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The Uses of the Body: The Church and the Cult of Santa Margherita da Cortona
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 July 2009
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Our bodies, like the poor, are always with us. They are the mechanism through which we apprehend the world, and as such—as the inescapable point of contact between subjective consciousness and objective “reality”— the body becomes a primary medium of cultural communication and bearer of cultural meanings. Paradoxically, this is nowhere clearer than in the case of ascetics like Margherita da Cortona, who wage unremitting war on their bodies during their lives and whose bodily remains in consequence are enshrined and revered. It was through her body that Margherita, like other illiterate holy women, could project a spiritual message that carried beyond the range of her voice; and it was to her body that people flocked after her death, endowing it with sacred values and social significance.
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References
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28. On the phases of construction, see Mirri, , Cronaca dei lavori edilizi, pp. 27–34,Google Scholarand Tafi, Angelo, Immagine di Cortona. Guida storico-artistica della città e dintorni (Cortona, 1989), p. 284.Google Scholar
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33. At the end of the fourteenth century, Sacchetti, Franco expressed some doubts about the uncorrupted bodies of these new saints: “Beato Ugolino e Beata Margherita da Cortona si mostrano per gran reliquie il dì loro, e che 'l corpo è intero, e per questo quel corpo sia santificato; da l'altra parte dicono li religiosi che 'l corpo scomunicato sta sempre intero.” [“The blessed Ugolino and blessed Margherita da Cortona are displayed as great relics on their feast days because their bodies are whole, and for this reason that body is held to be sanctified; on the other hand, the priests say that an excommunicated body remains forever whole.”]Google ScholarSacchetti, Franco, La Battaglia delle belle donne; Le Lettere; Le Sposizioni di vangeli, ed. Chiari, Alberto (Bari, 1938), p. 102.Google Scholar
34. ACC, Z.3, pezzo 3. Income is registered on fols. 92–109, expenditures on fols. 116–151.Google Scholar
35. ACC, Z.3, pezzo 3, fols. 116–117v, 120v–121, 122, 123v, 126v, 127v, 130, 133v, 136–136v, 143, 144, 145–145v, 147–147v.Google Scholar
36. “Michele de Guiduccio de Venutello me dè a me Angnialo de Tofano de l'ufferta de Santa Margarita XXI bolongnino e s. XXXVIII1 d. VI e uno fiorino d'oro; furo de l'ufferta de Santa Margarita che se mosstrò Santa Margarita al singniore e ale done ed al tre persone; mostrose el dì de Santo Cristofano adi XXV de luglio ello 1381.” ACC, Z3, pezzo 3, fol. 107v. The value of the foreign coins had to be translated into Cortonese money.Google ScholarSacchetti, Franco tells a story about just such a visit, a special showing of the body of the blessed Ugolino of Cortona, arranged by Francesco Casali as a mark of his esteem for a noble visitor: Franco Sacchetti, Il Trecentonovelle, ed. Faccioli, Emilio (Turin, 1970), pp. 438–441.Google Scholar
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40. ACC, Z.S. pezzo 3, fols. 99v, 102v, and 105.Google Scholar
41. BCC, MS 415, part 2, fols. 71–71v.Google Scholar
42. ACC, Z.2, pezzo 1, “Chiesa di Santa Margherita, entrata e spese 1403–1408,” fol. 37v. Was the bequest of Francesco di Bartolomeo Casali, which made such a big difference to the finances of Santa Margherita in the years immediately following his death in 1375, still generating annual payments in 1408? Or is the document's reference to “una lasita che fecie misere Francesscho di misere Bartolomeio signiore che fo di Chortona” an error for Francesco di Bartolomeo's son, Francesco Senese, who was murdered on 11 October 1407?Google Scholar
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45. The account book for 1369–1384 records an average of 14 items a year under income and 26 under expenditures: ACC, Z.3, pezzo 3. Between 1403 and 1408, the number of entries for income ranges from 59 to 100, and averages 76; for expenditures, the average is 145 entries, with a big jump from 61 in 1403 and 88 in 1404 to 240 in 1405, when work began on a new portico for the church: ACC, Z.2, pezzo 1. Since this book includes income from rents and expenditures on property maintenance and improvements—items which were not included in the fourteenth-century account book—the leap in economic activity may not be as great as it seems. But gross revenues for the period 1369—1384 averaged less than 150 lire, while in the first decade of the fifteenth century they ranged from a low of 400 lire in 1403 to nearly 1,350 lire in 1405, before dropping off to about 550 lire in 1407 and 950 lire in 1408.
46. ACC, Z.2, pezzo 1.Google Scholar
47. ACC, Z.5, pezzo 3, fols. 16–19.Google Scholar
48. ACC, Z.5, pezzo 3, fol. 19.Google Scholar
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