Abstract

This article explores the Counter-Reformation medievalization of Polish–Lithuanian St. Kazimierz Jagiellończyk (1458–1484)—whose canonization was only finalized in the seventeenth century—as a case study, taking up questions of the reception of cults of medieval saints in post-medieval societies, or in this case, the retroactive refashioning into a venerable medieval saint. The article investigates these questions across a transcultural Italo–Baltic context through the activities of principal agents of the saint’s re-fashioning as a venerable saint during the late seventeenth century: the Pacowie from the Grand Duchy of Lithuania and the Medici from the Grand Duchy of Tuscany, during a watershed period of Tuscan–Lithuanian bidirectional interest. During this period, the two dynasties were entangled not only by means of the shared division of Jagiellończyk’s bodily remains through translatio—the ritual relocation of relics of saints and holy persons—but also self-representational strategies that furthered their religio-political agendas and retroactively constructed their houses’ venerable medieval roots back through antiquity. Drawing on distinct genres of textual, visual, and material sources, the article analyzes the Tuscan–Lithuanian refashioning of Kazimierz against a series of precious reliquaries made to translate holy remains between Vilnius to Florence to offer a contribution to the entangled histories of sanctity, art and material culture, and conceptual geography within the transtemporal and transcultural neocolonial context interconnecting the Middle Ages, Age of Reformations, and the Counter-Reformation between Italy and Baltic Europe.

Highlights

  • Drawing on distinct genres of textual, visual, and material sources, the article analyzes the Tuscan–Lithuanian refashioning of Kazimierz against a series of precious reliquaries made to translate holy remains between Vilnius to Florence to offer a contribution to the entangled histories of sanctity, art and material culture, and conceptual geography within the transtemporal and transcultural neocolonial context interconnecting the Middle Ages, Age of Reformations, and the Counter-Reformation between Italy and Baltic Europe

  • Rejoice Vilnius—the glorious city, where Casimir’s purest bones, sweet remains, and most sacred relics will be kept for posterity as a guarantee of his immortality and glory (Ferreri 1521a, n.p.)

  • This microhistorical case study takes up the issue of questions of the reception—or in this case the retroactive construction—of cults of medieval saints in post-medieval societies to disclose the entangled histories of sanctity, art and material culture, and conceptual geography within the transtemporal and transcultural neocolonial context interconnecting the Middle Ages, Age of Reformations, and the Counter-Reformation between Italy and Baltic Europe

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Summary

Introduction

Noble and splendid Italy, from which arose both Litalinian [sic] and Lithuanian high nobility, from which was born Casimirus, whose primeval origin was there. Rejoice vast and spacious Sarmatia for conquering frost, cold and your own barrenness, to produce this most beautiful and blissful tree of life, yielding the sweetest fruit of virtue and honor. The third section reframes the Italo–Lithuanian refashioning of Kazimierz against an in-depth analysis of the material and technical fabrication of a series of precious reliquary containers to translate holy remains on behalf of the Pacowie and Medici between This microhistorical case study takes up the issue of questions of the reception—or in this case the retroactive construction—of cults of medieval saints in post-medieval societies to disclose the entangled histories of sanctity, art and material culture, and conceptual geography within the transtemporal and transcultural neocolonial context interconnecting the Middle Ages, Age of Reformations, and the Counter-Reformation between Italy and Baltic Europe. Tuscany and Lithuania through Kazimierz attempted to obfuscate the threats of precarity and discontinuity affecting the saint, dynasties, and states involved

MALO MORI QUAM FOEDARI:
(Figures
14 The nuncio
Danzig
61 Thus anian
10. Giovanni
Conclusions: “Relic States”
31. Istorinė Tikrovė ir Iliuzija
A Journal of New Perspectives on Medieval Art 4
Full Text
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