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 Darrera modificació: 2021-03-17 Bases de dades: Sciència.cat 
Schmitz-Esser, Romedio, The Corpse in the Middle Ages: Embalming, Cremating, and the Cultural Construction of the Dead Body, Turnhout, Brepols (Harvey Miller Studies in the History of Culture), 2021, vi + 780 pp. 
- Resum
 - To what extent are the dead truly dead? In medieval society, corpses were assigned special functions and meanings in several different ways. They were still present in the daily life of the family of the deceased, and could even play active roles in the life of the community. Taking the materiality of death as a point of departure, this book comprehensively examines the conservation, burial and destruction of the corpse in its specific historical context. A complex and ambivalent treatment of the dead body emerges, one which necessarily confronts established modern perspectives on death. New scientific methods have enabled archaeologists to understand the remains of the dead as valuable source material. This book contextualizes the resulting insights for the first time in an interdisciplinary framework, considering their place in the broader picture drawn by the written sources of this period, ranging from canon law and hagiography to medieval literature and historiography. It soon becomes obvious that the dead body is more than a physical object, since its existence only becomes relevant in the cultural setting it is perceived in. In analogy to the findings for the living body in gender studies, the corpse too, can best be understood as constructed. Ultimately, the dead body is shaped by society, i.e. the living. This book examines the mechanisms by which this cultural construction of the body took place in medieval Europe. The result is a fascinating story that leads deep into medieval theories and social practices, into the discourses of the time and the daily life experiences during this epoch.
 
 
INTRODUCTION 
The Constructed Corpse: Methodology, Structure, and Goals 
Burial between Norm and Practice 
St Augustine and the “Constructed” Sanctity 
The Staged Corpse 
No Fear of the Dead 
Body Parts and the Gaze Upon the Dead Body 
A Topic between Popular Hype and Historical Lack of Interest: The State of Research 
 
CHAPTER I: THE BURIED CORPSE 
The Corpse and the Resurrection 
The Soul, the Corpse, and the Beyond 
The Eternal and the Eternally Disturbed Grave 
Drowning and the Element of Baptism 
Cremating the Dead: Between Concern and Banning 
The Proper Burial in the Middle Ages 
The Quest for the Phantom: The “Standard” Burial in the Christian Middle Ages 
Symbolism of Light and the Position of the Dead in the Grave 
Solitary Burial and Group Affiliation of the Corpse 
The Corpse is Coming to the Living: The Cult of the Martyrs and the Burial with Saints 
The Development of the Church Graveyard 
Interment in the Time of Crisis 
War Dead and Their Graves 
Death as a Result of Epidemics, the Black Death, and Burial 
The Corpse Portrayed 
Summary 
 
CHAPTER II: THE HOLY CORPSE 
Real Presence and the Cult of Relics 
The Holy Corpse as a Self-Determined Being 
Transfer of Relics and Fragmenting of the Corpse 
Desired Relics, Corpse Desecration, and the Dead as a Valuable Treasure 
The Corpse as Proof of Sanctity 
“Corpus Incorruptum,” Mumification, and Created Sanctity 
The Aromatically Smelling Corpse 
Innocent Liquids: The Leichenöl 
Medieval Complementary Logic: The Corpses of the “Valde Boni” and the “Valde Mali” 
Summary 
 
CHAPTER III: EMBALMING AND THE PRESERVATION OF CORPSES 
Ancient Embalming in the Middle Ages 
Ancient Mummies and the Christian Occident 
“Aromatibus conditum“—The Biblical Model 
and Early Christian Embalming 
Embalming in the Time of the Merovingians 
Sanctity and (Repeated) Embalming 
Change of the Embalming Technique in the Time of the Carolingians 
Rotting and the Ideal of a Fast Burial 
Ritual of Burial and the Transport of the Corpse 
A New Method: Opening of the Corpse to Remove the Entrails 
and the Badly Smelling Corpse of Charles the Bald 
Embalming in the High Middle Ages 
Transfer of Corpses since the High Middle Ages 
Embalming in the Tenth Century 
Embalming in the Time of the Salian and the Hohenstaufen Dynasties 
Robert Guiscard, Sven Gabelbart, and Embalming in the 
Kingdom of England 
Embalming in the Kingdom of France 
The Desert and the King of Jerusalem 
Popes and Saints 
Roland, Henry the Lion, and the Deer Hide: Embalming Practice in the Literary Discourse 
Corpse Transport and Social Prestige: Changes in the Process of Embalming in the Course of the High Middle Ages 
Kitchen, Cooking, and the Treatment of the Corpse 
Cooking the Corpse—a "mos Teutonicus"? 
Boiling of Corpses in the Twelfth and Thirteenth Centuries 
The Bull “Detestandae feritatis” by Pope Boniface VIII from 1299 and the End of Boiling Corpses 
The White Bone: The Sanctity of the Boiled Body 
Individuals Charged with Taking Care of the Corpse and Corpse Washing 
Dissection of the Corpse and the Professionalization of Embalming 
Ar-Razi and Medicine in the High Middle Ages 
Henry of Mondeville, Guy de Chauliac, and the Process of Embalming in Late Medieval and Early Modern Medicine 
Innovations in High and Late Medieval Embalming Processes and the Anthropological and Archeological Data 
Opening of the Three Corporal Cavities 
The Application of Mercury 
Wax and Linen 
Galen and the Cold, Humid Corpse: Drying of the Corpse as a Technique in Embalming 
Aerial Drying of the Corpse 
Hygiene or the Preservation of the Corpse: Gypsum, Lime, and Hops 
Booming of Embalming: From the Eighteenth Century to Today 
Embalming, Preservation of the Body, and the Cult of Relics 
Summary 
 
CHAPTER IV: AUTHORITY AND THE CORPSE 
Visiting a Corpse—the Visit by a Corpse 
The Ruler's Corpse as a Sign of Victory 
The Specialists of Death and Their Ruler Clientele: The Location of the Grave and the Row of Corpses as a Means for Legitimization 
Conversion, Legitimacy, and the Beloved Bones of the Ancestors 
Summary 
 
CHAPTER V: THE COMMUNITY OF THE DEAD AND THE CORPSE IN THE "ORDO" 
Hierarchy of the Funeral Sites 
The Unclean Corpse and the Church as a Burial Site 
Old Age, Gender, and Kinship: The Hierarchy of the Burial Sites in Medieval Cemeteries 
Grave Donations Between Here and the Afterlife 
Clothing Provides Status to the Dead: Insignia of Social Class and the Identification of Corpses 
Pedum, Paten, Chalice, and Ring: The Burial of Priests and Bishops 
Crown, Scepter, Orb, and Royal Vestments: 
The Burial of Emperors and Kings 
Does God Forget the Names of the Dead? Tables with Inscriptions as Burial Objects and Inscriptions on the Sarcophagus 
Monastic Habit and Valuable Thread: Monks, Noblemen, Simple People, and Their Clothing for the Beyond 
Objects Useful for the Corpse 
Relics, Torture Instruments, and Hosts: Supporters for the Dead 
Written Documents, Indulgence Letters, and Seals as Documents of Faith 
Dead Pilgrims 
Plants and Herbs, Holy Water, Incense, and Coal: Funerary Objects Between Practice and Symbolism 
Shoes for the Day of Judgment 
Summary 
 
CHAPTER VI: THE CORPSE AND THE LAW 
The Corpse as the Interim Occupant of an Office 
The Corpse as Both Subject and Object of the Law 
The Corpse at Court 
Strikes with the Sword, Bleeding Corpses, and the Beginning of Forensics in the Middle Ages 
The Cemetery as a Place of Trial 
Marking Borders, Church Authority, and the Value of the Corpse 
The Funeral of the Corpse as an Economic Factor 
The Corpse and Marking of Borders 
Summary 
 
CHAPTER VII: LIVING CORPSE 
The Sleeping Dead and Its Physically Continued Life 
Signs of Life: Speaking, Bleeding, and Continued Growth of Nails and Hair 
Funeral Ritual to Prevent the Appearance of Revenants 
Placing Weights on the Corpse and the Separation and Breaking of the Legs 
Decapitation 
Impalement, Nailing Down, and Interment at a Crossroad 
Vampires in the Middle Ages? The Cremation of Revenants 
Obol and Payment of the Dead: Funerary Objects as a One-Way Ticket to the Afterlife? 
The Corpse Besieged by Demons 
The Active Corpse 
Summary 
 
CHAPTER VIII: THE DESTRUCTION AND DESECRATION OF CORPSES 
Deviation from the Funerary Ritual as Punishment and Exclusion 
Denial of Burial in Sacred Ground 
On Children Under the Church's Eaves and Pilgrimage Sites: The Unbaptized Dead and Children According to Archaeological Data 
Suicide and the Corpses of Suicide Victims 
Excommunicated Corpses and Death Under the Interdict 
The Example of Emperor Henry IV 
A Few Years of Eternity, or Was There a Permanent Exclusion of Those Who Had Been Excommunicated 
The Last of the Hohenstaufen and Their Excommunication: Conrad IV, Manfred of Sicily, and Conradin the Younger 
The High Medieval Debate on the Punishment of Corpses 
Exhumation as a Weapon in the Fight Against the Cathars 
The Growing Concern with the Moral Integrity of the Dead: Individuals Responsible for Church Desecration, Those Who Rejected Confession, and Those Dead Who Had Died without Their Guilt 
Having Been Forgiven and Atoned 
In the Case of Doubt Against the Dead: The Liturgists' Fear of the Unknown and the Foreign 
Death with the Lance in Hand: The Burial of Those Who Had Died in a Tournament 
The Burial of the Executed 
Being a Warrior and a Christian: The Exclusion from Burial in Light of Discourse Theory 
Corpse Desecration 
The Case of Pope Formosus 
Corpse Desecration as a Punishment 
The Ruler's Corpse and the Use of Scalps: Corpse Desecration as a Sign of Physical Superiority 
Burning and Physical Annihilation 
The Symbolism of Fire 
Death by Fire in the Early Middle Ages: Arsonists, Sodomites, Poisoners, Magicians, and Unusual Women 
The Burning of Heretics and Witches in the High and Late Middle Ages 
The Destruction of Corpses in the Early Modern Time 
The Humble Corpse 
Burial in Simple Clothing 
The Corpse Placed on Ash 
Paradise and the Naked Earth: The Burial Site as a Sign of Christian Humility 
The Penitent Approaching the Day of Judgment: Pippin the Short and Prone Burial 
Humility of the Medieval Corpse 
Summary 
 
CHAPTER IX: THE CORPSE AS MEDICINE AND MIRACLE CURE 
The Corpse as Royal Blessing? 
The Corpse as a Medium to Create Miracles and Magic 
Charges Against Heretics, Witches, and Jews: Ritual Murder and Mirroring the Eucharist 
The Corpses of Executed People as Medicine 
“Mumia vera”—Mummies as a Medical Drug 
Building Sacrifice and the Corpse as a Weapon 
Summary 
 
CHAPTER X: HEART, HEAD, AND HAND—THE BODY PARTS OF CORPSES FROM AN ANTHROPOLOGICAL AND ANATOMICAL PERSPECTIVE 
The Practice of Multiple Burials in the High and Late Middle Ages 
Heart 
Head 
Hand 
Summary 
 
EPILOGUE
 - Matèries
 - Història de la medicina
 Religió Medicina - Cirurgia i anatomia
 - Notes
 - Informació de l'editor 
 
  
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