| Saint Andrew Corsini | |
|---|---|
| Bishop and thaumaturge | |
| Born | 1302, Florence, Italy |
| Died | January 6, 1374, at Fiesole |
| Canonized | Canonized 29 April 1629 by Pope Urban VIII |
| Major shrine | Florence |
| Feast | February 4 |
| Attributes | holding a cross, with a wolf and lamb at his feet, and floating above a battlefield on a cloud or a white palfrey |
| Patronage | Invoked against riots and civil disorder |
Saint Andrew (Andrea) Corsini (1302—January 6, 1373) was an Italian Carmelite and bishop of Fiesole.
On his return, Andrew became the "Apostle of Florence." He was regarded as a prophet and a thaumaturgus. Called to the nearby episcopal see of Fiesole, he fled, but was discovered by a child, and compelled to accept the honour.
He redoubled his austerities as a bishop, was lavish in his care of the poor, and was sought for everywhere as a peacemaker, notably at Bologna, whither he was sent as papal legate to heal the breach between the nobility and the people.
After twelve years in the episcopacy, he died in 1373 at the age of seventy-one.
Miracles were so multiplied at his death that Pope Eugene IV permitted a public cult immediately; but it was only in 1629 that Pope Urban VIII canonized him. His feast is kept on 4 February.
In the early eighteenth century, Pope Clement XII, born Lorenzo Corsini, erected in the Basilica of St. John Lateran a magnificent chapel dedicated to his 14th century kinsman.
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