Hearing Voices: Reapproaching Medieval Inquisition Records
Abstract
:Laurence, wife of Guillaume Faidit, said that when her husband rendered himself a heretic, she followed him to Villemur, and saw those heretics there who received her husband. She also sought advice from the Waldensians about the illness of her son, heard the preaching of the Waldensians four times, gave them bread and wine, and believed that Waldensians were good men. She will go to Le Puy, Saint-Gilles, Santiago, San Salvador, and Saint-Denis.2
1. Biased Knowledge
2. Coverage Biases
3. Interrogation Biases
4. Recording Biases
It is worth noting and stressing in these matters that while as many questions, and sometimes different ones, should be asked as demanded by the variety of people and deeds in order to elicit and extort the truth more fully, it is not expedient that the full questioning be written down: rather, only those parts that touch the substance and nature of facts with greater verisimilitude and seem to better express the truth. For if one deposition is found to have a great abundance of questions, another containing fewer might seem diminished. Moreover, with too many questions written down in the process, agreement between witnesses’ depositions could hardly be achieved, [a danger] which must be considered and avoided.
5. Beyond Bias: The Problem of Exceptionality
6. From Exceptional Anecdote to Serial Complexity
7. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
1 | Giacomo’s trial has been edited in Patria and Pazé (2016, pp. 252–86; older edition, see Amati 1865). |
2 | Paris, Bibliothèque nationale de France, MS Doat 21, fols. 280v–281r. Cf., with a lacuna, Duvernoy (2001b, p. 212). |
3 | On low inquisitorial activity in Provence, see Chiffoleau (2006, pp. 163–64); on the same issue in Hungary, see Wysokiński (2010, pp. 173–95). |
4 | |
5 | See Bedouelle (1979, pp. 47–70); Cameron (1993, pp. 185–207); Friesen (1998, pp. 165–89). In relation to collecting inquisitorial documents, see Benedetti (2006b, esp. 25–26). |
6 | Examples include the book of sentences of Bernard Gui (London, British Library, Add MS 4697, see Nickson 1973; Palès-Gobilliard 2002, pp. 1:14–17); and seventeenth-century transcripts from an otherwise lost register of inquisition in Albi, 1281–1319, rediscovered in 2017 (Paris, Bibliothèque de la Société de l’Histoire du Protestantisme Français, MS 446/1; for seventeenth-century evidence of this register, see Benoist (1691, vol. 1, pp. 44–45, 271–73). |
7 | E.g., Milano, Archivio dell’Amministrazione delle Istituzioni pubbliche di assistenza e beneficenza, ex Ente comunale d’assistenza di Milano, Comuni, Arti e scienze, Culto, ms. 164 (see Bascapè 2002, pp. 31–36); Toulouse, Archives départementales de la Haute-Garonne, mss. 124 and 202. |
8 | On the original consignment of volumes, then reorganised in the library, see Albaret (2014, esp. 66–7, 77, 93 n. 109). |
9 | For its use in heresy trials prior to 1252, see Scharff (2000, pp. 153–54). |
10 | E.g., Given (1997, p. 54); Pegg (2001, p. 33); Biget (2007, p. 190). On medieval concerns about and limits to the use of torture, see Pennington (2008). For a caveat concerning the use of torture without mentioning it, see e.g., Hill (2019, pp. 107–8). |
11 | See the brief overview of modern debate on efficacy in Schiemann (2012). For two important discussions from opposing quarters that tackle the question of efficacy, see Bagaric and Clarke (2007, pp. 53–62) and Schiemann (2016). The latter’s critique goes to great lengths to suggest the ineffectiveness of torture through game theory analysis, but nevertheless cannot rule out circumstances where it might achieve its aim (Schiemann 2016, p. 213). For medieval thought on torture, see Peters (1998, pp. 131–48). |
12 | |
13 | E.g., Acta S. Officii Bononie ab anno 1291 usque ad annum 1310, ed. Paolini and Orioli (1982, 1:12); Register of Jacques Fournier, ed. Duvernoy (1965, p. 230). For examples of face-to-face confrontation of witnesses, e.g., Bernard Gui, Liber sententiarum, ed. Palès-Gobilliard (2002, vol.1, p. 856); Register of Jacques Fournier, ed. Duvernoy (1965, vol. 2, pp. 120, 229). |
14 | For parallels between the interrogation methods of modern police and medieval inquisition, see Sullivan (1999, pp. 94–99). |
15 | On misrepresentation rather than just concealment, e.g., Merlo (1977, p. 14); Benad (2001, pp. 151–52); Given (1997, pp. 142–44). |
16 | Bruschi (2009, pp. 22–23), follows Ginzburg on this point. For a critical note, see Tedeschi (1991, p. 49). |
17 | E.g., Jacques Fournier’s learned question to Beatrice of Lagleize whether she ever heard the Cathars call the devil hylé (matter): Duvernoy (1965, 1:240). Cf. Audisio (1998, pp. 61–62). |
18 | Such examples contradict Patschovsky’s claim that the inquisitors did not attempt to gather new insights into heresy through investigation: Patschovsky (1991, p. 266). For the broader problem of interplay between stereotypes and experience in medieval accounts of ‘others’, cf. Valtrová (2010). |
19 | |
20 | E.g., the attention paid to details of clothing observed by Bruschi in some women’s depositions by contrast to more frequent mentions of working tools in men’s depositions: Bruschi (2009, pp. 30–31). |
21 | This is one of the reasons why we refrain from using the term ‘protocols’ for medieval deposition records, which are only very rarely protocolla in this sense. |
22 | See Bruschi (2009, p. 35) among others. Such a view diminishes the value of Latin passages and fails to explain how we should then consider inquisition documents recorded primarily in the vernacular—as in the case of, e.g., Modestin (2007); McSheffrey and Tanner (2003). In addition, there are various possible reasons for the occasional use of the vernacular in a Latin document that do not necessarily entail the close recording of the original exchange. The notary may not have had a Latin expression immediately at hand for something they wished to express; they may even, as argued by Justice (1994), simply have been bored or keen to add flavour to the text. |
23 | In fact, even extant original minutes are extremely rare; see Bruschi (2009, p. 19). For examples of them, see Kurze (1975, p. 25). For an early modern example enabling the comparison of the minutes and the clean copy, see Del Col (2002, pp. 201–24). |
24 | Regarding this case, see Benati (1982); Thompson (2005, pp. 430–33); Zbíral (2011); Peterson (2019, pp. esp. 63–65). |
25 | Duvernoy (2001a, pp. 8–11) thus questions the authenticity of the register of John Galand and William of Saint-Seine (Paris, Bibliothèque nationale de France, fonds Doat, vol. 26, fol. 79r–316v). Roche (2005, p. 67), regards his view as too binary (distinction between authentic document and outright forgery). |
26 | This essay is also reviewed in Arnold (1998a, p. 382). |
27 | See Esch (2003, p. 252). Some witnesses give as many as forty or even sixty names; cf. Bueno (2015, p. 58). |
28 | Notable exceptions include: Abels and Harrison (1979); McSheffrey (1995), Arnold (1998b, pp. 183–205). |
29 | E.g., Gramsch (2013); Hammond and Jackson (2017); Błoch et al. (2022); and the Journal of Historical Network Research, published since 2017. |
30 | |
31 | |
32 | For a fresh look at topoi as far more than haphazard and repetitive rhetorical attacks, see Välimäki (2019, pp. 18–19). |
33 | We are aware that we are extending the meaning of this concept beyond its original stress on economic and demographic history and data on longer time series (Chaunu 1970; for English language summaries of this approach and its origins, see also, Harsgor 1978; Burke 2015, pp. 60–69, 87–92, 145; Burguière 2009, pp. 93–99, 103–32). Nevertheless, we remain within Chaunu’s characterisation of serial history as ‘less interested in individual facts than in elements that can be integrated into a homogeneous series’ (Chaunu 1970, p. 297). |
34 |
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Zbíral, D.; Shaw, R.L.J. Hearing Voices: Reapproaching Medieval Inquisition Records. Religions 2022, 13, 1175. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13121175
Zbíral D, Shaw RLJ. Hearing Voices: Reapproaching Medieval Inquisition Records. Religions. 2022; 13(12):1175. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13121175
Chicago/Turabian StyleZbíral, David, and Robert L. J. Shaw. 2022. "Hearing Voices: Reapproaching Medieval Inquisition Records" Religions 13, no. 12: 1175. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13121175