- Jacopone da Todi
Jacopone da Todi (
Todi , 1228 –Collazzone 1306) was a Franciscan friar fromUmbria ,Italy in the 13th century. He wrote several "laudi" (songs in praise of the Lord) in Italian, and the famous Latin lyricStabat Mater is conventionally attributed to him. He was an early pioneer in Italiantheatre , being one of the earliestscholars who dramatisedgospel subjects.Life
Jacopone studied
law inBologna and became a successfullawyer . At the age of 40 his wife was killed when part of the floor of his house gave way during a dance. He discovered she had been wearing ahaircloth to mortify her flesh - indicating great religious devotion and penance. Shocked, he gave up his legal practice, gave away all his possessions, and c.1268 lived as a wanderingascetic for about 10 years as aFranciscan tertiary. Around 1278 he joined the Friars Minor as alay brother . By 1278, two broad factions had arisen in the Franciscan order, the former with a more lenient, less mystical attitude, the latter being more severe, preaching absolute poverty andpenitence and known as The Spirituals.Jacopone was connected with the latter group and in 1294 they sent a deputation to
Celestine V to ask permission to live separate from the other friars and observe the Franciscan Rule in its perfection -- a request which was granted. On Celestine's death in 1297 the position of the Vatican reversed:Boniface VIII favored the Franciscan regulars which opposed The Spirituals strict views. Jacopone, in response, signed acovenant with the powerfulColonna s, one of the most influential families inRome , calling for Boniface's deposition. The Pope excommunicated them. A battle between the two rival parties ensued, ending with thesiege ofPalestrina and the imprisonment andexcommunication of Jacopone in 1298. He was freed in 1303 on the death of Boniface, having being excluded from theJubilee of 1300 bypapal bull . He retired to Collazzone, a small town situated on a hill between Perugia and Todi, and died in 1306.Jacopone was steadfast in condemning corruption, especially through his satirical Italian poems. Jacopone would not recant his position on the requirement of ascetic poverty, believing that the mainstream church had become corrupt and that its ministers were not interested in the welfare of the poor. This criticism is echoed in the contemporary
Alleluia Movement . It was a time offamine and poverty in Italy, and many mystics and preachers likeGioacchino da Fiore anticipated the end of the old world and the coming ofChrist because kings and clergy had become too attached to material goods, too interested in their personal wars rather than the welfare of the country. Jacopone's preaching attracted many enthusiasts even within the Franciscan order andDante praised him in hisParadiso .Jacopone's body is buried in a crypt in the church of San Fortunato, Todi.
Poetry
Jacopone's satirical and denunciatory "Laudi" witness to the troubled times of the warring
city-states of northern Italy and the material and spiritual crisis that accompanied them. The laudi are written in his native Umbriandialect and represent the popular poetry of the region. Many hundreds of manuscripts attest to the broad popularity of his poems in many contexts - although anonymous poems are often attributed to him by the tradition. Other laudi extol the spiritual value of poverty.Some of his laudi were especially in use among the so-called "Laudesi" and the "Flagellants" who sang them in the towns, along the roads, in their confraternities, and in sacred dramatical representations. With hindsight, the use of the laudi may be seen as an early seed of Italian drama that came to fruition in later centuries.
The Latin poem "Stabat Mater Dolorosa" is often attributed to Jacopone, although this has been often disputed. It is a fine example of religious
lyric in the Franciscan tradition. It was inserted into the Roman Missal and Breviary in 1727 for the "Feast of the Seven Sorrows of the Blessed Virgin Mary", celebrated on the Friday beforeGood Friday . Following changes byPius XII , it now appears on the "Feast of Our Lady's Sorrows" celebrated on 15 September. Many composers have set it to music, includingJosquin des Prez ,Giovanni Palestrina ,Giovanni Battista Pergolesi ,Gioacchino Rossini , andAntonín Dvořák .ee also
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Christian mystics
*Religious poetry
*Saint Francis of Assisi ources
*Giudice, A. e Bruni, G. "Problemi e scrittori della letteratura italiana". Torino, Paravia, 1981.
*Sapegno, N." Santo Jacopone". Torino, Edizioni del Baretti, 1926, p.30.
*Novatti, F. "Freschi e minii del Dugento". Milano, Cogliatti, 1925, pp. 202-204.External links
* [http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/08263a.htm Entry in Catholic Encyclopedia]
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