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William of Maleval

St. William of Maleval/ the Hermit
San Guillermo
Antonio nasini, san guglielmo, 1690-1710 ca. 01.jpg
San Guglielmo by Antonio Nasini.
Hermit
BornPoitiers, France
Died10 February 1157
Maleval
Venerated inRoman Catholic Church
Beatified1202
Canonized8 May 1202, Rome, Papal States by Pope Innocent III
Major shrineLaoag City
Feast10 February
Attributescross; skull
PatronageLaoag City, Ilocos Norte, Talisay, Batangas, Bacolor, Pampanga, Buting, Pasig City, Dalaguete, Cebu

William of Maleval (or William the Great) (died 10 February 1157) was the founder of the Catholic congregation of Williamites, a branch of the Hermits of St. Augustine. He was beatified in 1202.

The account of his life, written by his disciple Albert, who lived with him during his last year at Maleval, has been lost. Written accounts of his life by Theodobald, or Thibault, given by the Bollandists, is unreliable because it has been interpolated with the lives of at least two other Williams.

After a number of chapters in which he is confused with St. William of Gellone, Duke of Aquitaine, we are told that he went to Rome, where he had an interview with pope Eugene III, who ordered him to make a pilgrimage to Jerusalem in penance for his sins. Though Theodobald's account of his interview with the pope does not carry conviction, the fact of this visit and his subsequent pilgrimage to Jerusalem is supported by excerpts from the older life, which are preserved by responsories and antiphons in his liturgical feast Office. He seems to have remained at Jerusalem for one or two years, not nine as Theodobald relates. About 1153 he returned to Italy and led a hermit's life in a wood near Pisa, then on Monte Pruno, and finally in 1155 in the desert valley of Stabulum Rodis, later known as Maleval, in the territory of Castiglione della Pescaia, Diocese of Grosseto, where he was joined by Albert. He died on 10 February 1157 (his feast day) and was beatified in 1202.

Veneration

façade of Saint William’s Cathedral in Laoag City.

See also

Sources

  •  This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainHerbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company. [1]
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