Pious Postmortems
Anatomy, Sanctity, and the Catholic Church in Early Modern Europe
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As part of the process of consideration for sainthood, the body of Filippo Neri, "the apostle of Rome," was dissected shortly after he died in 1595. The finest doctors of the papal court were brought in to ensure that the procedure was completed with the utmost care. These physicians found that Neri exhibited a most unusual anatomy. His fourth and fifth ribs had somehow been broken to make room for his strangely enormous and extraordinarily muscular heart. The physicians used this evidence to conclude that Neri had been touched by God, his enlarged heart a mark of his sanctity.
In Pious Postmortems, Bradford A. Bouley considers the dozens of examinations performed on reputedly holy corpses in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries at the request of the Catholic Church. Contemporary theologians, physicians, and laymen believed that normal human bodies were anatomically different from those of both very holy and very sinful individuals. Attempting to demonstrate the reality of miracles in the bodies of its saints, the Church introduced expert testimony from medical practitioners and increased the role granted to university-trained physicians in the search for signs of sanctity such as incorruption. The practitioners and physicians engaged in these postmortem examinations to further their study of human anatomy and irregularity in nature, even if their judgments regarding the viability of the miraculous may have been compromised by political expediency. Tracing the complicated relationship between the Catholic Church and medicine, Bouley concludes that neither religious nor scientific truths were self-evident but rather negotiated through a complex array of local and broader interests.
"Elegantly written, provocative, and original, the book makes for delightful reading. Supported by numerous archival sources, from formal and informal autopsies to hagiographies and canonization documents, Pious Postmortems is a most valuable contribution to the history of medicine, as well as to the history of the relations between science and religion in early modern Europe." * Isis *
"This book should be required reading for scholars of religion and medicine, especially those interested in Christianity's attitudes toward the body or forms of knowledge making . . . Bouley has unearthed a host of novel compelling sources, from postmortem records to canonization testimonies by esteemed anatomists, vital to understanding early modern Christianity." * The Journal of Religion *
"Pious Postmortems is an original and carefully researched survey of the role of medical testimony in the canonization processes of the early modern period. Bradford A. Bouley's exposition both of physical examinations and of instances of actual autopsy of putatively saintly bodies provides an illuminating context for the search for signs of sanctity." * Nancy Siraisi, author of Communities of Learned Experience: Epistolary Medicine in the Renaissance *