Much loved saint was immortalised in song
Fireworks over the harbour at Syracuse during celebrations of the Festa di Santa Lucia |
La festa di Santa Lucia - St Lucy’s Day - will be celebrated
all over Italy today.
According to tradition, Santa Lucia comes down from the sky
with a cart and a donkey and distributes gifts to all the children who have
been good, while all the naughty children receive only a piece of coal.
Santa Lucia is the patron saint of the city of Syracuse in
Sicily. Today, a silver statue of the saint containing her relics will be
paraded through the streets before being returned to the Cathedral.
In Sicilian folklore there is a legend that a famine ended
on Santa Lucia’s feast day when ships loaded with grain entered the harbour.
Santa Lucia is also popular with children in parts of
northern Italy. In Bergamo, Brescia, Cremona, Lodi and Mantua in Lombardy, and
also parts of the Veneto, Trentino, Friuli and Emilia-Romagna, the children
will have been expecting the saint to arrive with presents during the night.
A silver statue of Santa Lucia is borne through the streets of Syracuse on December 13 each year |
According to tradition she arrives with her donkey and her
escort, Castaldo. Children leave coffee for Santa Lucia, a carrot for the
donkey and a glass of wine for Castaldo and they believe they must not watch
the saint delivering her gifts.
Santa Lucia is believed to have been a third century
Christian woman who took food to other Christians hiding in the catacombs in
Rome. She wore a candle-lit wreath on her head to light her way in order to
leave her hands free to carry as much food to them as possible. It is believed
she died as a martyr on 13 December 304 AD.
An inscription dating from the fourth century was found in
Syracuse mentioning the Festa di Santa Lucia. There it is believed she was a
Sicilian noble woman who was killed for refusing to renounce her Christian
beliefs.
Children in Bergamo leave letters for Santa Lucia in the way British children write to Santa Claus |
Travel tip:
A pre-Christmas tradition for children in Bergamo is to
visit the church of the Madonna dello Spasimo in the Città Bassa, lower town, with letters
detailing what they would like to receive for Christmas. The Church of San
Spasimo, in Via XX Settembre at the hub of the shopping area, is also known
locally as the church of Santa Lucia because the local children lay letters containing their Christmas wish lists next to the altar containing the statue of the Blessed Virgin of Spasimo, also known as Santa Lucia.
The Castel dell'Ovo and the harbour at Santa Lucia in Naples |
Travel tip:
An area in the centre of Naples, between the Royal Palace
and Borgo Marinari, the site of the Castel dell’Ovo, is known as Santa Lucia.
The first settlement there was established by the Greeks, but nowadays the area
is known for good hotels, fish restaurants and sailing clubs. The famous
Neapolitan song, Santa Lucia, was about a boatman issuing an invitation to go
out in his boat to enjoy the cool of the evening. The song made the picturesque
waterfront district of Naples famous when it was recorded at the beginning of
the 20th century by Enrico Caruso, an opera singer from Naples.