Our Lady of the Thirty Three

Feast: the second Sunday of November. The small image of the Virgin of the
Thirty Three is a wood carving originating in the missions that the Jesuits had
in Paraguay in mid XVIII century. The image was made in one of the Guarani
workshops that flourished in these famous missions. Around 1779 the image was
placed in the chapel that the Jesuits looked after in the village of Pintado
and later, when the entire village moved to what is now the city of Florida,
the residents took with them the beloved image before whom their ancestors had
prayed. On April 19, 1825, thirty three orientals, Uruguayan patriots, landed
on the beaches of the Agraciada to commence the liberation of their country.
When they reached Florida, they went to the small church and placed the future
of the new nation at the feet of the Virgin. National Independence is
proclaimed on August 25, and the members of the Constitutional Court having
signed the Act of Independence, present themselves again before the image and
place their nascent country under her protection. Ever since, the natives have
called this image "La Virgen de los Treinta y Tres" (The Virgin of
the Thirty Three). On August 25, 1975, on the 150th anniversary of its
independence, the Uruguayan nation officially declared this image of the Virgin
and the church where it was venerated "Historic Monuments." The
Virgin of the Thirty Three is 36 centimeters high. It is a baroque carving of
the Assumption of the Virgin, whose cloak and robes seem to move becasue of
their many pleats. Since 1857, "The Liberator of Uruguay" has a gold
crown with precious stones, a gift of the second leader of the Thirty Three,
who later became president of the Republic. The disproportionate size of this
crown - an extraordinary gold work - has become the distinctive feature of this
Marian image. The image was crowned canonically in 1961 by a concession of His
Holiness John XXIII, who the following year proclaimed her officially
"Patroness of Uruguay." The solemnity of "Our Lady of the Thirty
Three" is celebrated on the second Sunday of November with a pilgrimage to
her shrine from every part of the nation.
With grateful thanks to the
Mary Page.