“For the Salvation of This Girl’s Soul”: Nuns as Converters of Jews in Early Modern Italy
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Nun Converters in Their Own Words
3. Monastic Enclosure and Jewish Conversion
4. Conversionary Zeal and Post-Tridentine Sanctity
5. Conclusions
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
Archival Sources
- Brussels
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1 | Whereas Jewish men either converted alone or set in motion the conversion of their entire families, female Jews often only converted following the baptism of their fathers, husbands or brothers (Galasso 2002, pp. 116–17; Marconcini 2010, pp. 534–36; Herzig 2015, pp. 252–53; Stow 2016, p. 12). For medieval precedents of this phenomenon, see (Tartakoff 2010). |
2 | Written toward the end of the era, Medici’s work epitomizes this tendency; in over seventy pages featuring well-known baptized Jews from premodern Europe, it does not mention a single woman. |
3 | The dossier pertaining to Chiarastella is now at the Archivio di Stato di Perugia, Sezione di Spoleto, Suppliche, 1445–1530, busta 1, fasc. 8 [hereafter ASPSS, Suppliche, b. 1.8], fols. 70–70a. The citations below are based on my reading of the original documents, which bears no significant discrepancies to (Toaff 1994, pp. 1070–75). |
4 | As noted in the nuns’ supplication to Cardinal Borgia of 4 July 1496, which was incorporated into Giovanni Oliver’s instructions in ASPSS, Suppliche, b. 1.8, fol. 70r. |
5 | The parents’ version appears in the Copia brevis hebreorum incorporated into ASPSS, Suppliche, b. 1.8, fol. 70ar: “per blandicias vicinorum ad monasterium S.ti Mathie... ignorantibus dicte puelle parentibus, seducta extiteret.” |
6 | Copia brevis hebreorum (ASPSS, Suppliche, b. 1.8), fol. 70ar. |
7 | The nuns’ supplication of 4 July 1496 to Cardinal Borgia, incorporated into Giovanni Oliver’s instructions (ASPSS, Suppliche, b. 1.8), fol. 70r. |
8 | Giovanni Oliver’s instructions of 4 July 1496 (ASPSS, Suppliche, b. 1.8), fol. 70v. |
9 | The nuns’ second supplication, titled Copia supplicationis puelle hebree, was incorporated into the Copia brevis apostolice in causa puelle hebree, in ASPSS, Suppliche, b. 1.8, fol. 70ar: “qua ratione nescitur, in premissis que fidei stat[us] non videtur eam affectionem haberi quam deberi pro salute anime dicte puelle.” |
10 | Copia supplicationis puelle hebree, fol. 70ar: “data eidem matri commoditatem alloquendi eamdem puellam, ipsa semper perseverav[er]it in his que ante dixerat, videlicet quod volebat et intendebat esse christiana.” |
11 | Copia brevis apostolice in causa puelle hebree, fol. 70ar. |
12 | Baptized Jewish girls were allowed to remain in the House of Catechumens until they either married or took monastic vows. In 1562, a Dominican convent was established in Rome specifically for those neophytes who wished to become nuns (Caffiero 2004, p. 23; Lirosi 2013, pp. 147–80). In other Italian cities, converts from Judaism continued to take the veil in existing nunneries (see below). |
13 | The attempts to secure the baptism of Vitale’s children occurred during the most forceful phase in implementing the Tridentine decrees concerning monastic enclosure (cf. Weaver 1992, pp. 73–75). |
14 | On Santori’s involvement in facilitating the conversion of Vitale’s family, see (Plaisance 2008, pp. 153–55, 166–69). |
15 | Giulio Antonio Santori’s letter to the Inquisitor of Florence, Fra Dionigio Costacciari, of 13 January 1583, Archives Générales du Royaume, Brussels, Archives ecclésiastiques 19283 ter, vol. 2 (Florence. Saint Office. XVIe–XVIIIe): “l’è parso più espediente per rispetti che si deve tenere dei monasterii, che stano in casa de suoi parenti.” I consulted John Tedeschi’s photocopy of this document. |
16 | Cardinal Marcantonio Maffei’s letter to Archbishop Alessandro de’ Medici of 20 July 1583, Archivio Arcivescovile, Florence, Religiosi e Religiose, Professioni di Monache, filza II: “Il S[igno]re si contenta, che V[ostra] S[ignoria] possa far mettere in alc[un]o delli monasterii di Fiorenza la figliuola hebrea di Mastro Vitale Medico Neofito che forse con l’essempio di quelle madri ove sarà posta si risolverà di consolare suo padre, et imitarlo con pigliare il S[an]to Battesimo.” |
17 | Vitale Medici’s letter to Cardinal Guglielmo Sirletto of 14 October 1583, Biblioteca Apostolica Vaticana, Vat. Lat. no. 6195, pt. I, c. 276r. |
18 | The baptism of “Gratia già Hebrea di M[aestr]o Vitale Medici, d’anni 18” on this date is recorded in the register of girls baptized in 1583, under “G,” in Archivio Storico dell’Opera di Santa Maria del Fiore, Florence, Registri Battesimali [hereafter ASOSMFF, RB]. Vitale’s eldest daughter never became a nun, as suggested in (Saracco 2009) and (Toaff 2013, p. 103). She was married off to a Florentine citizen named Bartolomeo Sermanni, as noted in the manuscript Vita di Vitale Medici (Bibilioteca Nazionale Centrale, Florence, Manoscritti II.__. 174 [Vite di diversi], no. 8). |
19 | The baptism of “Anna già Hebrea di M[aestr]o Vitale Medico, d’anni 12” on 11 August 1583 is recorded in the register of girls baptized in 1583, under “A” in ASOSMFF, RB. |
20 | Archivio di Stato di Firenze, Acquisti e Doni 292 (transcription from the Suppliche della Pratica per Pistoia of September 1587, unpaginated): “Anna, paurosa di tornare col marito, vorrebbe ritirarsi in un monistero.” The request to have Anna placed in a convent was first noted in (Cohen 1992, p. 29), but (Marconcini 2016, p. 153) identified her father as the convert Vitale Medici. Anna did not ultimately enter a convent, though. She remained in Pistoia, where her brother Antonio later paid the rent for her apartment, as recorded in the Quaderno di ricevute di Antonio Medici (entry of 29 July 1620; renewed in 1621 and 1622) in Archivio Storico del Capitolo della Cattedrale, Florence, Fondo Medici [hereafter ASCCF, FM], busta R–66. |
21 | Vitale Medici’s letter to Archbishop Alessandro de’ Medici of 7 December 1598, in Biblioteca Marucelliana, Florence, Fondo manoscritti, Ms. A 142, c. 207r: “[N]issun medico è intrato in q[ues]ti luoghi vacati per caggione di parentella, ma per altre vie, le quali mi conviene tacere. Basta, che non si è considerato bene ne meriti ne età, ne sperienza, il tutto a giovani attillati, et di bello aspetto, e basta, che di otto monasteri che sono stati dati, io non ho nissuno.” |
22 | The numerous and hitherto unexplored records of the fund for fanciulle monacande are preserved at ASCCF, FM (those pertaining to its early years of operation, in buste no. R–123, R–175). |
23 | On Barbarigo’s reformist mission in Padua, see (McNamara 2013). |
24 | In northern Italy, sending ex-Jewish girls to be educated in nunneries in which they were later prompted to take the veil harkened back to the thirteenth century (cf. Superbi 2014). |
25 | Proselytizing the enemies of the Church constituted a central aspect of the post-Tridentine model of sanctity (Schutte 2001, p. 77), but its incompatibility with the concurrent emphasis on nuns’ monastic enclosure made it largely unavailable to women (Prosperi 1991, pp. 104–6; Wiesner-Hanks 2007, p. 476). |
26 | On nuns’ conversion of Jews in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, which lie beyond the chronological scope of this article, see (Marconcini 2016, pp. 116–18) and (Al Kalak and Pavan 2013, pp. 143–44). |
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Herzig, T. “For the Salvation of This Girl’s Soul”: Nuns as Converters of Jews in Early Modern Italy. Religions 2017, 8, 252. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel8110252
Herzig T. “For the Salvation of This Girl’s Soul”: Nuns as Converters of Jews in Early Modern Italy. Religions. 2017; 8(11):252. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel8110252
Chicago/Turabian StyleHerzig, Tamar. 2017. "“For the Salvation of This Girl’s Soul”: Nuns as Converters of Jews in Early Modern Italy" Religions 8, no. 11: 252. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel8110252
APA StyleHerzig, T. (2017). “For the Salvation of This Girl’s Soul”: Nuns as Converters of Jews in Early Modern Italy. Religions, 8(11), 252. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel8110252