Elizabeth
of Portugal known as “The Holy Queen” was born Isabel of Aragon in
Zaragoza, Spain, the daughter of King Pedro III of Aragon and Queen
Constanza of Naples. She was named after her great aunt, St. Elizabeth
of Hungary.
From childhood, having received a most Christian
upbringing, she learned to practice self-discipline, mortification of
wayward tendencies, the avoidance of sin and the pursuit of virtue,
prayer and union with God’s holy will.
Beautiful, talented and
good, she was sought in marriage by several European monarchs, and was
ultimately betrothed by proxy at the age of thirteen to King Dinis of
Portugal.
A year and a half later she arrived in Portugal to
assume her responsibilities as queen. Although he was an able ruler, her
husband had an irate temper and sinful habits. While he respected and
revered his queen, he was unfaithful to her and had several illegitimate
children.
Elizabeth bore the conjugal betrayal with exquisite
patience and heroic magnanimity, praying continuously for her wayward
spouse. She and Dinis had two children: Constanza and Alfonso.
The
young queen started her day with Mass and prayer, and then proceeded to
see to the governance of her palace. In the free moments she sewed and
embroidered with her ladies for the poor, and personally tended to their
needs. Afternoons were dedicated to the care of the elderly, the poor
or anyone else in want.
Amazingly talented, Elizabeth mastered
several languages, sang beautifully, and enjoyed a remarkable
understanding of engineering and architecture. She herself designed and
oversaw the building of several churches, monasteries and hospitals,
developing her own “Elizabethan Style.”
One day while inspecting a
construction site, a girl approached and gave her a bouquet of flowers.
The queen then distributed the flowers, one to each of the workers
saying: “Let’s see if today you will work hard and well for this pay.”
The men reverently placed their flower each in his own satchel, only to
find, at the end of the day, a gold coin in place of the flower.
In
her city Elizabeth built hostels for the poor, a hospital, a house for
repentant wayward women, a free school for girls, and a hospice for
abandoned children. She built bridges in dangerous places, visited and
procured doctors for the ill, and endowed poor girls for the convent or
for marriage. She kept a beautiful tiara and wedding dress to lend to
poor brides so they could “shine” or their special day. Her goodness
went as far as raising her husband’s illegitimate children.
A
great devotee of the Immaculate Conception of Mary Most Holy centuries
before the dogma was declared; she obtained from the bishop of Coimbra
the establishment of the feast of the Immaculate Conception on December
8, which was afterwards observed with great solemnity throughout the
whole country.
A constant peacemaker, the holy queen ironed out
many a conflict between bellicose rulers and nobles. Twice she
reconciled her husband and son, on one occasion, even interposing her
person between them in the battlefield.
In the end, Dinis died a most repentant man. In one of his poems he left his ultimate tribute to his ultimate queen:
God made you without peer
In goodness of heart and speech
As your equal does not exist,
My love, my lady, I thus sing:
Had God so wished,
You’d made a great king.
After
her husband’s death, Elizabeth took the habit of a Franciscan Tertiary
and retired near a convent of Poor Clares which she had built,
dedicating herself to the sick and the poor.
The saintly queen
died at age sixty-five invoking Our Lady, and was canonized in 1625 by
Pope Urban VIII who had vowed not to canonize anyone during his
pontificate. He made the exception for Elizabeth at being promptly
healed of a serious illness after praying to her.
Monday, July 5, 2021
St. Elizabeth of Portugal
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