July 6, 2025

Introducing "Il seminarista rosso: L'infiltrazione marxista nella Chiesa" by Gianandrea de Antonellis

Il seminarista rosso, or The Red Seminarian, is a powerful and meticulously researched exposé of the ideological infiltration that has shaped the modern Catholic Church from within. Tracing the furtive paths of Marxist and modernist influences, Gianandrea de Antonellis presents a bold and provocative account of the post-conciliar Church, while maintaining focus on the profound spiritual and cultural ramifications at hand. Supported by extensive footnotes and documentation, the author draws upon a wide array of ecclesiastical, political, and philosophical sources.

Though lengthy, the following quotations are essential for understanding the full scope of the author’s argument.

“In the case of the 'revolution in the Church'—that is, the Second Vatican Council—it did not arise out of nowhere, but was carefully prepared in the decades preceding it. Its promoters were, on one hand, the modernists, who had been exposed but not eradicated by Pascendi; [1] on the other hand, the new anti-Christian forces of Marxist origin. Both modernists and communists were united in the project of destroying the traditional Church from within rather than from without, as had been attempted previously (to cite only the main cases of the last millennium) by the Albigensians, Protestants, advocates of national churches (gallicani, giuseppinisti, etc.), [2] Enlightenment thinkers, Jacobins, jurisdictionalists, liberals (Kulturkampf, desamortización, guarentigie), [3] and, in the last century, Spanish anarcho-socialists and German National Socialists.


“A precedent for this ‘struggle from within’ can be found in the ‘underground’ movement of Jansenism (17th century), which in Italy found its most significant expression in the Synod of Pistoia (1786). [4] The movement, which takes its name from the Bishop of Ypres, Cornelius Otto Jansen (Latinized as Jansen or Giansenio, 1585–1638), sought to implement a semi-Calvinist reform while never formally leaving the bosom of the Church, attempting instead to infect it from within. Because of its elitist character, however, it remained relatively isolated: its ‘coming to light’ at the Synod of Pistoia even provoked a popular uprising, as it sought to abolish certain devotions deeply cherished by the faithful.”

With a seamless blend of theological critique and historical analysis, de Antonellis reveals recurring patterns of subversion and doctrinal compromise. 

“Iconoclasm and the abolition of side altars, the use of the vernacular language in the liturgy, and episcopalism or conciliarism (that is, considering the bishops’ conference as the head of the national Church while leaving to the pope the simple role of unus inter pares), [5] proposed by the Synod of Pistoia and immediately condemned, were triumphantly accepted with the Council and its ‘spirit.’


“The disruptive force of the neo-modernist mentality nonetheless comes from elements of extra-ecclesial formation: namely the Marxist infiltrators who, in the wake of Stalin’s consolidation of power in the USSR and the subjugation of the Orthodox Church, were tasked with weakening the Catholic Church, undertaking a long-term effort that offered promising prospects and—eighty years later—an almost unexpected success.


“In the 1930s, the secret services of the Soviet Union employed every kind of stratagem, even the most Machiavellian, in order to ‘plant the seed of ideological counteroffensive in the very heart of Western democracies and even within the fascist states themselves, beginning with Mussolini’s Italy, where they could serve in the dual role of fifth columns within the Catholic Church and agents of political espionage with an anti-capitalist and anti-bourgeois orientation.’ [6]


“This infiltration naturally continued after the Second World War: during the years of the Cold War, a significant number of Soviet secret service members—Italians, French, Germans, and so on, all young people of proven Marxist-Leninist conviction—skillfully infiltrated not only the vital organs of civil society in Western countries (newspapers, publishing houses, courts, labor unions), but also the ranks of the Catholic Church, starting at the level of priestly formation—that is, in seminaries and novitiates—with the specific mandate to subtly implant communist ideas into the mentality and practice of the clergy.”

He gives particular attention to the role of the Jesuit order, liberation theology, and the cultural upheavals that followed the Second Vatican Council. 

“A privileged instrument in this infiltration project has been the Society of Jesus. Whereas in the past the Jesuits were the arch-enemies of Freemasonry (which even succeeded in having them suppressed by the Holy See), they have now become its preferred tool, ‘with the precise aim of achieving a ‘normalization’ of relations with Freemasonry.’ With the ascent of a Jesuit to the papal throne, it is fair to ask: ‘What use will be made, by the religious order by far the most powerful, the richest, the most learned, the most adaptable, the most adventurous, the most cunning in political and diplomatic experience, the best connected with the secular world, with other religions, and with Freemasonry itself, as well as with international high finance, of its immense power?’ [7]


“In truth, the Jesuit order has long been only outwardly the same as it was in past centuries: already by the mid-twentieth century, certain members of the order—such as Teilhard de Chardin—stirred polemics and controversy with their bold theological positions; others, like Karl Rahner, openly advocated for a radical reform of the Church, and vigorously promoted this agenda, even within the halls of the Second Vatican Council.


“That very Council has been interpreted, by more than one observer, as an attempt to implement the comprehensive reform envisioned by Rahner and others—a trend that was then developed and deepened under the influence of liberation theology, which also arose—not coincidentally—in Latin American Jesuit circles.


“The Council was followed by the so-called 'spirit of the Council,' that is, the broad interpretation of the deliberately ambiguous conciliar documents. This is why, from a Novus Ordo (the modern Mass) that was originally intended to stand alongside the traditional liturgy, there emerged a practical suppression of the latter.”

I found de Antonellis’ take on the failure of the counter-revolution to be especially compelling. Once more, I quote at length—though not without cause.

“Why did the infiltration of seminaries occur through members or sympathizers of the Communist Party, and not through elements of the Right? Why was there no right-wing response to the hegemonic Marxist strategy? Why—to broaden the discussion—were leftist publishing houses not met with a corresponding network of right-wing publishers, essayists, novelists, or journalists? In reality, attempts were made, but what was lacking—even more than substantial funding like the so-called ‘Moscow gold’—was coordination among the various forces at play.


“In a single phrase, the reason for the overwhelming cultural victory of the Left can be summed up by saying that what the Right lacked was a figure like Gramsci: a thinker who understood the fundamental role of culture, and a Party that recognized this role as primary (regardless of Gramsci’s personal life or his relationship with the Party’s leader, Togliatti).


“But this does not mean that the Right has lacked significant thinkers. On the contrary: I won’t list them—it would be too long—because, ultimately, from Homer to the mid-twentieth century, the greatest writers, philosophers, and poets have essentially been on the Right, meaning religious, monarchist, meritocratic, aristocratic, and anti-democratic (just consider how Homer, in the Iliad, encapsulates the democratic spirit in the figure of Thersites…). [8] What has been entirely lacking, however, is a great man of culture who was recognized and valued as such: ‘When I hear the word culture, I reach for my revolver’—a now-famous phrase from a virtually unknown author, often casually attributed to various right-wing political figures, from Göring to Goebbels, Codreanu, or Primo de Rivera.


“Culture has always been regarded as the pastime of the idle (in the etymological sense, from otium): only those with a stable economic position can afford it. It was therefore unthinkable to make political journalism or literature a profession. The consequence is that—with a few numerically insignificant exceptions—those who wished to combine a cultural vocation with the need to earn a living had to either join a leftist newspaper, magazine, or publishing house, or else find a day job and, in their free time, dedicate themselves to writing not as professionals, but as amateurs. The result has been the dispersion of right-wing culture into a thousand insignificant rivulets.


“Just as there has been no ability to channel the cultural potential of the Right, so too has there been no ability to direct its political potential. It would therefore be inconceivable to ask a group of young people to choose the ‘cloistered path’ for a long-term project to stop the revolution in the Church from within. Certainly, there will be young people with vocations (who, today, will find modernist seminaries with modernist teachers and, once ordained, will celebrate modernist rites under the watchful eye of modernist bishops), but they will be a tiny minority. Why not then consider the entrance of traditionalists into seminaries to counter the revolution in the Church?


“In addition to the lack of an organization encouraging young militants to enter the seminary, this idea of sacrifice (which should not, in fact, be seen as such) clashes with the deep attachment of the Right-wing man to the value of the family, the fundamental nucleus of society: generally, he finds it difficult to renounce family life, even for a prestigious career. He will instead try to reconcile public and private life, work and family—perhaps sacrificing the latter to the former, but never entirely abandoning it, except in rare cases.”

Far from being a mere denunciation, Il seminarista rosso is an unflinching and intellectually rigorous call to vigilance. It compels readers to confront uncomfortable truths about the Church’s modern decline and to recover a restored obedience to tradition, spiritual authority, and metaphysical truth.

A vital contribution to the contemporary Catholic discourse, Gianandrea de Antonellis’ essay deserves a wide readership among all who care about the fate of Catholic tradition in the twenty-first century.

A PDF copy of Il seminarista rosso: L'infiltrazione marxista nella Chiesa can be downloaded at www.altaterradilavoro.com

~ By Giovanni di Napoli, Feast of the Madonna Immacolata

Translation and footnotes are my own unless otherwise indicated.

Notes

[1] Pascendi refers to Pascendi Dominici Gregis, a papal encyclical issued by Pope Pius X on September 8, 1907. It is one of the most important documents of the Catholic Church’s condemnation of Modernism.

[2] Gallicani (Gallicanism) was a political-religious movement that emerged primarily in France, especially during the 17th and 18th centuries, with earlier roots in the Middle Ages. It sought to limit the authority of the pope, particularly in temporal and national matters, and to increase the power of the national church and the monarchy. 

Giuseppinisti (Josephinism) was a policy initiated by Emperor Joseph II of Austria (reigned 1765–1790), aimed at subordinating the Catholic Church to the Austrian state and promoting enlightened absolutism. It extended beyond Austria into other Habsburg-controlled territories like Northern Italy.

[3] Kulturkampf is a German term meaning “culture struggle”, and it refers to a period of conflict in the 1870s between the German imperial government, led by Chancellor Otto von Bismarck, and the Catholic Church, particularly in Prussia and other German states.

Desamortización refers to a series of state-led confiscations and sales of Church and communal property carried out primarily in Spain during the 19th century, under various liberal governments. The term comes from the Spanish verb desamortizar, meaning “to disentail” or “to release from mortmain” (i.e., from inalienable ownership, especially by the Church).

Guarentigie refers to the Law of Guarantees (Legge delle Guarentigie) enacted by the Italian Kingdom in 1871 after the capture of Rome. It was a unilateral law intended to define the relationship between the newly unified Italian state and the Papacy, following the end of the Papal States.

[4] The Synod of Pistoia was a diocesan synod convened in 1786 in the town of Pistoia, Tuscany, by Bishop Scipione de’ Ricci, under the protection of Grand Duke Leopold of Tuscany (later Emperor Leopold II). It is one of the most important events in the history of Jansenist and proto-modernist reform movements within the Catholic Church in Italy.

[5] Unus inter pares is Latin for “one among equals,” referring to a view that denies the pope’s supreme authority over the bishops.

[6] Francesco Lamendola, Quanti preti di sinistra sono massoni ed ex agenti sovietici infiltrati nei seminari? il Corriere delle Regioni, Quaderni culturali: Giornale Web e www.ariannaeditrice.it [31.1.2017, pagina non più esistente] (Source: original essay by Gianandrea de Antonellis)

[7] Francesco Lamendola, I gesuiti hanno preso il timone della Chiesa, ma per condurla dove?, http://www.ariannaeditrice.it/articolo.php?id_articolo=53779 [7.02.2017]. (Source: original essay by Gianandrea de Antonellis)

[8] Thersites is a character from Homer’s Iliad. He serves as a literary embodiment of ugly, disorderly, and rebellious democratic sentiment, especially when contrasted with the heroic aristocratic ideals of the Greek epic tradition.

Feast of the Madonna Immacolata

Madonna Immacolata, ora pro nobis
The first Sunday in July is the Feast of the Madonna Immacolata, patroness of Buccino, a small town and comune in the Province of Salerno. In celebration, I'm posting a Prayer to Our Lady Immaculate. Special thanks to Giuseppe Arduino for sharing some historic photos of the procession in Buccino. Evviva Madonna Immacolata!
Prayer to Our Lady Immaculate
Most holy Virgin, who wast pleasing to the Lord and became His Mother, immaculate in body and spirit, in faith and in love, look kindly on the wretched who implore thy powerful patronage. The wicked serpent, against whom was hurled the first curse, continues fiercely to attack and ensnare the unhappy children of Eve. Do thou, then, O Blessed Mother, our queen and advocate, who from the first instant of thy conception didst crush the head of the enemy, receive the prayers which, united with thee in our single heart, we implore thee to present at the throne of God, that we may never fall into the snares which are laid out for us, and may all arrive at the port of salvation; and, in so many dangers, may the Church and Christian society sing once again the hymn of deliverance and of victory and of peace. Amen.
The statue of the Madonna Immacolata carried in procession in Buccino
The statue of the Madonna Immacolata carried in procession in Buccino

Feast of Santa Domenica di Tropea

Santa Domenica di Tropea, ora pro nobis

July 6 is the feast of Santa Domenica di Tropea (also called Santa Ciriaca), Virgin and Martyr. Widely venerated throughout Southern Italy, she the patron saint of Tropea (VV), Scorrano (LE), Torre di Ruggiero (CZ), Caraffa di Catanzaro (CZ), Santa Domenica di Ricadi (VV), Tremestieri (ME), and Mandanici (ME), among others.


Born in 287 in a profoundly Christian household in Tropea, Calabria, Santa Domenica and her parents, Doroteo and Arsenia, were tried and sentenced to exile in Western Asia. The young maid was brought to Campania instead and attempts were made to make her renounce her faith. Unwavering, she was condemned to death. First, she was to be burned alive at the stake, but the flames did not harm her. Next, she was to be torn to pieces by wild beasts, but the ferocious animals became docile at her feet. Each attempt to execute her led more and more witnesses to convert to Christianity. Brutally tortured, she was finally beheaded on 6 July 303. 


Her relics were first interred in Vizzini, Catania and later moved to the Cathedral in Tropea in 1893 by the bishop of Nicotera-Tropea Domenico Gallucci, where her cult flourished.


In celebration, we’re posting a prayer in Italian. The accompanying image, commissioned by Duke Carlo Guarini in 1921, was painted by Luigi Scorrano (Lecce 1849-Urbino 1924). Evviva Santa Domenica di Tropea!


Preghiera


O Martire coronata, che davanti ai tribunali testimoniasti con animo invitto Cristo Gesù; o Sposa eletta del Verbo umanato; o Ramo bellissimo di radice gloriosa, carico di frutti di celeste trionfo; o Domenica, noi ti celebriamo venerando l’arca delle tue Reliquie, memori e riconoscenti dei tuoi benefici.


O Verginità, tempio di Dio! O Verginità, gloria dei Martiri! O Verginità, socia degli Angeli! Domenica gloriosa, al tuo splendore le tenebre del paganesimo sono fugate: i tormenti, il fuoco, la morte sono per te un nulla. Tu pura, tu incorrotta, tu bellissima. Invitta fra tutti i Martiri, giglio nella convalle profumata di Cristo.


Nella effusione del tuo sangue immergesti i nemici infernali; rendesti tempio di Dio l’anima tua candidissima.


Nel tuo agone mortale, o Domenica celeberrima, hai trasceso le forze della natura; tra i leoni rendesti lode al tuo Gesù e superasti la fierezza delle belve. Agnella condotta al macello per amore dell’Agnello divino, al bellissimo tuo sposo conservasti il candore dell’anima tua.


Apristi un mare di grazia a chi t’invocò; ed il glorioso tuo corpo emana torrenti perenni di salute a chi ti supplica.


Deh! Lava le macchie dei vizi e dei peccati. Fa’  che noi superiamo le tentazioni. E la gloriosa tua memoria allontani ogni male e conforti coloro che ti venerano. Amen.

Announcing the 141st Feast of Our Lady of Mount Carmel in East Harlem, New York

July 5, 2025

A Prayer for Texas

San Medardo, ora pro nobis
We offer prayers for the victims of the deadly storms and flash flooding that swept through Central Texas on Friday night. The loss of life, the suffering, and the destruction grieve us deeply. May San Medardo, San Cesareo di Terracina, Sant’Antonio di Padua, Venerable Antonio Margil de Jesús, and Our Lady of Guadalupe protect and watch over you.

Prayer to St. Medard

Saint Medard, patron saint for protection against bad storms, we ask you to intercede for us during the storms of our lives as well as the storms in nature. Protect our families and our homes. We pray for assistance for the victims of hurricanes, tornadoes, earthquakes, and other natural disasters. Loving God, send in more helpers, and multiply resources and supplies for the aid of those in need. You calmed the storm on the Sea of Galilee; deliver us from the storms that are raging around us now. Amen

Feast of Sant’Antonio Maria Zaccaria

Sant'Antonio Maria Zaccaria, ora pro nobis
July 5th is the Feast of St. Anthony Mary Zaccaria (1502-1539), ascetic, physician, and priest. Benefactor of the sick and poor, he is the patron saint of physicians and founder of the Barnabites (The Clerics Regular of St. Paul) and Angelic Sisters of St. Paul.

In celebration, we’re posting a prayer to St. Anthony Mary Zaccaria. The accompanying photo comes courtesy of Father Eugene Carrella. The holy card is part of Father Carrella’s impressive collection of religious artifacts. Evviva Sant’Antonio Maria Zaccaria!

Prayer to St. Anthony Mary Zaccaria

Saint Anthony Zaccaria, helper of the poor and the sick, you who devoted your life to our spiritual welfare, listen to my humble and hopeful prayer. Continue your work as doctor and priest by obtaining from God healing from my physical and moral sickness, so that free from all evil and sin, I may love the LORD with joy, fulfill with fidelity my duties, work generously for the good of my brothers and sisters, and for my sanctification. Amen.

Simple Pleasures: A Return to the Studio

We had the pleasure of visiting our friend David DiPasquale’s atelier once again. The space has only grown more vibrant and full of life since our last visit. In the time that has passed, he has been hard at work, fully immersed in painting and drawing with tireless dedication. We were fortunate to catch a glimpse of some of his latest charcoal drawings—a small but powerful selection that revealed both refinement and a spirit of experimentation.

July 4, 2025

18 de julio en Asturias — Santa Misa y comida de hermandad

El próximo viernes 18 de julio, a las 12:00 h (mediodía, D.m.), se celebrará la Santa Misa en la capilla de Nuestra Señora del Carmen (Posada, 121A, Siero).

La Misa se ofrecerá por el eterno descanso de S.M.C. Don Carlos VII y por el de los muertos en la Cruzada de 1936-1939.

A continuación, tendrá lugar una comida de hermandad en un restaurante cercano.

Es imprescindible reservar con antelación, contactando con los organizadores por teléfono o escribiendo a: tradicionastur@yahoo.es

Feast of Sant’Ulrico di Augusta

Sant'Ulrico di Augusta, ora pro nobis
July 4th is the feast of St. Ulrich, Bishop of Augsburg. Born in Augsburg, Bavaria, in 890, he was educated at the abbey of St. Gall in Switzerland. After completing his studies, he returned to Augsburg, where he was ordained a priest. With the support of his kinsmen, Ulrich was made bishop of the city in 923.

As bishop, he restored buildings, built churches in honor of St. John and St. Afra, and founded the monastery of St. Stephan. A strong supporter and trusted advisor of Emperor Otto I the Great, he built Augsburg's stone wall fortifications and served as general against the invading Magyars. In 955 he successfully defended the city against the invaders until the arrival of the Emperor’s army and the siege was broken.

Often depicted with a fish, St. Ulrich famously rewarded a diligent messenger with a goose leg that miraculously turned into a fish on Friday morning.

St. Ulrich died in 973, and a local cult soon arose. Many miracles took place at his tomb and he was canonized by Pope John XV in 993, the first known canonization by a pope. He is invoked against anger, fever, mice, moles and complications with pregnancy and childbirth.

In celebration, we’re posting a prayer to St. Ulrich of Augsburg. The accompanying photo comes courtesy of Father Eugene Carrella. The holy card is part of Father Carrella’s impressive collection of religious artifacts. Evviva Sant’Ulrico di Augusta!

Prayer to St. Ulrich of Augsburg

O God our Father, you give us the lives of the saints as witnesses of Truth and examples of virtue. We thank you for the gift of St. Ulrich, who faithfully served your Church as a kindly Bishop that cared deeply for the poor and the sick. By his example of charity, perseverance and courage, may we too attain the holiness which he lived. We ask all things in the name of your Divine Son, our Lord, Jesus Christ, through the power of your Holy Spirit. Amen.

Feast of Beato Piergiorgio Frassati

Beato Piergiorgio Frassati, ora pro nobis
July 4th is the feast of Blessed Pier Giorgio Frassati, Dominican Tertiary. Born on April 6, 1901, to a wealthy family in Torino, Pier studied mechanical engineering with a specialization in mining. More interested in helping the poor minors than his studies, he was often reproached by his father. Preferring prayers and charitable works to his schooling, Pier joined every Catholic association he could, including the Conferenza di San Vincenzo and l’Azione Cattolica. A professed member of the Third Order of St. Dominic, he assumed the religious name of Girolamo after Girolamo Savonarola. In 1924 he even founded the society of Tipi Loschi (“swindlers and swindlerettes” or “shady characters”) with his close friends to organize hikes and mounting climbing, as well as to assist one another with their interior lives and to help the less fortunate.

Blessed Pier Giorgio Frassati unexpectedly died of Polio on July 4, 1925, at the age of 24. Thousands, mostly the sick and poor, turned up for his funeral. Impressed by the turnout, his broken-hearted father finally realizes who his son was and returns to the faith.

In celebration, we’re posting a prayer to Beato Piergiorgio Frassati written by Cardinal Giovanni Saldarni, Archbishop of Turin. The photo of the relic from the wood of the coffin of Blessed Pier Giorgio Frassati comes courtesy of Father Eugene Carrella. The relic is part of Father Carrella’s impressive collection of religious artifacts. Evviva Beato Piergiorgio Frassati!

Prayer to Beato Piergiorgio Frassati

O Father, you gave to the young Pier Giorgio Frassati the joy of meeting Christ and of living his faith in the service of the poor and the sick; through his intercession may we, too, walk the path of the beatitudes and follow the example of his generosity, spreading the spirit of the Gospel in society. Through Christ our Lord, Amen.

* Learn more about Blessed Pier Giorgio Frassati

July 3, 2025

Southern Italy as a Civilizational Bastion: On Massimo Pacilio’s Interview with Edizioni di Ar

The recent interview Meridionalismo e tradizione with Professor Massimo Pacilio, published by Edizioni di Ar, offers a compelling and timely contribution to the ongoing reevaluation of Southern Italy’s history, culture, and political destiny. Far from indulging in a nostalgic lament for a lost kingdom, Pacilio elevates the discourse surrounding Meridionalismo beyond economic grievance or regionalist rhetoric. Instead, he articulates a vision in which Southern identity is rooted in tradition, monarchy, and a metaphysical worldview that remains untainted by the modern cult of progress.

What sets this interview apart is its ability to weave together cultural criticism, historical revisionism, and philosophical depth. Pacilio’s interpretation of Southern Italy as a “morphology of a nation” rather than a sociological anomaly serves as an evocative and necessary corrective to the prevailing narratives of the Risorgimento. He makes a convincing case that the so-called “unification” of Italy was less a historical inevitability than a Masonic-liberal project that uprooted legitimate political and spiritual orders. By restoring the South to its rightful place as a bearer of kultur, not merely a casualty of history, Pacilio opens the door to a fuller understanding of Italian—and indeed European—identity.

The interview is particularly strong in its treatment of tradition, drawing on the thought of Evola and Guénon to contrast traditionalist metaphysics with the deracinated ideologies of modernity. Pacilio’s articulation of the “third dimension of history,” following Evola, reintroduces a forgotten depth to historical interpretation—one that accounts for hidden forces, spiritual decay, and the perennial conflict between rooted order and revolutionary chaos. His insights into the ideological character of so-called “scientific” historiography are especially relevant in an age where technocratic “neutrality” often masks deeper ideological commitments.

Perhaps the most impressive aspect is the clarity with which Pacilio navigates complex geopolitical and philosophical themes. He draws a subtle yet decisive distinction between individualistic liberalism and the legitimate self-determination of rooted peoples. His argument compellingly favors a vision of conservative renewal over the leveling forces of globalization, while also exposing the limits of a geopolitical realism that remains tethered to Enlightenment assumptions (secularism, universalism, etc.).

In sum, this interview is not only a valuable resource for those interested in the intellectual legacy of the Two Sicilies or the critique of the Risorgimento mythos—it is also a lucid expression of Traditionalist thought in the 21st century. Pacilio challenges us to rethink the South not as a passive victim but as a spiritual and civilizational bastion—one that still carries within it the seed of resistance to the liberal-modern world.

~ By Giovanni di Napoli, July 2nd, Feast of the Madonna delle Grazie

A Note of Thanks: Bringing the Sanfedisti to Light

Embarking on the journey to write a short history of Cardinal Fabrizio Ruffo and the Sanfedisti has been both challenging and deeply rewarding. Like any meaningful historical work, it demands time, focus, and the right sources. What has made this endeavor especially fulfilling is the support I’ve received from friends who believe in the value of bringing this often-overlooked chapter of Duosiciliano history to light in English.

Recently, several of you gifted me rare, insightful, and highly relevant books for my research. These were far more than simple gestures—they were acts of trust, intellectual solidarity, and quiet affirmations that this story is worth telling.

Cardinal Ruffo’s campaign was more than just a military episode; it was a deeply human story of faith, loyalty, resistance, and redemption. Knowing that others also recognize its significance has given me the encouragement to press on.

So thank you—not only for the books, but for your belief, your support, and your quiet motivation to keep moving forward. History, like friendship, flourishes through such gestures.

July 2, 2025

An Unexpected Look at the Constitutional Citizen’s Manual of the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies

A friend recently shared with us his latest acquisition, a document that immediately piqued our interest, the MANUALE DEL CITTADINO COSTITUZIONALE OVVERO La Costituzione politica del Regno corredata delle vigenti leggi Elettorale, e sulla Guardia Nazionale, or CONSTITUTIONAL CITIZEN’S MANUAL, or The Political Constitution of the Kingdom, Accompanied by the Current Electoral Laws and those Concerning the National Guard.

This rare and intriguing document captures a brief but significant moment in the political history of the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies. On June 25, 1860, amid rising internal unrest and the looming threat of invasion by Giuseppe Garibaldi and his red-clad band of marauding freebooters, King Francis II made the consequential decision to restore the constitution originally granted during the Revolutions of 1848. The restoration was a belated and ultimately ill-fated attempt to appease liberal and revolutionary factions within the kingdom and to rally broader support in defense of the Bourbon monarchy.

The move failed to achieve the desired effect. The sudden return to constitutionalism was widely seen as a desperate concession rather than a true reform. Garibaldi’s forces continued their advance, and within months the Bourbon regime collapsed, bringing an end to centuries of sovereign rule.

Although I personally do not favor constitutionalism, I still recognize the historical significance of the document. It serves as an insightful artifact of liberal nationalist ideology and a utopian experiment during the political upheavals of the modern era, offering a valuable glimpse into the institutional and legal structure of the kingdom in its final days.

Feast of the Madonna della Visitazione

Madonna della Visitazione, ora pro nobis
July 2nd is the Feast of the Madonna della Visitazione, or the Visitation of the Blessed Virgin Mary, patroness of Enna, Sicily. Commemorating the pregnancies of the Blessed Mother and Saint Elizabeth, the feast also celebrates the cleansing of the unborn Saint John the Baptist from original sin.

Following the Annunciation, Mary went to Judea to visit her elderly cousin Elizabeth and her husband Zachariah. Childless and too old to conceive, Elizabeth was miraculously pregnant with John, the holy prophet and herald of our Lord Jesus Christ. When Elizabeth greeted Mary, the unborn John leaped for joy in his mother’s womb.

In celebration, I’m posting a prayer for the Feast of Our Lady of the Visitation. The accompanying photo of The Visitation by Belisario Corenzio, courtesy of Andrew Giordano, was taken in the Duomo di Salerno. Evviva Madonna della Visitazione!


Prayer for the Feast of Our Lady of the Visitation

Bestow upon Thy servants, we beseech Thee, O Lord, the gift of Thy heavenly grace: that as the childbearing of the Blessed Virgin was the beginning of our salvation, so the solemn feast of her Visitation may bring us an increase of peace. Through our Lord.

Feast of the Madonna delle Grazie

Madonna delle Grazie, ora pro nobis
July 2nd is the Feast of the Madonna delle Grazie (Our Lady of Grace), patroness of Santa Caterina Villarmosa (CL), Verbicaro (CS), Toritto (BA) and Cautano (BN), among others. In celebration, I'm posting a Prayer to Our Lady of Grace. The accompanying photo of the statue of the Madonna delle Grazie, patrona di Santa Caterina Villarmosa, was taken at Most Precious Blood Church (113 Baxter Street) in New York City's historic Little Italy. Evviva Madonna delle Grazie!
Prayer to Our Lady of Grace
O heavenly treasurer of all graces, Mother of God and my mother Mary, since you are the first-born daughter of the Eternal Father and hold in your hands his omnipotence, be moved to pity my soul and grant me the graces which I fervently ask of you.
O merciful dispenser of divine graces, Mary most holy, mother of the Eternal incarnate Word who has crowned you with his immense wisdom, look upon the greatness of my sorrow and grant me the graces I need so much.
O most loving dispenser of divine graces, immaculate Spouse of the Eternal Holy Spirit, most holy Mary, who have received from him a heart which is moved to pity by human misfortunes and which is constrained to offer consolation to those who suffer, be moved to pity my soul and grant me whose graces which I await from you with full confidence in your immense goodness.
O my mother, treasurer of all graces, refuge of poor sinners, consolation of the afflicted, hope of those who despair and most powerful help of Christians, I places all my confidence in you, being sure that you will obtain for me from Jesus the graces which I so much desire, if they are good for my soul.

Napoli 2500: "Il Ducato Bizantino e Napoli Medievale"

In Napoli

July 1, 2025

The 1° Reggimento Re at the Historical Procession of the Royal Colony of San Leucio, Caserta

Photos courtesy of Angela Cuccillato

Feast of the Most Precious Blood of Our Lord Jesus Christ

Blood of Christ, save us
July 1st is the Feast of the Most Precious Blood of Our Lord Jesus Christ. The Feast was extended to the whole church in 1849 by Blessed Pope Pius IX who, in the wake of the 1848 Revolution, was living in exile at Gaeta in the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies. After the French Army toppled the vile Roman Republic and restored the Holy See’s temporal power, His Holiness assigned the Feast to the first Sunday of June. This was later changed to June 1st by Pope Pius X in order to reduce the number of feast days allocated to a Sunday. Sadly, the feast was removed from the new Church calendar in 1969, but it is still in the traditional Roman calendar of 1962 usage. The month of July is dedicated to the Most Precious Blood. In celebration I’m posting the Litany of the Most Precious Blood. The accompanying photo of the tympanum with genuflecting Angels and the Most Precious Blood of Our Lord Jesus Christ was taken at the Shrine Church of the Most Precious Blood in Little Italy, New York. 

Litany of the Most Precious Blood of Our Lord Jesus Christ:
Lord, have mercy. Lord, have mercy.
Christ, have mercy. Christ, have mercy.
Lord, have mercy. Lord, have mercy.
Christ, hear us. Christ, graciously hear us.
God the Father of Heaven, have mercy on us.
God the Son, Redeemer of the world, have mercy on us.
God, the Holy Spirit, have mercy on us.
Holy Trinity, One God, have mercy on us.
Blood of Christ, only-begotten Son of the eternal Father, save us.
Blood of Christ, Incarnate Word or God, save us.
Blood of Christ, of the New and Eternal Testament, save us.
Blood of Christ, falling upon the earth in Agony, save us.
Blood of Christ, shed profusely in the Scourging, save us.
Blood of Christ, flowing forth in the Crowning with Thorns, save us.
Blood of Christ, poured out on the Cross, save us.
Blood of Christ, price of our salvation, save us.
Blood of Christ, without which there is no forgiveness, save us.
Blood of Christ, Eucharistic drink and refreshment of souls, save us.
Blood of Christ, stream of mercy, save us.
Blood of Christ, victor over demons, save us.
Blood of Christ, courage of Martyrs, save us.
Blood of Christ, strength of Confessors, save us.
Blood of Christ, bringing forth Virgins, save us.
Blood of Christ, help of those in peril, save us.
Blood of Christ, relief of the burdened, save us.
Blood of Christ, solace in sorrow, save us.
Blood of Christ, hope of the penitent, save us.
Blood of Christ, consolation of the dying, save us.
Blood of Christ, peace and tenderness of hearts, save us.
Blood of Christ, pledge of eternal life, save us.
Blood of Christ, freeing souls from purgatory, save us.
Blood of Christ, most worthy of all glory and honor, save us.
Lamb of God, who takes away the sins of the world, spare us, O Lord.
Lamb of God, who takes away the sins of the world, graciously hear us, O Lord.
Lamb of God, who takes away the sins of the world, have mercy on us, O Lord.
V. You have redeemed us, O Lord, in Your Blood.
R. And made us a kingdom for our God.
Let us Pray:
V.
 Almighty and eternal God, You have appointed Your only-begotten Son the Redeemer of the world and willed to be appeased by his blood. Grant, we beg, that we may worthily adore this price of our salvation and through its power be safeguarded from the evils of the present life so that we may rejoice in its fruits forever in heaven. Through the same Christ our Lord.
R. Amen.

Feast of San Nicasio Camuto de Burgio

San Nicasio Camuto de Burgio, ora pro nobis
July 1st is the Feast of San Nicasio Camuto de Burgio, Knight of Malta and Martyr. Born in Sicily circa 1135, San Nicasio is descended from a Saracen Emir who converted to Christianity following the Norman reconquest of the isle. Joining the Knights Hospitaller, he fought to defend Christendom at Acre and was captured at the Battle of Hattin in 1187. Refusing to renounce his faith, the devout Crusader, along with his brother Ferrandino and other prisoners, were beheaded in the presence of the Sultan Saladin. San Nicasio is the patron saint of Caccamo (PA), Sicily. In celebration, I’m posting a Prayer to St. Nicaise.(1) Pictured are a pair of Sovereign Order of Malta postage stamps depicting the glorious martyr.(2) Evviva San Nicasio!

Prayer to St. Nicaise


O God, every year you give us joy in the commemoration of your martyr, blessed Nicasius: grant that through his prayers and example the companions of our Order may grow in faith and always follow you with all their hearts. We ask this through our Lord Jesus Christ your Son who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. Amen.

(1) Prayer courtesy of the Sovrano Military Ordine di Malta

(2) The stamps show the painting of the Madonna di Constantinople and detail of San Nicasio by the great Cavaliere Calabrese, Mattia Preti (1613-1699). An ex-voto for freeing Naples from the plague of 1656, the painting portrays the Blessed Mother crowning Santa Rosalia with San Giuseppe, San Gennaro, San Rocco and San Nicasio in attendance. The painting is held at the National Museum of Capodimonte in Naples.

Feast of St. Junipero Serra

St. Junipero Serra, ora pro nobis
“Siempre adelante, nunca atrás” ~ St. Junipero Serra*
July 1st is the Feast of St. Junipero Serra, Spanish Franciscan friar and Missionary. Known as the Apostle of California for his evangelization of the Indian tribes of North America, he is also the patron saint of vocations. In 2015 he became the first saint to be canonized in the United States. In celebration, I’m posting a prayer to St. Junipero Serra. The accompanying photo is a screen capture of the statue of St. Junipero Serra in San Francisco, California being toppled by a violent mob of Marxist vandals during the iconoclastic tantrums allowed to take place by cowardly and ineffectual leaders across these United States in 2020.

Prayer to St. Junipero Serra

O God, who by your ineffable mercy have been pleased through the labors of your priest Saint Junipero Serra to count many American peoples within your Church, grant by his intercession that we may so join our hearts to you in love, as to carry always and everywhere before all people the image of your Only Begotten Son. Who lives and reigns with you in the unity of the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. Amen.

* “Always forward, never backward”

Happy National U.S. Postage Stamp Day!

In celebration of National U.S. Postage Stamp Day, I thought it would be fun to share a pic of my Lord of the Rings Presentation Pack, issued in the UK in 2004 in commemoration of the 50th Anniversary of J.R.R. Tolkien's fantasy masterpiece. Pictured from left to right are: a map showing Middle Earth, Forest of Lothlórien in Spring, Dust-jacket for The Fellowship of the Ring, Rivendell, The Hall at Bag End, Orthanc, Doors of Durin, Barad-dûr, Minas Tirith, and Fangorn Forest.