"Going down towards the sea, St. Angelo appears surrounded by air of peace. Escaping from central part of the Island, first of all, stands the homonym islet with its cliffs and rocks above the waves, accessible only from the North-East by a stretch of sand 119.50 meters long and 30 meters wide to close the Island. It is a rock of volcanic origin 105 meters high. A gigantic altar beneath the sky, an altar shrouded in mystery and historical splendours where the cult of St. Michael the Archangel established, the guardian angel that gave name to the village".
Don Pietro Monti (1915 - 2008), the priest-archaeologist discovered, in the 1950s, a treasure of ancient memories on the floor of the church, the Sanctuary of Santa Restituta in Lacco Ameno, so described by St. Angelo in his remarkable work about the history and Archaeology of the Island of Ischia.
On that island the Benedictine Monks during the 1000 A.D. built a small monastery which abandoned in 1432 maintaining the cult of St. Michael the Archangel. There was also a church with a lookout tower that was destroyed during the British bombardment of 1808. Since then, the island was abandoned. The small fishing village began to extend to the sea with houses clinging to the rock.
The popular tradition says that the little statue of St. Michael the Archangel was moved to a small chapel above the village called "S. Maria a Terra" that a priest, Don Giuseppe Iacono, son of wealthy family of landowners and merchants of wine, expanded also thanks to donations in 1850 to build a parish that had the canonical recognition in 1905.
The church was built next to the tiny cemetery where the soil had been donated by the same Don Giuseppe Iacono. The church and cemetery are separated only by the small churchyard.
Don Vincenzo Fiorentino, the current parson of St. Michael in St. Angelo, which is the smallest church of the 25 parishes of the island with a community of about 700 souls, welcomes me during a marvellous August day just at this tiny courtyard that - he says - is "yearly the place of meeting with the Committee for the celebration in honor of St. Michael on September 29th and 30th , although the dates this year - he explains - are mid-week: on Thursday 29th and Friday 30th. Don Vincenzo Fiorentino is 81 but shows less years. He is son of peasants in the nearby village of Panza and the longevity is one of the family, for centuries. His mother died at the age of 100. He is priest of St. Michael Parish for 49 years - he tells me - and is the third priest since the erection of the parish after Father Giuseppe Iacono and Don Luigi Trofa, a great priest and educator who was pastor from 1913 until 1962.
In the small cemetery beside the church rests on his will also another great priest of St. Angelo, Don Pasquale Polito (1907-1994), historian and author about the island of Ischia and in his memoirs recalls the Don Luigi Trofa’s teaching. "Here I perform every role from the priest to the sacristan and even the guardian of the little cemetery that the inhabitants of St. Angelo tenaciously defend because it is set in the middle of town and nowis at risk of being closed", Don Vincenzo said me. He lives there by choice, in the small apartment of the rectory where it is possible to admire a breathtaking view overlooking the Maronti marina village. "The cult of St. Michael fades away in the time out of mind - he said - and has probably been consolidated by the sea tradition of "santangiolesi "fishermen and sailors who sent the wine to all the Mediterranean ports aboard their ships. St. Michael is venerated in Procida and Capri", Don Vincenzo concluded. The St. Michael celebration refers primarily to the extraordinary beauty of the "procession on the sea" on Friday, Sept. 30. The St. Michael’s statue shows “the warrior and the driver with a drawn sword against the dragon”, Don Pietro Monti presents in his book. The statue is carried on the shoulder of sailors of the St. Angelo church going down the lane to the square and from there set on a vessel on which there are Don Vincenzo Fiorentino, civil and military authorities, members of the committee and then hundreds of crafts of all kinds with the population and tourists to follow the St. Michael’s boat. It comes up from the harbor to Punta Chiarito towards Forio, and then circumnavigates the small island that everyone calls "The Tower", to the Maronti marina village and finally they return to the port and the square.
The procession begins on the sea at 18 and finishes at 20 in the square, where Don Vincenzo celebrates the Mass of thanksgiving. "It is a celebration very important for the population and very appreciated by tourists that for many years book hotels on the occasion of two days of the holy celebration," Don Vincenzo explains. The celebration ends the two feast days , during which religious services are intertwined with the band concerts in the square, the spectacle of the fireworks at midnight on September 30 in the stretch of water of Cava Grado with the Island of Ventotene before. Eighteen miles away it is possible also to catch a glimpse of Ischia, the Mother Island of the Gulfs of Naples and Gaeta. On the Pontine Islands nowadays "Ischia settlers" are still living and bear surnames like Iacono, Mattera, Taliercio. Descendants of peasants and fishermen, men and women of land and sea, have sailed the Mediterranean islands settling on the islands, even in the Tuscan Archipelago, trusting in the holy protection of St. Michael the Archangel, their own guardian angel.
This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it











