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The Demons and the Friars: Illicit Magic and Mendicant Rivalry in Renaissance Bologna*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 November 2018

Tamar Herzig*
Affiliation:
Tel Aviv University

Abstract

In 1473 Pope Sixtus IV instructed the vicar of the Bishop of Bologna to investigate rumors concerning Carmelite friars who were preaching that summoning demons in order to obtain responses from them was not heretical. Drawing on newly discovered archival sources, this article elucidates the circumstances that led the Franciscan pope to intervene in a conflict between the Bolognese Carmelites and the Dominican inquisitor Simone of Novara. It proposes that the Carmelite affair, which ended with the inquisitor's defeat, constituted a critical juncture in the Dominicans’ relations with other Mendicant orders, and that it shaped inquisitorial activity in Bologna over the next few decades. This paper suggests that the aftermath of the Carmelite affair may also explain why, when the repression of illicit magic was resumed, Inquisitor Giovanni Cagnazzo decided to turn a female necromancer, and not the friars who had taught her demonic rites, into the main target of his prosecution.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © 2011 Renaissance Society of America

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Footnotes

*

I wish to thank Michael D. Bailey, Maayan Liebrecht, Moshe Sluhovsky, and the two anonymous readers at Renaissance Quarterly for their helpful comments on earlier drafts of this article. Support from the Israel Science Foundation (grant no. 292/10) is gratefully acknowledged. All translations are the author's except where otherwise noted.

References

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Lea, Henry Charles. A History of the Inquisition of the Middle Ages. 2 vols. New York, 1888.Google Scholar
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Park, Katharine. “Medicine and Magic: The Healing Arts.” In Gender and Society in Renaissance Italy , ed., Brown, Judith C and , Davis, Robert C, 129–49. London, 1998.Google Scholar
Peña, Francisco. Directorium inquisitorum f. Nicolai Eymerici ordinis Praedicatorum, cum commentariis Francisci Pegņe. Venice, 1607.Google Scholar
Perosa, Alessandro. Studi di filologia umanistica . Vol. 3, Umanistica italiana. Ed., Viti, Paolo. Rome, 2000.Google Scholar
Peters, Edward. “Editing Inquisitors’ Manuals in the Sixteenth Century: Francisco Peña and the Directorium inquisitorum of Nicholas Eymeric.” The Library Chronicle 34 (1973): 95107.Google Scholar
Petrella, Giancarlo. “Nella cella di fra Leandro: Prime ricerche sui libri di Leandro Alberti umanista e inquisitore.” In Libri, biblioteche e cultura nell'Italia del Cinque e Seicento , ed., Barbieri, Edoardo and , Zardin, Danilo, 85112. Milan, 2002.Google Scholar
Petrella, Giancarlo. L'officina del geografo. La “Descrittione di tutta italia” di Leandro Alberti e gli studi geografico-antiquari tra Quattro e Cinquecento. Milan, 2004.Google Scholar
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Piglione, Cinzia , and , Tasso, Francesca , eds. Arti minori. Milan, 2000.Google Scholar
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