The process of Rose's
canonization was opened in the year of her death by
Pope Innocent IV, but was not definitively undertaken until 1457. Originally buried in the small parish church of
Santa Maria in Poggio located in Piazza della Crocetta in central Viterbo; in 1257
Pope Alexander IV ordered it moved to the monastery she had desired to enter, located a few hundred meters away from her original burial, at which time it was renamed in her honor. When the liturgical calendar of the Roman Catholic Church was reformed after the
Second Vatican Council, her
feast day was transferred to the date of her death. September 4 is the date of the translation of her relics to the Monastery of St. Damian. It is this latter date on which her feast is celebrated in Viterbo and by the Franciscans. On September 3, the eve of the feast of St. Rose, the people of Viterbo follow the transportation of
La Macchina ("the Machine of St. Rose") a massive tower, illuminated with 3,000 tiny electric lights and 880 candles, and topped off with a statue of her, which is carried for 1,200 metres through the darkened streets of the old medieval town on the backs of around 100 volunteers called "facchini". The tradition goes all the way back to September 4, 1258, when the body of the saint was exhumed and transported to the Monastery of Saint Damian; but it was not until 1664, following seven years of plague in the city, that a "machine" first appeared. In gratitude for having survived such a terrible pestilence the citizens voted to renew the veneration of their saint every year.
St. Rose of Viterbo Convent, named for her, in
La Crosse, Wisconsin, is the
motherhouse of the
Franciscan Sisters of Perpetual Adoration. The convent is listed on the
National Register of Historic Places.
Viterbo University is a Catholic, Franciscan university in the liberal arts tradition, founded by these Franciscan Sisters, also located in La Crosse, Wisconsin. Rose of Viterbo is one of the religious figures featured in the award-winning series of saint plays by
Erik Ehn. The play celebrating her life premiered in October 2008 at
Goshen College. ==See also==