Jasna Góra Monastery
The Jasna Góra Monastery in Częstochowa, Poland, is a shrine dedicated to the Virgin Mary and one of the country's places of pilgrimage. The image of the Black Madonna of Częstochowa, also known as Our Lady of Częstochowa, to which miraculous powers are attributed, is one of Jasna Góra's most precious treasures.
The site is one of Poland's official national Historic Monuments and is tracked by the National Heritage Board of Poland.
History
Jasna Góra Monastery was founded in 1382 by Order of [Saint Paul the First Hermit|Pauline monks] who came from Hungary at the invitation of Vladislaus II of Opole. The new monastery was entrusted with the icon, depicting the Mother of God with the Christ Child, known as the Black Madonna of Częstochowa or Our Lady of Częstochowa. On April 14, 1430, Jasna Góra was sacked by the Hussites. It was originally a single-nave church, which was enlarged around 1463 to become a three-nave hall church in the Gothic style.In the winter of 1655, the monastery was unsuccessfully besieged by the Swedish army during the Second Northern War, or The Deluge. The event stimulated the Polish resistance and shortly thereafter, in the cathedral of Lwów, on April 1, 1656, Jan Kazimierz, the King of Poland, solemnly pronounced his vow to consecrate the country to the protection of the Mother of God and proclaimed Her the Patron and Queen of the lands in his kingdom. On March 16, 1657, he visited Jasna Góra and prayed there.
Reconstruction in the Baroque style was carried out between 1690 and 1693. Between 1693 and 1696 the walls of the nave and chancel were raised, thus changing the spatial arrangement of the church from a hall to a basilica.
The monastery was again unsuccessfully besieged by the Swedes in 1702, 1705 and 1709 during the Third Northern War. In 1717 the icon of the Virgin Mary was crowned by the decision of Pope Clement XI. Between 1760 and 1772 in the monastery was imprisoned Jacob Frank, Polish-Jewish religious leader, founder of the Frankist sect, who considered himself a messiah. In 1770-1772 Jasna Góra was besiged by Russians during the Bar Confederation.
In 1909, during the Congress Poland period, thieves broke into the monastery and stole millions in rubles worth of jewels, pearls, and other valuables. The icon itself was not damaged. Crowds of praying and weeping people gathered at the closed monastery when the theft was discovered. Pope Pius X himself offered to replace the crown that was stolen, and the coronation occurred in 1910. The coronation attracted Poles from both the Russian and Austrian partitions. Special trains brought people from Warsaw, and the crowds numbered up to 60,000. A monk named Damazy Macoch confessed to the crime in 1910.
Among the monastery's most important exhibits is the Nobel Prize medal from the 1983 Nobel Peace Prize received by Lech Wałęsa, the former Polish president and trade-union organizer.