The Art of The Franciscan Order SELECCION
The Art of The Franciscan Order SELECCION
The Art of The Franciscan Order SELECCION
Donal Cooper
Introduction
They say that the body of St. Francis is buried there in a place which
they show, but the truth is that no one knows the exact spot, not even
those in the monastery, except the Pope, one cardinal, and a brother
of the monastery, to whom the Pope confides the secret.
Thus the Spanish pilgrim Pero Tafur summarised his visit to the
tomb of St. Francis at Assisi in the spring of 1436.1 His unlikely
rationale for a missing grave introduces us at once to the singular
blend of memory, mystery and belief that has characterised the study
of Francis’s shrine over the centuries. For one thing, any treatment
of the Saint’s tomb below the high altar of the Lower Church must
confront the extraordinary fact that, prior to 1818, Francis’s body
had been lost for at least three hundred years—possibly many more.
The archaeological complexities and historical controversies that
shroud the tomb continue to deter modern scholars, and general
1
Pero Tafur —Travels and Adventures 1435–1439, trans. and ed. Malcolm Letts
(London, 1926), p. 44; the original Spanish texts reads: “Dizen que el cuerpo de
Sant Francisco está allí enterrado en un lugar que ellos muestran, pero la verdat
es que ninguno non lo sabe en qué lugar está, aunque dentro en el monasterio,
salvo el Papa é un cardenal, é un frayle del mesmo monasterio de quien el Papa
lo confía”; Andanças é viajes de Pero Tafur por diversas partes del mundo avidos 1435–1439,
ed. José María Ramos (Madrid, 1934), p. 29. This article expands a series of
research papers delivered to the Association of Art Historians’ annual conference,
the Leeds International Medieval Congress (both 2000), and the International
Congress of Medieval Studies, Kalamazoo (2001). In developing this material, I am
particularly indebted to Janet Robson, Beth Williamson, Paul Binski, Dillian Gordon
and Padre Gerhard Ruf, OFMConv., for their generous advice and valuable com-
ments. My research has been supported by the British School at Rome, the Dutch
Art Historical Institute in Florence, the Leverhulme Trust, the Henry Moore
Foundation and the Research Department of the Victoria and Albert Museum. The
essay is dedicated to Joanna Cannon, whose innovative approach to mendicant
shrines inspired me to look again at St. Francis’s tomb.
2 donal cooper
2
Isidoro Gatti, OFMConv., La Tomba di S. Francesco nei secoli (Assisi, 1983). The
important study by Gerhard Ruf, OFMConv., Das Grab des heiligen Franziskus. Die
Fresken der Unterkirche von Assisi (Freiburg, 1981) sets the tomb within the wider con-
text of the Lower Church.
3
Bonaventura Marinangeli, OFMConv., published 17 articles under the title “La
tomba di S. Francesco attraverso i secoli” in the monthly periodical S. Francesco
d’Assisi (published by the Sacro Convento, hereafter SFA) between 4 July, 1921 and
4 February, 1924. A further essay in SFA 8 (1928), pp. 405–410, provides a brief syn-
thesis of his earlier contributions. From 1969 to 1974 Giuseppe Zaccaria, OFMConv.,
in loco tutissimo et firmissimo 3
given extra weight by the Order’s consistent assertion that the Assisi
tomb contained Francis’s complete and undivided body.4 In 1279
the Podestà and Consiglio of Assisi, responding to false reports of
relics from Austria, affirmed that Francis’s whole body was guarded
by the friars “in the safest and most secure place” (“in loco tutissimo
et firmissimo”).5 The Basilica held no other corporeal relics of the
Saint, save for some of Francis’s hair and vials of blood collected
from the Stigmata.6 Furthermore, Francis’s body was distinct from
every other holy cadaver in bearing the Holy Stigmata, the mirac-
ulously imprinted wounds of Christ. These had not been proclaimed
7
Elias of Cortona proclaimed the Stigmata in an encyclical letter to the Order
sent several days after Francis’s death, which stated that “non diu ante mortem
frater et pater noster apparuit crucifixus, quinque plagas, quae vere sunt stigmata
Christi, portans in corpore suo”. Elias likened the Stigmata on Francis’s hands and
feet to wounds received from nails that had passed through his flesh, leaving pro-
truding black scars. His side appeared punctured by a lance, and blood flooded
freely from this open wound. For Elias’s Epistola and the subsequent promotion and
acceptance of the Stigmata see Chiara Frugoni, Francesco e l’invenzione delle stimmate:
Una storia per parole e immagini fino a Bonaventura e Giotto (Turin, 1993), esp. pp. 52–62.
8
André Vauchez, La sainteté en Occident aux derniers siècles du moyen âge: d’après les
procès de canonisation et les documents hagiographiques (Rome, 1981). For a recent case
study of a mendicant shrine in its artistic context see Joanna Cannon and André
Vauchez, Margherita of Cortona and the Lorenzetti—Sienese Art and the Cult of a Holy
Woman in Medieval Tuscany (University Park, Pennsylvania, 1999), esp. pp. 21–78.
For the importance of the wider architectural context see J. Crook, The Architectural
Setting of the Cult of Saints in the Early Christian West, ca. 300–1200 (Oxford, 2000).
in loco tutissimo et firmissimo 5
9
For Bonaventure’s version see Francis of Assisi: Early Documents 2, eds. Regis
J. Armstrong OFMCap., J.A. Wayne Hellmann OFMConv., William J. Short OFM.
(New York, 2000), p. 644 (hereafter cited as Early Documents). For a synthesis of the
various accounts of Francis’s final days see Michael Robson, OFM., St. Francis of
Assisi: The Legend and the Life (London, 1997), pp. 254–262.
10
Marinangeli-Zaccaria, “Le diverse opinioni”, pp. 273–4.
11
For Conrad of Offida’s relics see Donal Cooper, “Qui Perusii in archa saxea tumu-
latus: The Shrine of Beato Egidio in S. Francesco al Prato, Perugia”, Papers of the
British School at Rome 69 (2001), p. 235, note 59.
12
For the S. Giorgio arrangement see Marinangeli-Zaccaria, “La primitiva
sepoltura”, pp. 46–54. After 1230, the wooden arca seems to have been disman-
tled, and in 1717 the Eremo delle Carceri still possessed a relic “del legno della
cassa, ove prima di esser trasferito riposava il suo [Francis’s] corpo” (p. 54, note 5).
6 donal cooper
According to local sources, another section was later painted with Francis’s image.
This is often identified with the thirteenth-century panel of the Saint, sometimes
attributed to Cimabue, preserved at S. Maria dei Angeli; see L. Carattoli, “Di una
tavola della primitiva cassa mortuaria di S. Francesco”, Miscellanea francescana 1
(1886), pp. 45–46. Another early image of St. Francis at the Porziuncola by the
Maestro di S. Francesco was said to be painted on the board on which Francis
died, for this tradition see Elvio Lunghi, Il Crocefisso di Giunta Pisano e l’Icona del
‘Maestro di S. Francesco’ alla Porziuncola (S. Maria degli Angeli, 1995), pp. 65–91.
13
With reference to Bonaventure’s Legenda Maior, see Early Documents 2, p. 647.
14
Gatti, La tomba, p. 76.
15
The bull specified a church “in qua eius corpus debeat conservari”, see Bullarium
Franciscanum Romanorum Pontificum constitutiones, epistolas, ac diplomata continens tribus ordinibus
Minorum, Clarissarum, et Poenitentium (hereafter Bullarium Franciscanum), ed. Johannes H.
Sbaralea (Rome, 1759), vol. 1, pp. 40–41; Gatti, La tomba, pp. 76–77.
in loco tutissimo et firmissimo 7
our best contemporary source, the papal bull Speravimus hactenus sent
by Gregory IX twenty-two days later to the bishops of Perugia and
Spoleto (the See of Assisi lying vacant at the time).16 The Pope
berated the civic authorities of Assisi for disrupting the translation
without papal authorisation and threatened to revoke the generous
privileges granted to the Basilica by his earlier edict Is qui Ecclesiam.
On pain of excommunication he ordered the Podestà and Consiglio
of Assisi to send representatives to Rome to explain their behaviour.
Gregory’s tone was uncompromising: “Sciant quam graviter Nos,
imo Dominum offenderunt”.
The Pope’s anger was evidently placated, for the Basilica kept its
privileges and the Podestà and others escaped excommunication, but
the translation remained a matter of controversy within the Franciscan
Order. The principal strand of Franciscan hagiography treated the
event as unremarkable. Julian of Speyer, who was probably present
in Assisi that day, stated simply: “The most holy body was trans-
lated to the church constructed near the walls of the city with such
great solemnity that it cannot be briefly described”.17 Bonaventure
gave a similarly straightforward description, adding that “while that
sacred treasure was being carried, marked with the seal of the Most
High King, He whose likeness he bore deigned to perform many
miracles”.18 But another tradition questioned the orthodox account.
The first sign of discontent surfaces in the late 1250s with Thomas
of Eccleston’s claim that “the body of St. Francis had been trans-
lated three days before the friars gathered [for the General Chapter]”.19
The author of the Speculum vitae beati Francisci (ca. 1325) was more
succinct: “Elias, led by his concern for the remains, had the trans-
lation done before the friars gathered”.20 This charge received its
16
Bullarium Franciscanum, vol. 1, pp. 66–67; Gatti, La tomba, p. 87.
17
Analecta Franciscana (hereafter AF) 10 (1941), p. 371; “Translatum est igitur cor-
pus sanctissimum ad eamdem costructam foris prope muros civitatis ecclesiam . . . cum
tanto videlicet apparatu solemni, qui brevi sermone describi non posset”; cited by
Gatti, La tomba, p. 94. English translation in Early Documents 1, p. 420; Julian’s text
is generally dated between 1232–35.
18
Early Documents 2, p. 648.
19
Fratris Thomae vulgo dicti de Eccleston: De adventu fratrum minorum in Angliam, ed.
A.G. Little (Manchester, 1951), p. 65; “credidit [Elias] autem populus, quod esset
discordia, quia corpus sancti Francisci tertia die, antequam patres convenissent,
translatum erat”.
20
Gatti, La tomba, p. 96; “Fecit igitur fieri translationem illam Helias antequam
fratres convenirent, humano timore ductus”.
8 donal cooper
21
AF 3 (1897), p. 212; “Frater Helias . . . ductus humano timore, occulte fecit
fieri translationem, nolens quod scirent aliqui ubi esset in ecclesia sacrum corpus,
paucis exceptis”, cited by Gatti, La tomba, p. 96.
22
Michael Robson has observed that the genuine disagreements at the subse-
quent general chapter probably came to colour perceptions of Elias’s involvement
in the translation over time, see St. Francis of Assisi, p. 268. A very different expla-
nation for the 1230 controversy is provided by Richard Trexler’s provocative arti-
cle “The Stigmatised Body of St. Francis of Assisi Conceived, Processed, Disappeared”
in Frömmigkeit im Mittelalter. Politisch-soziale Kontexte, visuelle Praxis, korperliche Ausdrucksformen,
eds. Klaus Schreiner and Marc Müntz (Munich, 2002), pp. 463–497, where the
translation is reassessed within a sceptical analysis that doubts the presence or vis-
ibility of the Stigmata on the Saint’s body, at least by 1230.
23
Cronica fratris Salimbene de Adam, ed. G. Scalia (Bari, 1966), vol. 1, p. 96; “Anno
Dominice incarnationis MCCXXX generale capitulum fratrum Minorum Assisii est
celebratum. In quo corporis beati Francisci, VIII Kal. Iunii translatio facta fuit”
(composed 1282–88); cited by Gatti, La tomba, p. 94.
in loco tutissimo et firmissimo 9
ingly chaotic as it approached the Basilica, with the friars and towns-
people threatening to swamp the cortège and damage the Saint’s
remains. At this point, with the aid of civic officials and soldiers, the
procession was brought to a hurried conclusion and the burial con-
ducted privately within the Basilica while the crowd was locked out-
side. Public hysteria was a genuine danger during the translation or
burial of relics—the most extreme disturbances surrounded the funer-
ary rites of St. Elizabeth of Hungary in Marburg on 17 November,
1231, when the faithful tore at the clothes, hair, ears and nails of
the cadaver.24
Irrespective of these specific accusations, the theme of the secret
tomb became firmly embedded within the Order’s collective memory.
In his mammoth De Conformitate vitae Beati Francisci ad vitam Domini
Iesu (1385–90), Bartolomeo da Pisa inevitably linked Francis’s tomb
with Christ’s: “As Christ’s tomb was sealed and watched by guards,
so St. Francis’s tomb has been sealed, to prevent his body ever being
visible to anyone”.25 Elsewhere in his text, Bartolomeo claimed that
“nothing of [Francis’s] body is shown or kept to be shown to the
people; for he lies in that church in a place which is known to no
one but a few” (echoing the “paucis exceptis” of the Chronica XXIV
Generalium).26 The same refrain found its way into the pilgrimage lit-
erature, as evidenced by Pero Tafur’s bemused account from 1436,
cited at the beginning of this article. Tafur’s comment “that no one
knows the exact spot, not even those in the monastery”, must reflect
the sort of explanation that the friars were giving to common pil-
grims by the early fifteenth century.
On 28 November, 1442 Perugian forces led by the condottiere
Nicolò Piccinino stormed Assisi, and within days the Priors of Perugia
had petitioned Pope Eugenius IV to authorise the removal of Francis’s
body from the Basilica. Eugenius’s reply, enunciated in the letter
Accepimus licteras of 21 December, 1442, strongly rejected the Perugian
24
Gatti, 1983, p. 86. For the comparison with the equally disordered translation
of St. Anthony of Padua’s body after his death in 1231, see Robson, St. Francis of
Assisi, pp. 252–254.
25
AF 5 (1912), p. 443; “Sicut sepulchrum Christi fuit clausum et signatum cum
custodibus, sic beati Francisci sepulchrum fuit clausum, ut numquam deinceps alicui
patuerit eius corpus”; cited by Gatti, La tomba, p. 112.
26
AF 4 (1906), p. 178; “De cuius corpore ad ostendendum populis nihil inven-
itur nec habetur; ac in quo ecclesiae loco iaceat, etsi quibusdam sit agnitum, quibus
vero, nulli est notum”; cited by Gatti, La tomba, p. 118.
10 donal cooper
claims, noting that the removal of Francis’s relics would spell the
desolation and ruin of the Basilica. Instead the Pope admonished
the governor of Perugia, the Franciscan Provincial Minister and
Piccinino to “undertake, and execute such provisions, so that no
harm can befall these relics”.27 Eugenius’s letter stands at the begin-
ning of a long tradition, upheld by Marinangeli and Zaccaria but
rejected by Gatti, that dates the definitive closure of Francis’s tomb
to the papal rearrangements of the fifteenth century. At this point,
the nature of our sources begins to change, as the Franciscan liter-
ature assumes a mystical and prophetic tone, focusing on nocturnal
visits to secret chambers below the Lower Church and the final seal-
ing of the Saint’s tomb by the Franciscan Pontiff Sixtus IV.
In his Franceschina of ca. 1476, Fra Giacomo degli Oddi gave a
colourful account of the clandestine veneration of Francis’s remains
and the Holy Stigmata by Sixtus IV and two companions.28 Degli
Oddi went on to describe Sixtus’s desire to publicly display Francis’s
body, which was said to be miraculously uncorrupted. He was dis-
suaded from this by S. Giacomo della Marca, who cautioned that
Francis’s body must be preserved for future ages, more in need of
faith than their own.29 Heeding the advice of the fiery Observant
preacher, the Pope then ordered the final sealing of the Saint’s tomb.
For all of this information, Giacomo degli Oddi gave his source as
certain friars “worthy of trust” from the Sacro Convento. The story
was enthusiastically taken up by other Franciscan writers: Mariano
da Firenze (†1523) further embellished Giacomo’s account in his
Compendium Chronicarum, fixing Sixtus’s descent to the tomb to 1476,
while Luke Wadding later repeated substantially the same story in
his Annales Minorum of 1625.30 In 1676, two centuries after the Pope’s
27
Gatti, La tomba, pp. 114–115, 196; “. . . ut cura de ea re suscipiant, et talem
provisionem . . . faciant, quod dictis reliquiis nullum damnum inferri possit”.
28
Nicola Cavanna, OFM., La Franceschina. Testo volgare umbro del sec. XV scritto dal
P. Giacomo Oddi di Perugia, edito la prima volta nella sua integrità (S. Maria degli Angeli,
1931), vol. 2, pp. 195–196.
29
According to the Franceschina, Giacomo della Marca—then residing at the Eremo
delle Carceri—argued, “Beatissimo Patre, ad me non me pare per niente, perchè
tutto el mondo verria ad vedere lo novello Christo stigmatizzato, et seria pericoloso
che molta gente perisse de la fame per la moltitudine grande che veria in Italia;
et quando Dio vorà, se mostrarà ad un altro tempo che serà maiore de bisogno de
la fede”; Cavanna, La Franceschina, vol. 2, p. 196; Gatti, La tomba, p. 115, note 220.
30
Mariano da Firenze, OFMObs., “Compendium chronicarum fratrum mino-
rum”, in AFH 4 (1911), p. 323; “Anno quo supra [1476] Sixtus cum tota curia
in loco tutissimo et firmissimo 11
34
The first volume of Marcus’s chronicle, which contains his account of the
tomb, was published in Portuguese in 1557, see Gatti, La tomba, pp. 199–201.
35
Gatti, La tomba, p. 201, counted five editions of the Italian translation of
Marcus’s first volume printed in Venice between 1582 and 1597.
36
Francesco Maria Angeli, OFMConv., Collis Paradisi amœnitas, seu Sacri Conventus
Assisiensis historiæ libri II (Montefalco, 1704), Liber primus, inserted between pp. 8–9;
entitled “Ecclesia in qua stat S.P. Francisci corpus interior prospectus; plancta eius-
dem”, signed by the local artist Francesco Providoni. The various legends regard-
ing the third church are discussed on pp. 9–19.
37
A faction in the Observant branch of the Order had begun to dispute the
very existence of the tomb, culminating in Flaminio Annibali’s polemic Quanto incerto
sia che il corpo del Serafico S. Francesco esista in Assisi nella Basilica del suo nome (Lausanne,
1779), see Gatti, La tomba, pp. 175–177.
38
An earlier excavation, sponsored by Pope Pius V, seems to have been attempted
in 1571–72, see Gatti, La tomba, p. 230.
in loco tutissimo et firmissimo 13
39
Summarized in Carlo Fea, Descrizione ragionata della sagrosanta patriarcal Basilica e
cappella papale di S. Francesco d’Assisi, nella quale recentemente si è ritrovato il sepolcro e il
corpo di si gran santo, e delle pitture e sculture di cui va ornato il medesimo tempio (Rome,
1820). More material was gathered by Niccola Papini, OFMConv., Notizie sicure della
morte, sepoltura, canonizzazione e traslazione di S. Francesco d’Assisi e del ritrovamento del di
lui corpo (first edition: Florence, 1822; second edition, Corretta ed accresciuta dall’autore:
Foligno, 1824). Several engravings were made of the excavations, those reproduced
here are the most detailed, being drawn by Giovambattista Mariani and engraved
by Giovambattista Cipriani in 1818. Both were eyewitnesses to the discovery of
Francis’s tomb.
40
Gatti, La tomba, pp. 35–43; the sarcophagus is probably the pre-1230 tomb
“de lapide” described in S. Giorgio (presumably within the larger wooden shrine)
by Henri d’Avranches in his Versified Life of St. Francis (1232–39) see Early Documents
1, p. 518. No early source mentions the iron cage, but Gatti supposed that Elias
commissioned it soon after Francis’s death. A similar wrought iron arca guarded
Margherita of Cortona’s cadaver in the early fourteenth century, see Cannon and
Vauchez, Margherita of Cortona, pp. 61–62. Another iron cage, apparently made for
the tomb of St. Luke in 1177, survives in S. Giustina, Padua, see Girolamo Zampieri,
La tomba di “S. Luca Evangelista” (Rome, 2003), pp. 212–214.
41
For the objects recovered from the tomb, see Marinangeli-Zaccaria, “La com-
missione pontificia descrive in quale stato si trovava il corpo”, pp. 38–45, and ibid.,
“La commissione pontificia conclude la ricognizione”, p. 199. The numismatic evi-
dence, unfortunately, does not clarify the closure of the tomb, for the coins were
minted at Lucca between 1181 and 1208, so the offerings may well predate the
1230 burial. The ring bore a depiction of Minerva and is now lost (illustrated by
Fea, p. v).
42
The measurements are Michele Millozzi’s, Gatti gave slightly smaller dimen-
sions (350 × 360cm), see La tomba, p. 96.
43
Ibid., p. 100.
14 donal cooper
limestone that were found above the coffin, which are clearly illus-
trated in the cross-section of the excavated tomb (numbers 2, 3 and
4 in Fig. 4). The two upper monoliths (numbers 3 and 4) were
intended as protective layers: they were set into the walls of the cav-
ity, were strengthened by a bond of cement sandwiched between
them, and rested on three iron bars, so that their weight in no way
bore down on the sarcophagus below.44 This singular arrangement
was immovable, and served to shield Francis’s remains from the
immense load of stone and mortar above, not to mention the mass
of the altar platform.45 Below this impenetrable stratum, the third,
smaller slab (number 2) was placed over the sarcophagus, free from
the surrounding walls.46 It served as a lid, but did not rest directly
on the stone coffin, which was encased within its wrought iron cage.
Lid and sarcophagus were separated by a dense grille of metal.
This evidence has been interpreted in very different ways. Isidoro
Gatti believed that the excavation had uncovered the tomb as it had
been sealed in the early thirteenth century, or certainly by the time
the high altar of the Lower Church was consecrated in 1253.47
Contrary to this position, Marinangeli, Zaccaria and—in response
to Gatti’s monograph—Michele Millozzi have all argued that the
1818 cross-section records a later closure of the tomb effected after
1442, under the auspices of either Eugenius IV or Sixtus IV.48 The
confined arrangement found in 1818, they observe, cannot explain
the original excavation of a much larger chamber, nearly four metres
square in plan and over three and a half metres deep, hewn from
the solid bedrock of the Collis Paradisi.49 The manner in which much
44
Ibid., pp. 103–104.
45
However, Gatti, La tomba, pp. 104–6, suggested that the twin travertine slabs
initially served as a pavement for a small confessio space above, which was accessi-
ble from 1230 until the construction of the high altar (before 1253).
46
Ibid., pp. 102–103; this slab survives and today forms the dossal above the
altar in the crypt. It measures 234 × 97cm, but a section was chiselled away dur-
ing the 1818 invention.
47
For Gatti’s own conclusions, see La tomba, p. 160. The only element that Gatti
would attribute to the Quattrocento was the introduction of the aggregate filling
above the twin travertine slabs, which he associated with Eugenius IV’s 1442 injunc-
tion to secure the tomb (although how this work could have been completed with-
out the removal of the high altar above remains unclear).
48
Michele Millozzi, OFMConv., “L’altare maggiore della Basilica inferiore”, SFPI
66 (1986), pp. 1–13. For the high altar of the Lower Church see also Julian Gardner,
“Some Franciscan Altars of the Thirteenth and Fourteenth Centuries”, in The
Vanishing Past: Studies in Medieval Art, Liturgy and Metrology Presented to Christopher Hohler,
eds. Alan Borg and Andrew Martindale (Oxford, 1981), pp. 29–38.
49
Millozzi, “L’altare maggiore”, p. 8, estimated that, according to Gatti’s argu-
in loco tutissimo et firmissimo 15
of this chamber was filled with stone and aggregate raises further
questions. The narrow space that contained Francis’s sarcophagus
was faced with blocks of variable quality. Some pieces of finely
dressed stone were recovered, while others were crudely worked and
haphazardly arranged—hardly worthy of a carefully prepared bur-
ial.50 Marinangeli, Zaccaria and Millozzi explain these anomalies by
dating the coarse stonework of the burial cavity and the two bonded
slabs of travertine (together with the crude in-fill above) to the
Quattrocento.51 According to this reconstruction, the surrounding
area cut from the bedrock and filled with rubble and stone marks
the extent of a more expansive, thirteenth-century chamber beneath
the Lower Church, probably topped by a vault to support the high
altar above.52 Marinangeli, Zaccaria and Millozzi have suggested that
the dressed stone used in the fifteenth-century rearrangement was
taken from the pavement and cladding of this earlier chamber,
although it is equally possible that much of the original floor and
walls could have been left as bare rock.53 The extraordinary depth
of the burial loculus—the factor which had foiled the earlier excava-
tions in 1755 and 1802/3—would have left room for a shallow vault
over such a chamber.54 Within this subterranean space, Francis’s
remains would have been protected by the wrought iron cage that
enveloped the sarcophagus. In addition, grille and coffin were almost
certainly capped by the third travertine slab, which was treated as an
integral part of Francis’s arca by the fifteenth-century rearrangement.
The closure of the tomb would have necessitated the dismantling
ments, Elias had removed an extra 15–20 cubic metres of bedrock over and above
what was necessary for the construction of the reduced loculus as it was found in
1818. Marinangeli-Zaccaria, “Il loculo sotto l’altare”, p. 105, give the depth of the
tomb as 375cm (from the pavement of the Lower Church, not including the altar
platform).
50
Marinangeli-Zaccaria, “Il loculo sotto l’altare”, p. 100; Millozzi, “L’altare mag-
giore”, p. 4.
51
Marinangeli-Zaccaria, “Quando e da chi fu modificata la tomba”, pp. 219–226,
broadly accepted the tradition of Sixtus’s sealing of the tomb in 1476. Millozzi,
“L’altare maggiore”, pp. 1–13, consolidated this position in response to Gatti’s 1983
monograph.
52
Marinangeli-Zaccaria, “Il loculo sotto l’altare”, pp. 102–105; Millozzi, “L’altare
maggiore”, p. 8.
53
Most fully developed by Millozzi, “L’altare maggiore”, pp. 9–10; however, the
author’s attempt to connect the travertine slabs from the tomb with the “tribertini
magni” requisitioned by Elias for the Basilica in 1239 needlessly complicates the
issue.
54
Millozzi suggested the presence of a “volta a crociera”; ibid., p. 9.
16 donal cooper
55
Ibid., pp. 2–3, the altar mensa slopes downwards to the left (looking from the
nave).
56
Biblioteca del Sacro Convento, cantorino 2, Ms. 1, fol. 235r. For this illumi-
nation see Giovanni Morello’s entry in The Treasury of Saint Francis of Assisi, ed.
Giovanni Morello and Laurence B. Kanter (Milan, 1999), pp. 142–142, where it
is dated to ca. 1280.
57
Marinangeli-Zaccaria, “La tomba del Santo secondo il sigillo detto di Frate
Elia ed una miniatura del secolo XIII”, p. 222, believed that the upper half of the
initial represents “con linee fortemente stilizzate” the vaults of the Lower Church,
including nine stalls from the friars’ choir. The analysis of the seal in the same arti-
cle is flawed, owing to the inaccurate drawing of the seal made in 1898, see Gatti,
La tomba, p. 120.
58
Ettore Ricci, “Tommaso da Gorzano Podestà di Perugia alla tomba di
S. Francesco”, Miscellanea francescana 34 (1934), pp. 42–45; the Podestà wished to
go to Assisi “pro veneratione corporis beati Francischi”.
59
In The Treasury of Saint Francis, p. 142, Morello described the body of St. Francis
“lying on a high catafalque, carved directly out of the rock”. The Saint’s green
coffin does, however, appear to be distinct from the rocky floor. The harsh surface
serves to emphasise the presence of the Collis Paradisi beneath the Basilica, see Gatti,
La tomba, p. 102.
in loco tutissimo et firmissimo 17
60
Millozzi, “L’altare maggiore”, p. 9, considered the chamber “non un loculo,
dunque, ma un sacello, una vera cappella”. Marinangeli-Zaccaria, “Le diverse opi-
nioni”, p. 276, believed that the chamber “fu accessibile fin dal principio”.
61
The image has been linked to the consecration of the high altar in 1253, see
William R. Cook, Images of St. Francis of Assisi in Painting, Stone and Glass from the
Earliest Images to ca. 1320 in Italy: A Catalogue (Florence, 1999), cat. no. 27, pp. 62–63,
18 donal cooper
193. It was described over the door of the sacristy in the Lower Church in the
1570s see Fra’ Ludovico da Pietralunga. Descrizione della Basilica di S. Francesco d’Assisi.
Introduzione, note al testo e commentario, ed. Pietro Scarpellini (Treviso, 1982), p. 79
(hereafter cited as Fra’ Ludovico).
62
Wolfgang Schenkluhn, S. Francesco in Assisi: Ecclesia specialis. Die Vision Papst
Gregors IX von einer Erneuerung der Kirche (Darmstadt, 1991), pp. 29–30, and fig. 24
on p. 35; passages of disturbed stonework at the base of the apse indicate the posi-
tion of the door. Schenkluhn, however, believed the opening to link the Sacro
Convento directly with the apse of the Lower Church, rather than the tomb below.
63
Ugo Tarchi, L’arte medioevale nell’Umbria e nella Sabina (Milan, 1940), vol. 4, tavv.
LXIV, LXV.
64
Edgar Hertlein, Die Basilika S. Francesco in Assisi. Gestalt—Bedeutung—Herkunft
(Florence, 1964), p. 106; assessed by Schenkluhn, Ecclesia specialis, p. 144. Hertlein’s
observation is impossible to verify following the re-paving of the apsidal area in
1960. An entrance from the choir was also proposed by Marinangeli-Zaccaria, “Le
diverse opinioni”, pp. 276–277.
65
The comparison with St. Peter’s is made by Schenkluhn, Ecclesia specialis,
p. 144, although the author’s argument is complicated by his proposal for an ele-
vated podium in the apse of the Lower Church (pp. 79–80; fig. 62).
in loco tutissimo et firmissimo 19
either the Lower Church or the Sacro Convento.66 The 1818 reports
are quite specific on this point—the chamber was surrounded by
solid rock on all sides.
The burial of St. Clare in the nearby Basilica of S. Chiara can
shed some further light on this point. Multiple similarities between
their tombs indicate that Clare’s shrine (like her church) was designed
as a pendant to Francis’s. Clare’s body had been interred below the
high altar of S. Chiara in 1260 but her remains, like Francis’s, had
been inaccessible for some time by the nineteenth century.67 A short
excavation in 1850, inspired by the success of the 1818 campaign
in the Lower Church, quickly discovered Clare’s sarcophagus set into
the floor of a barrel-vaulted chamber beneath the crossing (Fig. 6).
At some later date, this space was filled in with mortar and rubble,
but otherwise it was remarkably undisturbed. The survival of a
medieval barrel vault at S. Chiara may well support the presence
of a similar vaulted chamber below the Lower Church, but Clare’s
burial was certainly not accessible from the church above. The exca-
vators in 1850 found no trace of a passage leading to Clare’s burial
loculus, which was surrounded by solid rock on all sides.68 Moreover,
Clare’s cadaver was firmly sealed within her sarcophagus, which was
secured by two heavy iron bands and eight lead clasps.69 She was
unequivocally concealed from view, even within the confines of her
burial chamber.
The comparison with S. Chiara suggests that Francis’s burial cham-
ber was less accessible than Marinangeli and others have supposed,
but it also indicates how this type of subterranean tomb could be
physically and visually linked to the surface. The 1850 excavations
in S. Chiara established that a shaft had connected Clare’s burial
loculus to a grated opening (the so-called fenestella confessionis) set into
the front of the high altar platform above (Figs. 6, 7). The function
of the S. Chiara fenestella was reinforced by an accompanying inscrip-
tion on the altar steps: “Hic iacet corpus S. Clare Virginis”.70
66
Gatti, La tomba, pp. 146–149, 154.
67
For Clare’s tomb see Marino Bigaroni, “Origine e sviluppo storico della chiesa”,
in Marino Bigaroni, Hans-Rudolf Meier and Elvio Lunghi, La Basilica di S. Chiara
in Assisi (Ponte S. Giovanni, PG, 1994), pp. 30–34.
68
Gatti, La tomba, pp. 105, 154, characterized the S. Chiara loculus as a “cella
senza ingressi da nessun lato”.
69
Bigaroni, “Origine e sviluppo”, p. 32.
70
Ibid., p. 30.
20 donal cooper
71
With regard to the buca, Gatti, La tomba, p. 158, places some credence in an
ambiguous reference from Papini which dated the opening of the aperture to
1509/10, but elsewhere (pp. 133–135) rejects the same passage for dating the con-
struction of the altar platform and pergola to the same years. For Papini’s original
comments see Notizie sicure (1822 edition), pp. 88, 207; (1824 edition) pp. 211–212,
218–219.
72
The grate before the high altar is emphasized in two representations of Francis’s
shrine in Pietro Ridolfi, OFMConv., Historiarum Seraphicae Religionis libri tres (Venice,
1586), pp. 50r (“De liberatis a diversis infirmitatibus”), 250v (“De Admirabili Sepulchro
in quo venerandum corpus B. Francisci conditum est”); both reproduced by Gatti,
La tomba, fig. 17. The accuracy of some of the engravings that illustrate Ridolfi’s
text is debatable, but the topographical representations of the Basilica (p. 247r), the
Porziuncola (p. 252v) and La Verna (p. 262r) are all carefully observed—the sec-
ond of the tomb scenes falls in the same section.
73
On the left-hand side the Latin key for ‘F’ reads: “Locus in quo est Corpus
Serafici P.S. Francisci: ac tres dimisse lampades continuo ardentes”. The print illus-
trated Francesco Antonio Maria Righini’s, Provinciale Ordinis Fratrum Minorum
S. Francisci Conventualium (Rome, 1771).
74
Ludovico da Pietralunga gave a detailed description of the buca: “Nel piano,
nel quarto et ultimo gradile, dalla banda della navata della chiesa, overo intrata,
gli è una pietra assai grandotta over tavola sotto la quale gli è uno sepulcro over
grotta quasi sotto e presso la altare. Il vano . . . dove che de continuo gli arde una
ad minus lampada, il quale li giova a molte infermità.: se acende per una finestra
più longa che larga, nel ultimo et del mezzo del gradile o scalone . . .”, see Fra’
Ludovico, p. 50. The Libro degli Ordini de’Superiori from the 1590s referred to the buca
as a “caverna” and stipulated that “la chiave della Caverna sotto l’Altare maggiore
stia nella cassa delle tre chiavi, et il Lampadaro habbi solamente la chiave dello
sportellino per acconciare la lampada”; cited by Gatti, La tomba, p. 145.
75
Cesare Cenci, OFM., Documentazione di vita assisana 1300–1530, vol. 1 (Grottaferrata,
1974), p. 576: “de spera que est sub altare p. nostri Francisci” (1446); there is also
an earlier notice “de altari maiori et spera S. Francisci” from 1438 (p. 538). The
nature of the “spera” is clarified by later references to “socto l’altare dove arda la
spera” (1461) and “pro lumine et spera ardenda ante corpus S. Francisci” (1509),
cited by Cenci, Documentazione, vol. 2 (Grottaferrata, 1975), pp. 663, 982.
in loco tutissimo et firmissimo 21
platform. By 1405 the friars were selling oil near the high altar, pre-
sumably to elicit on the spot offerings by pilgrims.76 The fenestella
itself would have given the devout viewer kneeling on the steps before
the high altar a dim view into the vaulted chamber below, perhaps
even a distant glimpse of the Saint’s sarcophagus. This was the clos-
est that the average pilgrim to the Lower Church could hope to
come to Francis’s remains.
The interpretation of the textual sources is more problematic, but
one salient fact does emerge—that the tradition of the closed tomb
predates Eugenius’s 1442 letter, which was taken by Marinangeli,
Zaccaria and Millozzi as a terminus post quem for the sealing of the
tomb. Bartolomeo da Pisa provides two separate passages which indi-
cate that the tomb was sealed and inaccessible by the 1390s. Even
if one discounts both of these as later fifteenth-century interpolations,
one can fall back on two sources that have, until now, been over-
looked in the debates over the tomb.77
The first is Pero Tafur’s brief account of the tomb, already cited
above. Tafur visited Assisi in the spring of 1436, six years before
the Perugians sacked the town and appealed to Eugenius.78 It is
inherently unlikely that his comments on Assisi are later insertions,
for the Travels and Adventures have survived through a single copy in
Salamanca, itself probably made from the author’s original manu-
script.79 The text was isolated from the later evolution of Franciscan
historiography, and—excepting the four sentences on Assisi—would
have been of no interest to the Order. Paradoxically, the tangential
nature of Tafur’s account makes him an especially valuable witness.
He lodged at the Sacro Convento for three days with “a servant of
76
See Cenci, Documentazione, vol. 1, p. 287, citing a notarial act “in ecclesia
S. Francisci, in loco ubi venditur oleum, prope altare magnum dicte ecclesie
inferioris”.
77
Bartolomeo’s original manuscript does not survive. The earliest surviving copies
date from the fifteenth century, and are thought to contain many interpolations,
see the comments by the Quarrachi fathers in AF 4 (1906), pp. xxiv–xxxv; AF 5
(1912), pp. xlv–lxxxv; and Gatti, p. 170, note 36 with further bibliography.
78
Letts, Travels and Adventures, p. v; Tafur does not provide many firm dates in
his chronicle, but from Assisi he proceeded directly to Venice, which he left on 17
May, 1436 after a thirty day stay. An approximate estimate would place Tafur in
Assisi at the beginning of April in 1436.
79
Ibid., p. 1; the surviving manuscript in the Biblioteca Patrimonial dates from
the eighteenth century, but faithfully copies the spelling, punctuation and layout of
a fifteenth-century codex.
22 donal cooper
our Cardinal of Castille who was a great friend of mine”, and was
shown the Lower Church (presumably by the friars).80 His was not
a hurried pilgrimage, and his sources seem to have been the friars
themselves, but for Tafur the true location of the tomb was a secret,
an arcanum entrusted only to the Pope, one of his cardinals and a
single friar. Instead, “the place which they show” was surely the high
altar of the Lower Church, perhaps even the buca delle lampade in
the steps of the altar platform.
Tafur’s comments are corroborated by an entry from the Sacro
Convento’s archive, transcribed by Papini in 1824 but subsequently
ignored by Gatti, Marinangeli and Zaccaria. According to Papini’s
transcription, on 23 June, 1380, Fra Niccolò Vannini, senior Sacristan
of the Basilica and later Custodian of the Sacro Convento, issued a
certificate of pilgrimage to one Pietro di Giovanni, who thereby
fulfilled by proxy the vow of the elderly Francesco d’Enrico.81 The
stipulations for the completion of Pietro’s pilgrimage are revealing.
He had attended a Mass in honour of St. Francis, and had “placed
his hand on the altar beneath which lies the body of the Most Holy
Father Francis, in the presence of a number of trustworthy friars
from this convent”.82 His actions confirm that, for both pilgrims and
friars, the high altar of the Lower Church stood for Francis’s shrine.
Pietro di Giovanni touched the altar mensa as he might the Saint’s
tomb. Legally and spiritually, he had fulfilled his obligation.
* * *
80
Ibid., p. 44.
81
For this document see Papini, Notizie sicure (1822 edition), pp. 90, 205; (1824
edition), pp. 89, 216. The source is Archivio del Sacro Convento, Registri 372
(Entrate e uscite del Sacro Convento 1377–1447), fol. 1r. Niccolò Vannini was custodian
of the Sacro Convento from 1382 to 1386, see John R.H. Moorman, Medieval
Franciscan Houses (New York, 1983), p. 37. The phenomenon of vicarious pilgrim-
age is widely documented, and a number of Bolognese testaments specify pilgrim-
ages by proxy to Assisi; see, for example, the 1289 bequest for “cuidam persone
qui vadat ad terram Assixii ad perdonantiam” or that in 1296 for “uni bono homini
qui visitet altare B. Francisci de Assisio”, both cited in AF 9 (1927), pp. 181, 350.
82
Papini, Notizie sicure (1822 edition), p. 205; (1824 edition) p. 216; “. . . et ibi-
dem fecit legere devote unam Missam in honore S. Francisci, et ibidem obtulit
munus suum ad Altare sub quo Corpus Sanctissimi Patris Francisci requiescit, prae-
sentibus aliquibus fratribus fide dignis dicti Conventus”. The same act could also
provoke miracles, see Francesco Bartoli’s description of the cure of a female pil-
grim in 1308, “posita manu sua super altari in quo Corpus beati Francisci condi-
tum requiescit”, in his treatise on the Porziuncola (1330–35), cited by Gatti, La
tomba, p. 99.
in loco tutissimo et firmissimo 23
83
When they appealed to the Commune for assistance during the floods of July
1311, the friars of the Sacro Convento stated that the water was flowing “super
altare ipsius b. Francisci”, cited by Gatti, La tomba, p. 134. In a letter from 1279,
Nicholas IV recalled the healing of a blind man in 1232, who had been “ductus
ad altare beati Francisci”, cited by Nessi, “La tomba e i documenti”, SFPI 60
(1960), p. 430. Further examples are found in Cenci, Documentazione, vol. 1, pp. 88,
147, 228.
84
The relationship between the buca and the other lamps around the tomb under-
lies a later seventeenth-century tale from the life of S. Giuseppe of Cupertino (†1663).
While Giuseppe prayed at night before the high altar, a demon with iron shoes
entered the Lower Church and extinguished all of the lamps around the altar, only
for Francis to emerge from the tomb. Taking a flame from one of the lamps in
the buca, the Saint then re-lit all of the lamps around the altar, driving the demon
away in the process; cited by Papini, Notizie sicure (1824 edition), pp. 92, 218; orig-
inal text in Acta Sanctorum Septembris, Tomus V (Antwerp, 1755), pp. 1033–1034.
24 donal cooper
85
Irene Hueck, “Der Lettner der Unterkirche von S. Francesco in Assisi”, Mitteil-
ungen des kunsthistorisches Instituts in Florenz 28 (1984), pp. 173–202. Hueck (p. 199)
dated the structure to ca. 1253. For a less monumental alternative to Hueck’s recon-
struction see Jürgen Wiener, Die Bauskulptur von S. Francesco in Assisi (Werl/Westfalen,
1991), pp. 156–162.
86
For this reading of the Crib at Greccio as a reflection of the Lower Church see
Pietro Scarpellini, “Assisi e i suoi monumenti nella pittura dei secoli XIII–XIV” in
Assisi al tempo di S. Francesco: atti del V Convegno internazionale, Assisi, 13–16 ottobre 1977;
Società internazionale di studi francescani (Assisi, 1978), pp. 101–108.
87
For Dominic’s tomb see Joanna Cannon, “Dominican Patronage of the Arts
in loco tutissimo et firmissimo 25
in Central Italy ca. 1220–c. 1320: The Provincia Romana”, Ph.D. dissertation, Courtauld
Institute of Art, 1980, pp. 169–175; Anita Fiderer Moskowitz, Nicola Pisano’s Arca
di S. Domenico and Its Legacy (London, 1994).
88
Jordan of Saxony described how the faithful visiting the church “hung wax
effigies of eyes, hands, feet and other bodily parts over the tomb of the Blessed”
which were then torn down and smashed by the friars, see Venturino Alce, “Il con-
vento di S. Domenico in Bologna nel secolo XIII”, Culta Bononia 4 (1972), p. 151.
89
G.G. Meersseman, OP., “L’architecture dominicaine au XIIIe siècle: Législation
et pratique”, Archivum Fratrum Praedicatorum 16 (1946), pp. 155–156; “dont le culte
populaire pouvait désormais se dérouler librement sans déranger la liturgie”. Joanna
Cannon presented substantial new research on Dominican shrines in a paper enti-
tled “Founders and Followers II: The Burial and Commemoration of Saints and
Beati among the Dominicans of central Italy” at the Association of Art Historians’
annual conference of 2000, with special emphasis on the opportunities for access
and circulation afforded by free-standing tombs on the model of Dominic’s shrine.
90
Hueck, “Der Lettner”, p. 176, observed that the screen was probably dis-
mantled less then fifty years after its construction. The original piscinae and ambries
for the side altars set on the screen’s upper storey can still be seen high on the
walls in the first bay of the nave. Other sections from the screen seem to have
been reused as a revetment above the altar in the Magdalen chapel.
91
For the construction of the side chapels see Irene Hueck, “Die Kapellen der
Basilika S. Francesco in Assisi: die Auftraggeber und die Franziskaner”, in Patronage
and Public in the Trecento, Proceedings of the St. Lambrecht Symposium, Abtei St. Lambrecht,
Styria, 16–19 July, 1984, ed. Vincent Moleta (Florence, 1986), pp. 81–104.
26 donal cooper
92
See Robson in this volume, pp. 39–70.
93
Iron cancelli were sometimes added to free-standing, elevated tombs to dis-
courage over-zealous devotion. For example, a grille was placed around St. Dominic’s
tomb in 1288, see Alce, “Il convento”, p. 167.
94
For the pergola in the Lower Church see Bigaroni, “Origine e sviluppo”, pp.
26–28.
95
A fragment of the pergola architrave is reproduced by Hueck, “Der Lettner”,
p. 184, fig. 9, although the author excludes it from her reconstruction of the choir
screen due to discrepancies in dimensions (pp. 180–181).
96
For Cavalcaselle’s cavalier campaign of restoration see Irene Hueck, “La Basilica
francescana di Assisi nell’Ottocento: alcuni documenti su restauri progettati ed inter-
venti eseguiti”, Bollettino d’arte 66, no. 12 (October–December, 1981), pp. 143–152;
see fig. 5 for a photograph of the Upper Church with the pergola around the high
altar. The acrimonious correspondence over Cavalcaselle’s historicism at Assisi is
gathered together in Dibattimento del giornalismo italiano intorno alla rimozione del coro di
Maestro Domenico da S. Severino dalla Basilica di S. Francesco in Assisi (Perugia, 1873),
esp. pp. 139–145 for Luigi Carattoli’s criticisms in the Osservatore Romano on the
in loco tutissimo et firmissimo 27
removal of the pergola from the Lower Church. Cavalcaselle, who had first dismissed
the pergola as a seventeenth-century addition, believed he had identified signs of its
original collocation around the high altar of the Upper Church.
97
Some of the architrave fragments are now hidden behind the conservation
cabinets in the Chiostro dei Morti; I am grateful to Padre Gerhard Ruf of the
Sacro Convento for the opportunity to examine the Chiostro dei Morti and the
cancelli in the main cloister.
98
Vasari described the pergola accordingly; “intorno al detto altare sono grate di
ferro grandissime, con ricchi ornamenti di marmo e di musaico . . .”; Le vite, vol. 2,
p. 51.
99
Marinangeli-Zaccaria, “Le diverse opinioni”, pp. 275–276; Millozzi, “L’altare
maggiore”, pp. 12–13; the later dating derives from Pietralunga’s attribution of the
iron cancelli to Maestro Gasperino da Lugano, documented in Assisi from 1463
onwards, see Fra’ Ludovico, p. 49. In his commentary Scarpellini (pp. 259–260)
argued that the surviving fragments are much too old to be Gasparino’s work, and
that the Lombard had probably restored an existing structure.
100
See Scarpellini’s commentary to Pietralunga’s text, Fra’ Ludovico, p. 259.
101
Fratris Francisci Bartholi de Assisio. Tractatus de Indulgentia S. Mariae de Portiuncola,
ed. Paul Sabatier (Paris 1900), p. 83; “Quumque frater . . . post crates ferreas altaris
beati patris nostri Francisci oraret”.
102
For English grilles with similar back-to-back scroll designs produced during
the twelfth and thirteenth centuries, see Jane Geddes, Medieval Decorative Ironwork in
England (London, 1999), pp. 141–145.
28 donal cooper
103
For a comparison of the two pergolae in Assisi see Bigaroni, “Origine e sviluppo”,
pp. 24–30; and also Hans-Rudolf Meier’s essay, “Protomonastero e chiesa di pel-
legrinaggio”, in the same volume, pp. 126–130.
104
For the dating of the S. Chiara capitals to the beginning of the fourteenth
century, and a 1319 reference to “cancellos ferros” in the church, see Meier,
“Protomonastero”, pp. 127–129. The primacy of the S. Chiara pergola, suggested
by Bigaroni (p. 28), seems the less likely path of influence.
105
The opening in the nave side of the colonnade is indicated by a number of
later representations of the pergola in the Lower Church, see for example Giovambattista
Mariani’s 1821 engraving reproduced by Bigaroni, “Origine e sviluppo”, p. 27.
106
The choir stalls constructed between 1467 and 1471, which today fill the apse,
probably replace an earlier choir precinct. A choir in the Lower Church is docu-
mented from 1342, see Cenci, Documentazione, vol. 1, p. 88. However, two notarial
acts from 1430 and 1434 were redacted “in choro dicte ecclesie, ante altare mag-
num dicte ecclesie inferioris”; ibid., pp. 487, 513. This should probably be read
as the space between the high altar and an apsidal choir, rather than a precinct
in the upper nave. A payment in 1447 for “cortine a pie’ del coro del convento”
(p. 585) may indicate that fabric hangings could divide the choir from the transept
area. It is assumed here that, as today, the choir would not have impeded the pas-
sage of pilgrims behind the high altar. I would follow Hueck, “Der Lettner”, p.
191, in placing the thirteenth-century choir between the original choir screen and
the high altar.
in loco tutissimo et firmissimo 29
107
Fra’ Ludovico, p. 70: “Dicano che non fu guasto comme li altri”.
108
The presence of such an altar may be suggested by the terms of Puccio di
Ventura’s testament of 1300, discussed by Hueck, “Die Kapellen”, pp. 86–87;
Silvestro Nessi, La Basilica di S. Francesco in Assisi e la sua documentazione storica (Assisi,
1994), pp. 429, 448–449. An altar dedicated to the Immaculate Conception was
later installed below the Cimabue in the fifteenth century, see Nessi, p. 428.
109
For the side altars see Scarpellini’s commentary in Fra’ Ludovico, pp. 323–326
(St. Elizabeth); 328–340 (St. John the Evangelist and south transept); for Simone
Martini’s fresco altarpiece for the St. Elizabeth chapel see also Adrian S. Hoch,
“Beata Stirps, Royal Patronage and the Identification of the Sainted Rulers in the
St. Elizabeth Chapel at Assisi”, Art History 15 (1992), pp. 279–295. A 1360 refer-
ence to “una chiave per la capella di Santa Elisabetta” may suggest that the chapel
had an altar enclosure by that date, see Nessi, La Basilica, p. 427.
30 donal cooper
110
Bullarium Franciscanum, vol. 4, pp. 22–23: “. . . innumera fratrum vestri Ordinis
confluit multitudo, quodque Asisii civitas brevi concluditur spatio . . .”
111
Bruno Zanardi, Giotto e Pietro Cavallini: La questione di Assisi e il cantiere medievale
della pittura a fresco (Milan, 2002), p. 212.
112
In the twelfth century, Abbot Suger had famously eased the problems of access
and circulation at St. Denis through architectural expansion, notably the construc-
tion of a spacious ambulatory. Suger had vividly described the earlier overcrowd-
ing of pilgrims in his De Consecratione, see Paul Binski, Medieval Death: Ritual and
Representation (London, 1996), pp. 18–20. Giovanni Lorenzoni has suggested that
between 1310 and 1350, St. Anthony of Padua’s tomb was located in the central
radial chapel of the Santo, with the church’s ambulatory constructed specifically for
the purpose of easing the flow of pilgrims to and from his tomb, cited by Sarah
Blake McHam, The Chapel of St. Anthony at the Santo and the Development of Venetian
Renaissance Sculpture (Cambridge, 1994), p. 11.
113
For the early presence of choir screens or tramezzi in Italian mendicant churches
see Donal Cooper, “In medio ecclesiae: Screens, Crucifixes and Shrines in the Franciscan
Church Interior in Italy ca. 1230–ca. 1400”, Ph.D. dissertation, Courtauld Institute
of Art, 2000, pp. 41–105. The removal of the choir screen in the Lower Church,
together with the papal arrangement of the Upper Church, may have influenced
more open liturgical arrangements in several other Franciscan churches belonging
to the Order’s Umbrian province, see Donal Cooper, “Franciscan Choir Enclosures
and the Function of Double-Sided Altarpieces in Pre-Tridentine Umbria”, Journal
of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 64 (2001), pp. 1–54.
in loco tutissimo et firmissimo 31
114
Early Documents 1, pp. 290–291.
115
See Early Documents 2, pp. 421 (for a commitment to visit the shrine); 423 (the
revival of the boy at Suessa, see below note 130); 445 (the healing of Brother
Giacomo of Iseo immediately after the 1230 translation); 454 (Pietro of Foligno
touches Francis’s tomb in thanks for his exorcism); 455 (a possessed girl from Norcia
is freed before the altar of St. Francis which she then kisses); 465 (healing of Lord
Trasmondo Anibaldi’s companion before Francis’s tomb); the text also includes some
of the miracles from Celano’s first life which related to the S. Giorgio tomb, see
pp. 458–460.
116
For the instances in Bonaventure’s text see Early Documents 2, pp. 658 (the
32 donal cooper
raising of the boy at Suessa, see below note 130); 660–661 (the miraculous recov-
ery of a woman struck by a stone from the pulpit in the Lower Church, see below
note 128); 676 (a commitment to go in person on pilgrimage to Francis’s tomb by
Renaud, a priest from Poitiers). Bonaventure’s text also includes two miracles from
Celano’s first life concerning the S. Giorgio tomb (p. 675).
117
Cook, Images, pp. 62–63, 192–193.
118
From the Chronica XXIV Generalium; AF 3 (1897), p. 217; “ad eius sepulcrum
accedens praecepit cum magna confidentia et fide mortuo, ne cum suis miraculis
sancti Patris Francisci gloriam offuscaret. Qui ex tunc nulla miracula fecit”. A sim-
ilar reading of the William story in relation to the scarcity of miracles in the Lower
Church has recently been advanced by Chiara Frugoni, “L’Ombra della Porziuncola
nella Basilica Superiore di Assisi”, Mitteilungen des kunsthistorisches Institut in Florenz 45
(2001), pp. 353–361.
119
See, for example, Paolo Caucci von Saucken, “Vie di pellegrinaggio verso
Assisi”, in Assisi anno 1300, ed. Stefano Brufani and Enrico Menestò (S. Maria degli
Angeli, 2002), pp. 249–266; as well as Mario Sensi’s essay, “Il pelegrinaggio al
Perdono di Assisi e la tavola di prete Ilario di Viterbo”, in the same volume, pp.
267–326. For an overview of pilgrimage in Umbria, see Mario Sensi, “Le vie e la
civiltà dei pellegrinaggi nell’Italia centrale: L’esempio umbro”, in Le vie e la civiltà
dei pellegrinaggi nell’Italia centrale. Atti del convegno di studio, Ascoli Piceno, 21–22 maggio,
1999, ed. Enrico Menestò (Ascoli Piceno, 2000), pp. 111–131.
in loco tutissimo et firmissimo 33
120
For the Porziuncola indulgence see now Mario Sensi, Il Perdono di Assisi
(S. Maria degli Angeli, 2002), esp. pp. 83–86 for the important role played by the
Franciscan Bishop of Assisi, Teobaldo Pontano, in promoting the Perdono at the end
of the thirteenth century.
121
Bullarium Franciscanum, vol. 4, pp. 22–23: “. . . ad eam [the Basilica], in qua
ipsius sancti corpus gloriosissimum requiescit, ac etiam ad ecclesiam S. Marie de
Portiuncula . . .”
122
For Clareno’s text see Franz Ehrle, SJ., “Die Spiritualen”, Archiv für Litteratur
und Kirchengeschichte des Mittelalters 1 (Berlin, 1885), p. 544.
123
See, for example, the exorcism at the Portiuncola of a woman who had ear-
lier sought release in the Basilica without success, see Tractatus de Indulgentia, pp.
62–63.
34 donal cooper
Conclusion
From its inception in 1230 the shrine of St. Francis at Assisi had to
reconcile the demands of pilgrimage and popular devotion with the
needs of a major monastic complex. In developing the Lower Church,
the friars were largely constrained by the architectural choices made
during the building of the double basilica. Moreover, the original
decision to bury Francis beneath the high altar in imitation of older
Roman practice was perpetuated and cemented by the fear that his
remains would be removed from Assisi by force. Francis’s body there-
fore remained physically and visually separated from the flow of pil-
grims in the Lower Church throughout the medieval period. This
distance, coupled with the insistence that the tomb contained the
Saint’s whole and undivided body, resulted in a cult shorn of major
relics.
Contemporary responses to Francis’s shrine can be better gauged
through a comparison with other Italian shrines in the thirteenth
century. It is likely that Francis’s 1230 burial below the high altar
at Assisi was intended to evoke Early Christian martyr burials, befitting
the Saint’s status as the founder of a new apostolate. In this respect,
however, Francis’s tomb ran counter to the dominant trends in thir-
teenth-century shrine provision. The elevated arrangement conceived
in 1233 for the new tomb of St. Dominic in Bologna represented a
far more influential prototype.124 Raised tombs bequeathed due sta-
124
The contrast between this arrangement and the tomb of St. Francis was high-
lighted by Cannon, 1980, p. 172; “The general Italian practice had been [before
1233] to hide venerated bodies and relics away in crypts or behind screens and
enclosures: even St. Francis was probably buried in this way. The Dominicans chose
to make their founder’s tomb visible and accessible to pilgrims”. As well as posing
problems for the proper functioning of the church, Dominic’s initial burial in the
floor of S. Nicolò nelle Vigne was now perceived as unworthy (compare Peter
Ferrandus’s comment that “it was seen as unsuitable that the bones of his body
should be set in the ground beneath our feet” with Humbert of Romans justification
for the new 1233 arrangement: “. . . since the sanctity of the holy man could no
longer be hidden . . . his body, which had hitherto resided in a humble tomb, had
to be moved with honour to a higher place”; both cited by Cannon, p. 170).
Elevated tombs were often related to Luke 11:33, “No man, when he hath lighted
a candle, putteth it in a secret place . . . but on a candlestick, that they which come
in may see the light”; burials below high altars to the vision of the martyrs beneath
the altar from Revelations 6:9. This material will be developed further in Cannon’s
forthcoming book, Art and Order. The Dominicans of Central Italy and Visual Culture in
the Thirteenth and Fourteenth Centuries.
in loco tutissimo et firmissimo 35
125
For the successive burials of St. Anthony see Blake McHam, The Chapel of St.
Anthony, pp. 10–13; Anthony was placed in an elevated tomb in 1263, although this
was initially beside the high altar of his incomplete Basilica. His tomb was located
in the left transept, to the west of the choir screen, by 1350 at the latest. The
Santo’s ambulatory may have been constructed to facilitate access to an interme-
diate burial in the central radial chapel, see above, note 112. Even in those instances
where the Franciscans opted for burials below high altars, the remains seem to have
been visible and accessible. For the arrangements at Sansepolcro and Città di
Castello see Donal Cooper, “Spinello Aretino in Città di Castello: The lost model
for Sassetta’s Sansepolcro polyptych”, Apollo 154 (August, 2001), pp. 22–29.
36 donal cooper
126
Robson, pp. 39–70.
127
The topographical record of the Lower Church compiled for the then Minister
General, Filippo Gesualdo, in 1597 recorded “un panno macchiato di sangue, quale
uscí in gran copia da una imagine delle stimmate di S. Francesco dipinta in muro”,
Archivio del Sacro Convento, Registri 24, fol. 46v. If this notice is read narrowly
to refer to a fresco of the Stigmatisation in the Basilica (as opposed to a non-specific
image of St. Francis bearing the Stigmata) then Lorenzetti’s transept fresco and the
analogous scene in the St. Francis Cycle are the only credible candidates.
128
In the 1570s, Pietralunga described the stone (now in the Sacristy in the
Lower Church) hanging on an iron chain “nella volta a man dextra”; Fra’ Ludovico,
pp. 48–49. Several years later, Gesualdo’s 1597 description places the stone over
the high altar: “al presente giorno si vede appicata con una catena di ferro alla
volta dell’altare maggiore”, Archivio del Sacro Convento, Registri 24, fol. 53r. The
capital, replete with iron ring, is now kept in the Basilica’s inner sacristy, it is illus-
trated by Hueck, “Der Lettner”, p. 185, fig. 11. Frugoni, “L’Ombra della Porziuncola”,
p. 360, has dated the miracle to 1235.
129
The two Suessa episodes are discussed in greater detail by Robson, pp. 39–
70. The post mortem miracle scenes were among the first elements of the new transept
scheme to be started, and were probably left half finished for several years follow-
ing 1297, for their dating see Zanardi, Giotto e Pietro Cavallini, pp. 194–197.
130
In Celano’s account, the mother promised to wreathe Francis’s altar with sil-
ver thread and to cover it with a new altar cloth, while Bonaventure mentions only
the altar cloth. This element of the story may intend an altar in a Franciscan church
in Suessa or nearby, but both texts do not specify its identity beyond “the altar of
blessed Francis”, and it is likely that by the end of the thirteenth century this would
have been read to refer to the altar in the Lower Church, see Early Documents 2,
in loco tutissimo et firmissimo 37
pp. 423, 658. The practice of encircling a tomb with precious metal or wax tapers
is well attested in late medieval miracula collections, see Cannon and Vauchez,
Margherita of Cortona, pp. 57–60 and Cooper, “Qui Perusii”, p. 241. The wreathing
of the altar in the Lower Church would be a further indication of contemporary
votive practices being accommodated by the altar/tomb arrangement of Francis’s
shrine.
131
Gatti, La tomba, p. 106.
132
The story is included amongst the miracles appended to Bonaventure’s Legenda
Maior, see Early Documents 2, pp. 661–662. However, in his Tractatus de miraculis,
Thomas of Celano specified that the stone was for the fountain of St. Francis in
Assisi. This episode is preceded by a similar accident involving an altar mensa in
Sicily, and some conflation of the two miracles may have occurred over time, see
Early Documents 2, pp. 428–429.
133
Elvio Lunghi, “La perduta decorazione trecentesca nell’abside della chiesa
inferiore del S. Francesco ad Assisi”, Collectanea franciscana 66 (1996), pp. 479–510.
The medieval image, which was unfinished in its lower portion, was replaced in
1623 by Cesare Sermei’s Last Judgement.
134
Pietralunga did not specify such rays in his description, but they appear in
the earliest images which reproduce the so-called alter Christus gesture, for example
the representation of St. Francis on the predella of Giotto’s Baroncelli altarpiece,
and consistently thereafter.
THE PILGRIM’S PROGRESS: REINTERPRETING THE
TRECENTO FRESCO PROGRAMME IN THE LOWER
CHURCH AT ASSISI
Janet Robson
This article had its beginnings in a series of conference papers presented at the
Courtauld Institute of Art, London; the Leeds International Medieval Congress
2000; and the International Congress on Medieval Studies, Kalamazoo (MI) 2001,
and I am most grateful to all those delegates whose questions and suggestions con-
tributed to its further development. I would like to thank Dr. Joanna Cannon,
whose illuminating work on Margherita of Cortona inspired some of my initial
ideas, for her valuable comments on the draft of this article; and Dr. Donal Cooper,
for many discussions of things Franciscan. This article is dedicated to Peter Sidhom,
pilgrim of St. Francis, who has spent innumerable enjoyable hours walking, talking
and testing theories with me in the Basilica of San Francesco, Assisi.
1
See Donal Cooper, “ ‘In loco tutissimo et firmissimo’: the tomb of St. Francis
in history, legend and art,” pp. 1–37.
40 janet robson
of the friars in the choir, which was separated from the nave by a
solid tramezzo screen, and the demands of the devotees of the Saint’s
cult.2 The new arrangements opened up access into the transepts by
demolishing the tramezzo screen, while the space available in the
Lower Church was substantially expanded through the addition of
side chapels (Fig. 1). Francis’s body remained in situ beneath the
high altar, which was now protected and reserved to the friars through
the installation at the top of the altar steps of ironwork cancelli, sep-
arated by marble columns and topped with a cosmati-work archi-
trave. The closest that most Trecento pilgrims could have got to the
body of the Saint would have been to kneel on the steps at the front
of the high altar: a small iron grate set into the top step, facing the
nave, allowed them a limited view down into the subterranean cham-
ber below. This space was known as the buca delle lampade, because
it was lit by oil lamps.3
Although the degree of lay access to the shrine is greater now
than in the Trecento, another change in the pilgrim’s experience of
the tomb is perhaps even more striking. While the austere crypt is
entirely devoid of images, every inch of the barrel vaults and walls
of the transepts, crossing vaults and apse is covered in brightly-
coloured frescoes.4 Nowadays, the religious pilgrims who come to
visit Saint Francis’s tomb are matched by equal numbers of pilgrims
of art, coming to see the paintings. In the Lower Church in the
fourteenth century, there was no such dichotomy: image and cult
were combined into a single devotional experience.
* * *
2
Ibid.
3
This grate still exists in the present-day altar step. A similar grate is shown in
two rather fanciful engravings in P. Ridolfi, OFMConv., Historiarum Seraphicae Religionis
libri tres (Venice, 1586) (see Isidoro Gatti, OFMConv., La Tomba di S. Francesco nei
Secoli (Assisi, 1983), fig. 17) and on an engraving of 1771, but it is likely to be much
older. A useful comparison is the Basilica of Santa Chiara in Assisi, where St. Clare,
like St. Francis, was also interred beneath a high altar protected by ironwork can-
celli. These cancelli (at least part of which are original) are still in place, as is the
small grate in the top step in front of the altar. See Marino Bigaroni, “Origine e
sviluppo storico della chiesa,” in Marino Bigaroni, Hans-Rudolf Meier and Elvio
Lunghi, La Basilica di S. Chiara in Assisi (Ponte San Giovanni, PG, 1994), pp. 24–30,
and the photograph on p. 25 (Santa Chiara). See Cooper (Fig. 9) for the 1771
engraving of San Francesco, and for a fuller argument in support of dating the
arrangement of cancelli and buca delle lampade to the early fourteenth century.
4
The crypt was initially decorated in a neo-Classic style, but was remodelled
between 1925 and 1932 by Ugo Tarchi.
the pilgrim’s progress 41
5
For example, Elvio Lunghi, The Basilica of St. Francis at Assisi: The Frescoes by
Giotto, his Precursors, and Followers (London, 1996), p. 100; Irene Hueck, “Die Kapellen
der Basilika San Francesco in Assisi: die Auftraggeber und die Franziskaner,” in
Patronage and Public in the Trecento, Proceedings of the St. Lambrecht Symposium, Abtei St.
Lambrecht, Styria, 18–19 July 1984, ed. Vincent Moleta (Florence, 1986), pp. 81–104
(on p. 93).
6
As the Basilica is occidented, I am using geographic rather than liturgical points
of the compass.
7
Apart from the treatment of the frescoes in the many monographs devoted to
Giotto and Pietro Lorenzetti, some examples dealing specifically with the Assisi fres-
coes are: for the north transept, Luciano Bellosi, Giotto at Assisi (Assisi, 1989); Giotto
e i giotteschi in Assisi, introduction Giovanni Palumbo (Rome, 1969); and for the
south transept, Luciano Bellosi, Pietro Lorenzetti at Assisi (Assisi, 1988); C. Brandi,
Pietro Lorenzetti: Gli affreschi nella Basilica Inferiore di Assisi (Milan, 1957); Hayden B.J.
Maginnis, “Pietro Lorenzetti and the Assisi Passion Cycle,” Ph.D dissertation,
Princeton University, 1975 and “The Passion Cycle in the Lower Church of San
Francesco, Assisi: the technical evidence,” Zeitschrift für Kunstgeschichte 39 (1976),
193–208; Carlo Volpe, Pietro Lorenzetti ad Assisi (Milan, 1965). Even books on the
complete Basilica tend to compartmentalise the material by artist: see, for example,
L. Colletti, Gli affreschi della Basilica di Assisi (Bergamo, 1949); Lunghi, The Basilica.
42 janet robson
8
For the south transept: Maginnis, “Pietro Lorenzetti and the Assisi Passion
Cycle”; Anne Derbes, Picturing the Passion in Late Medieval Italy: Narrative Painting,
Franciscan Ideologies, and the Levant (Cambridge, 1996); Janet Robson, “Judas and the
Franciscans: perfidy pictured in the Lorenzetti Passion Cycle at Assisi,” Art Bulletin
86, no. 1 (2004), 31–57. On the vele and apse: D.W. Schönau, “The ‘vele’ of Assisi:
their position and influence,” Mededelingen van het Nederlands Instituut te Rome 44–45,
n.s. 9–10 (1983), 99–109; Elvio Lunghi, “La perduta decorazione trecentesca nel-
l’abside della chiesa inferiore del S. Francesco ad Assisi,” Collectanea Franciscana 66
(1996), 479–510 and “L’influenza di Ubertino da Casale e di Pietro di Giovanni
Olivi nel programma iconografico della chiesa inferiore del S. Francesco ad Assisi,”
ibid., 67 (1997), 167–87. The relationship between the Franciscans and private
patrons in determining iconography has, not surprisingly, focused on the side chapels.
See Hueck, “Die Kapellen” and, for the St. Nicholas Chapel, “Il Cardinale Napoleone
Orsini e la cappella di S. Nicola nella Basilica Francescana ad Assisi,” in Roma Anno
1300: Atti della IV settimana di studi di storia dell’arte medievale dell’Università di Roma ‘La
Sapienza’ (19–24 maggio 1980) (Rome, 1983), pp. 187–98; for the Magdalen Chapel,
see Lorraine Schwartz, “The fresco decoration of the Magdalen Chapel in the
Basilica at Assisi,” Ph.D. dissertation, Indiana University, 1980, and “Patronage and
Franciscan iconography in the Magdalen Chapel at Assisi,” Burlington Magazine 133
(1991), 32–36; for the St. Martin Chapel, see Joel Brink, “Saints Martin and Francis:
sources and meaning in Simone Martini’s Montefiore Chapel,” in Renaissance Studies
in Honor of Hugh Craig Smyth 2, ed. Andrew Morrogh et al (Florence, 1985), pp.
79–96; Adrian S. Hoch, “St. Martin of Tours: his transformation into a chivalric
hero and Franciscan ideal,” Zeitschrift für Künstgeschichte 50 (1987), 471–82.
9
Two notable examples are Gerhard Ruf, OFMConv., Das Grab des heiligen
Franziskus. Die Fresken der Unterkirche von Assisi (Basel, 1981) and Guy Lobrichon, Assise:
les fresques de la basilique inférieure (Paris, 1985).
the pilgrim’s progress 43
10
Lunghi, The Basilica, pp. 116–17, suggests the work may have come to a forced
halt in summer 1311, because of a flood in the Lower Church.
11
Fra’ Ludovico da Pietralunga: descrizione della Basilica di S. Francesco e di altri santu-
ari di Assisi, ed. Pietro Scarpellini (Treviso, 1982), pp. 62–64 (hereafter cited as Fra’
Ludovico).
12
Joanna Cannon, “Dating the frescoes by the Maestro di San Francesco at
Assisi,” Burlington Magazine 134 (1982), 65–69.
44 janet robson
13
For instance, A.T. Mignosi, “Osservazioni sul transetto della basilica inferiore
di Assisi,” Bollettino d’arte 60 (1975), 129–42; Lobrichon, Assise, p. 101; Lunghi, The
Basilica, pp. 106–111.
14
Hayden B.J. Maginnis, “The Passion Cycle in the Lower Church of San
Francesco” (see above, n. 7) and “Assisi revisited: notes on recent observations,”
Burlington Magazine 117 (1975), 511–15; Robin Simon, “Towards a relative chronology
of the frescoes in the Lower Church of San Francesco at Assisi,” Burlington Magazine
118 (1976), 361–65.
15
Hayden B.J. Maginnis, “Pietro Lorenzetti: a chronology,” Art Bulletin 66 (1984),
183–211 (on p. 208).
16
Lunghi, The Basilica, p. 111. The abandonment of the plan seems to have been
tacitly acknowledged by the attempt to patch up the surviving section of St. Francis
Preaching to the Birds, in a style similar to that of the Upper Church St. Francis Cycle.
the pilgrim’s progress 45
17
For the following, see Robson, “Judas and the Franciscans” (see above, n. 8).
18
Bonaventure, Defense of the Mendicants, The Works of Bonaventure 4, trans. José de
Vinck (Paterson, NJ, 1965), chap. 7, p. 159.
19
The official Franciscan position on this was most fully expounded by Bonaventure
in his Apologia pauperum of ca. 1260. (Trans. as Defense of the Mendicants, ibid.)
20
Arnald of Sarrant, The Kinship of St. Francis, trans. Francis of Assisi: Early Documents
3, eds. Regis J. Armstrong OFMCap., J.A. Wayne Hellmann OFMConv., William
J. Short OFM (New York, 2001), p. 693.
21
These Crucifixions are placed directly beneath two earlier Crucifixions, attributed
to Cimabue, in the equivalent positions in the transepts of the Upper Church.
Because of later alterations to the Lower Church and crypt, an exact reconstruc-
tion of the fourteenth-century choir is problematic. Lunghi, “L’influenza di Ubertino,”
pp. 186–87, seems to assume a gathering of friars under the vele, within the high
46 janet robson
altar enclosure itself. I am hypothesizing that for divine offices the friars would have
been seated in the apse, facing (geographic) east. For further discussion, see Cooper,
note 106.
22
In the preliminary notes to Images of St. Francis of Assisi in Painting, Stone and
Glass from the Earliest Images to ca. 1320 in Italy: a Catalogue (Florence, 1999), William
R. Cook argues that the early dossals of St. Francis “with their emphasis on the
posthumous miracles that took place at Francis’ tomb, encouraged pilgrimage to
Assisi” (p. 22). All seven surviving dossals of St. Francis painted before 1263 (accord-
ing to Cook’s dating) feature posthumous miracles: only two contain more life than
posthumous miracles, while three contain solely posthumous miracles: see cat. nos.
27, 68, 115, 141, 143, 145 and 163. F. Bisogni has argued that the division of con-
tent in the frescoes in the Cappellone di S. Nicola da Tolentino, which have been
connected with the Saint’s canonisation process of 1325, reflects an expected dual
audience, with the scenes of Nicholas’s life being directly primarily at the Augustinian
friars and the miracle scenes at pilgrims. See F. Bisogni, “Gli inizi dell’iconografia
di Nicola da Tolentino e gli affreschi del Cappellone,” in San Nicola, Tolentino, le
Marche: Contributi e ricerche sul processo (a. 1325) per la canonizzione di San Nicola da
Tolentino. Convegno internazionale di studi, Tolentino 4–7 sett. 1985 (Tolentino, 1987), pp.
266–321. Joanna Cannon argues that the emphasis on Beata Margherita as a thau-
maturge in the lost fresco cycle in S. Margherita, Cortona, ca. 1335, was connected
with renewed civic interest in seeking her official canonisation: see Joanna Cannon
and André Vauchez, Margherita of Cortona and the Lorenzetti: Sienese Art and the Cult of
a Holy Woman in Medieval Tuscany (University Park, PA, 1999), pp. 181–90, 205–12
and 217–20. See also Max Seidel, “Condizionamento iconografico e scelta seman-
tica: Simone Martini e la tavola del Beato Agostino Novello,” in Simone Martini: Atti
del convegno, Siena, 1985, ed. Luciano Bellosi (Florence, 1988), pp. 75–80, for the
role of the posthumous miracle scenes of the Beato Agostino altarpiece in the pro-
motion of the Beato’s cult in Siena in the early 1330s.
the pilgrim’s progress 47
23
I have not undertaken extensive research on this particular point and there
may be accounts that are presently unknown to me.
24
Pero Tafur, Travels and Adventures 1435–39, trans. and ed. Malcolm Letts (London,
1926), p. 44.
25
The Book of Margery Kempe, ed. Barry Windeatt (Harlow, 2000), pp. 180–81.
The relic of the Virgin’s veil had been presented to the friars of the Sacro Convento
by Tommaso Orsini that same year: Silvestro Nessi, La Basilica di S.Francesco in Assisi
e la sua documentazione storico 2, 2nd rev. ed. (Assisi, 1994), p. 395. Margery’s tearful
reaction to the veil was a common one for her, but the often hostile reactions of
other pilgrims towards her, recorded in her Book, suggest that it was not regarded
as typical pilgrim behaviour.
26
Ben Nilson, “The Medieval Experience at the Shrine,” in Pilgrimage Explored,
ed. J. Stopford (Woodbridge, Suffolk, 1999), pp. 95–122 (on p. 97).
27
The Book of Margery Kempe, p. 180.
28
Tafur, Travels and Adventures, p. 44.
48 janet robson
referring to the friars when he reported: “they say that the body [of
St. Francis] . . . is buried there in a place which they show . . .”29 It
is notable that both Tafur and Margery were able to find friars of
their own nationality to guide them. An account of a local pilgrim-
age to Assisi is given in the Memorial of the mystic Angela of Foligno.
Although the events related took place in 1291, before the restruc-
turing of the Lower Church, the Memorial gives some insight into
the general nature of such a pilgrimage. Angela made her pilgrimage
as part of a group of “very good men and women, her companions”30
and in the church she met a friar from her home town who was
her relative, confessor and spiritual advisor, and who later became
her scribe.31 This is the only pilgrimage account of the period to
refer to a specific image: on entering the Upper Church, Angela saw
“Saint Francis depicted in the arms of Christ” (in the stained-glass
window now in the first bay of the south wall of the nave), trig-
gering a violent spiritual crisis that caused her to screech long and
loud, much to the embarrassment of her confessor.32
While the collective accounts of Tafur, Margery and Angela sug-
gest that the friars were actively involved in guiding visitors around
the Basilica, they do not provide evidence for a coherent decorative
programme aimed at pilgrims visiting the tomb. However, the case
for such a programme is supported by evidence of a different kind:
the images themselves.
In the rest of this article, I will argue that there is a consistent
message running through the images of the entire area around the
tomb. The artists employ two visual tools to express some overar-
ching themes that are able to transcend the individual meanings
communicated through the iconography of the separate narrative
cycles. First, specific gestures are used repeatedly to help pilgrims
interpret the images (perhaps with the assistance of a guide) with-
out needing detailed knowledge of learned religious texts. Although
I will draw on some Franciscan writings, this is primarily in order
to provide support for my arguments for the benefit of the modern
reader; in addition, as far as possible, I have deliberately used only
the most popular texts of St. Bonaventure.
29
Ibid.
30
Angela of Foligno, Memorial, trans. John Cirignano, introduction, notes and
interpretive essay by Cristina Mazzoni (Cambridge, 1999), p. 37.
31
His identity is unknown, but he is usually referred to as Brother A.
32
Angela of Foligno, Memorial, p. 43, for Angela’s account of the incident and
p. 37 for Brother A’s side of the story.
the pilgrim’s progress 49
33
An indulgence of one year and forty days was offered to those visiting the
Basilica on the feasts (and octaves) of St. Francis (4 October), the Translation of
St. Francis (25 May) and St. Anthony of Padua (13 June); Pentecost, the Nativity,
the Annunciation, the Purification of the Virgin and the Assumption. See Bullarium
Franciscanum Romanorum Pontificum constitutiones, epistolas, ac diplomata continens tribus
Ordinibus Minorum, Clarissarum et Poenitentium a Seraphico Patriarca Sancto Francisco insti-
tutis concessa 4 (Rome, 1768), ed. J.H. Sbaralea, p. 380 (Boniface VIII, Ante thronum,
21 January 1296) and pp. 254–55 (Nicholas IV, Eximae devotionis, 1 June 1291). A
lesser indulgence of 100 days was available for those visiting the Basilica on all
other days of the year (“diebus singulis”), ibid., p. 380 (Boniface VIII, Licet is, 21
January 1296). Most attractive of all was the plenary indulgence known as the
Perdono (2 August): although it applied not to the Basilica but to the Porziuncola at
Santa Maria degli Angeli, many pilgrims would also have taken the opportunity to
visit the tomb of St. Francis while they were in Assisi. Margery Kempe did so. For
the historicity of the Perdono, see P. Rino Bartolini OFM, “La ‘novitas’ dell’indul-
genza della Porziuncola alla luce del IV Concilio Lateranse e della storia dei pel-
legrinaggi,” Convivium Assisiense, n.s., anno 4, no. 1 (2002), 195–264.
34
See note 3.
35
The main uncertainty here is the position and extent of the friars’ choir. See
note 21.
50 janet robson
The construction of the side chapels along the north side, with their
interconnecting doorways, created an additional route between the
atrium and the north transept (Fig. 1). This immediately suggests
two alternative circular routes. The first possibility is that the pil-
grims processed up the nave to the high altar, where they would
kneel above the tomb, then continue on their way, passing behind
the altar (in a clockwise direction) before returning to the entrance
via the side chapels. The obvious benefit of this route is its direct-
ness: the pilgrim immediately achieves his or her object. But there
are distinct disadvantages in terms of crowd control. A long line of
the faithful could quickly build up behind those kneeling at the high
altar, with nothing to keep them occupied.
The second possible route simply reverses the first. The pilgrims
approach through the side chapels, whose altars might provide con-
venient stopping points on the way to the tomb. Moving around the
transepts in a counter-clockwise direction, the pilgrims would be able
to venerate the relics of two groups of Francis’s early companions.
The first wall-shrine, in the north transept, is still in its Trecento
position beneath the Madonna and Child Enthroned attributed to Cimabue.
Fronted by an iron grating, the shrine contains the remains of five
friars who are depicted in the fresco above.36 There was originally
a similar arrangement for the second shrine, beneath the Crucifixion
in the south transept.37 It might be argued that the pilgrim could
venerate these shrines equally well by taking the first route. But there
is one crucial difference: this way, the pilgrim venerates the relics of
the companions before reaching the tomb of the Saint. As well as the
crowd control advantages, there are also psychological benefits. The
pilgrim’s devotional experience is extended along with the anticipa-
tion of achieving his or her main object. The Saint’s tomb becomes
the culminating experience of the tour.38
36
In his description, Fra Ludovico da Pietralunga noted the presence of a little
panel alongside the shrine giving some details about the beati. This panel (now lost)
identified them as Bernard of Quintavalle, Sylvester of Assisi, William of England,
Eletto of Assisi (a layman) and Valentine of Narni. Scarpellini, however, points out
that the last friar could not have been Valentine of Narni since he did not die until
1378. See Fra’ Ludovico (see above, n. 11), pp. 71–72.
37
According to Fra’ Ludovico, p. 76, whose description was made before the fres-
coes were damaged by the construction of a Baroque altarpiece, this shrine con-
tained the remains of Brothers Leo, Angelo, Masseo and Rufino. These are the
four companions who are now interred in the crypt along with St. Francis.
38
That the Franciscans of the Sacro Convento considered the proper role of the
the pilgrim’s progress 51
papal letter of 1332 names him as the patron and says that he paid
600 gold florins for the chapel. But Hueck has shown that Pontano
initially put down only 100 florins, the rest of the sum being advanced
by the Franciscans themselves.43 By the time of his death, the Bishop
had still not paid back all of the loan. Hueck argues that the chapel
must already have been built before Pontano became its patron, and
its stained-glass window commissioned.44 While the windows of the
other private chapels contain either a portrait or the coat-of-arms of
the patron, this one does not.45 Since the window contains scenes
from the life of the Magdalen, this suggests that the Franciscans had
already chosen the dedication for the chapel’s altar. Hueck believes
that it may have replaced an earlier Magdalen altar that had been
situated on the lay side of the tramezzo screen. Some of the marble
cosmati-work panels from the tramezzo were also incorporated into
the Magdalen Chapel, perhaps for the same reason.
The unusual inclusion of two portraits of the patron in the chapel
is suggestive of strong personal input by Bishop Pontano, yet the
distinctions that are being made in these two images are telling.
Whereas Pontano kneels at the feet of San Rufino (titular of his
cathedral) in full episcopal pomp as Bishop of Assisi, it is as a
Franciscan friar that he grasps the hand of the Magdalen. The per-
sonal interests of Pontano seem in perfect rapport here with the cor-
porate interests of the Franciscans of the Sacro Convento. The
importance of the Magdalen in mendicant spirituality is well known.
Katherine Jansen has argued convincingly that the twin factors of
mendicant preaching and the reformulation of sacramental penance
at the Fourth Lateran Council inspired a new wave of devotion to
the Magdalen in late medieval Italy, and that she was offered to the
laity as a model of perfect penance.46 It is in her role as a penitent
that she earns her place at the foot of the Cross in late medieval
depictions of the Crucifixion—so it is significant that the first time she
43
Irene Hueck, “Ein Dokument zur Magdalenenkapelle der Franziskuskirche von
Assisi,” in Scritti di storia dell’arte in onore di Roberto Salvini (Florence, 1984), pp. 191–96.
44
Frank Martin, Die Glasmalereien von San Francesco in Assisi (Regensburg, 1997),
pp. 297–303, dates the window ca. 1300–05, making it the earliest window in the
chapels of the north side.
45
Hueck, “Die Kapellen”, p. 94.
46
Katherine Ludwig Jansen, The Making of the Magdalen: Preaching and Popular
Devotion in the Later Middle Ages (Princeton, 1999).
the pilgrim’s progress 53
47
In both Crucifixion frescoes in the Upper Church transepts, attributed to Cimabue,
St. Francis is at the foot of the Cross. See Ketti Neil, “St. Francis of Assisi, the
Penitent Magdalen and the patron at the foot of the Cross,” Rutgers Art Review 9–10
(1988–89), 83–110; Bridget Heal, “Paradigm of penance: the presence of Mary
Magdalen at the foot of the Cross in thirteenth and fourteenth-century Crucifixion
imagery from Tuscany and Umbria,” MA dissertation, Courtauld Institute of Art,
University of London, 1996.
48
There are some fragmentary frescoes attributed to Andrea de’ Bartoli ca. 1360
in the small San Lorenzo Chapel, between the chapels of the Magdalen and St.
Anthony of Padua.
49
It is possible that these decorations might have replaced earlier schemes.
However, Fra’ Ludovico does not mention frescoes in either chapel in his description
of ca. 1570 (pp. 41–42 and 45). See also Nessi, La Basilica 2 (see above, n. 25),
pp. 448–54.
50
See Schwartz, “The fresco decoration of the Magdalen Chapel” (see above,
n. 8), pp. 121–53, and, for a more recent review of the historiography, Scarpellini’s
comments in Fra’ Ludovico, pp. 244–50.
54 janet robson
51
When Pope Innocent III approved the Franciscan Order in 1209 or 1210 he
gave the friars, most of whom were laymen, permission to preach, provided that
they preached only penance (1 Celano, chap. 13, par. 33).
52
Schwartz, “Patronage and Franciscan iconography” (see above, n. 8), pp. 32–36.
53
Jansen, The Making of the Magdalen, p. 204.
54
Soliloquy on the Four Spiritual Exercises, in The Works of Bonaventure 3, pp. 33–130
(on pp. 61–62). Of the three other male figures depicted in the soffit, King David
is cited by Bonaventure in this same text, among the Old Testament penitents. The
identification of the final two figures has proved difficult: Schwartz believes they
are Dionysius the Areopagite and St. Augustine. As a converted Manichean and
the author of the Confessions, St. Augustine might be viewed as a penitent, but it is
hard to see how Dionysius could be.
55
For references, see note 33.
the pilgrim’s progress 55
56
The Pilgrim’s Guide to Santiago de Compostela: a Critical Edition, gen. ed. Paula
Gerson, 2 vols. (London, 1998), Vol II: The Text. Annotated English Translation by Paula
Gerson, Annie Shaver-Crandell and Alison Stones, p. 79. The altar was apparently
prominently placed in the ambulatory, directly behind the high altar: p. 210, note
106.
57
Bishop Pontano’s donation for the chapel included provision for vestments, a
chalice, two silver candlesticks and a missal. See Hueck, “Ein Dokument” (see above,
n. 43), p. 196.
58
See Cannon and Vauchez, Margherita (see above, n. 22), p. 178, for the sug-
gestion that the frescoes on the south nave wall of S. Margherita in Cortona may
have provided a rallying point for pilgrims waiting, on busy days, to approach the
beata’s tomb on the opposite wall.
59
Jacobus de Voragine, The Golden Legend, Readings on the Saints 1, trans. William
Granger Ryan (Princeton, NJ, 1995), pp. 376–79.
60
Ibid., p. 379.
56 janet robson
out for his child (whose figure is now largely effaced), while his wife
still lies motionless on his cloak.
The iconography of the Magdalen Chapel frescoes thus introduces
a theme of Hope that is continued throughout the sanctuary. The
narrative sequence moves from the bottom of the wall to the top
and, as a result, the first two scenes of the cycle are placed directly
above the door leading into the north transept (Fig. 6). The first
scene, Christ in the House of Simon, depicts the Magdalen’s penitence.
As Christ dines in Bethany, the Magdalen (a notorious sinner, accord-
ing to Luke) kneels and anoints his feet with precious ointment and
in return receives forgiveness of her sins. In the second scene, the
Raising of Lazarus, which was understood to prefigure Christ’s own
Resurrection, Lazarus is restored to life by Christ in response to the
pleading of his sisters Mary and Martha.
In both scenes, the Magdalen places all her hope in Christ and
is rewarded. Hope, one of the three theological virtues, had been
defined by Peter Lombard as “the certain expectation of future bliss,
coming out of the grace of God and out of previous merit.”61 The
two scenes pair the forgiveness of sins and the resurrection of the
body. Professed successively in the Nicene Creed, these are perhaps
the two most important “expectations of future bliss” in which all
true Christians must place their hope.
After taking in these two scenes, the pilgrims could file down the
short passage and through the door into the north transept. From
this direction, the patchwork impression of the lowest tier of images
resolves itself. The short cycle of St. Francis’s posthumous miracles,
instead of seeming a piecemeal addition to the Infancy Cycle, now
assumes much greater prominence. The first images to confront the
pilgrim are the two frescoes opposite, on the lowest tier. The alle-
gory of Francis and Death (Fig. 8), placed over the stairs, must have
been devised especially for this setting, close to the tomb of the
Saint.62 Francis faces forward, looking directly at the viewer, and
holds up his right hand to display his wounded palm. His left hand
61
“[Spes] est certa exspectatio futurae beatitudinis, veniens ex Dei gratia et meritis
praecedentibus,” Magistri Petri Lombardi, Sententiae in IV libris distinctae 2 (Grottaferrata,
1981), lib. III, d. 26, cap. 1 (91), p. 159.
62
The only other version of Francis and Death painted in the medieval period in
Italy is, to my knowledge, a slightly later fresco in the chapter house of the Santo
in Padua. My thanks to Dr. Laura Jacobus for bringing this image to my attention.
the pilgrim’s progress 57
63
This text exists in various versions, mainly French, of which the best known
is the poem by Baudouin of Condé (ca. 1240–80), minstrel to Margaret, Countess
of Flanders. At least two Duecento representations of the story can be found in
Italy: the first in the north apse of the cathedral of Atri, in southern Italy; the sec-
ond in the grotto church of S. Margherita, Melfi. See Louis Edward Jordan III,
“The iconography of death in western medieval art to 1350,” Ph.D. dissertation,
Medieval Institute of Notre Dame University, Indiana, 1980, pp. 99–103.
64
Ibid., p. 109.
65
The earliest may be in the church of St. Flavian, Montefiascone, ca. 1320;
other fourteenth-century examples are in the Camposanto, Pisa and the Scala Santa,
Subiaco. See Chiara Settis Frugoni, “Il tema dell’Incontro dei tre vivi e dei tre
morti nella tradizione medioevale italiana,” Atti della accademia nazionale dei lincei: memo-
rie classe di scienze morale, storiche, e filologiche, series 8, vol. 13 (1967), fasc. 3, 145–251,
esp. 166–82.
66
Ibid., p. 173. On the predella panel by Bernardo Daddi in the Galleria
dell’Accademia in Florence (no. 6153) the hermit’s cartouche reads: “Costoro furono
re come voi, in questo modo sarete voi.”
67
According to Étienne Delaruelle, “Les ermits et la spiritualité populaire,” in
L’eremitismo in Occidente nei secoli XI e XII: atti della seconda Settimana internazionale di stu-
dio, Mendola, 30 agosto–6 settembre 1962 (Milan, 1965), p. 219, “cette prédication est
donc essentiellement une ‘prédication de pénitence’.”
68
“. . . s’annonce par bien des traits saint François d’Assise qui, à de nombreux
égards, sera un héritier des ermites du XIe siècle.” Ibid., p. 241.
58 janet robson
gesture with his raised right hand reinforces his message to the viewer.
In the sixteenth century, Fra Ludovico da Pietralunga saw this as a
preacher’s gesture,69 while Lobrichon has likened it to a gesture of
welcome and acceptance.70 But only Gerhard Ruf (significantly, a
Franciscan himself ) has drawn attention to the importance of the
fact that, with this gesture, Francis prominently displays his stigmata.71
In one of his sermons on the Saint, Bonaventure had spoken of St.
Francis’s stigmata as a sign of penance, placed on him by God so
that he might be the model of penitence for all who were to come
after him.72
More is intended in this allegory than just a penitential medita-
tion on the certainty of death. In his account of the canonisation of
St. Francis in the Legenda maior, Bonaventure explained that God
made Francis more brilliant in death, by leaving signs of future glory
imprinted on his body. The stigmata were the sign of the living God,
the seal of Christ’s approval of Francis and a guarantee of his sanc-
tity that, as Bonaventure proclaimed, “confirm believers in faith, raise
them aloft with confident hope and set them ablaze with the fire of
charity”.73
In his chapter on Francis’s posthumous miracles, Bonaventure
begins with several concerning the stigmata themselves. The Saint
appears in the dreams of those who doubt the truth of the stigmata
and displays his wounds to them—beginning with no less a figure
than Pope Gregory IX.74 Bonaventure then recounts the healing of
a mortally wounded man from Ilerda, and asserts that it was from his
stigmata that Francis derived his posthumous thaumaturgical power.75
The importance ascribed to these two miracles by the Franciscans
at Assisi is demonstrated by their selection as the first two posthu-
mous miracles in the St. Francis fresco cycle of the Upper Church.
According to Bonaventure, the power of the stigmata was entirely
fitting. They were, after all, the brand marks of Christ who, through
his death and resurrection, had healed the human race through the
69
Fra’ Ludovico, p. 73.
70
Lobrichon, Assise, p. 107.
71
Ruf, Das Grab (see above, n. 9), p. 140.
72
Bonaventure, Evening Sermon on Saint Francis, preached at Paris, October 4, 1262,
trans. in Francis of Assisi: Early Documents 2, pp. 718–30 (on p. 721).
73
Bonaventure, Legenda maior, chap. 13, par. 9, trans. ibid., p. 637.
74
Bonaventure, Legenda maior, The Miracles, chap. 1, pars. 1–4, ibid., pp. 650–52.
75
Ibid., par. 5, pp. 651–52.
the pilgrim’s progress 59
76
Ibid., p. 652.
77
Legenda maior, chap. 15, par. 1, ibid., p. 645.
78
The sermon is unpublished. See Deborah Birch, “Jacques de Vitry and the
ideology of pilgrimage,” in Pilgrimage Explored (see above, n. 26), pp. 79–93 (on p. 87).
79
Assisi Compilation (ca. 1244–60), chap. 7, trans. in Francis of Assisi: Early Documents
2, p. 121.
80
Beda Kleinschmidt, Die Basilika S. Francesco in Assisi 2 (Berlin, 1926), p. 211.
See also: Martin Gosebruch, “Gli affreschi di Giotto nel braccio destro del transetto
e nelle ‘vele’ centrali della Chiese Inferiore di San Francesco,” in Giotto e i giotteschi
in Assisi (see above, n. 7), pp. 129–98 (on p. 140); Ruf, Das Grab, p. 140.
60 janet robson
Ruf has noted, the two images function as pendants.81 While the
figure of Francis is an allegory of Hope, Judas is an allegory of
Despair, Hope’s antithesis.82 According to Matthew’s gospel, Judas,
who had betrayed Christ for thirty pieces of silver, tried to repent
by returning the money to the high priests. But when they rejected
him, he went out and hanged himself.
Medieval theologians ascribed Judas’s suicide to despair. When a
man despairs, he fails to believe that God will forgive him his sins;
since by so doing he denies the infinite nature of God’s mercy,
despair is a mortal sin.83 If a theological definition such as this was
too technical to have much impact on most lay folk, the dramatic
story of Judas’s suicide, as depicted in popular texts or images, was
a different matter. The Franciscans made use of it to great didactic
effect. Bonaventure, in the Tree of Life, explained what happened
when Judas saw Christ bound and led away to his death:
It was then that the impious Judas himself, driven by remorse, became
so filled with self-loathing that he preferred death to life. Yet woe to
the man who lost the hope of being forgiven even then—who, terror-
stricken by the enormity of his crime, gave up to despair instead of
returning, even then, to the Source of all mercy.84
Through his despair, Judas lost the hope of salvation, and his reward
was bodily death and eternal damnation. As a failed penitent, the
hanged Judas was displayed in the Lower Church as the opposite
of St. Francis and of all the hopeful penitents depicted in the Magdalen
Chapel.
81
I have argued elsewhere (“Judas and the Franciscans”) that the Death of Judas
is aimed primarily at the friars themselves, since the perspective of the fictive arch
beneath which the suicide hangs is best viewed by the friars as they exit from the
choir and leave the church via this staircase, which leads out into the cloister.
However, it is interesting to note that both the frontal pose of Francis and the
three-quarters profile of Judas’s body support a counter-clockwise route around the
transepts: the pilgrim entering from the Magdalen Chapel would see the image of
Francis straight on, but having passed behind the altar into the south transept would
view the image of Judas obliquely from the right.
82
For the development of images of Judas as allegories of despair, see Janet
Robson, “Speculum imperfectionis: the image of Judas in late medieval Italy,” Ph.D.
dissertation, Courtauld Institute of Art, University of London, 2001, chapter 5,
“‘Terror-stricken by the enormity of his crime.’ Judas desperatus.”
83
See for example, Thomas Aquinas, Summa theologica, II:II, q. 20, art. 3, resp.
84
The Works of Bonaventure 1, pp. 118–19.
the pilgrim’s progress 61
85
Selma Pfeiffenberger, “The iconology of Giotto’s virtues and vices at Padua,”
Ph.D. dissertation, Bryn Mawr College, 1966, II:3:3–5.
86
Ibid., II:3:7.
87
Emile Mâle, Religious Art in France: the Thirteenth Century, ed. and trans. Henry
Bober (Princeton, 1984), p. 111.
62 janet robson
88
See Cook, Images of St. Francis (see above, n. 22), cat. no. 27, pp. 62–63. The
panel is now in the Museo-Tesoro of the Sacro Convento.
89
Legenda maior, p. 657 and p. 658. This aspect seems to have been more impor-
tant to Celano, whose versions are more elaborate in both cases. The Roman father
also promises he “will regularly visit his holy place”, while the mother in Suessa
also promises to “wreathe the altar with silver thread” and to “encircle the whole
church with candles”. (Celano, Treatise on the Miracles, trans. Francis of Assisi: Early
Documents 2, p. 421 and p. 423 respectively.) Although these vows have sometimes
been interpreted as promises to visit the Basilica in Assisi, this is not stated in the
texts: the mother in Rome and the father in Suessa are more likely to have offered
their ex votos in their respective local Franciscan churches. See Cannon and Vauchez,
Margherita, pp. 57–60 for a revealing account of ex voto offerings made at the shrine
of Margherita of Cortona, the devotional practices associated with candles, tapers
and girdles, and the encircling of tombs and churches.
the pilgrim’s progress 63
to fall out of the window of the family palazzo, and is killed. On the
left of the painting, we see the accident and the despair: the boy is
in mid-air, plummeting head-first from the window, distraught onlook-
ers helpless to intervene. The texts explain how, shortly after the
tragedy, a Franciscan friar arrives on the scene and asks the father
whether he believes in St. Francis’s power to raise his son from the
dead, “through the love he always had for Christ, who was crucified
to give life back to all”.90 The artist shows the friar and his com-
panion surrounded by the townspeople and clergy in supplication.
In the midst of this ritual of prayer, the child is depicted a second
time, restored and back on his feet, both hands raised in thanks-
giving. We do not see the performance of the miracle by St. Francis,
but only an angel flying up towards the top left.91
In Bonaventure’s account of the miracle, it is the boy’s mother
who expresses her anguish at the boy’s death, while it is the father
who firmly declares his faith in the Saint. The father is probably
the elegantly-dressed man wearing a gown and cap who kneels in
the foreground, pressing his palms together in front of his chest in
prayer. However, the most striking figure in the scene is the young
woman in red—surely the mother—shown in profile against the sky
at the back. She prays with a gesture similar to her husband’s, but
raises her hands much higher, while casting her eyes towards heaven.
The mode of praying with palms joined had, in the first half of the
thirteenth century, gradually replaced the archaic orans gesture of
extended, separated hands.92 Moshe Barasch has argued that while
Giotto always used the newer gesture for prayer, he occasionally
90
Legenda maior, p. 657.
91
There are remnants of a second figure to the angel’s left, whose halo can just
be made out. Because of the poor state of the fresco, it is impossible to identify
this figure: is it another angel, or St. Francis himself? The former is more proba-
ble, since it seems unlikely that that Francis would have been portrayed with his
face obscured by the battlement of the house.
92
Gerhart B. Ladner, “The gestures of prayer in papal iconography of the thir-
teenth and fourteenth centuries,” in Didascaliae: Studies in Honour of Anselm M Albareda,
ed. S. Prete (Rome, 1961), pp. 247–75, relates the gesture to the feudal ceremony
of commendation, but also to its introduction into liturgy in the thirteenth century,
including the elevation of the host of the Mass, the consecration of bishops and
the rite of penance. William R. Levin, in “Two gestures of Virtue in Italian late
medieval and Renaissance art,” Southeastern College Art Conference Review 13, no. 4 (1999),
325–46, points out that all these instances of the gesture’s use are linked by hope,
“which is the pivot on which the elements of surrender and offering, of dependence
and trust implicit in the gesture of raising and joining the hands all turn.” (p. 334).
64 janet robson
93
Moshe Barasch, Giotto and the Language of Gesture (Cambridge, 1987), pp. 68–71.
94
I have deliberately omitted from my argument any discussion of the frescoed
the pilgrim’s progress 65
altarpieces attributed to Simone Martini in the north transept and to Pietro Lorenzetti
in the south. Consideration of how the side altars and shrines in the sanctuary
might have been viewed and used by pilgrims is a subject I hope to return to in
the future.
I have also assumed that the two transept chapels dedicated to St. John the
Baptist and to St. Nicholas of Bari would not have formed an integral part of the
pilgrim’s tour. It seems unlikely that pilgrims would have had free access into these
private chapels, whose patron was Cardinal Napoleone Orsini. In the St. Nicholas
Chapel, which contains the tomb of Napoleone’s brother Gian Gaetano, Orsini
ownership could hardly have been asserted more insistently: the family coat-of-arms
originally appeared at least 69 times (Lunghi, “La perduta decorazione” [see above,
n. 8], p. 500). The majority of these emblems were positioned where they could
be seen from outside the chapel—in the stained glass, in the frescoed window embra-
sures, in the marble socles below the windows, and even worked into the wrought-
iron gates that were in still in place across the chapel entrance when Fra Ludovico
wrote his description.
It is, however, interesting to note that the iconographic choices for these chapels
seem to have taken into account the overall scheme for the Lower Church transepts.
The St. Nicholas Chapel, like the north transept to which it is adjacent, strongly
features child miracles. But perhaps even more interesting for my own argument is
the decoration of the counter-facade. Below the dedicatory fresco, images of the
Penitent Magdalen and St. John the Baptist, both in a rocky desert terrain, are
paired to either side of the entrance arch. Once again, strong exemplars of peni-
tence are offered to the viewer as preparation for entering the sanctuary. No doubt
these themes would have been reiterated in the St. John the Baptist Chapel, had
its decorative programme been executed.
95
Lobrichon, Assise, p. 134.
66 janet robson
96
Perugia, Galleria Nazionale dell’Umbria, inv.no.22. For a colour illustration,
see The Treasury of Saint Francis of Assisi, eds. Giovanni Morello and Laurence B.
Kanter (Milan, 1999), fig. 6/9, p. 78. This pose was common on Pisan and Lucchese
painted crucifixes from the second half of the Duecento. Also, Lorenzetti would
probably have been familiar with it from his home city: the mural of the Deposition,
recently discovered in the crypt of Siena Cathedral, uses the same iconography.
See Sotto il Duomo di Siena. Scoperte archeologiche, architettoniche e figurative, ed. Roberto
Guerrini (Milan, 2003), fig. 34, p. 131.
97
Max Seidel, “Das Frühwerk von Pietro Lorenzetti,” Städel Jahrbuch n.s. 8 (1981),
79–158 (on p. 149).
98
Tino da Camaino used the same motif at about the same time, on the tomb
of Cardinal Petroni, ca. 1317, in Siena Cathedral. However, there is an example
in the stained-glass windows of the apse of the Upper Church at Assisi, dated
ca. 1255, created by northern artists. See Frank Martin, Die Glasmalereien (see above,
n. 44), cat. no. 45, p. 250 and colour plate 47.
the pilgrim’s progress 67
99
Sleep, seen as a miniature death, is a metaphor for despair used by St.
Augustine. See Susan Snyder, “The left hand of God: despair in medieval and
Renaissance tradition,” Studies in the Renaissance 12 (1965), 18–59 (on p. 58).
100
The Mystical Vine: Treatise on the Passion of the Lord, trans. in The Works of Bonaventure
1, p. 173.
68 janet robson
101
See note 77.
102
Lobrichon, Assise, p. 107.
the pilgrim’s progress 69
103
Lunghi, “La perduta decorazione,” p. 508.
104
Fra’ Ludovico, pp. 62–64. This part of the image may be reflected in Simone
Martini’s St. Louis of Toulouse altarpiece, where the Saint is also crowned by two
angels. For a colour illustration, see Hayden B.J. Maginnis, The World of the Early
Sienese Painter (University Park, PA, 2001), colour plate 16.
105
Fra’ Ludovico, p. 63.
106
Szépmüvészeti Muzeum, Budapest, inv. no. 30. For a colour illustration, see
Giotto: Bilancio critico di sessant’anni di studi e ricerche, Firenze, Galleria dell’Accademia, 5
guigno–30 settembre 2000, ed. Angelo Tartuferi (Florence, 2000), cat. no. 8, plate 8.
70 janet robson
107
Legenda maior, chap. 15, par. 1, p. 645.