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

(Darren Dugan) #1

CommunalPiety and theMendicants 437 


belief in Catharism, which had never amounted to anything more theologi-


cally sophisticated than condemning marriage, denying the Eucharist, and


worshiping the perfects. His claim has the ring of truth, since, as Fra Guido


discovered, Bompietro was incapable of distinguishing one Cathar sect from


another. The pursemaker confessed that he could not bring himself to turn


in Giuliano, knowing that his father’s old Cathar friend might end up at the


stake. He ascribed his contact with the other Cathars to his own foolishness


(ex simplicitate). Knowing that his actions were risky, and that he had thereby


incurred excommunication, he had confessed his lapses (probably spontane-


ously) to Fra Guido’s predecessor, the inquisitor Fra Florio of Vicenza. Faced


with such a case, Florio scourged him ‘‘a bit’’ (aliquantulum) on the shoulders


with a rod and gave him absolution, with a warning to watch himself. The


easygoing Florio did not even bother giving him a written copy of the absolu-


tion.^122 One senses that the sterner Guido was not pleased.


Unlike the elderly Cathar Giuliano, Bompietro was well known to his


fellow residents in San Martino dell’Aposa and the surrounding neighbor-


hood. His parish was located off the Market (the Piazza del Mercato, or


Campus Fori) on the north side of Bologna, between the old and new city


walls. San Martino was a center for leatherworking and for Bompietro’s


trade, pursemaking. As well as a pursemaker, Bompietro was a respected


small-scale businessman, a member of the merchants’ society, dealing in


wine. From his own stocks, Bompietro supplied Mass wine to the Carmelite


friars who had established themselves in his parish. He attended the Of-


fice,^123 which the friars sang, along with his friend, the tailor Zambonino di


Bongiovanni from San Bendetto in Galliera.^124 This parish was opposite San


Martino on the northwest corner of the Market. He was established, well


respected, generous, to all appearances a good Catholic—but a Catholic


who gave alms indiscriminately to Catholic and Cathar alike, even after his


second warning by Fra Florio.


After Bompietro’s arrest and two appearances before Fra Guido on 23


and 25 March 1299 , the inquisitor referred Bompietro’s case to a panel of


four experts in canon law. They submitted their opinion on 4 April. The


panel included famous names: Guido of Baiso (known to canon-law history


as ‘‘the Archdeacon’’), Giovanni of Monte Merlo, and Marsilio Manteghelli.


122 .ASOB,no. 12 , 1 : 33. Fra Florio was charged with peculation in 1307 : Zanella, ‘‘Malessere ereti-
cale,’’ 34.
123. Lansing,Power and Purity, 92 – 93 , is willing to consider Bompietro a Cathar ‘‘believer’’ in spite of
his Catholic conformity. I see no particular reason to doubt his good faith; as she admits, ibid., 95 – 96 ,
most Cathars and Catholics had only vague views on abstruse theological constructs and dogma.
124. As we know from a denunciation by Giovanni Bonmercati, a heresy hunter from the Societas
Crucis,ASOB,no. 180 , 1 : 175. He had overheard Zambonino say this in his lamentation over Bompietro’s
death while sitting on a bench outside the church of San Michele del Mercato di Mezzo, just around the
corner from the Palazzo Comunale. On his business connections, see ibid., 1 : 48 n. 1. It appears that Fra
Guido did not have Zambonino summoned. On the Societas Crucis, see Lorenzo Paolini, ‘‘Le origini
della ‘Societas Crucis,’ ’’Rivista di storia e letteratura religiosa 15 ( 1979 ): 173 – 229.

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