When the
Catalans by name of the King of Aragon and Count of Barcelona conquered Cagliari, Sardinia from the
Pisans in 1324, they established their headquarters on top of a hill that overlooked the city. The hill was known to them as
Bon Ayre (or "Bonaria" in
Sardinian language), as it was free of the foul smell prevalent in the old city (the Castle area), which is adjacent to
swampland. During the siege of Cagliari, the Catalans built a sanctuary to the
Virgin Mary on top of the hill. In 1335, King
Alfonso the Gentle donated the church to the
Mercedarians, who built an
abbey that stands to this day. In the years after that, a story circulated, claiming that a statue of the Virgin Mary was retrieved from the sea after it miraculously helped to calm a storm in the
Mediterranean Sea. The statue was placed in the abbey. Two centuries later, Spanish sailors, especially
Andalusians, venerated this image and frequently invoked the "Fair Winds" to aid them in their
navigation and prevent
shipwrecks. A sanctuary to the Virgin of Buen Aire would be later erected in
Seville. The capital of Argentina, Buenos Aires, was named by its founders the captain
Pedro de Mendoza:
Santa María del Buen Aire ("Holy Mary of the Fair Winds"), a name chosen by the chaplain of Mendoza's expedition, a devotee of the Virgin of Buen Aire. Mendoza's settlement soon came under attack by indigenous peoples, and was abandoned in 1541. ==Patroness==