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

(Darren Dugan) #1

Feasting,Fasting,andDoingPenance 279 


man escaped death by hanging because the Virgin came and supported his


feet. When the thief revealed the miracle, the podesta pardoned him, and


both gave thanks to God and his Blessed Mother.^43


Sicardo of Cremona, as a theologian, might emphasize the Christological


dimension of the five Marian feasts celebrated at Cremona: Immaculate


Conception, Christmas, Annunciation, Assumption, and the Virgin’s Nativ-


ity. And he ruefully observed that among these two, Annunciation and


Christmas, were not Marian at all and that the Immaculate Conception was


nonbiblical and boasted only a vision to authenticate it.^44 For the laity, the


four feasts other than Christmas were the pivots of the year, marking the


seasons—and they were the preserve of the Virgin. Two stood above all the


rest, Mary’s Assumption and her Nativity. In Padua and its contado, Mary’s


birthday, on 8 September, was the Marian center of the year. They honored


her with yet anothernundinain the Piazza Este.^45 For that feast in 1208 , the


podesta Viscontino of Piacenza organized pageants, singing, and parades in


the Prato della Valle. The companies of the contrade marched, dressed in


splendid outfits made especially for the occasion. The events ranged from


the singing of psalms and hymns to feats of arms and included ‘‘the great


game of the wild man’’ (magnus ludus de quodam homine salvatico).^46


But no feast matched the Assumption as a time of devotion and festivity.^47


This, the feast of Saint Mary in August, was the great civic festival of sum-


mer. Parma detailed the municipal trumpeters, Santo di Ugolino de’ Vega-


tuli and Vetulo of Palanzano, to play at the festivities of that day and


provided each with a stipend of £ 3 parm. and a new suit of clothing.^48 A


document of 1273 records Brescia’s August celebration of the Virgin.^49 The


general council of the city publicized it in city and countryside. Heralds went


through the whole district for the eight to ten days previous, summoning all


to come and bring their offerings. Courts closed three days before the feast,


and at Terce on the vigil all shops, except the candle sellers, closed. The


captain of the people assembled the officials of the corporations (antiani parati-


corum) with their offerings to honor the Virgin and to support work on the


church of Santa Maria e San Pietro. Corporations and guilds suspended


business during the feast.^50


From the Annunciation, on 25 March, whose Lenten and winter date


precluded festivities, to the Assumption, on 15 August, not a single Marian



  1. Ibid., fols. 138 r–v.

  2. Sicardo,Mitrale, 9. 40 , col. 420.

  3. Padua Stat. ( 1275 ), 2. 10 ,p. 182 , no. 565.

  4. Rolandino of Padua,Cronica in Factis et circa Facta Marchie Trivixiane( 1208 ), 232 ;Liber Regiminum
    Padue( 1208 ), 300 – 301.

  5. Sicardo,Mitrale, 9. 40 – 43 , cols. 420 – 21.

  6. Parma Stat.i, 436 , 470.
    49 .Statuti bresciani del secoloxiii, ed. Federico Odorici (Turin: Reale Tipografica, 1876 ), col. 1584 ; see
    also Pini, ‘‘Le arti in processione,’’ 72 – 73 , on this text.

  7. E.g., the knife makers at Bologna: Bol. Pop. Stat., 2 : 412.

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