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

(Darren Dugan) #1

 74 LaCitadeSancta


of lay penitents. The group’s organization was also strikingly similar to that


of the neighborhood corporations (societa`) that dominated the thirteenth-cen-


tury communes. But this group had no penitential aspects or civil functions.


One can only assume that the communal corporations derived their struc-


tures from pious societies like this one rather than vice versa.^31 I discuss the


communal neighborhood societies in the next chapter.


Like the San Cassiano d’Imola group, early societies of conversi were


rural foundations. A well-documented group of conversi gathered around


the church of San Desiderio in the Vicentine contado. They were active


from 1187 to 1236 and present a good example of the structure and goals of


such a lay association.^32 These penitents formed a voluntary community and


supported themselves by agriculture. Lowland flooding, which destroyed


their livelihood, probably explains their disappearance in the late 1230 s.^33


Members of this group married, had children, cultivated their fields in com-


mon, and practiced an asceticism based on that of canonical public penance


(save for celibacy). The association was spontaneous and voluntary.^34 Their


religious identity was paramount. They vowed conversion of life, wore a kind


of habit (saio), recited the traditional hours, if literate, or the Pater Noster (as


medievals knew the Our Father, or Lord’s Prayer), if not. They met for


periodic Masses, sermons, and chapters of faults. The group held common


property, but they were not monks, nor were they attached to a monastery.


A document of 21 November 1222 records the self-oblation of Adriano of


Grancona and his wife, Richelda, to the San Desiderio community. The


couple give their property, including Richelda’s dowry, to the group, and


the document carefully itemizes it. Fortunately, the document also includes


the couple’s ceremony of oblation. After offering their property, the conversi


of the church wrapped the couple with cloths from San Desiderio’s altar,


thereby symbolizing that the group’s patron had taken the new members


under his protection.^35 This gesture is strikingly like that by Bishop Guido of


Assisi, who wrapped his mantle around Saint Francis as a sign of ecclesiasti-


cal protection when that layman converted to penance and disburdened


himself of property and clothing.


Although eleventh-century conversi were ‘‘freelancers,’’ they sought spon-


sorship from local ecclesiastical authorities. The turn of the thirteenth cen-


tury was a fertile time for such affiliation. Excepting their common



  1. Cf. De Sandre Gasparini,Statuti,xlix–l, and Ronald Weissman, ‘‘From Brotherhood to Congre-
    gation: Confraternal Ritual Between Renaissance and Catholic Reformation,’’Riti e rituali nelle societa`
    medievali,ed. Jacques Chiffoleau, Lauro Martines, and Agostino Paravicini Bagliani (Spoleto: Centro
    Italiano di Studi sull’Alto Medioevo, 1994 ), 79.

  2. Documents in Vicenza, Archivio di Stato, San Bartolomeo, Busta 1 , on which, see Gilles Ge ́rard
    Meersseman, ‘‘Penitenti rurali comunitari in Italia alla fine delxiisecolo,’’ Meersseman,Ordo, 1 : 305 – 54.

  3. Meersseman, ‘‘Penitenti,’’ 321.

  4. Ibid., 335. On use of canonical penance forms, see Meersseman,Ordo, 1 : 326 – 27.

  5. ‘‘Pergamene dei Penitenti di S. Desiderio’’ 25 , Meersseman,Ordo, 1 : 349 – 51 , esp. 350 ; on this
    ceremony, see ibid., 1 : 312.

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