Displaying items by tag: Edizioni Carmelitane
Presentation of a book on Fr. Serafino Maria Potenza
On Thursday, January 18, 2024, at 6 p.m., at the Centro Internazionale Sant'Alberto (Rome), the volume L'attività di padre Serafino Maria Potenza (1697-1763) attraverso i documenti d'Archivio, by Simona Durante, published by Edizioni Carmelitane, will be presented.
Father Serafino Maria Potenza's importance to the Carmelite Order is particularly reflected during his work as postulator general and in having dedicated his life to collecting documents related to the history of the Order.
Fr. Vincenzo Criscuolo, ofmcap, Relator General, dicastery of the Causes of Saints, and Prof. Luca Carboni, archivist, from the Vatican Apostolic Archives, will speak at the presentation.
The author, Dr. Simona Durante, will also intervene.
For further study and purchase of the publication, see the Edizioni Carmelitane website.
CISA and Edizioni Carmelitane Host Book Presentation
The Institutum Carmelitanum and Edizioni Carmelitane will be hosting a presentation of the book La demolita chiesa di S. Nicola dei Cesarini a Roma (The Demolished Church of S. Nicola dei Cesarini in Rome) at Centro Internazionale San’ Alberto on Wednesday, October 25, 2023, at 17:45.
See the latest publications of Edizioni Carmelitane at https://edizionicarmelitane.org/
Recently Published Books
New Meditation on Gospel Mercy, the Peace of Christ, and Obedience to God
Let Yourself Be Loved is a wonderful contribution towards exploring words and themes that are central to the Gospel message. Highlighted are such matters as the facts that mercy in the gospel is an amazingly beautiful thing that bears little resemblance to what the word means outside of gospel contexts; that the peace of Christ is much more than the absence of conflict and/or any of the other dictionary definitions of the English word ‘peace’; and that the notion of obedience to God is something far richer than anything we normally attribute to obedience in other contexts.
In English | 81 pages
Write to This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. for more informationNew Book Published on Iconography of Carmelite Women
Edizioni Carmelitane Editions published a new book by Ruggiero Doronzo— Iconografia carmelitana al femminile nelle incisioni dell’Archivio Generale dell’Ordine dei Carmelitani di Roma fra Seicento e Settecento. To learn more about this work, we asked the author three questions:
We know that you are involved in the history of Apulian art and have taught a course on the subject at the University of Bari. You also published several essays and monographs on painting and sculpture in southern Italy in the modern period. How did the idea for this volume on Carmelite iconography come about?
This book is the result of research commissioned by the General Archives of the Carmelites entitled: Engravers and Painters for the Virgin of Mount Carmel, Saints and Venerables of the Carmelite Order. These are from Sister Isabella Piccini, Sebastiano Conca, and other artists active between the second half of the seventeenth century and the early eighteenth century. While initially the study was to focus on the engravings by a few artistic personalities, as the research progressed, new discoveries continued to be made. Some were seemingly insignificant but others were extraordinarily important in order to broaden the iconographic and iconological analysis to all engravings depicting the female subjects of the Carmelite Order.
The book we have in our hands is a real catalog. How did you plan to set it up?
To make the work easier to consult, the criterion used in setting up the volume takes into account the subject and the chronology of the print. These are translations or d'aprés prints, made on a source model, which was almost always a painting. Then there are “reproduction” prints derived solely from the drawings. When signatures were to be placed at the bottom of the print, that of the author was placed on the left, according to a hierarchical order and in a better position, while the engraver's signature was on the right. The terms pinxit, invenit, and delineavit thus indicate the author of the original and the intellectual and creative person responsible. Facit and sculpsit refer to the engraver. For each engraving, in fact, the name of the draughtsman or painter, that of the engraver, the subject, the technique, the measurements, any inscriptions, the current inventory number and the bibliography of reference (if it is already published) are indicated. This is followed by an iconographic and iconological examination of the image. It was decided to draw up also a biographical profile of the draughtsman and the burinist, their field of reference, as well as to offer some indication of the commissioner where such is indicated.
The subjects represented include Our Lady of Mount Carmel, the great saints Teresa of Avila and Mary Magdalene de' Pazzi, and twenty-three blessed and venerable women. Which authors and engravings have impressed you most?
On the basis of philological analysis, it appears that the prints were executed by engravers active in Italy, Flanders, Spain, Bavaria, and Poland. But there are some signed by authors who have escaped the major repertories or others who are anonymous. But they still pose interesting questions both about their identification and their place in the history of engraving. I was most impressed by those for which I was able to find the model they started with. This was the case with an engraving by Leonardo Germo depicting the Virgin of Mount Carmel appearing to Antonio Chiavassa. There is also one by Gaetano Bianchi reproducing a painting of the Virgin preserved in the sanctuary of the Madonna delle Grazie at Colletto near Pinerolo. I also find great beauty in the engravings of Abraham van Diepenbeeck, a Flemish artist. He is capable of conveying theological and Marian messages through images drawn with meticulous graphic skill.
Available in Spanish the book 'The Price of Truth' on St. Titus
The Price of Truth: Titus Brandsma, Carmelite (in Spanish)
by Miguel Maria Arribas, O. Carm.
The biography of the Church's most recent martyr--a dangerous friar according to the Nazis--Fr. Arribas succeeds in capturing the heart and soul of St. Titus Brandsma's lessons for us today. We all know the life of Titus, but in this book Fr. Arribas explores the documentation behind the canonization process to show why Titus is so important for today.
A simple and cordial Carmelite, a multi-faceted priest who was at times a mystic, a passionate journalist, a university rector and, throughout his life, a driven witness for Christ to the point of giving his own life for the truth.
The author, now deceased, traveled to the Netherlands and Germany, to the places of birth, life and death of St. Titus, to better understand this "martyr of freedom of expression".
Edizioni Publishes 'Meditations' of John of St. Samson
A book of 30 meditations by John of St. Samson inviting us to listen in on his prayers of aspiration as the Church makes its way through the liturgical year and through the various Mysteries of Christ and His Church. John of St. Samson was a French Carmelite and mystic. He is known as the soul of the Touraine Reform of the Carmelite Order, which stressed prayer, silence, and solitude.
John was blind from the age of three after contracting smallpox and receiving poor medical treatment for the disease. He insisted very strongly on the mystical devotion of the Carmelites. After a series of healings word spread and the local bishop asked his theologian his opinion of the healings. The theologian replied, "If people had the faith of Br. John, and lived as authentically as he, the gift of healing the sick would be far more common."
Donatien of St. Nicholas, a disciple and editor of his works "it is certain that this illuminated blind brother has been chosen and given to us by God to be the teacher and director of the spiritual life of our Reform." Donatien later wrote "his face was frequently beheld to be divinely radiant, resplendent with as it were some luminous ray, as I myself and other very trustworthy brothers have witnessed." John of St. Samson has been referred to as the "French John of the Cross" by students of Christian mysticism.
The work is expertly translated from the French by Carmelite nun Sr. Veronica of the Immaculate Heart of Mary of the Wahpeton cloistered Carmel. In his preface to the book, Fr. Charlò Camilleri writes "Notwithstanding the fact that blindness impeded him from using visual imagery to clarify his ideas, and that the texts are generally full of crowded ideas, digressions, and loosely connected concepts, his doctrine is sound and inspires the reader to live radically the call to divine transformation."




















