Piety and charity in late medieval Florence
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Piety and charity in late medieval Florence
Clarendon Press , Oxford University Press, 1994
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Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. [475]-503 ) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This book examines the relationship between the secular and sacred in late medieval Florence through the vehicle of the religious confraternity, one of the most ubiquitous and popular forms of lay association throughout Europe. Based on a wealth of new documentation Dr Henderson provides a fascinating account of the development of the major fraternities of the city in relation to other types of communal ecclesiastical institutions. The first part discusses in
detail their devotional activities for living members, including the singing of lauds, self-flagellation, processions and dramatic presentations, as well as funerals and commemorative services for the dead. Secondly, this is one of the most detailed analyses of relief to the poor and sick in medieval
Europe. He examines the complementary welfare roles of fraternities and hospitals, during both non-crisis years and the emergencies caused by plague and famine, all within the wider context of communal policy towards the poor. Taken together the two themes of this book, piety and charity, provide new evidence concerning the complex relationship between religion and society in both private and public life.
Table of Contents
- Fraternity and fraternities in late medieval Florence. Part 1 Piety: the confraternities of late medieval Florence - an overview
- the Laudesi companies
- penitence and penitents
- death, funerals and bequests
- piety and charity - orsanmichele and a public cult. Part 2 Charity: charity and the poor before the Black Death
- charity, the poor, and the aftermath of the Black death, 1348-1400
- charity in 15th century Florence
- conclusion - the secular and the sacred. Appendix - confraternities meeting in Florence, 1240-1499.
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