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

(Darren Dugan) #1

 416 BuoniCattolici


was one hundred Paters and Aves.^236 Who could tell whether God might not


be more pleased with the Paters of a pious lay brother than with the elabo-


rate prayers of clerics? Prayers for the dead had their greatest power during


the Communion at Mass, just as the sacrifice was complete. One thirteenth-


century Florentine priest collected Communion devotions, including prayers


for the dead. His collection recommended that, on entering a cemetery, one


say a Pater for the dead, remembering that what they were now all would


one day be. For the literate he excerpted two Latin prayers from the Mass


of the dead, which could be added to this Pater to make it more specific.


One was for all the dead in the cemetery, the other for one’s parents. Death


did not cancel the Fourth Commandment. But for those with no Latin, the


Pater was wholly sufficient; it was the Lord’s own prayer.^237


Whether a family, a pious association, or the commune itself, every corpo-


ration was especially responsible for its dead. In 1278 , the clergy confraternity


of Ferrara got bishop Guglielmo to promise that on the first of each month


he would chant Mass and the Office of the dead for his deceased priests.


The cathedral clergy, for their part, bound themselves to attend under a


penalty of £ 6 ven. parv., to be dispensed as alms for the poor by the archdea-


con.^238 When a priest died, four priests of his contrada read the Psalter over


his body, and the bishop or archpriest of the duomo said the funeral Mass.


All priests chanted seven Requiem Masses for him within a month of his


death. The laity were not forgotten by these clerics; they too could enroll in


the confraternity for prayers and temporal benefits. A deceased priest’s cloth-


ing and goods went to the poorer lay members from his neighborhood.^239


Bishops also stipulated that the clergy recite Masses and prayers for them


after their death. In the province of Ravenna, the bishops, cathedral canons,


and collegiate-church clergy all chanted a Mass and fed three paupers each


day for an entire month when their archbishop died.^240


Lay confraternities and communal societies recited their own Paters and


Aves for the dead after Mass, usually on the first Sunday of the month.^241


Innocent III’s 1201 provisions for Humiliati lay tertiaries required them to


attend each other’s funerals and recite there twelve Paters and the psalm


‘‘Miserere.’’^242 The most ancient parts of the Bolognese Popolo’s statutes are


probably their suffrage provisions.^243 At Pisa, the society of Santa Lucia kept


a necrology listing dead members and recited three Paters and three Aves


236 .ACGOP, 267.
237. Florence, Biblioteca Nazionale Centrale,msMagl.xxxvi. 81 bis, fols. 37 r–v.
238. Ferrara Clergy Const. ( 1278 ), cols. 433 – 34.
239. Ibid., cols. 434 – 35.
240. Ravenna Council ( 1311 ), 2 ,p. 452 , and Ravenna Council ( 1317 ), 21 ,p. 620.
241. E.g., Lucca, Biblioteca Statale,ms 1310, fol. 9 r; Piacenza, Biblioteca Comunale,msPallestrelli
323 , fols. 17 r– 19 v; Meersseman, ‘‘Statuto dei Disciplinati di Bologna’’ ( 1260 ), 10 , Meersseman,Ordo, 1 : 480 ;
id., ‘‘Statuto dei Disciplinati di Vicenza’’ ( 1263 ), 29 , Meersseman,Ordo, 1 : 497.
242. On the Humiliati rites for the dead, see Andrews,Early Humiliati, 225 – 29.
243. Epstein,Wage Labor, 84 – 85.

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