St. Francis and Franciscan Assisi Francis was born in 1181 and rumored that he was taught as a little boy to read and write in Latin. In 1205, Francisco had a vision; this vision was interpreted as information from the recovery of the God of the Church. After giving up all his possessions and receiving the blessings of the Pope, Francis began publishing his new priest, Franciscan. To protect his brother's faith, Francis created these rumors. They were written during the foundation period of the Franciscan orders.
Francisco and his followers - a small monk later known as Franciscan - promised poverty, chastity and obedience, sent a life of regret and preaching. Their efforts contributed to the Italian major spiritual renaissance of the 13th century. In 1212, Francisco helped his friend St. Clair in Assisi to order women based on the same oath as ordered by the Franciscan team. There are several orders from St. Francis in Assisi, including a non-professional order Secular Franciscan (SFO).
In the Franciscan assembly itself and his festival etiquette, St. Anthony was welcomed as a teacher and extraordinary missionary. He was the first teacher of the Franciscan society and received special approval and blessings from St. Francis to lead his brother Franciscan. His role as a missionary in calling people to return to faith has brought the title "pagan prisoners". Equally important is his peacemaking and harsh justice. In 1232, Pope Gregory IX worshiped Anthony as "Bible" and "Bible knowledge base". This is the reason why St. Anthony is often portrayed as the burning light or scripture of the Bible. In the hands. In 1946, Pope Pius XII officially announced that Anthony is a Ph.D. in a universal church. This is a sincere effort to understand and apply it to Anthony's God's Word and apply it to everyday life, the church especially wants to imitate St. Anthony.
During the teaching of Pope Peter Nicholas IV, the first Franciscan Papal Cimabue worked in Assisi. In Assisi, in the cross section of the cathedral under San Francisco, he created mural paintings called Madonna with the children, four angels and St. Francis. The left part of this mural is lost, but it may already indicate Padua 's St. Antonius (the author of the picture was recently questioned for technical and style reasons). At the same time that Roman artists decorated the nave, Cimabue was later asked to decorate the back and section of Assisi's cathedral. The cycle he created there includes the gospel scene, the life of the Virgin Mary, St. Peter and St. Paul. Due to the brighter color oxidation used by artists, these paintings are currently in a bad state.