 João
 Mendes da Silva, better known as the Blessed Amadeus of Portugal, was 
born in 1420 in Campo Maior on the eastern side of the country. The 
youngest son of twelve children, he was closely related to the Counts of
 Vila Real and Viana do Alentejo, whose lands lay near the border of 
Portugal and Spain. St. Beatriz da Silva, the foundress of the Order of 
the Immaculate Conception, was one of his sisters, and a strong devotion
 to this prerogative of Our Lady – centuries before it was defined as a 
dogma – was a profound spiritual characteristic they both shared.
João
 Mendes da Silva, better known as the Blessed Amadeus of Portugal, was 
born in 1420 in Campo Maior on the eastern side of the country. The 
youngest son of twelve children, he was closely related to the Counts of
 Vila Real and Viana do Alentejo, whose lands lay near the border of 
Portugal and Spain. St. Beatriz da Silva, the foundress of the Order of 
the Immaculate Conception, was one of his sisters, and a strong devotion
 to this prerogative of Our Lady – centuries before it was defined as a 
dogma – was a profound spiritual characteristic they both shared.
João
 was married very young, but soon after entered the Hieronymite 
monastery of Santa Maria de Guadalupe in Spain, where he spent about ten
 years. Inspired by a vision of the Immaculate Conception of Mary Most 
Holy to join the Franciscans, he sought admission to their friary in 
Ubeda in Lombardy where he entered as a lay brother in 1452 and took the
 name of Amadeus.
Initially not well received by his confreres, 
some of whom took him for a religious fraud, he was widely persecuted 
within the Order bearing all the humiliations inflicted upon him with 
great patience. He was ordained to the priesthood in 1459 at the 
insistence of his superiors. Amadeus subsequently became renowned 
throughout the houses of the Order for his holiness and miracles.
In
 1469, he founded the Friary of Notre Dame de la Paix under the 
protection of the Archbishop of Milan. This friary soon became the 
center of a Franciscan reform which eventually spread throughout Italy 
and beyond. When the Minister General of the Franciscan Order, Francesco
 della Rovere, was elected to the throne of Peter as Pope Sixtus IV, he 
summoned Amadeus to Rome to be his confessor and counselor.
The 
reform of the Franciscan Order begun by St. Amadeus led to his founding 
of a distinct branch of the Friars Minor which was ultimately named 
after him. Amadeus later returned to Milan, where he died in 1482.
Monday, August 9, 2021
Bl. Amadeus of Portugal
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