Saints Baronce et
Dizier, ermites
A la fin du VIIème
siècle, après quelques années de mariage, Baronce se retira à l’abbaye de
Saint-Cyran, non loin de Nevers ou de Lorney près de Bourges. Désirant devenir
ermite, il se rendit en Italie à Montalbano en Toscane. En compagnie d'un autre
moine, Dizier, il mena une vie érémitique d'une extrême austérité. Bien que
cachés, ils attirèrent des disciples qui les considérèrent comme des saints, même
de leur vivant.
Saints Baronce et Dizier
Ermites (+ v.
700)
Après quelques années de
mariage, Baronce se retira dans l’abbaye de Saint-Cyran non loin de Nevers ou
de Lorney près de Bourges. Désirant devenir ermite, il se rendit en Italie à
Montalbano en Toscane. En compagnie d'un autre moine, Dizier, il mena une vie
érémitique d'une extrême austérité. Bien que cachés, ils attirèrent des
disciples qui les considérèrent comme des saints, même de leur vivant.
À Montalbano en Toscane,
au VIIe siècle, les saints Baront et Dizier, ermites.
Martyrologe romain
SOURCE : http://nominis.cef.fr/contenus/saint/10771/Saints-Baronce-et-Dizier.html
Book of Saints – Barontius and
Desiderius
Article
BARONTIUS and DESIDERIUS
(Saints) (May 25) Hermits. (8th century) Saint Barontius was a married French
nobleman of Berri, who, together with his son, leaving the Court of King
Thierry II, retired into the Abbey of Saint Cyran near Nevers. He afterwards
migrated into Italy and took up the life of a hermit in the hill country near
Pistoja in Tuscany. He was joined by Saint Desiderius and others. He died in
A.D. 700, or a year or two later.
MLA
Citation
Monks of Ramsgate.
“Barontius and Desiderius”. Book of Saints, 1921. CatholicSaints.Info. 18
August 2012.
Web. 1 April 2023.
<http://catholicsaints.info/book-of-saints-barontius-and-desiderius/>
SOURCE : https://catholicsaints.info/book-of-saints-barontius-and-desiderius/
Also
known as
Barontus
Baronce
Baronto
Baronzio
Profile
Member of the French nobility
and a courtier to King Theirry
II. Married and
a father.
Retired to become a monk at
Lonrey, France.
After receiving a vision, he moved to become a hermit near Pistoia, Italy.
Friend of Saint Desiderius
of Pistoia.
c.725
Additional
Information
Book
of Saints, by the Monks of
Ramsgate
books
Our Sunday Visitor’s Encyclopedia of Saints
other
sites in english
sitios
en español
Martirologio Romano, 2001 edición
fonti
in italiano
nettsteder
i norsk
MLA
Citation
“Saint Barontius of
Pistoia“. CatholicSaints.Info. 26 March 2017. Web. 1 April 2023.
<https://catholicsaints.info/saint-barontius-of-pistoia/>
SOURCE : https://catholicsaints.info/saint-barontius-of-pistoia/
Also
known as
Dizier
Desiderio
Profile
Hermit at Pistoia, Italy.
Friend of Saint Barontius
of Pistoia.
Additional
Information
Book
of Saints, by the Monks of
Ramsgate
books
Our Sunday Visitor’s Encyclopedia of Saints
other
sites in english
sitios
en español
Martirologio Romano, 2001 edición
fonti
in italiano
nettsteder
i norsk
MLA
Citation
“Saint Desiderius of
Pistoia“. CatholicSaints.Info. 26 March 2017. Web. 1 April 2023.
<https://catholicsaints.info/saint-desiderius-of-pistoia/>
SOURCE : https://catholicsaints.info/saint-desiderius-of-pistoia/
Barontius (Barontus) & Desiderius, OSB Monks (RM)
Died c. 725. Barontius was a gentleman of Berry who, together with his son,
became a monk at Lonrey in the diocese of Bourges. As a result of a vision, he
asked permission to become a hermit, set out for Italy, and established himself
in the district of Pistoia. There he lived a most austere life with another
saintly monk, Desiderius (Attwater2, Benedictines).
SOURCE : https://web.archive.org/web/20120222045058/http://www.saintpatrickdc.org/ss/0325.shtml
The Vision of Barontus, French,
678–79 [Bib.]
The Vision of Barontus
(Visio Baronti Monachi Longoretensis) is an eighth–century Latin prose vision
of heaven and hell approximately 4700 words long. The vision itself is dated 25
March 678 or 679, and the author claims to be the visionary in what is one of
the more fascinating and dramatic visions of the otherworld.
Barontus, a monk in
the monastery of St. Peter at Longoreto (Saint–Cyran near Bourges), who has
repented of his past life and joined a monastery, falls ill. His fellow monks
keep watch over him while his soul has left his body. When he finally recovers,
he is asked to tell of his vision, which he then proceeds to do, explaining how
he was immediately beset by devils who wanted to take him to hell, but he was
protected by the angel Raphael who brought him on a journey through heaven
where he might be judged before the devils made off with him.
Barontus and Raphael
visit four levels of heaven, and Barontus repeatedly meets there people he has
known, especially monks from his monastery, while the devils keep up a constant
tug-of-war for Barontus. Finally Raphael sends another angel to bring St. Peter
to them. Peter arrives and asks the devils what charges they have against this
soul, and they charge Barontus with having three wives. Barontus admits to the
charge, but the devils had by now become so annoying to everyone that Peter
whacks them with his keys and sends them scurrying. He then decides to send
Barontus back to earth via hell, so that Barontus can consider reforming his
life.
Needing a guide,
Frannoaldo is chosen on the condition that Barontus take particular care of
this soul’s tomb near the door of their church. They leave heaven with Barontus
warned to give a certain sum to the poor and to protect himself with the phrase
“Gloria a te, O Dio.” In hell he sees sinners of every kind, all joined
together suffering. Although the terrain of hell is not carefully described,
the souls that Barontus meets who are suffering in hell are mentioned. Finally
Barontus returns to his cell where he speaks with his fellow monks.
The vision closes with a
statement by the author, allegedly Barontus, attesting to the veracity of this
vision.
SOURCE : http://www.hell-on-line.org/TextsJC.html#_1000__1500_CE
The Vision of Barontus, French,
678–79
SOURCES
AS 3 March 25,
570–74. Edition of Latin vision preceded by commentary (567–69).
Ciccarese, 236–75.
Latin text based on MGH (130)
with facing Italian translation. Includes brief introduction on the nature of
this work with regard to the others in the collection. Provides some notes to
the text.
Hillgarth, J.N., Christianity and Paganism,
350–750 (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1986; rev.
ed. of The conversion of Western Europe, 350-750 (Englewood Cliffs,
N.J. : Prentice-Hall, 1969)), 195–204. English translation.
MGH SRM 5:368–94.
Annotated critical edition of Latin text. Introduction by W. Levison includes
discussion of mss, brief description of vision, comparison to other visions.
STUDIES
Carozzi, Claude, Le
Voyage de l’âme dans l’au-delà d’après la littérature latine, Ve-XIIIe siècle Le Voyage de
l’âme dans l’au-delà d’après la littérature latine, Ve-XIIIe siècle, Collection
de l’Ecole Francaise de Rome, 189 (Rome: École Française de Rome, 1994),
139–86.
Ciccarese, Maria Pia. “La
‘Visio Baronti’ nella tradizione letteraria delle visiones dell’aldilá.” Romano
Barbarica 6. Rome: Herder, 1981–82, 25–52. Discusses the vision genre as
related to the visions in the Dialogues of Gregory the Great and
beginning in the seventh century. Describes the VB as a more original
vision displaying imagination and narrative talent, while preserving the
traditional style and themes of this genre.
Contreni, John J., “Building Mansions in Heaven:
The Visio Baronti, Archangel Raphael, and a Carolingian King,” Speculum 78.3
(2003): 673–706.
Hen, Yitzak, “The
Structure and Aims of the Visio Baronti,” in Journal of Theological
Studies 47 (1996): 477–97.
Levison, Wilhelm, “Die
Politik in den Jeneseitsvisionen des frühen Mittelalters,” in idem, Aus rheinischer und
frankische Frühzeit (Düsseldorf: Verlag L. Schwann, 1948), 229–46. [Originally
published in Festgabe Friedrich von Bezold (Bonn, 1921), 81–100.]
Lucey-Roper,
Michelle, “The Visio
Baronti in Its Early Medieval Context” (PhD thesis, University of
Oxford, 2000). A study of early medieval conceptions of the other world and the
historical context in which visionary accounts were produced. Chapter 1: an
introduction to ideas of the other world and visionary experiences; Chapter 2:
medieval and modern responses to visions. Chapter 3: manuscript tradition of
the VB; Chapter 4 dating of the VB to the seventh century; chapter 5 treats the
VB in its seventh-century monastic context; Chapter 6 considers the Carolingian
interest in the VB; Chapter 7 an examination of the illustrations in the
ninth-century St Petersburg manuscript.
Palmer, James T. The Apocalypse in the Early
Middle Ages (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2014), 86–87.
SOURCE : http://www.hell-on-line.org/BibJC2.html#BibBarontus
Santi Baronto (Baronzio) e Desiderio Eremiti
a Pistoia
sec. VII
Martirologio
Romano: Presso Montalbano in Toscana, santi Baronzio e Desiderio, eremiti.
BARONTO (BARONZIO) e
DESIDERIO, eremiti a PISTOIA, santi.
Il Baronio introdusse al 25 marzo, nel Martirologio Romano, la celebrazione di
Baronto e Desiderio, fondandosi su Atti della Chiesa di Pistoia. In questo
testo, redatto da un monaco italiano tra il sec. XI e il XII e pubblicato dai
Bollandisti, Baronto è identificato con l'omonimo monaco di Longoreto, che,
dopo aver compiuto la penitenza impostagli da san Pietro e aver visitato le
tombe degli apostoli, avrebbe deciso di abbracciare la vita eremitica,
fissandosi sul monte Albano, presso Pistoia. Questo racconto, accettato per
molto tempo senza critica alcuna, è però ben poco attendibile, dal momento che,
nella tradizione di Baronto di Longoreto, non si accenna affatto a un viaggio
in Italia del santo. E' sembrato quindi giusto e opportuno scindere le due
figure e le loro vicende, indubbiamente confuse. La fama di santità di un
eremita, di nome Baronto, e stabilitosi sul monte Albano nel corso del sec.
VII, indusse cinque giovani a unirsi a lui nelle penitenze, e tra essi si
distinse per fervore religioso Desiderio. Morto alla fine del sec. VII, Baronto
fu sepolto nell'oratorio, che aveva costruito presso la sua cella, e, sulla sua
tomba che il popolo non aveva mai cessato di venerare, Restaldo, vescovo di
Pistoia (1012-1023), fece erigere un monastero benedettino a lui dedicato. Il
monastero di San Baronto, in cui erano state trasferite le reliquie di Baronto
assieme a quelle di Desiderio e degli altri eremiti, presso cui nel 1107 era
sorto un ospedale, nel sec. XV fu dato in commenda e nel 1577 fu unito alla
abbazia di Santa Maria di Firenze della Congregazione cassinese.
Autore: Pietro Burchi
SOURCE : https://www.santiebeati.it/dettaglio/47220
Den hellige Barontius og
Desiderius av Pistoia (d. ~725)
Minnedag: 25.
mars
Den hellige Barontius
(fr: Baronce; it: Baronzio) ble født på 600-tallet i Berry i Frankrike. Han kom
fra en adelsfamilie, men som middelaldrende delte han ut det meste av det han
eide, og sammen med sin sønn trakk han seg tilbake til benediktinerklosteret (Ordo
Sancti Benedicti – OSB) Lonrey i bispedømmet Bourges [kilden Infocatho sier
at han trakk seg tilbake til klosteret Saint-Cyran ikke langt fra Nevers].
Men som et resultat av en
visjon ba han om tillatelse til å bli eremitt, og han dro til Italia, hvor han
etablerte seg i distriktet nær Pistoia [kilden santiebeati.it sier
nær Montalbano i Toscana]. Der levde han et svært asketisk liv sammen med en
annen munk, den hellige Desiderius (fr: Dizier; it: Desiderio), som også æres
som helgen. Selv om de levde isolert, tiltrakk de seg disipler, som betraktet
dem som helgener ennå mens de levde. De døde begge rundt 725. Deres minnedag er
25. mars og deres navn står i Martyrologium Romanum.
Kilder:
Attwater/Cumming, Benedictines, Bunson, KIR, Infocatho, santiebeati.it -
Kompilasjon og oversettelse: p. Per Einar Odden -
Opprettet: 1998-11-07 15:42 - - Sist oppdatert: 2008-12-28 13:00
SOURCE : http://www.katolsk.no/biografier/historisk/barontiu
Voir aussi : http://orthodoxievco.net/ecrits/vies/synaxair/mars/baronce.pdf
http://orthodoxievco.net/ecrits/vies/synaxair/mars/baronce.pdf