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

(Darren Dugan) #1

 242 BuoniCattolici


1 d. for the staff of a chapel.^42 At Lucca, failure to chant the Office was a


major clerical transgression. The city’s synod also stipulated that every


chapel, no matter how tiny, have at least one ‘‘scholar’’ trained in reading


and singing to assist the priest in the celebration of the hours.^43 Daily worship


continued throughout the year; only a papal interdict stopped it, and that by


stripping the city of its clergy.^44 In larger churches, monasteries, and cathe-


drals, the clergy filled the intervals between the canonical hours with recita-


tions of the Office of the dead and the little Office of the Virgin. These hours


were chanted in a subdued tone, to distinguish them from the great hours


that made up the official prayer of the Church.^45


Matins, the first canonical hour of the day, was the longest and most


elaborate. It was so essential to the daily round of prayer that a priest could


not say Mass unless he had already recited this Office, at least privately.^46


The laity knew these clerical obligations and expected their clergy to obey.


Matins began with the chanting of Vigils: twelve long psalms on ordinary


days, or ferias, sixteen psalms on Sundays, or nine psalms divided into three


‘‘nocturns’’ on feasts. At the end of ferial Vigils came three readings from


the Bible. The three nocturns of a feast each ended with a set of three read-


ings. In most cases, the readings of the first nocturn were from Scripture, the


second from a life of the saint, and the third from a treatise by a Church


Father. After each lesson came an elaborate responsory. From reading to


reading and day to day, the responsories formed narratives of events from


the Scriptures, and each such narrative set was called a ‘‘history.’’ For medie-


val listeners, this musical presentation of biblical stories overshadowed the


lessons as the essential ‘‘message’’ of Matins. Attached to Vigils were the six


psalms and canticles of Lauds, the twin of the evening Office, Vespers.^47


Since the psalms of the minor hours were identical each day, the variable


psalms of the long Office of Matins and the shorter Office of Vespers had to


complete the recitation of all 150 psalms of the Psalter each week. For each


psalm, the verses were chanted alternately by the clerics on the north and


south sides of the choir. Today, the chanting of Matins before dawn is unique


to monks and some other groups of religious clergy. In thirteenth-century


Italy, Matins was the normal morning Office of every church and parish,


even the smallest. Matins and Vespers, along with Mass, were the essential



  1. On obligations, see Lucca Synod ( 1300 ) (repeating statute of 1252 ), 1 ,p. 214 ; Piacenza Stat. Cler.
    ( 1297 ), pp. 529 – 30 ;( 1337 ), 1 – 2 , pp. 537 – 38.

  2. Lucca Synod ( 1253 ), 1 – 2 ,p. 54.

  3. As happened in Forlı`in 1282 :Chronicon Parmense, 39.

  4. On these lesser Offices, see Cremona Cath. Stat. ( 1247 ), 2 ,p. 453. On the canonical hours, see
    Sicardo,Mitrale, 4 , cols. 147 – 90.

  5. Grado Council ( 1296 ), 1 ,p. 1165.

  6. See Sicardo,Mitrale, 4. 1 , cols. 151 – 54 (on ferial Matins), and 4. 2 , cols. 154 – 59 (on festival Matins).
    In the province of Milan, the ‘‘Ambrosian Rite’’ followed different arrangements; on which, see ‘‘Instru-
    mentum Litis,’’ 8 ,p. 269 , and Valsecchi,Interrogatus, 110 n. 324 , citing Enrico Cattaneo,Il breviario ambro-
    siano(Milan: n.p., 1943 ), 12 , 27.

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