Leopold of Alpandeire
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Alpandeire, Málaga, Spain
Granada
Leopold of Alpandeire | |
|---|---|
| Born | 24 June 1864 Alpandeire, Málaga, Spain |
| Died | 9 February 1956 (aged 91) Granada |
| Beatified | 12 September 2010, Armilla Air Base, Armilla by Archbishop Angelo Amato |
| Major shrine | Crypt of the Capuchin convent in Granada |
| Feast | 9 February |
Leopold of Alpandeire (Spanish: Leopoldo de Alpandeire; 24 June 1864 – 9 February 1956) – born Francisco Tomás de San Juan Bautista Márquez y Sánchez – was a Spanish Capuchin friar.[1] He spent most of his life in Granada, where its people still remember and celebrate him as a model example of Christian life and virtue.[2] Devotion to the friar has spread considerably in southern Spain. He was beatified in September 2010.
Early life
Francisco Tomás de San Juan Bautista Márquez y Sánchez was born on 24 June 1864, in Alpandeire, Spain, a small village in the province of Málaga, and was baptized on 29 June. His parents, Diego Márquez y Ayala and Jerónima Sánchez y Jiménez, were peasants.[3][4] The family, although of modest condition, owned land dedicated to the cultivation of cereals and almond trees, as well as some goats. Marquez was the eldest son out of four children from that marriage; he had two brothers and one sister.
He spent his entire childhood and youth in Alpandeire dedicated to agricultural work, except for a period of military service (1887-1888), which he carried out in the Pavía Infantry Regiment in Malaga.
Religious life
Márquez decided to dedicate himself to religious life after hearing two Capuchins preach in the city of Ronda (on the occasion of the beatification of Diego José de Cádiz in 1894).[4] He later declared that the secluded way of life of those men had made a good impression on him. He felt attracted by the idea of serving God by becoming similar to them.
After several failed attempts, he entered the Capuchin convent in Seville in 1899 as a postulant and took the religious name Leopold (of Alpandeire). In 1900 he made his vows. After successive assignments in Antequera, Granada and again Seville, on February 21, 1914 he was definitively transferred to the convent of Granada, where he resided for 42 years.[5]
Most of the time Leopold served as sacristan and questor of the community,[4] which had him walk around the city and into many homes requesting donations. Gradually he became a familiar sight in the city, so many people sought his advice or intercession, beginning to know him as "the humble beggar of the three Hail Marys", because that was the prayer dedicated to those who sought his blessing.
Leopold died in Granada on 9 February 1956, and is buried in a crypt of the friary church dedicated to his honor.[6]