Damien Jeanne
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The disease and the sacred
The leper as a scapegoat in England and Normandy (eleventh–twelfth centuries)
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In central medieval sources, lepers are represented as both impure (tainted) and pure (holy) beings. These sources suggest that leprosy was accepted both as a sign of divine election and as a curse. How can we explain this dichotomy in the way that leprosy sufferers were perceived in medieval society? Lepers’ dual representation is even more surprising because they were viewed as Christ’s privileged sick. Why was leprosy seen as a disease that was representative of the sickness and suffering of Christians? And why did lepers benefit from specialised care centres that developed thanks to the generosity of clerical and secular donors? After exploring earlier medieval ideas about leprosy, this chapter examines the complex religious identity of lepers by focusing on miracle accounts associated with the tomb of Saint Thomas Becket at Canterbury, England, written down in the 1170s by Benedict of Peterborough and William of Canterbury. Miracle accounts shed light on medieval attitudes towards sickness and disability, as well as on the identities of those who sought saintly assistance at shrines. The collections of miracles associated with Thomas Becket are unusual because they contain accounts of the healing of lepers, a category of the sick that does not often feature in miracle stories. This chapter considers why lepers feature in Becket’s miracles, and what is signified by the language used to describe them and their suffering. More broadly, it probes the possibility that lepers served as scapegoats for ills in society, as well as being models of Christian suffering.

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Leprosy and identity in the Middle Ages

From England to the Mediterranean

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