Restituta

For the 20th-century saint, see Maria Restituta Kafka.
Saint Restituta

Depiction of Restituta.
Born ?
Carthage or Bizerte, (Tunisia)
Died 255 or 304
Tunisia
Venerated in Roman Catholic Church
Eastern Orthodox Church
Feast May 17
Patronage Lacco Ameno

Saint Restituta (Santa Restituta of Africa – dead in 255 or 304) is a saint and martyr of the Roman Catholic[1] and Eastern Orthodox[2] Churches.

Biography

She was said to be born at Carthage or at Teniza (today known as Ras Djebel, Tunisia) and became a martyr under Diocletian. The exact place and time of her martyrdom lacks precise historical data.[3] She is sometimes considered one of the Martyrs of Abitina, a group of North African martyrs that incluyes Dativus, Saturninus, and others.[3]

Legend

A later medieval legend, recounted by Pietro Suddiacono in the 10th century[4] and similar to legends associated with Saints Devota, Reparata, and Torpes of Pisa, states that after being horribly tortured, Restituta was placed in a blazing boat loaded with oakum and resin. Restituta was unharmed by the fire, and asked for aid from God. God sent an angel to guide her boat to the island of Aenaria (present-day Ischia), and she landed at the present-day site of San Montano. The legend further states that a local Christian woman named Lucina had dreamt of the angel and the boat. When she walked to the beach, she found the resplendent and incorrupt body of Restituta, who was now dead. Lucina gathered the population together and the saint was solemnly buried at the foot of Monte Vico in Lacco Ameno, where a paleochristian basilica was dedicated to her, and is now the site of a sanctuary dedicated to her.[3]

Veneration

However, the spread of her cult from North Africa to Italy is historically associated with the expulsion of Catholics from North Africa by Genseric, king of the Vandals, who followed the Arian sect. Her relics may have been brought to Naples in the fifth century by Gaudiosus of Naples when he was exiled from North Africa.[5]

A church, Santa Restituta, was built in her honour in Naples in the sixth century.

The church was then incorporated into the Cathedral of Naples built on the same site in the 13th century.

She is the patron saint of Lacco Ameno.[6] She is especially venerated on the island of Ischia and at Lacco Ameno, where she is celebrated in a three-day celebration running from May 16 to May 18.[5]

A crypt associated with Restituta can be found at Cagliari, in the neighborhood of Stampace.[3]

Lamartine, inspired by the legend of the saint, composed in 1842 “Le lis du golfe de Santa Restituta dans l’ìle d’Ischia.”[3]

See also

References

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