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

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TheCityWorships 247 


silently, so as not to distract from the main service. And he was not to begin


until the deacon of the people’s Mass had chanted the Gospel.^76 To replace


the people’s Mass with some other celebration so as to convenience the


clergy was a serious abuse. The saintly minister general of the Franciscans,


Fra Giovanni of Parma, put an immediate stop to the practice in some Fran-


ciscan houses of replacing the people’s Mass with a Requiem when one had


to be said.^77 The time for solemn Mass was early to mid morning. Mostly,


the proper hour fell after Matins but before Terce, but a later time, just after


Terce, was common on Sundays and feasts. Then the canons at Siena chan-


ted Sext immediately following Mass as a thanksgiving. Because the Mass


celebrated both Christ’s Passion on Good Friday and his Resurrection on


Easter morning, it was almost never said after None, lest the connection with


that Resurrection morn be lost.^78 People frequented Masses other than the


solemn Mass when these were available. These Masses had the attraction of


being more intimate, especially when celebrated at nave altars or in small


side chapels, and of being briefer, since they were celebrated with lesser


solemnity, although still sung.


In a practice probably nearly universal, the canons of Siena celebrated a


‘‘Mary Mass’’ a little after the solemn Mass of the day during most of the


year. It complemented their recitation of the daily Office of the Virgin. They


omitted this devotional Mass only from Advent to Epiphany, Palm Sunday


to Pentecost Octave, and on a few of the most solemn feasts. It attracted so


many laypeople that the clerics called it the ‘‘popular,’’ or ‘‘people’s,’’ Mass


(Missa popularis), although that title really belonged to the Mass of the day or


the Mass during which there was a general Communion.^79 The ancient


Roman practice had been to repeat the Sunday Mass each day of the follow-


ing week, but in a shorter version (without the Gloria and Credo), unless the


week included a feast or saint’s day. The clerics of the communes broke this


monotony by celebrating a ‘‘votive Mass,’’ that is, a Mass with a special


theme, on each weekday. On Monday, this was usually the Mass of the Holy


Trinity; on Tuesday, that of Charity; on Wednesday, that of the Holy Spirit;


on Thursday, that of the Angels; on Friday, that of the Holy Cross; and on


Saturday, that of the Blessed Virgin Mary. Everywhere, the choir added a


Gloria to the votive Mass of the Blessed Virgin on Saturday as a way of


giving her special honor. Local churches, however, in other ways enjoyed


freedom to establish their own customs. Bishop Sicardo knew of some Italian


churches that sang a Requiem Mass on Tuesday, a Mass for Peace on


Wednesday, and a Mass against Tribulations on Thursday.^80 Since choice of



  1. Grado Council ( 1296 ), 4 ,p. 1166 , and Bologna, Biblioteca Universitaria,ms 1785(latexiicent.),
    Rolando the Deacon,Liber de Ordine Officiorum,fol. 35 v.

  2. Salimbene,Cronica( 1248 ), 439 , Baird trans., 301.

  3. See ibid. ( 1250 ), 608 , trans., 425 ;Ordo Senensis, 1. 14 ,p. 14.
    79 .Ordo Senensis, 2. 12 – 15 , pp. 413 – 15.

  4. Sicardo,Mitrale, 8. 1 , cols. 388 – 89.

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