Mary's name occurs in the first and second parts of the
Hail Mary. At Rome, one of the twin churches at the Forum of Trajan is dedicated to the Name of Mary (
Santissimo Nome di Maria al Foro Traiano).
Feast day The feast is a counterpart to the Feast of the Holy Name of Jesus (January 3). Its object is to commemorate all the privileges bestowed upon Mary by God and all the graces received through her
intercession and mediation.
History The feast day began in 1513 as a local celebration in
Cuenca, Spain, celebrated on 15 September. In 1587
Pope Sixtus V moved the celebration to 17 September.
Pope Gregory XV extended the celebration to the
Archdiocese of Toledo in 1622. In 1683, the Polish king
John Sobieski arrived at Vienna with his army. Before the
Battle of Vienna, Sobieski placed his troops under the protection of the Blessed Virgin Mary. In the following year, to celebrate the victory,
Pope Innocent XI added the feast to the Roman calendar, assigning to it the Sunday within the
octave of the
Nativity of Mary. The reform of
Pope Pius X in 1911 restored to prominence the celebration of Sundays in their own right, avoiding their being often replaced by celebrations from the
sanctoral. The celebration of the Holy Name of Mary was therefore moved to 12 September. Later in the same century, the feast was removed from the
General Roman Calendar in 1969 as part of its reform by
Pope Paul VI, as something of a duplication of the 8 September feast of the
Nativity of the Blessed Virgin Mary, but it did not cease to be a recognized celebration of the
Roman Rite, being mentioned in the
Roman Martyrology on 12 September. In 2002
Pope John Paul II restored the celebration to the General Roman Calendar. ==Legacy==