Eucharistic Miracle of Blanot, France (1331)
 The                                   Eucharistic Miracle of Blanot took  place during                                  the Easter Mass of 1331.  During Communion, a Host                                  fell to a  cloth that was held below the communicant’s                                   mouth. The priest tried to pick it up, but it                                   was not possible. The Host had transformed into                                   Blood, resulting in a stain – the same size                                   as the Host – on the cloth. That cloth is                                   preserved today in the village of Blanot.
The                                   Eucharistic Miracle of Blanot took  place during                                  the Easter Mass of 1331.  During Communion, a Host                                  fell to a  cloth that was held below the communicant’s                                   mouth. The priest tried to pick it up, but it                                   was not possible. The Host had transformed into                                   Blood, resulting in a stain – the same size                                   as the Host – on the cloth. That cloth is                                   preserved today in the village of Blanot.In the 14th Century,  Blanot was                                  a small village in the  center of France and part                                  of the  diocese of Autun. The bishop of this town,                                   Pierre Bertrand, was involved in certain canonical                                   discussions with an official of his curia, Jean                                   Jarossier, which resulted in documentation that                                   gives us many details about this  Eucharistic miracle.
The  miracle occurred on Easter                                  Sunday,  March 31, 1331, at the first Mass of the                                   day, which was offered by Hugues de la Baume,                                   the vicar of Blanot. One of the last people to                                   receive Communion was a woman named Jacquette,                                   the widow of Regnaut d'Effour. The priest  placed                                  the Host on her tongue, turned,  and started walking                                  toward the altar.  He did not notice that a particle                                  from  the Host fell and landed upon a cloth that                                   covered the woman’s hands. Thomas Caillot,                                   who was assisting at the Mass went to the altar                                   and said: “Father, you must return to the                                   rail because the Body of Our Lord fell from the                                   mouth of this lady onto the cloth.” The                                   priest immediately went to the woman,  still kneeling                                  at the railing, but  instead of finding the Host                                  on the  cloth, he saw a small spot of Blood. 
When  Mass was over, the priest                                  took the  cloth into the sacristy and placed the                                   stained area in a basin filled with clear water.                                   After washing the spot and scrubbing it numerous                                   times, he found that it had become darker and                                   larger (reaching about the size and shape of a                                   Host). Moreover, the water in the  basin turned                                  bloody. The priest took a  knife and, after washing                                  it, cut from  the cloth the piece bearing the bloody                                   imprint of the Host. He held it up and said: “Good                                   people: here there is the Precious Blood of Our                                   Lord Jesus Christ. I sought in every way to wash                                   it and to wring it, and in no way was I  able to                                  remove it from this cloth.”  This square                                  of cloth was reverently  placed in the tabernacle.                                  Every year,  on the feast of Corpus Christi, the                                   relic is solemnly exposed in the church of Blanot.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 
