A German tourist died on the Grand Canal in Venice a few weeks ago. In a 'perfect storm' of traffic, the unfortunate man was crushed in a collision between a vaporetto and a gondola. His body was repatriated to Germany for the funeral - which was attended by a cohort of Venetian gondoliers, showing solemn respect.
The story attracted international press attention. Deaths on the water are rare in Venice these days. But once upon a time urban drownings were far more common, and it was often impossible to identify the corpses.
Venice has historically shown tenderness to those who have died in her waters, and even to those whose identities have never been known..
Chapter 5 of my children/'s book Talina in the Tower begins like this:
The
Company of Christ and the Good Death
the canals of Venice, the early
hours of April 30th, 1867, Saint Pio’s Day
Venetians were prone to drowning:
it was an ancient superstition among them that it was better not to learn to
swim.
‘The sea must have what the sea
wants,’ they were fond of quoting.
And, every so often, the sea took.
When the stones sweated slippery danger, there were always drunken, clumsy – or
just plain unlucky – Venetians who slipped and fell into the canals. Some time
later, the kind, quiet men of the Company of Christ and the Good Death would
pull their corpses out of the water and take them to the cemetery island of San
Michele for a decent burial ...
The Company of Christ and the Good Death was indeed devoted to taking dead bodies out of the water. Sometimes also known as la Confraternita del Santissimo Crocefisso, the association’s foundation in 1635 was marked by the construction of a little chapel with an altar under a portico (now demolished) of the church of San Marcuola, near Venice’s ghetto.
In 1643 began the building of the current edifice in the street now known as the Rio tera del Cristo. It was pronounced, on its completion the following year, to be "in bellissima forma".
On the façade, in white Istrian stone, an inscription records that from 1640 the Scuola was allied to a similar confraternity in Rome which also "esercitava quella di portarsi a raccogliere i corpi degli annegati non conosciuti per dar loro onorevole sepoltura".
At the entrance, on the Rio Tera drio la Chiesa, to the right is still visible the 'abate’ or large stone that served as an anchor for the standard of the Scuola.
In the Scuola's early days, there was no cemetery at San Michele. This joining of the islands of San Michele and San Cristoro was a Napoleonic invention. Until the early nineteenth century, the Venetian dead were usually buried in campi di morti near the parish churches. Opposite la Scuola at San Marcuola is a raised piece of land, usually a sign of one those burial grounds. It easy to imagine that quiet corner as a resting place for the drowned bodies of the unknown.
My collections of
Venetian proverbs show a respect for the water and its perils.
If you want to learn
how to pray, go to sea
Better to drown in the
sea than in a canal
If God had wanted Venetians to be fish, He would have given then an acquarium, not a city.
Where there is no
faith, the water pushes in.
But back to the Company
of Christ and its home. There is so much to peer at in Venice that I for years
I have walked unseeing past the beau tiful
little building. The façade is enriched by windows
with intricate iron grates. Tall Corinthian pilasters rise high. The third
floor is crowned with a triangular timpano.
Inside, there were once fine paintings, including
three by Giovanni Antonio Pellegrini 1675-1741). There was also a Jesus among the Doctors
by Giambattista Lambranzi, and a Portrait of the Confraternity Members in front
of an Allegory of the Church and Boranga’s
The Transport of a Drowned Man with the Participation of the Confraternity
Members, dating from 1700.
The
congregation of the Scuola, which survived the Napoleon suppression of the
monasteries, was still functioning in 1858. Today it is integrated with that
of San Marcuola.
And
in 1984 it seems that canvases remaining in the disused Scuola were despatched
to the Museo Diocesano d’ Arte Sacra in San Marco.
I have never seen the
doors to the building open but recently it has been given a healing hand. The
roof has been consolidated, the beams reinforced and the large marble crucifix
on the façade has been made more secure. The parish priest at San Marcuola, the
newspapers tell me, has shown great tenacity and a great attachment to the
Scuola, of which he is the guardian, from the moment when he took his role 23
years ago. Federico Niero has been a champion of the fabric of the place all
this time. With this link, you can see the architects’ beautiful drawings for
the project.
The next step, of
course, would be to get its paintings back, and to let the public, and curious writers
of historical novels, back inside.
1 comment:
What a fascinating post. I agree that tending to the dead is one of the basic decencies, and writing about the dead is another way of doing this. For my part, I can't see how one can really write about someone without some sort of empathy, and if a life was sad then the writer must understand that sadness for the story to be 'true'. Chekhov, for example, seemed able to be tender about his characters however they behaved.
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