Treasure Hunt—Roman Inquisition and Magical Practices <i>Ad Inveniendos Thesauros</i> in Southern Tuscany

Resorting to the supernatural to find something lost is a practice that can be observed over a very large range of times and places. With the affirmation of Christianity, these kinds of habits and beliefs were considered superstitious by the Church. During the early modern era, the institution appoi...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Vincenzo Tedesco
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2019-07-01
Series:Religions
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2077-1444/10/7/444
id doaj-08092227f21a49cbaf44d1f4704bc073
record_format Article
spelling doaj-08092227f21a49cbaf44d1f4704bc0732020-11-25T01:55:21ZengMDPI AGReligions2077-14442019-07-0110744410.3390/rel10070444rel10070444Treasure Hunt—Roman Inquisition and Magical Practices <i>Ad Inveniendos Thesauros</i> in Southern TuscanyVincenzo Tedesco0Scuola Superiore di Studi Storici, University of the Republic of San Marino, Salita alla Rocca, 44, 47890 San Marino (RSM), San MarinoResorting to the supernatural to find something lost is a practice that can be observed over a very large range of times and places. With the affirmation of Christianity, these kinds of habits and beliefs were considered superstitious by the Church. During the early modern era, the institution appointed to control the integrity of the faithful in the Italian peninsula was the Supreme Sacred Congregation of the Roman and Universal Inquisition, which had a significant number of local tribunals spread over the territory. This essay aims to study the diffusion of the practice of finding treasures by using magical items and rituals in the area under the jurisdiction of the Sienese tribunal of the Holy Office (approximately the entire southern Tuscany), whose trial sources are preserved in the Archive of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (Vatican City). The research, based on around seventy individual cases, shows an interesting belief from a historical&#8722;anthropological point of view, namely: although in most cases people were looking for everyday objects that they had lost, sometimes, they used the same rituals to search for ancient treasures that they heard were buried or hidden in a particular place (church, field, or cellar), with the presence of guardians like spirits or demons, that had to be driven away with a prayer or an exorcism before taking possession of the treasure.https://www.mdpi.com/2077-1444/10/7/444treasure huntingInquisitionHoly OfficeheresysorcerymagicdivinationdevilEarly Modern History
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Vincenzo Tedesco
spellingShingle Vincenzo Tedesco
Treasure Hunt—Roman Inquisition and Magical Practices <i>Ad Inveniendos Thesauros</i> in Southern Tuscany
Religions
treasure hunting
Inquisition
Holy Office
heresy
sorcery
magic
divination
devil
Early Modern History
author_facet Vincenzo Tedesco
author_sort Vincenzo Tedesco
title Treasure Hunt—Roman Inquisition and Magical Practices <i>Ad Inveniendos Thesauros</i> in Southern Tuscany
title_short Treasure Hunt—Roman Inquisition and Magical Practices <i>Ad Inveniendos Thesauros</i> in Southern Tuscany
title_full Treasure Hunt—Roman Inquisition and Magical Practices <i>Ad Inveniendos Thesauros</i> in Southern Tuscany
title_fullStr Treasure Hunt—Roman Inquisition and Magical Practices <i>Ad Inveniendos Thesauros</i> in Southern Tuscany
title_full_unstemmed Treasure Hunt—Roman Inquisition and Magical Practices <i>Ad Inveniendos Thesauros</i> in Southern Tuscany
title_sort treasure hunt—roman inquisition and magical practices <i>ad inveniendos thesauros</i> in southern tuscany
publisher MDPI AG
series Religions
issn 2077-1444
publishDate 2019-07-01
description Resorting to the supernatural to find something lost is a practice that can be observed over a very large range of times and places. With the affirmation of Christianity, these kinds of habits and beliefs were considered superstitious by the Church. During the early modern era, the institution appointed to control the integrity of the faithful in the Italian peninsula was the Supreme Sacred Congregation of the Roman and Universal Inquisition, which had a significant number of local tribunals spread over the territory. This essay aims to study the diffusion of the practice of finding treasures by using magical items and rituals in the area under the jurisdiction of the Sienese tribunal of the Holy Office (approximately the entire southern Tuscany), whose trial sources are preserved in the Archive of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (Vatican City). The research, based on around seventy individual cases, shows an interesting belief from a historical&#8722;anthropological point of view, namely: although in most cases people were looking for everyday objects that they had lost, sometimes, they used the same rituals to search for ancient treasures that they heard were buried or hidden in a particular place (church, field, or cellar), with the presence of guardians like spirits or demons, that had to be driven away with a prayer or an exorcism before taking possession of the treasure.
topic treasure hunting
Inquisition
Holy Office
heresy
sorcery
magic
divination
devil
Early Modern History
url https://www.mdpi.com/2077-1444/10/7/444
work_keys_str_mv AT vincenzotedesco treasurehuntromaninquisitionandmagicalpracticesiadinveniendosthesaurosiinsoutherntuscany
_version_ 1724983755220713472