Fr. Paul D’Souza, OCD. The Carmelite Scapular: History and DevotionАрхівавана 8 кастрычніка 2020. — This article mentions the 17th century forgery, probably by a Carmelite named Fr. John Cheron, of what was purported to be a fragment of a letter by Saint Simon Stock’s secretary Peter Swanington (or Swanyngton). This «Swanington» letter was the origin of the July 16, 1251 date for Saint Simon Stock’s vision, this date having been chosen presumably because July 16th was (and still is) the Feast of Our Lady of Mount Carmel. It is also the source of some other oft-repeated details, such as the location of the vision at Cambridge, England. There is further information and analysis on the «Swanington» forgery in a July-December, 1904 Irish Ecclesiastical Record article by Herbert Thurston, S.J., «The Origin of the Scapular — A Criticism.», and the letter itself is extensively quoted at this linkАрхівавана 3 сакавіка 2016.
У 1951 годзе ВялебныПапаПій XII абвясціў наступнае падчас адзначэння 700-годдзя аб’яўлення Маці Божай СвятомуСымону Стоку: «Шкаплер ― гэта па сваёй сутнасці габіт. Чалавек, які атрымлівае яго, праз сам факт яго прыняцця становіцца ў большай ці меншай ступені звязаным з ордэнам кармелітаў» (з апостальскага ліста «Neminem profecto latet»). Крыніца: Hugh Clarke OCarm. Mary and the Brown Scapular; Carmelite Province of Our Lady of the Assumption; Anglo Irish Province of the Discalced Carmelites, 1994. (буклет) (англ.)
Hugh Clarke OCarm. Mary and the Brown Scapular; Carmelite Province of Our Lady of the Assumption; Anglo Irish Province of the Discalced Carmelites, 1994. (booklet) (англ.)
Fr. Paul D’Souza, OCD. The Carmelite Scapular: History and DevotionАрхівавана 8 кастрычніка 2020. — This article mentions the 17th century forgery, probably by a Carmelite named Fr. John Cheron, of what was purported to be a fragment of a letter by Saint Simon Stock’s secretary Peter Swanington (or Swanyngton). This «Swanington» letter was the origin of the July 16, 1251 date for Saint Simon Stock’s vision, this date having been chosen presumably because July 16th was (and still is) the Feast of Our Lady of Mount Carmel. It is also the source of some other oft-repeated details, such as the location of the vision at Cambridge, England. There is further information and analysis on the «Swanington» forgery in a July-December, 1904 Irish Ecclesiastical Record article by Herbert Thurston, S.J., «The Origin of the Scapular — A Criticism.», and the letter itself is extensively quoted at this linkАрхівавана 3 сакавіка 2016.
Fr. Paul D’Souza, OCD. The Carmelite Scapular: History and DevotionАрхівавана 8 кастрычніка 2020. — This article mentions the 17th century forgery, probably by a Carmelite named Fr. John Cheron, of what was purported to be a fragment of a letter by Saint Simon Stock’s secretary Peter Swanington (or Swanyngton). This «Swanington» letter was the origin of the July 16, 1251 date for Saint Simon Stock’s vision, this date having been chosen presumably because July 16th was (and still is) the Feast of Our Lady of Mount Carmel. It is also the source of some other oft-repeated details, such as the location of the vision at Cambridge, England. There is further information and analysis on the «Swanington» forgery in a July-December, 1904 Irish Ecclesiastical Record article by Herbert Thurston, S.J., «The Origin of the Scapular — A Criticism.», and the letter itself is extensively quoted at this linkАрхівавана 3 сакавіка 2016.
Fr. Paul D’Souza, OCD. The Carmelite Scapular: History and DevotionАрхівавана 8 кастрычніка 2020. — This article mentions the 17th century forgery, probably by a Carmelite named Fr. John Cheron, of what was purported to be a fragment of a letter by Saint Simon Stock’s secretary Peter Swanington (or Swanyngton). This «Swanington» letter was the origin of the July 16, 1251 date for Saint Simon Stock’s vision, this date having been chosen presumably because July 16th was (and still is) the Feast of Our Lady of Mount Carmel. It is also the source of some other oft-repeated details, such as the location of the vision at Cambridge, England. There is further information and analysis on the «Swanington» forgery in a July-December, 1904 Irish Ecclesiastical Record article by Herbert Thurston, S.J., «The Origin of the Scapular — A Criticism.», and the letter itself is extensively quoted at this linkАрхівавана 3 сакавіка 2016.