Savonarola's bonfire. Believe me, it got bigger than this. |
The Bonfire of Vanities was not just a
particularly snarky novel by Tom Wolfe or the one of the few movie duds starring Tom Hanks. It was an event—or
more precisely the most famous of a
series of events—in Renaissance
Italy propagated by elements of
the Catholic Church in revulsion against perceived decadence and corruption of the flourishing
new culture.
On
February 7, 1497, the date of the traditional
Mardi Gras festival, crowds whipped up by charismatic Dominican Friar Girolamo
Savonarola seized and burned
thousands of objects like cosmetics,
art, and books in Florence, part
of a pattern of defiance to the corruptions of the Church and to the Pope himself.
Savonarola
can be seen as a forerunner of the Protestant
Reformation. Denouncing clerical, abuse of the poor, and the despotic rule of the Medici, he gathered a fanatical following, especially among
the educated young with his promises of new civic glory based on virtue
and purity.
It
was a time of particular turmoil as Charles VIII of France in 1494 invaded Italy
in opposition to Pope Alexander VI and his plans to extend Papal influence and control. As the mighty French army neared the city Savonarola entered negotiations with the king while his supporters overthrew the Medici and expelled them from the city proclaiming
a republic. He welcomed the French as liberators, defying the direct order of
the Pope to join his alliance. The French, for their part, spared the city from sacking and promised to respect the
new republic.
Dom Girolamo Savonarola of Florence. |
Savonarola
was, naturally considered a hero by
many. But Medici and Papal loyalists remained. To shore up support the Friar staged elaborate public processions and
theatrical events both celebrating the new order and promoting
purification to earn God’s approval
for a New Jerusalem. The celebrated Bon Fire was the highlight of his movement.
No
one really knows how many great books, musical
instruments, paintings, and statues were consigned to the flames along with ostentatious clothing,
cosmetics, mirrors, and personal trifles like playing cards. Some believe the loss to be a cultural
catastrophe, while other historians downplay
the amount of damage done claiming it was largely symbolic and most fine
pieces were either hidden or smuggled out of Florence before the
flames could consume them.
Among
those caught up in the euphoria of the
moment was one of Florence’s leading
artists, Sandro Botticelli who
had risen to fame painting allegories
from classical mythology, most
notably his stunning The
Birth of Venus with its famous nude
on the half-shell. Obviously such themes and sexuality
would not be in keeping with Savonarola’s austere piety. The artist had already moved on to more acceptable themes,
particularly various renditions of
the Virgin Mary. The artists may—or may not—have pitched many of his own paintings on
the fire. We do not that for some years
he retired from painting all
together and was as a result reduced to
poverty. He would later, however, recant his allegiance to Savonarola and
regain the patronage of the restored Medici.
The
French king’s army sliced through
Italy with little resistance outside
of a couple of stubborn cities which
paid heavily for their defiance. Just weeks after Savonarola’s party in
Florence, Charles reached Naples
where he claimed the crown of the state that controlled most of southern Italy. Alarmed by the ease with which Charles had
moved, the Pope was able to rally most
of the Northern states into the League
of Venice. The idea was to cut off
Charles’s return to France with his
army and destroy it. The Republic of
Florence had little choice but to formally
join the alliance, although under Savonarola’s influence, they never
actually committed troops to the
Papal force.
After
a nasty battle in which he lost most of his loot, Charles got his army safely
back to France. But he had lost Naples
already and once friendly northern cities like Florence were coming back into
the Papal orbit.
Pope Alexander XI was a Borgia and notorious libertine who lusted for temporal power in Italy was Savonarola's great enemy. |
In
May of 1497 the Pope formally excommunicated
the Friar and threatened to put the
city under interdiction unless they surrendered
him. Under pressure from local
authorities he withdrew from public preaching and composed a manuscript of justification
and a theological reflection, Triumph
of the Cross. Unfortunately for
him in it he not only claimed to receive
visions from God, but hinted that he had been given the power to perform miracles. Big
mistake. It left him open to the
charge of Heresy.
A rival friar and preacher called on
Savonarola to prove his innocence by an ordeal
by fire. When another monk and
friend volunteered to take the test for him, Savonarola felt he had no choice
but to accept the challenge. On April 7 1497 as he prepared to walk through the fire in the first such
ordeal in Florence for 400 years, a rainstorm
broke out extinguishing the flames.
As the burden of proof was on
him, the crowd took it as a sign that he was guilty. They attacked his convent. Savonarola and two other friars were
arrested.
Savonarola and two of his Friars were hung and roasted for heresy and schismatism. |
On
the morning of May 23, 1498, the three friars were led out into the main square
where, before a tribunal of high clerics and government officials, they were condemned as heretics and schismatics,
and sentenced to die. They were immediately stripped of their Dominican
robes down to thin white shirts. Each ascended
to separate gallows on which
they were hung with fire burning below them to consume their bodies. Their ashes were scattered in the Arno River to prevent them from
becoming relics for stubborn
followers.
However
his partisans remained active as both a religious and political force until the
Medici were restored in Florence and the Republic squashed in 1517.
But
Savonarola’s idea lived on. Martin Luther read Triumph of the Cross as did John
Calvin. He was very influential in
the briefly flourishing Italian Protestant
Reform movement which included the scholars like Faustus Socinus and Giorgio
Blandrata who were instrumental in introducing anti-trinitarianism and unitarianism
into central and eastern Europe.
On
the Catholic side, when it was safe to do so the Dominican Order reclaimed Savonarola and recast him as a benevolent and saintly
prophet mostly stripped of his
political importance and rougher
edges. Later Catholic reformers would
call him the last hope to “prevent the catastrophe of the
Reformation.” And in the 19th Century he would be adopted as a symbol for Italian nationalists and their drive to create a modern nation state.
Politically Savinarola was recast as a hero of Italian Republicanism. |
As
for the Bonfire business, well, that has been more controversial. Intellectuals,
writers, and artists have looked on it with horror. As such it has often been referenced directly or indirectly in
books from George Eliot’s Romola
to Margaret Atwood’s works which allude to the Bonfire, as in her dystopian novel, The Handmaid’s Tale.
On
the other hand, some have found inspiration in Savonarola’s urge to purge. In some ways what we have come to think of as
19th Century American Puritanism, especially the obsessive sexual prudery and zeal at suppression of corrupting
influences, might be more rightly called Savonarolaism. Certainly the
notorious Anthony Comstock and his Society
for the Suppression of Vice are the old Friar’s direct heirs.
And
so were and are, whether they know it or not—and most assuredly they do not—all
of the modern book burners of whatever stripe.
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