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  2. May devotions to the Blessed Virgin Mary - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/May_devotions_to_the...

    (Mary, Queen of May, we come to greet you. O dear donor of joy, look at us at your feet.) [11] Another similar song greets Mary, the queen of May, who is greeted by the month of May. [12] Another well-known Marian "Queen of May" song ends with the words: O Mary we crown thee with blossoms today! Queen of the Angels and Queen of the May.

  3. May Queen - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/May_Queen

    A May Queen of New Westminster, British Columbia, Canada circa 1877. In the British Isles and parts of the Commonwealth, the May Queen or Queen of May is a personification of the May Day holiday of 1 May, and of springtime and the coming growing season. The May Queen is a girl who rides or walks at the front of a parade for May Day celebrations.

  4. Bring Flowers of the Rarest - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bring_Flowers_of_the_Rarest

    "Bring Flowers of the Rarest" (also known as the Fairest) is a Marian hymn written by Mary E. Walsh. It was published as the "Crowning Hymn" in the Wreath of Mary 1871/1883 and later in St. Basil's Hymnal (1889). [citation needed] The hymn is frequently sung during a May Crowning service, one of several May devotions to the Blessed Virgin Mary ...

  5. Litany of the Blessed Virgin Mary - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Litany_of_the_Blessed...

    The Litany of the Blessed Virgin Mary is a Marian litany originally approved in 1587 by Pope Sixtus V.It is also known as the Litany of Loreto (Latin: Litaniae lauretanae), after its first-known place of origin, the Shrine of Our Lady of Loreto (Italy), where its usage was recorded as early as 1558.

  6. I syng of a mayden - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/I_syng_of_a_mayden

    The work has been described by Laura Saetveit Miles, a University of Bergen Professor of medieval literature, as "one of the most admired fifteenth-century Middle English lyrics [which] offers, within a deceptively simple form, an extremely delicate and haunting presentation of Mary (the 'mayden / þat is makeles') and her conception of Christ ('here sone')". [1]

  7. Marian litany - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marian_litany

    Marian litanies are numerous in the Eastern church and may cover a multitude of themes, some dogmatic, others of moral and patriotic character. In the liturgy of the Western Church the word litany is derived from the Latin litania , meaning prayer of invocation or intercession.

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  9. Our Lady, Star of the Sea - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Our_Lady,_Star_of_the_Sea

    [5] Pope Pius XII, in his encyclical Doctor Mellifluus, also quoted Bernard of Clairvaux in saying: "Mary… is interpreted to mean 'Star of the Sea'. This admirably befits the Virgin Mother… (for) as the ray does not diminish the brightness of the star, so neither did the Child born of her tarnish the beauty of Mary's virginity." [6]