Our Lady of the Most Holy Rosary – La Naval de Manila (Spanish: Nuestra Señora del Santísimo Rosario - La Naval de Manila; Tagalog: Mahal na Ina ng Santo Rosaryo ng La Naval de Manila) is a venerated title of the Blessed Virgin Mary associated with the same image in the Philippines. Pious believers believe that the Virgin's intercession under this title helped to defeat the invading forces of the Protestant Dutch Republic during the Battles of La Naval de Manila in 1646.

Our Lady of the Most Holy Rosary – La Naval de Manila
The image enthroned on the baldachinno for the annual La Naval festivities
LocationQuezon City, Philippines
Date1593, 1646
TypeIvory, wood statue
ApprovalPope Pius X
5 October 1907
Pope Paul VI
13 October 1973
Venerated inCatholic Church
ShrineNational Shrine of Our Lady of the Most Holy Rosary, Quezon City, Philippines
PatronagePhilippine Navy
Quezon City
Feast daySecond Sunday of October

The Philippine government in 2012 designated the icon and its shrine as a National Cultural Treasure, making it one of the country's Cultural Properties.[1]

Description

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Measuring approximately four feet and eight inches high, the body is made of hardwood in the cage or Bastidor style. The face and hands, as well as the entire Child Jesus, are made of solid ivory. Since its creation, the statue – considered the oldest dated ivory carving in the Philippines – has always been decorated with elaborate garments and a crown.[2]

Some 310,000 individuals led by professors of the University of Santo Tomas, donated their heirloom jewels, gemstones, gold and silver to the image for its canonical coronation in October 1907. These now form part of the icon's vast collection of elaborate regalia, with some pieces dating to the 18th century.[3]

History

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Procession before the enthronement of Our Lady of the Most Holy Rosary of La Naval

In 1593, the new Spanish governor-general, Don Luis Pérez Dasmariñas, commissioned a statue of Our Lady of the Rosary for public veneration in memory of his recently deceased father. Under the direction of Captain Hernando de los Rios Coronel, the sculpture was made by an anonymous Chinese immigrant, who later converted to Christianity; this is the commonly cited reason for the statue's Asian features. The statue was later given to the Dominican friars, who installed it at the Santo Domingo Church.

In 1646, naval forces of the Dutch Republic made several repeated attempts to conquer the Philippines in a bid to control trade in Asia. The combined Spanish and Filipino forces who fought were said to have requested the intercession of the Virgin through the statue prior to battle. They were urged to place themselves under the protection of Our Lady of the Rosary and to pray the rosary repeatedly. They went on to rebuff the continued attacks by the superior Dutch fleet, engaging in five major battles at sea and losing only fifteen members of the Spanish Navy. After the Dutch retreat, in fulfillment of their vow, the survivors walked barefoot to the shrine in gratitude to the Virgin.

Later, on 9 April 1662, the cathedral chapter of the Archdiocese of Manila declared the naval victory a miraculous event owed to the intercession of the Virgin Mary, declaring:

Granted by the Sovereign Lord through the intercession of the Most Holy Virgin and devotion to her Rosary, that the miracles be celebrated, preached and held in festivities and to be recounted amongst the miracles wrought by the Lady of the Rosary for the greater devotion of the faithful to Our Most Blessed Virgin Mary and Her Holy Rosary.[4]

Pope Pius X authorized granting the statue a canonical crown in 1906, which was bestowed by the apostolic delegate to the Philippines, The Most Rev. Ambrose Agius, O.S.B. During the Japanese bombardment in 1942, fearing that the statue would be destroyed, church authorities hid the statue at the University of Santo Tomas until 1946, the 300th anniversary of the battles.

The image was transferred in October 1954 to a new shrine built to house it inside the new Santo Domingo Church in Quezon City–the sixth Santo Domingo Church since its erection in the late sixteenth century in Intramuros. For this journey, devotees constructed a boat-shaped carriage (Spanish: Carroza Triunfal) to carry the image to its new home, which was declared her National Shrine by the Catholic Bishops Conference of the Philippines.[5] In October 1973, La Naval was formally declared the patroness of Quezon City, at that time the national capital. Filipino Archbishop Mariano Gaviola declared her patroness of the Philippine Navy in 1975, a patronage invoked until this day.

 
A replica of the image at the Manila Cathedral in Intramuros.

During the People Power Revolution of February 1986, a replica of the statue was brought in procession to the Malacañan Palace by the Dominican friars, in a peaceful protest of the state of martial law instituted by President Ferdinand Marcos. The replica was also brought to the eastern gate of Camp Crame, the police headquarters where the rebel forces headed by Juan Ponce Enrile and Fidel V. Ramos were confined during the uprising. Many Filipino Catholics attribute the revolution's peaceful victory to the miraculous intervention of the Blessed Virgin Mary.[6]

Filipino historian Nick Joaquín attributed one of the red jewels in one of the statue's crowns to an old legend of a giant serpent found in the Pasig River; the local folktale is more likely a metaphor of the triumph of Christianity over paganism.[citation needed] The other crown was supposedly inscribed and donated by King Norodom of Cambodia in 1872, one having disappeared after a burglary in 1930 while another one was simply two pearls adorning the orbs of the statue.

In December 2011, the Eternal Word Television Network featured the image as the "Grandest Marian Icon in the Philippines" on an episode of the programme Mary: Mother of the Philippines.

The image, its church and convent, along with the other objects stored in the complex were declared a "National Cultural Treasure" by the National Museum of the Philippines on 4 October 2012. This declaration is in accordance with Republic Act 10066 ("National Cultural Heritage Act of 2009") announced officially by the Catholic Bishops' Conference of the Philippines and by the National Museum.[1][7]

Pontifical approbations

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The statue has merited several papal honours, namely the following:

"...Go to the temple of Santo Domingo, to the sanctuary of the excellence of the Most Holy Virgin of the Rosary in the Philippines, to the place where your elders bent their knees to give thanks to her who liberated these Islands from Protestant heresy, to the spot consecrated by the piety of one hundred generations who had gone there to deposit their piety and confidence in Mary most holy...
Leone XIII, P.P. "

Feast

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Feast of Our Lady of La Naval de Manila
 
La Naval de Manila at the baldachin after the enthronement rites
Also calledProcesion de las Procesiones
Observed byQuezon City
TypeReligious / Cultural
DateSecond Sunday in October
2023 dateOctober 8  (2023-10-08)
2024 dateOctober 13  (2024-10-13)
2025 dateOctober 12  (2025-10-12)
2026 dateOctober 11  (2026-10-11)
FrequencyAnnual

The feast of Our Lady of La Naval de Manila is on the second Sunday of October, having been celebrated on that date since 1646. Since 2023, the feast day of the image has been observed as a proper solemnity in Quezon City.[8]

The celebrations start with the enthronement of the image at the main altar of Santo Domingo Church on the Thursday before the novena of the image. The main highlight of the celebrations is the street procession of the image on its feast day, attracting thousands of devotees. The first procession was held in October 1646 in Intramuros to commemorate the Spanish victory in the Battles of La Naval de Manila.[8]

26 images join the Virgin in procession. While some of the images are made sometime in the 20th century, some are made in the 18th century and are part of the original Intramuros procession, these are the ivory images of Saints Vincent Ferrer, Catherine of Ricci, Rose of Lima, Agnes of Montepulciano, Pius V, and Catherine of Siena. Some of the 11 original images that used to join the Intramuros procession didn't survive the war, and those are the images of Dominic de Guzman, Antoninus of Florence, Peter of Verona, Thomas Aquinas, and Saint Joseph. The procession in Old Intramuros is once known as the "Procession of All Processions", and is known to be the grandest feast of Old Manila.[8]

In 2020 and 2021, the image's procession was cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic in the Philippines. Instead, the image was enshrined outside the shrine for devotees to venerate.[9][10]

In 2023, city-wide celebrations were held in Quezon City to commemorate the fiftieth anniversary of the declaration of the Marian title as patroness of the city.[11]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b CBCP: Sto Domingo church to be named 'national treasure' Oct 4, GMA News.
  2. ^ The National Shrine of Our Lady of the Rosary, La Naval de Manila
  3. ^ La Naval de Manila Online: The Story of La Naval
  4. ^ Shrine
  5. ^ Shrine
  6. ^ La Naval Online
  7. ^ Sto. Domingo Church to be declared national treasure[usurped], CBCP News.
  8. ^ a b c Hermoso, Christina (26 September 2023). "Bishop Ongtioco declares second Sunday of October as Solemnity of La Naval". Manila Bulletin. Retrieved 18 October 2023.
  9. ^ "No procession in pandemic, but faithful still mark Our Lady of the Rosary's La Naval de Manila feast". BusinessMirror. 12 October 2020. Retrieved 18 October 2023.
  10. ^ Castillo, Ma. Alena O. (7 October 2021). "Mary to gaze devotees once again on La Naval feast". The Varsitarian. Retrieved 18 October 2023.
  11. ^ Hermoso, Christina (29 September 2023). "City-wide celebration begins for feast of La Naval". Manila Bulletin. Retrieved 18 October 2023.