Welcome to DU! The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards. Join the community: Create a free account Support DU (and get rid of ads!): Become a Star Member Latest Breaking News Editorials & Other Articles General Discussion The DU Lounge All Forums Issue Forums Culture Forums Alliance Forums Region Forums Support Forums Help & Search

BootinUp

(49,169 posts)
Thu Oct 26, 2023, 08:11 AM Oct 2023

Autopsy of a Saint

In the late thirteenth century, followers of the Italian abbess Clare of Montefalco dissected her heart in search of a crucifix.

By: Amelia Soth October 26, 2023 4 minutes

In an abbey in a small Italian town, a fresco shows a haggard Christ shoving the end of his cross into a woman’s chest. Perhaps half the cross has been mysteriously absorbed into her body; she calmly gazes upward, guiding it inward with gentle hands. This is Saint Clare (Santa Chiara) of Montefalco, abbess in the late thirteenth century. The painting depicts a vision she had, one she recounted so often that, upon her death, her fellow nuns decided to actually cut open her heart in search of the cross of which she had spoken so frequently.

This dissection represents an early entry in what would become a tradition of performing autopsies to consider an individual’s sanctity, according to historian Simon Ditchfield. The stones formed inside organs, revealed after death, served as “potential markers of sanctity in early modern Italy,” explains historian Jetze Touber.

Inside Clare, examiners found not only a tiny crucifix, but an array of the instruments of the passion: “a shroud, a crown of thorns, three nails, a lance, a sponge, a whip and a column,” all formed out of the flesh of her heart. On top of that, three stones were discovered in her gallbladder. According to Isidoro Mosonio, then Vicar General of Bologna, the stones were

colored like ashes, equal in appearance, color, and weight, and laid out in the gallbladder in such a way that a triangular form resulted, by which the secrets of the Very Holy Trinity were represented.


At least, that’s the story told at Clare’s canonization trial, a few years after her death. The case was controversial, notes historian of religion and science Bradford Bouley. The nuns were suspected of planting the relics, and it was rumored that in life, Clare had consorted with heretics. Although the nuns were ultimately judged innocent of subterfuge, Clare would not be officially declared a saint until centuries later.


Continued https://daily.jstor.org/autopsy-of-a-saint/
6 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight: NoneDon't highlight anything 5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
Autopsy of a Saint (Original Post) BootinUp Oct 2023 OP
Very interesting article. Thanks for posting this. Native Oct 2023 #1
Religion makes people do crazy things. Farmer-Rick Oct 2023 #2
Obvious sexual fantasy on the part of this nun. Irish_Dem Oct 2023 #3
Don't let Alito read this! lol n/t Cheezoholic Oct 2023 #4
Yes, let's run a 21st century nation based on this stuff! not fooled Oct 2023 #5
I wonder if the gallstones killed her Warpy Oct 2023 #6

Farmer-Rick

(11,503 posts)
2. Religion makes people do crazy things.
Thu Oct 26, 2023, 09:08 AM
Oct 2023

Especially when those people are not educated in the basics of science and logic.

It's amazing how many things they found inside her dead heart. I'm surprised she was able to pump blood with it.

Warpy

(113,131 posts)
6. I wonder if the gallstones killed her
Thu Oct 26, 2023, 01:52 PM
Oct 2023

They weren't the usual variety of cholesterol gallstones, those are yellow. Don't ask how I know, I might tell you.

It's odd that there was any sort of examination of her innards after death, the human body was supposed to be inviolate and buried completely intact, something that would have been infinitely more necessary for an Abbess.

They didn't mention the tricuspid valve affirming the trinity, I suppose they were aware that was standard issue, which means that dissection was a lot more prevalent than has been assumed and was probably one of the many bodies of unofficial knowledge that was lost half a century later in the Black Death, although Guy de Chauliac insists on the need for knowledge gained by dissection in his book on surgery, written after the plague had passed.

Latest Discussions»Culture Forums»Science»Autopsy of a Saint