Lepanto and the Rosary

DON VINCENZO writes:
On this day, the Church celebrates the Day of the Rosary, a day of prayer proclaimed in 1571 by the Pope Pius V after one of the decisive naval battles in history: Lepanto, fought in the Ionian Sea near today’s Greek city of Naupaktos, which adjoins both the Gulfs of Corinth and Patras.
On October 7, 1571, the boy shepherd, Michele Ghislieri, who would become Pope Pius V, recognizing the serious threat of Islamic expansion in the Mediterranean, and the boast of the Sultan Selim II that he “would stable his horses in St. Peter’s,” single handedly organized the Holy League, receiving no help from Germany, France or England, in which the naval forces of the Holy See, Venice and Spain were deployed against the much larger Turkish fleet. The pope attributed that victory by an outnumbered fleet the result of the presence of the Blessed Virgin Mary, and the saying of the Rosary; hence, he called that day Our Lady of Victory, which was later changed to the Feast of the Rosary by Pope Clement XIII. (more…)





