Saint Zita of Lucca

detail of a stained glass window depicting Saint Zita of Lucca; design by Raphaël Freida, manufacture by Félix Gaudin, date unknown; Church of Saint-Honoré d'Eylau, Avenue Raymond Poincaré, 16th arrondissement of Paris, France; photographed on 12 September 2010 by GFreihalter; swiped from Wikimedia CommonsAlso known as

  • Cita
  • Sita
  • Citha
  • Sitha

Memorial

Profile

Born to a very poor but pious family. At age twelve she became a domestic servant for the wealthy Fainelli family in Lucca, Italy, a position she kept all her life; she looked at it as a way to serve God. She often gave her own food, and sometimes that of her master, to those poorer than herself, which caused her to get in frequent trouble with her employers and the other servants in the house who resented her. However, she did such a fine job she was eventually placed in charge of the house, and entrusted with its keys. Attended daily Mass before beginning her duties, and would go to a nearby monastery to pray in private. Her reputation was such that Dante in the Inferno referred to the city of Lucca as “Santa Zita”.

Born

  • 1218 at Bozzanello, Monte Sagrate, Tuscany, Italy

Died

Beatified

  • 1652 by Pope Innocent X
  • during the recognition proceedings, her remains were found to be incorrupt

Canonized

Patronage

Representation

Readings

A servant is not holy if she is not busy; lazy people…is fake holiness. Saint Zita

MLA Citation

  • “Saint Zita of Lucca“. CatholicSaints.Info. 27 April 2024. Web. 10 May 2024. <>