, inspires the writing of Saint Bridget. Detail of initial letter miniature, dated 1530, probably made at
Syon Abbey, England, a Bridgettine House. At the age of ten, Bridget had a vision of Jesus hanging upon the cross. When she asked who had treated him like this, he answered: These revelations made Bridget something of a celebrity to some and a controversial figure to others.
Vision of the birth of Christ with kneeling Virgin Her visions of the
Nativity of Jesus would influence later depictions of the
Nativity of Jesus in art. Shortly before her death, she described a vision which included the infant Jesus lying on (not in) clean swaddling clothes on the ground, and emitting light himself, and she described the Virgin as blonde-haired and kneeling in prayer exactly as she was moments before the spontaneous birth, with her womb shrunken and her virginity intact. Many depictions followed this scene, they included the popular ox and donkey and they reduced other light sources in the scene in order to emphasize the "child of light" effect, and the Nativity was treated with
chiaroscuro through the
Baroque. Other details which are frequently seen, such as Joseph carrying a single candle that he "attached to the wall," and the presence of
God the Father above, also originated in Bridget's vision. The pose of the Virgin kneeling to pray to her child, to be joined by
Saint Joseph, technically known as the "Adoration of the Child", became one of the most common depictions in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, largely replacing the reclining Virgin in the West. A few earlier depictions of the Virgin which show her with an ox and a donkey (scenes which are not described in the gospels) were produced as early as 1300, before Bridget was born, have a
Franciscan origin, by which she may have been influenced, because she was a member of the Franciscan order. File:Duccio di Buoninsegna - The Nativity with the Prophets Isaiah and Ezekiel - Google Art Project.jpg|Pre-Bridget reclining Virgin with ox and donkey, with
midwife Salomé off to the side, , by
Duccio di Buoninsegna File:Hans Memling 027.jpg|Post-Bridget kneeling Virgin with Joseph holding a candle as he enters the space with angels, ox, and donkey, circa 1470, by
Hans Memling Her visions of
Purgatory were also well-known.
Prophecy In addition, "she even predicted an eventual Vatican State, foretelling almost the exact boundaries delineated by
Mussolini for
Vatican City in 1921."
Pope Benedict XVI spoke of Bridget in a general audience on 27 October 2010, saying that the value of Saint Bridget's Revelations, sometimes the object of doubt, was specified by
Pope John Paul II in the letter
Spes Aedificandi: "Yet there is no doubt that the Church," wrote my beloved predecessor, "which recognized Bridget's
holiness without ever pronouncing on her individual revelations, has accepted the overall authenticity of her interior experience." ==Fifteen 'Our Father and Hail Mary prayers'==