Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Map
- Preface
- In the Name of Saints Peter and Paul: Popes, Conversion, and Sainthood in Western Christianity
- I Papal Administration
- The Cost of Grace: The Composition Fees in the Penitentiary, c. 1450-1500
- Career Prospects of Minor Curialists in the Fifteenth Century: The Case of Petrus Profilt
- A Criminal Trial at the Court of the Chamber Auditor: An Analysis of a Registrum from 1515-1516 in the Danish National Archives
- II Saints and Miracles
- The Power of the Saints and the Authority of the Popes: The History of Sainthood and Late Medieval Canonization Processes
- Velut Alter Alexius: The Saint Alexis Model in Medieval Hagiography
- Judicium Medicine and Judicium Sanctitatis: Medical Doctors in the Canonization Process of Nicholas of Tolentino (1325): Experts Subject to the Inquisitorial Logic
- Heavenly Healing or Failure of Faith?: Partial Cures in Later Medieval Canonization Processes
- III Crusades and Conversion
- Servi Beatae Marie Virginis: Christians and Pagans in Henry’s Chronicle of Livonia
- Holy War – Holy Wrath!: Baltic Wars Between Regulated Warfare and Total Annihilation Around 1200
- The Swedish Expeditions (‘Crusades’) Towards Finland Reconsidered
- Index
Judicium Medicine and Judicium Sanctitatis: Medical Doctors in the Canonization Process of Nicholas of Tolentino (1325): Experts Subject to the Inquisitorial Logic
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 December 2020
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Map
- Preface
- In the Name of Saints Peter and Paul: Popes, Conversion, and Sainthood in Western Christianity
- I Papal Administration
- The Cost of Grace: The Composition Fees in the Penitentiary, c. 1450-1500
- Career Prospects of Minor Curialists in the Fifteenth Century: The Case of Petrus Profilt
- A Criminal Trial at the Court of the Chamber Auditor: An Analysis of a Registrum from 1515-1516 in the Danish National Archives
- II Saints and Miracles
- The Power of the Saints and the Authority of the Popes: The History of Sainthood and Late Medieval Canonization Processes
- Velut Alter Alexius: The Saint Alexis Model in Medieval Hagiography
- Judicium Medicine and Judicium Sanctitatis: Medical Doctors in the Canonization Process of Nicholas of Tolentino (1325): Experts Subject to the Inquisitorial Logic
- Heavenly Healing or Failure of Faith?: Partial Cures in Later Medieval Canonization Processes
- III Crusades and Conversion
- Servi Beatae Marie Virginis: Christians and Pagans in Henry’s Chronicle of Livonia
- Holy War – Holy Wrath!: Baltic Wars Between Regulated Warfare and Total Annihilation Around 1200
- The Swedish Expeditions (‘Crusades’) Towards Finland Reconsidered
- Index
Summary
Medical doctors often appear in late medieval canonization processes: sometimes they give testimony to miracles they have assisted or from which they benefited themselves; sometimes they testify to fama sanctitatis. Most often, however, they are professionals verifying the symptoms of a patient. The process to evaluate the sanctity of Augustinian hermit Nicholas of Tolentino (1245-1305) is no exception to this. Medical doctor was the most represented profession. These canonization records are a written outcome of an enquiry of papal commissioners; they are preserved in two manuscripts. The commissioners were appointed by Pope John XXII; the hearing took three months and it was carried out in five cities of the Marches of Ancona (Tolentino, Macerata, Camerino, San Ginesio, and San Severino). To pursue the canonization of Nicholas of Tolentino, men and women testified to his pious life as well as miracles performed by him. Altogether, 365 witnesses (196 men and 169 women) were interrogated and 371 depositions recorded. According to the witnesses, Nicholas had performed 26 miracles in vita and 280 post mortem. The depositions formed a large record, which reached the papal curia in Avignon on 5 December 1326.
In this process, the word medicus occurs 205 times, eight times more often than notarius. In addition, there are 35 occurrences of the word medicina (referring to remedy or cure, but also to medicine), six occurrences of medicamentum, and two of medicalus. Medicus is associated with magister in 32 cases, and the terms consilio, auxilio, rogare, mandare, curare, volere, and diffidare define its lexical environment. These terms reveal the hoped-for function of a doctor's presence in canonization processes; he is a witness, but particularly a practitioner, who tried – in vain – to cure the patient.
The marked presence of doctors testifies to the highly elaborate management of medicine in the episcopal cities of Camerino and Macerata, as well as the quasi città, villae, terrae, or castra of the area in the first half of the fourteenth century. Respectively, it also testifies to the elevated social position of the witnesses in this process. This enables the measuring of the gains of these doctors. It would be much harder, however, to estimate their competence, since in canonization processes – contrary to many other contemporary sources – their work ends in failure.
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- Church and Belief in the Middle AgesPopes, Saints, and Crusaders, pp. 153 - 170Publisher: Amsterdam University PressPrint publication year: 2016
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