Anna M. Peterson
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Connotation and denotation
The construction of the leper in Narbonne and Siena before the plague
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The identity of the medieval leper is complex, often contradictory, and frequently constructed by a third-party observer. Not all leprosi were the same, and the leper had a different significance to different groups and individuals. The leper’s identity has also been formed through historiography, originally founded upon the narrative of exclusion, long clouding our understanding of the identities of lepers. However, by incorporating the newer historical framework developed by François-Olivier Touati and others, we can begin to reconstruct the leper’s place in medieval society. This chapter takes a comparative approach, exploring how lepers were perceived in Narbonne (southern France) and Siena (Italy), and how these perceptions changed from the foundation of the leper hospitals in each city to the Black Death. One of the overarching discussions concerns whether medieval communities sought to exclude people labelled as lepers. Narbonne’s records concerning lepers are largely transactions or bequests initiated by individuals, though there are also relevant municipal documents. Siena’s sources consist of the legislation preserved in the city’s constitutions from 1262. The documentation in these cases makes for a useful comparison regarding how different groups in society perceived leprosy sufferers. While both cities worked to provide spaces of protection and support for lepers, their approach was different, a picture that is shaped by the nature of the extant sources. Fundamentally, in both cities, lepers were identified collectively as the sick residents of leper houses. However, the sources examined here also enable a more dynamic reconstruction of lepers’ identities.

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Leprosy and identity in the Middle Ages

From England to the Mediterranean

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