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

(Darren Dugan) #1

 274 BuoniCattolici


TheCityFeasts


Feasts had a social as well as a religious role. Cities fixed their court sessions


according to the liturgical calendar. Padua and Mantua courts scheduled


recess from Christmas to Epiphany and during the week of Michaelmas ( 29


September). In the spring, courts closed from Palm to Low Sunday, the time


of Holy Week and Easter Week—unless some delinquent dared violate that


holy season by rioting. Courts always closed on Sunday.^6 Christmas and


Easter were the very minimum for days of rest. Cities suspended sessions on


feasts of the Virgin, the apostles, and their local patron saints, including the


titulars of every city chapel.^7 From calculations based on festivals in rural


areas, we know that medieval farmers typically enjoyed a number of vaca-


tion days unequaled in later ages until the postindustrial society of the twenti-


eth century. The communes, with their closings for chapel patrons, certainly


had even more. Bologna in 1288 observed closings for Sundays and all major


solemnities of the calendar. The latter included the octaves (eight days) fol-


lowing Christmas and Easter, Holy Week itself, the two days before Christ-


mas, the major Marian feasts, the Ascension, all feasts of apostles, the


solemnity of Saints Peter and Paul, and the feast of Saint Michael. Bologna


thus enjoyed at least ninety-five days of rest a year. The number of closings


due to patron feasts varied from city to city, depending on the number of


chapel and city patrons. In 1288 , Bologna observed twenty-two days for


chapel titulars and added more as the century waned.^8 The large city of


Florence and smaller Lucca were among the highest in the number of titular


closings, each adding approximately twenty-five local saints to the major


festivals of the calendar. Ferrara required the least, only two. Brescia was


probably typical, with about ten.^9 On all feasts, Lucca forbade such noisome


activities as leatherworking in the Piazza San Pietro, lest the stink spoil the


decorum.^10 But Florence exempted barbers from festival closing, so that all


participating in the ceremonies of the day could look presentable.^11 Most


cities did not observe what Bishop Sicardo considered New Year’s Day, the


pagan 1 January.^12 The communes preferred 25 March, the date of the An-


nunciation to the Virgin, thereby linking the new civil year with Christ’s


Incarnation in the body of his mother. City officials received their biannual



  1. Padua Stat., 2. 10 ,p. 180 , nn. 554 – 56 ; Mantua Stat., 2. 25 , pp. 191 – 92. On saints’ days, see Webb,
    Patrons, 96 – 111 ; and on saints in municipal statutes, ibid., 95 – 134.

  2. E.g., Verona Stat.ii( 1276 ), 4. 158 ,p. 617 ; Modena Stat. ( 1327 ), 3. 1 , pp. 282 – 83 ; Biella Stat. ( 1245 ),



    1. 12 ( 72 ); Vicenza Stat. ( 1264 ), 181.



  3. Bologna Stat.i( 1250 – 67 ), 4. 18 , 1 : 400 – 402 ; Bologna Stat.ii( 1288 ), 6. 51 , 2 : 41 – 42.

  4. Florence Stat.ii( 1325 ), 2. 13 , pp. 95 – 96 ; Lucca Stat. ( 1308 ), 4. 1 , pp. 249 – 50 ; Ferrara Stat. ( 1287 ),

  5. 396 – 97 ,p. 199 ; Brescia Stat. (before 1277 ), cols. ( 149 )–( 150 ). Treviso only added All Saints and the feast
    of Saints Peter and Paul: Treviso Stat. ( 1230 ), 150 , 2 : 57 , and 168 , 2 : 63. See also the closing for patrons’
    feasts in Parma Stat.ii( 1266 ), 158.

  6. Lucca Stat. ( 1308 ), 3. 141 ,p. 221.

  7. Florence Stat.ii( 1325 ), 5. 21 ,p. 379.

  8. See Sicardo,Mitrale, 5. 6 , col. 218 C, and 8. 25 , col. 404.

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