Tea at Trianon Forum
Always be polite. Courtesy is required of you.

Join the forum, it's quick and easy

Tea at Trianon Forum
Always be polite. Courtesy is required of you.
Tea at Trianon Forum
Would you like to react to this message? Create an account in a few clicks or log in to continue.
Tea with the Queen
Latest topics
» Looking for a good book about Madame Elisabeth
St. Elizabeth of Hungary, Duchess of Thuringia EmptySat Jul 10, 2021 5:43 pm by Elena

» Recognition by the Church of Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette
St. Elizabeth of Hungary, Duchess of Thuringia EmptySat Jul 10, 2021 5:38 pm by Elena

» Reposts: In Praise of Monarchy!
St. Elizabeth of Hungary, Duchess of Thuringia EmptyWed Apr 15, 2020 10:20 pm by ViveHenriV

» Remembering Louis XVI
St. Elizabeth of Hungary, Duchess of Thuringia EmptyWed Jan 22, 2020 10:04 am by ViveHenriV

» Mass for Louis XVI on live video
St. Elizabeth of Hungary, Duchess of Thuringia EmptyTue Jan 21, 2020 6:10 pm by ViveHenriV

» Judges 17:6
St. Elizabeth of Hungary, Duchess of Thuringia EmptyThu Jan 16, 2020 11:29 pm by ViveHenriV

» War in the Vendée/Guerre de Vendée
St. Elizabeth of Hungary, Duchess of Thuringia EmptyThu Jan 09, 2020 4:37 pm by ViveHenriV

» The Comte de Chambord (Henri V)
St. Elizabeth of Hungary, Duchess of Thuringia EmptySun Jan 05, 2020 5:24 pm by ViveHenriV

» Reflection: Les Membres et L'Estomac
St. Elizabeth of Hungary, Duchess of Thuringia EmptySun Jan 05, 2020 2:35 am by ViveHenriV

Who is online?
In total there are 3 users online :: 0 Registered, 0 Hidden and 3 Guests

None

[ View the whole list ]


Most users ever online was 253 on Sat Apr 10, 2021 3:06 am
Social bookmarking

Social bookmarking reddit      

Bookmark and share the address of Tea at Trianon Forum on your social bookmarking website

Banner art courtesy of The Graphics Fairy.

St. Elizabeth of Hungary, Duchess of Thuringia

3 posters

Go down

St. Elizabeth of Hungary, Duchess of Thuringia Empty St. Elizabeth of Hungary, Duchess of Thuringia

Post  Elena Thu Nov 17, 2011 1:41 pm

St. Elizabeth of Hungary, Duchess of Thuringia The+Charity+of+St.+Elizabeth+of+Hungary

On November 17 the Church gives us the feast of Saint Elizabeth of Hungary (1207-1231) who in her twenty-four years on earth embodied virtues which in today's world have almost ceased to exist: honesty, modesty, courage, chastity, self-denial and fidelity. She was not queen of Hungary, as many people think, but a princess. Her parents were the king and queen. Being royal in those days meant that your life was not your own. Marriages between two ruling families would form an alliance between countries and keep two countries from going to war. So from her infancy, Elizabeth was a living pledge of peace, since she was promised in marriage to the heir of Thuringia.

Elizabeth was sent to Germany at the age of four to be raised in the household of her betrothed, Louis of Thuringia, as was the practice of the time. It was heartbreaking for her parents to separate from their lively, dark-haired little girl, but they commended her to God and Our Lady. Louis' family disliked her, as was often the case with foreign royal brides, but he always cherished and protected his little fiancée. Elizabeth, although far from home, was a Magyar princess, and there was an intensity in her commitment to God and her husband which was repugnant to the placid Thuringians. They were married when Elisabeth was fourteen and Louis was about seventeen; he had inherited the dukedom of Thuringia from his father by then. Thuringia is roughly where Hesse-Darmstadt is now. In the thirteenth century it was a prosperous and powerful territory, although Louis was a duke, not a king.

Elizabeth had always shown a strong inclination toward piety as well as a great love of helping the needy and downtrodden. She opened a hospital for the poor in one of her castles and ran a soup kitchen. She was passionately in love with her husband, which is one of her most appealing aspects - she was a saint but she was also very much a woman. Louis truly loved his wife and sought for a fervent priest to guide her spiritual life. Unfortunately, her later confessor, the overzealous Conrad of Marburg, was excessively harsh with Elizabeth.

As Duchess, she established the Franciscan order in Thuringia and became herself a tertiary (with St. Louis of France, she is the patroness of tertiaries.) . Louis and Elizabeth had three children.

When Elizabeth was twenty, her husband died while on crusade. She ran shrieking through the castle, as if she had lost her mind. Her brother-in-law coveted the inheritance; he evicted Elizabeth and her three small children from their home. He forbade everyone in Thuringia to give them shelter. The little family had to hide in a pig pen from the rain. Poverty, loss and persecution did not embitter Elizabeth, as it would have embittered others, especially when it involved the suffering of her small children. She accepted everything from the hand of God.

Finally, someone got word to Elizabeth's father the King of Hungary, and he prevailed upon the Holy Roman Emperor to intervene. Elizabeth's lands were restored to her but she voluntarily chose holy poverty. After securing her children's welfare, she lived in a small room in the hospital she had founded and cared for the sick and the lepers. That would be like someone going to live with AIDS patients today.

Emperor Frederick begged for Elizabeth's hand in marriage but she refused. She died at the age of twenty-four and as she passed from this world a great light filled the room. Many miraculous cures were reported at her grave site. She was buried wearing the imperial crown which she had refused in life.

Thinking of St Elizabeth can help us when ever we feel afraid of poverty, or of being alone. Her spirit of humility and the renunciation of worldly honors can be imitated by all.
Elena
Elena
Admin

Posts : 1169
Join date : 2011-10-18
Location : East of the Sun, West of the Moon

http://www.emvidal.com/

Back to top Go down

St. Elizabeth of Hungary, Duchess of Thuringia Empty Re: St. Elizabeth of Hungary, Duchess of Thuringia

Post  Elena Thu Nov 17, 2011 2:57 pm

Elena
Elena
Admin

Posts : 1169
Join date : 2011-10-18
Location : East of the Sun, West of the Moon

http://www.emvidal.com/

Back to top Go down

St. Elizabeth of Hungary, Duchess of Thuringia Empty Re: St. Elizabeth of Hungary, Duchess of Thuringia

Post  Christina Croft Tue Nov 06, 2012 11:09 am

The connection between St. Elizabeth and St. Elizabeth of Russuia (Ella of Hesse) is remarkable. Not only was Ella named after this saint (who was her ancestor) but their approach to the poor was almost identical. I have a quotation for Elizabeth of Hungary which I am sure Ella applied in her own life:
"I want to be able to say to Jesus, 'you were hungry and I gave you food; you were naked and I clothed you; sick and I came to you; in prison and I visited you."
Ella did all these things (even visiting her husband's murderer in his prison cell!)

Christina Croft

Posts : 9
Join date : 2011-11-17
Location : Yorkshire, England

http://www.hilliardandcroft.com

Back to top Go down

St. Elizabeth of Hungary, Duchess of Thuringia Empty Re: St. Elizabeth of Hungary, Duchess of Thuringia

Post  May Tue Nov 06, 2012 1:17 pm

Queen Elisabeth of Belgium was also a descendant and admirer of Elizabeth of Hungary. In her memoirs, Queen Elisabeth's daughter Maria José mentions that her mother gave her Montalembert's biography of St. Elizabeth to read.
May
May

Posts : 488
Join date : 2011-10-24
Location : United States

http://crossoflaeken.blogspot.com

Back to top Go down

St. Elizabeth of Hungary, Duchess of Thuringia Empty Re: St. Elizabeth of Hungary, Duchess of Thuringia

Post  Sponsored content


Sponsored content


Back to top Go down

Back to top

- Similar topics

 
Permissions in this forum:
You cannot reply to topics in this forum