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

(Darren Dugan) #1

 200 LaCitadeSancta


ally exorcized demoniacs (even nuns, at the bishop’s request), and practiced


his trade for the glory of God.^128


TheCityMakes aSaint


Good relations between holy person and city brought mutual benefits; cities


competed to recruit possible saints. It took an apparition of the Blessed Vir-


gin and an intervention from the bishop of Lucca to end the quarrel between


Castelfranco and Castel Santa Croce over the right to construct a monastery


for Oringa Cristiana. Castel Santa Croce got the honor.^129 The communes


knew that any holy person might become a protector in heaven. After death,


the commune and neighbors promoted the cults and erected the tombs of


their divinely favored children. The parish or cathedral clergy wrote their


lives, at least until later in the thirteenth century, when mendicants came to


dominate hagiography.^130 In contrast with practice in the communal period,


however, modern canonization is a centralized process, and the making of a


saint can take decades, if not centuries.^131 The modern procedure has distinct


steps: an initiation of the process for the ‘‘servant of God,’’ approval of a


restricted cult under the title of ‘‘blessed,’’ and finally the papal canonization


itself, which declares the blessed a ‘‘saint’’ of the universal Church. The


people of communal Italy knew none of this.^132 Today public veneration of


an uncanonized saint will block a papal canonization. The people of the


communes created their saints by acclamation. The public cult came first,


and it made the saint.


When the Dominicans buried Margherita of Citta`di Castello, they could


not do so in the cloister, because the people demanded that her tomb be


accessible in the church—they already considered her a saint and treated


her as such.^133 When Francesco Patrizzi’s Servite brothers intoned the open-


ing chant of his funeral Mass, the congregation shouted down the choir and


demanded instead the chants for the feast of a confessor. The friars obliged


and sang the introit ‘‘Gaudemus in Domino’’ instead of ‘‘Requiem Aeter-


nam.’’ From that day forward, Francesco was a saint.^134 Not all clerics were


so cooperative. When the founder of the Dominicans died at Bologna, the


friars buried him in an unmarked grave. Within days, the laity starting show-


ing up to honor ‘‘Saint’’ Dominic’s tomb with flowers and candles and to



  1. Ibid., 29 – 31 ; for his exorcism by blessed bread, seeVita Beati Facii, 44 – 45 (Miraculum 5 ).
    129 .Legenda Beatae Christianae, 22 , pp. 205 ; see also the deed for the house: ibid., pp. 285 – 89.

  2. Vauchez, ‘‘Nouveaute ́,’’ 76.

  3. On the shift from episcopal to papal control of canonizations, see Herrmann-Mascard,Reliques
    des saints, 87 – 105.

  4. On saints’ cults, see Sofia Boesch Gajano,Agiografia altomedievale(Bologna: Il Mulino, 1976 ), and
    the bibliographical and methodological update in ead., ‘‘Il culto dei santi,’’ 119 – 36 ; and Golinelli,Citta`e
    culto. On the ‘‘canonization’’ of lay saints, see, above all, Vauchez, ‘‘Between Church and City,’’Laity in
    the Middle Ages, 67 – 72.
    133 .Legenda B. Margaritae de Castello, 24 ,p. 126.

  5. Cristoforo of Parma,Legenda Beati Francisci, 32 ,p. 187.

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