Zita (Sitha, Citha) (1218–72), a serving-maid of Lucca. Born at Monsagrati, she served the Fatinelli household from the age of twelve for the rest of her life. Often misunderstood and criticized by them, she eventually won their respect through her persevering devotion. Many miracle stories were told of her, including the attribution to angels of the baking of her loaves while she was rapt in ecstasy. Soon after her death a popular cult grew up round her tomb in the church of the Canons Regular of St. Frigdianus, shared in some degree by more prominent members of society. A liturgical cult was permitted in that church only by Leo X in the early 16th century, but it was solemnly confirmed as ‘immemorial’ in 1696; her name was added to the Roman Martyrology in 1748 by Benedict XIV.
Her popular cult had already spread to other countries in the later Middle Ages, testified by chapels in her honour as far afield as Palermo and Ely. In England, where merchants from Lucca had introduced her cult, she was known as Sitha and was invoked by housewives and domestic servants, especially when they lost their keys or were in danger from rivers or crossing bridges. She occurs in mural paintings (Shorthampton, Oxon.), in stained glass (Mells and Langport, Somerset), and on rood screens in Norfolk (Barton Turf ), Suffolk (Somerleyton), and Devon (Ashton). But her cult seems to have been usually unofficial. No churches were dedicated to her, although St. Benet Shorehog (London), which had a chapel of St. Zita, was commonly known as St. Sithes. Eagle (Lincs.) claimed a finger relic and fostered her pilgrimage. Her incorrupt body in her shrine at Lucca lacks a finger, but is claimed to be otherwise complete. Her feast on 27 April is found in some calendars, mainly from Lincolnshire. Feast: 27 April.
Bibliography
Click here for a list of abbreviations used in this bibliography.
- AA.SS. Apr. III (1675), 497–527; Propylaeum, pp. 158–9; Benedict XIV, Opus de servorum Dei canonizatione (1787), lib. II, c. xxiv, no. 25; A. Guerra, Istoria della vita di santa Zita vergine Lucchese (1895); C. Woodforde, Stained Glass in Somerset (1946), pp. 181–2; B.L.S. iv, 191–3




