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Luigi Beltrame Quattrocchi and Maria Corsini

Luigi Beltrame Quattrocchi (12 January 1880 – 9 November 1951) and Maria Corsini-Beltrame Quattrocchi (24 June 1884 – 26 August 1965) were two married Italian Catholic laypeople who became the first couple to be beatified together in 2001.[1][2] According to Pope John Paul II, they lived "an ordinary life in an extraordinary way".[3] They are commemorated on 25 November—their wedding anniversary.[4][5]


Luigi Beltrame Quattrocchi and Maria Corsini

Luigi (12 January 1880, in Catania)
Maria (24 June 1884, in Florence)

Luigi (9 November 1951, aged 71 in Rome)
Maria (26 August 1965, aged 81 in Serravalle di Bibbiena)

25 November

elderly married couple

Both: Married couples and families
Maria: Mothers and volunteers
Luigi: Fathers and lawyers

Luigi Beltrame Quattrocchi[edit]

Luigi was born in Catania in 1880 to Carlo and Francesca Beltrame Vita. The second surname was added when Luigi was raised and then adopted by his childless aunt and uncle, Stefania and Luigi Quattrocchi, but maintained a close relationship with his birth parents. He attended school at Ancona and then moved to Rome, where he lived in the area of Esquiline. He studied jurisprudence at Sapienza University of Rome and graduated in 1902 with a degree in law.


After his graduation, Quattrocchi took a legal position with the Intendacy of Finances and later went on to hold a number of posts on the boards of a variety of banks, including the Bank of Italy.[6]

Maria Corsini[edit]

Maria Luisa Corsini was born in Florence in 1884, a member of the noble Corsini family. Her father, Angeiolo Corsini, was a Royal Army captain of grenadiers. Her mother was Julia Salvi. Because of her father's frequent military transfers, the family lived in Pistoia, Arezzo and Rome.


Corsini had an excellent education from a young age. Parish priests taught her literature classes, which gave her the background to write essays and books on education, religion, the family and the spiritual upbringing of children.[7] She followed a strict religious life, which included religious counseling, attending mass, receiving daily Communion, and reciting prayers.[7] Although she had been enrolled at a parish school in Rome run by nuns, when one of the nuns talked ill of the King, Corsini transferred to a state-run school. After her graduation, she became a professor of education and lecturer.[7][8]

Married life[edit]

Corsini met Quattrocchi, the son of a family friend,[9] at her family's home in Florence.[10][7] The two married on 25 November 1905 in the Cappella Corsini in the Basilica di Santa Maria Maggiore, in Rome. In the early years after their marriage, they lived together with parents and grandparents.[9]


She was a highly devout person, but her husband, in the initial years, was not.[9] In the first three years of marriage, Corsini gave birth to three children: Filippo (born 1906), Stephania (born 1908) and Cesare (born 1909). Diagnosed with placenta praevia during her fourth pregnancy, and given the dangers at that time of carrying the baby to term, doctors counseled the couple to abort the pregnancy.[9] Her husband was advised that, barring a medical intervention, he should expect to be a widower with three small children to attend to. The doctors induced labour, however, and delivered the baby prematurely.[11] Corsini attributed her faith in God[8] to her and her baby's survival. Enrichetta (born 1914), along with two of her siblings, were present for their parents' beatification (in 2001).[9][12]


Maria worked for the Red Cross during the Second Italo-Ethiopian War and served as a voluntary nurse in the Italian Red Cross during World War II. The couple's home was open for those in need during wartime.[7] Corsini was active with women's causes in the St. Vitale Parish and the women's division of Catholic Action.

Filippo (October 15, 1906 - February 20, 2003), Benedictine priest, known as Don Tarcisio or Don Tar.

Stefania (March 9, 1908 - March 1, 1993), nun, known as Suor Cecilia.

Benedictine

Cesare (November 27, 1909 - December 31, 2008), Trappist monk, known as Father Paolino.[13]

[6]

Enrichetta (April 6, 1914 - June 16, 2012), whose cause of beatification opened in 2018.

The couple had four children:


Don Tarcisio and Father Paolino joined ASCI (Associazione Scouts Cattolici Italiani) as children, and after their ordinations, became scout chaplains. When it merged with AGI (Associazione Guide Italiane) to become AGESCI (Associazione Guide e Scouts Cattolici Italiani), both of them joined the new association.

ASCI (), the Italian Catholic scout association;

Associazione Scouts Cattolici Italiani

the biggest lay organization of Catholics in Italy;

Azione Cattolica

UNITALSI, an organization which carries infirm people on pilgrimages to and other sanctuaries.[11]

Lourdes

The couple were among the founders of many Catholic organizations:


Both were members of the Third Order Regular of St. Francis of Penance. They started scouting groups for children in the poorer neighborhoods of Rome.[4] Although initially supportive, they soon became disenchanted with fascism.[11] During the Second World War, their home on Via Depretis became a shelter for Jews and other refugees.[10]


Corsini and her husband were associated with many religious institutions. Cardinal Jose Saraiva Martin noted that "they made their family an authentic domestic church, open to life, prayer, witness of the Gospel, the social apostolate, solidarity with the poor, and friendship... Intimately united in love and Christian ideals, they walked together on the path of holiness."[7] The couple also established a Scouting group in Rome.[14][7][8]

Legacy[edit]

The Foundation Luigi and Maria Beltrame Quattrochi, established in their honour, has the objective of helping couples to marry and to advise them on cementing their marital life.[7]

(1912) La madre : nel problema educativo moderno

(1924) Voce di madre : lettere ai giovani

(1924?) Incontro al Re d'amore : raccolta di prediche

(1940) Il fucco à da ardere

(1950) Il libro della giovane

(1955) Mamma vera

(1968) Una testimonianza: M. Amabile Damiazzi

Corsini wrote several books about education:

, "On the Role of the Christian Family in the Modern World"

Familiaris consortio

Catholic Church. United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (2006). . United States Conference of Catholic Bishops. ISBN 978-1-57455-450-2.

United States Catholic Catechism for Adults

(in Italian) from a scout magazine of AGESCI.

Article about Luigi and Maria Beltrame Quattrocchi

(in Italian)

Notice of funeral of Father Paolino Beltrame Quattrocchi, one of their sons