Public Uses of Human Remains and Relics in History

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Alessandro Manzoni
Blood Libel
Capital Punishment
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Category=NHD
Category=NHTB
Cephalic Index
cultural memory studies
Danses Macabres
Donizetti
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Ferdinando Fuga
funerary practices
Gaetano Donizetti
Goffredo Mameli
historical anthropology
historiographical models
human remains
interpretative approaches
Italian religious history
Italian Unification
mortuary archaeology
Neapolitan Republic
Opposite Fronts
Physicality Relics
political uses of human remains
relic veneration
religious relics
Roman Committee
Roman Republic
Saint Januarius
Saint Peter's Basilica
Saint Peter's Square
Saint Peter’s Basilica
Saint Peter’s Square
Santa Maria Della Pace
Synthetic DNA
Trent Affair
University Cities Hospitals
University's Professors
University’s Professors
Victor Emmanuel III

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367272722
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 11 Nov 2019
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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The principal theme of this volume is the importance of the public use of human remains in a historical perspective. The book presents a series of case studies aimed at offering historiographical and methodological reflections and providing interpretative approaches highlighting how, through the ages and with a succession of complex practices and uses, human remains have been imbued with a plurality of meanings. Covering a period running from late antiquity to the present day, the contributions are the combined results of multidisciplinary research pertaining to the realities of the Italian peninsula, hitherto not investigated with a long-term and multidisciplinary historical perspective.

From the relics of great men to the remains of patriots, and from anatomical specimens to the skeletons of the saints: through these case studies the scholars involved have investigated a wide range of human remains (real or reputed) and of meanings attributed to them, in order to decipher their function over the centuries. In doing so, they have traversed the interpretative boundaries of political history, religious history and the history of science, as required by questions aimed at integrating the anthropological, social and cultural aspects of a complex subject.

Silvia Cavicchioli is Researcher of Contemporary History at the University of Turin.

Luigi Provero is Full Professor of Medieval History at the University of Turin.