed. See also: roses enriched with a See also: sapphire, the whole having a value of seventy ducats
.
The value of the gift vaiied according to the character or See also: rank of the recipient
.
See also: John XXII. gave away some weighing 12 oz., and worth from £250 to £325
.
Among the recipients of this honour have been
See also: Henry VI. of
See also: England, 1446; See also: James III. of Scotland, on whom the rose (made by Jacopo Magnolio) was conferred by Innocent VIII.; James IV. of Scotland;
See also: Frederick the Wise, elector of See also: Saxony, who received a rose from Leo X. in 1518; Henry VIII. of England, who received three, the last from See also: Clement VII. in 1524 (each had nine branches, and rested on different forms of feet, one on oxen, the second on acorns, and the third on lions); See also: Queen Mary, who received one in 1555 from See also: Julius III.; the republic of Lucca, so favoured by See also: Pius IV., in 1564; the Lateran See also: Basilica by Pius V. three years later; the sanctuary of See also: Loreto by See also: Gregory XIII. in 1584; Maria See also: Theresa, queen of See also: France, who received it from Clement IX. in 1668; Mary Casimir, queen of Poland, from Innocent XI. in 1684 in recognition of the deliverance of Vienna by her See also: husband, John Sobieski; Benedict XIII
.
(1726) presented one to the See also: cathedral of See also: Capua, and in 1833 it was sent by Gregory XVI. to the church of St Mark's,Venice
.
In more See also: recent times it was sent to See also: Napoleon III. of France, the empress See also: Eugenie, and the queens Isabella II., Christina (1886) and See also: Victoria (1906) of See also: Spain
.
The gift of the golden rose used almost invariably to accompany the See also: coronation of the See also: king of the
See also: Romans
.
If in any particular See also: year no one is considered worthy of the rose, it is laid up in the Vatican
.
Some of the most famous See also: Italian goldsmiths have been employed in making the earlier roses; and such intrinsically valuable See also: objects have, in See also: common with other priceless See also: historical examples of the goldsmiths' See also: art, found their way to the melting-pot
.
It is, therefore, not surprising that the number of existing historic specimens is very small
.
These include one of the 14th century in the See also: Cluny Museum, See also: Paris, believed to have been sent by Clement V. to the See also: prince-See also: bishop of See also: Basel; another conferred in 1458 on his native city of See also: Siena by Pope Pius II.; and the rose bestowed upon Siena by See also: Alexander VII., a son of that city, which is depicted in a procession in a
See also: fresco in the Palazzo Pubblico at Siena
.
The surviving roses of more recent date include that presented by Benedict XIII. to Capua cathedral; the rose conferred on the empress See also: Caroline by Pius VII., 1819, at Vienna; one of 1833 (Gregory XVI.) at St Mark's, Venice; and Pope Leo XIII.'s rose sent to Queen Christina of Spain,
which is at See also: Madrid
.
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