A Jacobite Gazetteer - Lazio

Monte Porzio Catone


The town of Monte Porzio Catone is located atop a hill about 25 kilometres south-east of Rome, some four kilometres east of Frascati.

Chiesa di San Gregorio Magno

Former School for Girls

Eremo dei Camaldolesi

The town is easily accessible by bus from Frascati. The Camaldolese Hermitage lies in a valley between Frascati and the hill-top town centre of Monte Porzio Catone.


Chiesa di San Gregorio Magno

Facade
Facade

The Chiesa di San Gregorio Magno, which dominates the view of the town from the valley below, lies at the far end of the old town from the main square. To reach it, one enters the old town from the main square through the arch below Palazzo Borghese and goes straight ahead.

The church was dedicated in 1766 by Henry, Cardinal Duke of York (later King Henry IX and I). A Latin inscription formerly on the interior wall of the facade recorded the fact: 1

D. O. M. TEMPLUM IN HONOREM D. GREGORII MAGNI PAPAE PRIMI A IOAN. BAPTA BURGHESIO SULMONIS PRINCIPE CENTUM FERME ABHINC ANNIS RESTITUTUM A FUNDAMENTIS AMPLIATUM EXORCATUMQUE MARCO ANTONIO BURGHESIO SULMONIS PRINCIPE PATRONO POSTULANTE HENRICUS EPISCOPUS TUSCULANUS S. R. E. VICE CANCELLARIUS CARDINALIS DUX EBORACENSIS SOLEMNI RITU CONSECRAVIT KAL. JUNIIS AN. DNI MDCCLXVI TRANSLATAQUE ANNIVERSARIA EJUSDEM CONSECRATIONIS MEMORIA AD DOMINICAM SECUNDUM OCTOBRIS IPSUM EO DIE VISITANTIBUS INDULGENTIAM CENTUM DIERUM CONCESSIT CLEMENTE XIV PONTIF. MAXIMO.

Under the altar in the chapel on the left side of the church are preserved the relics of Saint Laconilla which Henry brought to the church in 1783. On the right wall of the chapel there is a Latin inscription:

Chapel of St. Laconilla
Chapel of St. Laconilla
SANCTAE LACONILLAE MARTYRIS CORPUS
IN COEMETERIO S: CYRIACAE
PROPRIO NOMINE IN MARMOREA TABULA
INDICATO REPERTUM
ET A IOHANNE DOMINICO SEGARELLI ORD: S: AVGUSTINI
APOSTOLICI SACRARII PRO PRAEFECTO
PATRIO TEMPLO DONO DATUM
HENRICUS EPISCOPUS TUSCULANUS CARD: DUX EBORACENSIS
S: R: E: VICE=CANCELLARIVS
IIII IDUS OCTOBRIS ANNI DOMINI MDCCLXXXIII
SOLEMNI ECCLESIAE RITU TRANSLATIONE PERACTA
SUB HAC ARA EA DIE AB IPSO CONSECRATA
PROPRIIS MANIBUS COLLOCAVIT
ET AD RECOLENDAM MARTYRIS MEMORIAM
PIO VI SUMMO PONTEFICE ANNUENTE
DIEM EAMDEM CONSTITVIT
Inscription in St. Laconilla's Chapel
Inscription in St. Laconilla's Chapel

On the right side of the church towards the back is a small chapel, the Oratory of Saint Antoninus, a saint from Apamea in Syria. Henry acquired a part of the saint's right shoulder from Spain and brought it to Monte Porzio Catone in 1772 on the occasion of the consecration of the oratory.

Notes

1 Alessandro Atti, Il Cardinale Duca di York, Vescovo della Città e Diocesi di Frascati: Cenni Storici (Rome: Fratelli Pallotta, 1868), 40. Above the main door on the inside of the facade there is now (2002) an organ-casing. It is possible that the inscription still survives behind the organ, but is no longer visible.


Former School for Girls

Inscription
Inscription

At Via Giuseppe Verdi 10, Henry, Cardinal Duke of York (later King Henry IX and I), established a school for young girls.

To reach Via Giuseppe Verdi, one enters the old town from the main square through the arch below Palazzo Borghese. He turns left and goes to the end of the street, where he turns right onto Via Giuseppe Verdi. A little ways down on the right side there is a Latin inscription high up on the wall of what is today a very unimpressive building:

HENRICVS CARD. DVX EBORAC.
EPISC. TVSCVL. S.R.E. VICECANC.
PVELLIS PIETATE ET ARTIBVS
INSTITVENDIS
A. D. MDCCLXXIII
 
Henry, Cardinal Duke of York,
Bishop of Frascati, Vice-Chancellor of the Holy Roman Church,
for the education
of young girls in piety and the useful arts,
in the year of our Lord 1773.

This was one of several schools established by Henry. There is another in Velletri.


Eremo dei Camaldolesi

The Camaldolese Monastery (Sacro Eremo Tuscolano degli Eremiti Camaldoesi di Montecorona) is technically located in the commune of Monte Porzio Catone, although historically it was part of Frascati.

The monastery was often visited by King James III and VIII. 1 Henry, Cardinal Duke of York (later King Henry IX and I) re-consecrated the church in 1772. A Latin inscription on the inside wall of the facade above the main entrance records the fact:

D. O. M.
HENRICO EPISCOPO TUSCULANO
CARDINALI DUCI EBORACENSI
S. R. E. VICE-CANCELLARIO
QUOD
ECCLESIAM HANC DEO IN HONOREM
S. ROMUALDI ABBATIS
EXIMIA PIETATE, SOLEMNI RITU DICAVERIT
SACRASQVE INDULGENTIAS DE MORE CONCESSERIT
DIE XXV OCTOBRIS MDCCLXXII
CAMALDULENSES ÆTERNUM POSUERE
 
To the glory of Almighty God,
[and] to Henry, Bishop of Frascati,
Cardinal Duke of York,
Vice-Chancellor of the Holy Roman Church,
on account of the fact that,
with extraordinary devotion and solemn rites,
he dedicated this church to God in honour
of Saint Romuald the Abbot
and, according to the custom, granted a holy indulgence,
October 25, 1772:
the Camaldolese placed [this monument] for eternity.

Facade
Facade
Inscription
Inscription

According to several published works Henry's coat-of arms can be seen over the entrance to one of the buildings which flanks the church. In the major historical work about the hermitage there is a photograph with the caption, "Stemma del Cardinale Enrico Duca di York Vescovo di Frascati, disegnato sulla parete dell' ingresso dell' appartamento detto pontificio" (Coat-of-arms of Henry, Cardinal Duke of York, Bishop of Frascati, painted on the wall of the entrance to the so-called pontifical apartment). But the illustration shows the coat-of-arms of Pope Pius IX. 2 I have not been able to determine if Henry's coat-of-arms are in fact anywhere displayed in the monastery.

King Charles Emanuel IV of Sardinia (later King Charles IV) and his wife Queen Marie Clotilde visited the hermitage in late September or early October 1800. 3

The monastery is located several kilometres from the centre of Frascati. If one takes Via del Tuscolo, the road soon begins to climb the mountain towards the summit with the site of the ancient town of Tusculum. After about three kilometres a road branches off to the left towards the town of Monte Porzio Catone. From here there are good views of the monastery which lies on the other side of a small valley. The road towards Monte Porzio Catone descends into this valley. On the right is a driveway with a black iron gate. A dirt road leads to a formerly rather grand entrance to the monastery up a long paved and tree-lined drive.

The monastery (including the church) is not open to tourists; it is only open for devotional visits Monday to Friday from 8.15 a.m. to 12.00 noon and Saturday from 8.15 a.m. to 12.00 noon and from 3.00 p.m. to 5.00 p.m. 4 Only men may enter the monastery (including the church).

Via del Tuscolo, 45. Telephone: 39.06.9449006.

Notes

1 Villa e Paese: Dimore Nobili del Tuscolo e di Marino (Rome: De Luca, 1980), 246.

2 Luigi Devoti, L'Eremo Tusculano e la Villa detta dei Furii (Frascati, Italy: Associazione Tuscolana "Amici di Frascati", 1981), 225.

3 Vicomtesse de Beausire-Seyssel, Madame Clotilde de France, Reine de Sardaigne, 1759-1802 (Paris: Honoré Champion, 1926), 83. Queen Marie Clotilde wrote about the visit in a letter to one of her brothers (either Louis XVIII or Charles X of France); she described the hermitage as "bien moins grand et moins beau que les nôtres" (somewhat smaller and less lovely than our own [in France]).

4 A sign at the entrance of the monastery reads, "Non si fanno visite turistiche né devozionali".

Image 1 (Facade): © Noel S. McFerran 2001.

Image 2 (Inscription): © Noel S. McFerran 2002.


This page is maintained by Noel S. McFerran (noel.mcferran@rogers.com) and was last updated July 17, 2005.
© Noel S. McFerran 2000-2005.