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Franciscan Sanctuaries
San Rufino

Two special Churches in Assisi:
R – Basilica of St Clare
L – Cathedral
of St Rufinus
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At one end of the main street of Assisi, Via San Francesco, is the Basilica
of Saint Francis … so striking as the walled city is approached
by road. At the other end of the street is the great edifice in
pink and while stone dedicated to Saint Clare. It is necessary
to wind your way up through the narrow streets of Assisi to find the
Cathedral of San Rufino which pre-dates both the other major churches.
The present Romanesque structure with its beautiful rose window and
impressive bell tower is the third Cathedral to stand on this site. The
earliest was built in the 5th Century in honour of St Rufinus, a bishop
of the third century who is said to have brought Christianity to Assisi.
This church was replaced early 11th Century and by the present structure
in the first half of the 12th Century.

The Cathedral of San Rufino, Assisi
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San
Rufino has a special place in the history of the Franciscan Order as
it was the parish church of Assisi at the time when Francis (1182) and
Clare (1193) were baptised at the font that is still used for baptisms
there today. Bernard and some of the other early disciples of Francis
would have been baptised there too.
In this church Francis began his preaching after he was given permission
by Innocent III. Clare would certainly have heard Francis preach there
as she attended Mass with her family. At Mass in San Rufino Clare accepted
the olive branch from Bishop Guido on Palm Sunday, 11 March 1212 – the
day she secretly left home to join Francis.
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