Cities of God: The Religion of the Italian Communes 1125-1325

(Darren Dugan) #1

TheHolyCity 131 


inducted new members in the chapel of San Cristoforo before the group’s


own altar, that of Saint Eustace. That altar was also their usual place of


meeting.^202 On the feast of their patron, the society elected as leaders eight


ministers. These received an annual compensation of 10 s. bon.^203 Given its


worldly purpose, the group’s statutes come as something of a shock to mod-


ern readers. This commercial entity is structurally and devotionally identical


to the early penitent confraternities. Its statutes first provided for devotion to


the patron saint. The treasurer (massarius) was to assure that an oil lamp


burned perpetually before the patronal altar. He procured ‘‘the two large


wax candles’’ that burned during the Masses of the society. At the vigil Mass


of Saint Eustace, each member personally presented a candle, to be valued


at least 18 d. bon., to the patron—failure to do so resulted in expulsion from


the society.^204 The society met each month on the last Sunday for a votive


Mass of Saint Eustace, for which the statutes provided a 6 d. bon. stipend to


the priest engaged to chant the service.^205 The Mass ended with abenedizione,


that is, a loaf of fine white bread, which was blessed and shared by the


members as a nonsacramental communion. After the service, the members


met to conduct society business if there was any. The major social affair of


the year was the annual banquet in honor of Saint Eustace.^206 The statutes


appropriated a sum of 15 s. bon., which paid for the dinner and allowed the


priest of the chapel to hire a suitable choir to chant the solemn Mass that


preceded it. A smaller dinner was held in the fall, in preparation for the


annual candle offering. The society members were obliged to say five Paters


and Aves daily in honor of the blessed martyr Saint Eustace. One might


easily mistake this vineyard society for a religious confraternity. That would


not be wholly mistaken. It would be a worse mistake to see it as a business


corporation with some pious trappings.


In the Society of Saint Eustace, sacred and worldly elements formed a


seamless whole, and they did so from its very foundation. The societies of


the Popolo should be understood in the same way. The statutes of the Bolog-


nese Societa`delle Armi present the same merging of secular purpose (mili-


tary and police functions) with religious forms. Their organization is identical


to that of the later vineyard society and earlier penitent associations. The


founders used the religious forms that were ready to hand. For only one


society, the Lombardi, does the group’s origin by itself explain its religious


character. The ‘‘Lombards’’ were localized in the university district toward


Porta Ravenna and limited to those of north Italian family origin. The soci-


ety was in origin a true religious confraternity, formed by the students of the


202. Ibid., fol. 123 r.
203. Ibid., fol. 123 r(repeated: fols. 140 r–v).
204. Ibid., fols. 123 v– 124 v(repeated: fols. 140 v– 141 r).
205. Ibid., fols. 124 r–v(repeated: fols. 141 v– 142 r).
206. Ibid., fol. 125 r(repeated: fols. 142 v– 143 r).
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