Tap / click on image to see more RealViewsTM
Sale Price CA$4.35.  
Original Price CA$6.21 per card
You save 30%

SS. Monica and Augustine at Ostia (SAU 047) Card

Qty:
Signature Matte
18 pt thickness / 120 lb weight Soft white, soft eggshell texture
+CA$1.00
+CA$1.00
-CA$0.30

Other designs from this category

About Folded Greeting Cards

Sold by

Size: Standard, 5" x 7"

Thank you, hello, or I love you, custom greeting cards are thoughtful gifts that are always the perfect way to express yourself.

  • Dimensions: 5" x 7" (portrait); 7" x 5" (landscape)
  • Full colour CMYK print process
  • Double sided printing for no additional cost

Paper Type: Signature Matte

Our Signature Matte paper is a customer favorite—smooth to the touch with a soft eggshell texture that elevates any design. Its sturdy 18 pt weight and natural feel make it the ideal choice for timeless, sophisticated events.

  • Exclusively made for Zazzle
  • Made and Printed in the USA
  • FSC® Certified—sourced from responsibly managed forests that protect both people and planet

About This Design

SS. Monica and Augustine at Ostia (SAU 047) Card

SS. Monica and Augustine at Ostia (SAU 047) Card

Today, we would call her a ‘helicopter parent’. St. Monica (c. 332−387) was unrelenting in her fervent prayers and tearful entreaties for her eldest son Augustine to return to the values of his Christian upbringing. Augustine had lived fast and loose since he had gone off to Carthage to Rhetoric School, the Roman equivalent of college, at 17. Now in his late 20s-early 30s and eager to escape his nagging mother, Augustine told her one day he was going down to the docks to see off ‘a friend’. Instead, he sailed away himself… to Rome! St. Monica followed. But, when she arrived in Rome, Augustine had already left for Milan for a better job: an imperial appointment as professor. St. Monica followed. At Milan, Augustine came under the influence and became friends with its archbishop St. Ambrose. It was a turning point in the future saint’s spiritual development. + The Lord works in mysterious ways. St. Ambrose became St. Monica’s spiritual adviser and Augustine’s Christian father-figure. St. Monica and her son reconciled. They spent six harmonious months at a rural manor in Cassiciacum (modern Cassago Brianza in Lombardy) while Augustine completed his pre-baptismal instructions in the Faith. And, in 386, with his much-relieved mother in attendance, Augustine (together with his son Adeodatus and friend Alypius) was baptized in the Church of St. John the Baptist by St. Ambrose. + In his Confessions (IX, 10), a frank account of his transgressions and conversion, St. Augustine recalls how he and his mother then set off for Africa. Having reached Ostia, the port of Rome, after a difficult journey, the pair took lodging at a comfortable house. A 14th-century monk Jordan of Quedlinburg, who wrote a life of St. Augustine, later summed up the passage and its experience in four words writing ‘[col]loquebantur soli valde dulciter’, that is ‘they spoke alone together sweetly’ of the life eternal of the Saints in heaven. (The Latin phrase appears on the original chromolithograph where we have added the saints’ names.) + In the Confessions, SS. Monica and Augustine stood at a window overlooking an interior central garden of a typical peristyle Roman house. In this splendid image, they are depicted deep in conversation on a porch overlooking the sea. Seated on a marble bench, St. Monica is dressed in a violet mantle with an emerald green lining over a reddish-pink robe. She wears a white veil and her head is surrounded by a halo in emerald green with yellow-green rays. She gestures animatedly with both hands raised in the rhetorical gesture of supplication or solemn entreaty toward her son. St. Augustine is anachronistically tonsured and dressed in the black habit of his—the Augustinian—order. A priest’s black galero--a low-crowned, wide-brimmed ecclesiastical hat--lays on the bench behind him. He would not live the monastic life nor become a priest until after his return to Africa (in c. 388 and 391, respectively). Focused on spiritual matters, St. Augustine’s eyes are lifted toward heaven. His right hand rests on the balustrade and his left is raised in the rhetorical gesture calling for silence. He is bearded and his head is surrounded by a halo in dark reddish-pink with rays in a lighter shade of that colour. Heavenly beams of soft yellow light shine down on the figures of the two saints through grey-violet clouds in an aqua blue beamed sky. Taken as a whole, the scene telescopes the saints’ mother-son relationship: St. Monica’s entreaties to Augustine to mend his ways (the past); the intimate conversation on spirituality at Ostia (the present), and St. Augustine’s commitment to the religious life (the future). + Five days later, St. Monica--her heart’s desire achieved, her earthly work finished--contracted a fever. She died at Ostia following a nine-day illness. + Feasts: August 27 (St. Monica) and August 28 (St. Augustine) + Image Credit (SAU 047): Antique devotional print in chromolithography of SS. Monica and Augustine entitled Loquebantur soli valde dulciter [‘They spoke alone together sweetly’], originally published by the Socièté de St. Augustin, Bruges, Belgium, late 19th century, from the designer’s private collection of religious ephemera.

Customer Reviews

4.9 out of 5 stars rating17.5K Total Reviews
16501 total 5-star reviews724 total 4-star reviews118 total 3-star reviews60 total 2-star reviews114 total 1-star reviews
17,517 Reviews
Reviews for similar products
5 out of 5 stars rating
By Debra J.April 17, 2024Verified Purchase
Folded Greeting Card, Size: Standard, 5" x 7", Paper: Signature Matte, Envelopes: White
Really pleased with the card quality. The perfect theme to personalize a birthday celebration. Birthday greeting combined with a Christmas wish for my nieces Christmas Birthday. Perfect! These colours really pop on this Matte finish. The cute funny monkey expressions add humour to a birthday card surprise.
5 out of 5 stars rating
By AnonymousOctober 1, 2025Verified Purchase
Folded Greeting Card, Size: Big, 8.5" x 11", Paper: Signature Matte, Envelopes: White
I absolutely love this!! Thank you so much for creating a very special birthday card for my mom for her very special day!
5 out of 5 stars rating
By Stacey V.May 5, 2023Verified Purchase
Folded Greeting Card, Size: Small, 4" x 5.6", Paper: Signature Matte, Envelopes: White
Zazzle Reviewer Program
This card is beautiful. I loved that I could pick special poems that mean something to me and will mean so much to my friend who lost her pet soul mate. The picture and the poems I requested turned out Purrfect! I will definitely be back to place more orders with this seller. Thank you for the amazing work you do!!

Tags

Folded Greeting Cards
saint monica of tagastesaint augustine of hippowhite veil reddish pink robeviolet mantle with green liningblack augustinian monastic habitpriests black galeroroman port of ostia seascapeloquebantur soli valde dulciterthe confessionssau series
All Products
saint monica of tagastesaint augustine of hippowhite veil reddish pink robeviolet mantle with green liningblack augustinian monastic habitpriests black galeroroman port of ostia seascapeloquebantur soli valde dulciterthe confessionssau series

Other Info

Product ID: 256465747406006582
Designed on 2020-08-27, 3:55 PM
Rating: G