HOT✌🏼 Wholesale Art, Inspired by Faith

Frances Xavier Cabrini

16,00  83,00  exc. VAT
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Xavière Cabrini-Santa Francisca Javier Cabrini – Francesca Saverio Cabrini – Santa Francisca Cabrini

Dimensions: 11 x 8 cm – 4.33”x3.14”in , 15 x 11 cm – 5.9”x4.33”in , 21 x 15 cm – 8.3”x5.9”in , 27 x 21 cm – 10.6” X8.3”in – 42 x 32 cm – 16.5“x12.60”in

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TitleRangeSale price
Total items5 - 10 15,20 
Total items11 - 30 13,60 
Total items31 - 60 12,00 
Total items61 - 150 10,40 
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Estimated Delivery:
21 - 28 Jul, 2025
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Description

This Icon is a copy of the Hagiography (Holy Card Printing) that we have made in our Laboratory and we reserve the exclusive rights to reproduce these images, which are protected by copyright.

St. Frances Xavier Cabrini (born July 15, 1850, Sant’Angelo Lodigiano, Lombardy [Italy] died December 22, 1917, Chicago, Illinois, U.S.; canonized July 7, 1946; feast day November 13) was the Italian-born founder of the Missionary Sisters of the Sacred Heart and the first United States citizen to be canonized. She is revered as the patron saint of immigrants.
Maria Cabrini was the youngest of 13 children, only 4 of whom survived to adulthood. She was determined from her childhood to make religious work her life’s vocation. After teaching in Italy, in Vidardo (1872–74), she was appointed supervisor of an orphanage in Codogno (1874). In 1877 she took her vows and changed her name in honor of St. Francis Xavier, the patron saint of missionaries, and soon afterward she became known as Mother Cabrini.
She founded the Missionary Sisters of the Sacred Heart in 1880, which served orphans and offered a day school. She planned to found a convent in China, but Pope Leo XIII directed her to “go west, not east,” and she sailed with a small group of sisters for the United States in 1889. Their work in the United States was to be concentrated among Italian immigrants, whose communities were discriminated against and neglected including by American Catholic clergy because of anti-Italian and anti-immigrant attitudes that prevailed at the time. This journey was the first in a series that took her through the Americas and into Europe. She became a naturalized citizen of the United States in 1909. Although plagued by ill health most of the time, Mother Cabrini established 67 houses one for each year of her life in such cities as Buenos Aires, Paris, Madrid, and Rio de Janeiro. She also founded several schools, hospitals, and orphanages.
The canonization process to make Mother Cabrini a Roman Catholic saint was expedited, beginning only 11 years after her death, when two miracles were attributed to her. She was beatified the second stage in the canonization process in 1938 by Pope Pius XI and was declared a saint in 1946 by Pope Pius XII. In 1950 she was named the universal patroness of immigrants, though she is also regarded as the patron saint of hospital administrators and impossible causes. A national shrine devoted to Mother Cabrini is located in Chicago, the city where she died.

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