Urban History (2020), 1–26
doi:10.1017/S0963926820000541
RESEARCH ARTICLE
The dynamics of healthscaping: mapping
communal hygiene in Bologna, 1287–1383
Taylor Zaneri1*
and G. Geltner2†
1
Department of History, University of Amsterdam, Kloveniersburgwal 48, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Department of History, University of Amsterdam, Kloveniersburgwal 48, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
*Corresponding authors. Email: t.l.zaneri@uva.nl and g.geltner@uva.nl
2
Abstract
This article traces how urban communities operating with a humoral or Galenic medical
paradigm understood and confronted the health challenges facing them, using the extraordinarily well-documented case of Bologna, Italy. Working within a GIS environment,
the authors spatially analyse over 3,500 events recorded by the Ufficio del fango concerning violations of the city’s health-related ordinances, augmented by other demographic
and material data. As such, the study not only adds specificity to recent attempts to enrich
the field of pre-modern public health, but also demonstrates that the Bolognese administration had a sophisticated and evolving understanding of communal health risks, and
exposes several discrepancies between policy and practice.
Introduction
The integration of archival and archaeological data in a GIS environment is a boon
to the field of public health history, and urban history more broadly.1 In particular,
it pushes scholarly debates beyond questions of whether earlier cities devised preventative programmes and towards how such programmes shaped and in turn
†
An earlier version of this article was discussed with great benefit at the Rachel Carson Center’s ‘The
nature of health, the health of nature’ conference, hosted by the Renmin University in Beijing. For their
insights and comments, the authors would like to thank the latter’s organizers and participants, the journal’s anonymous reviewers and the ‘Healthscaping urban Europe’ (ERC Consolidator Grant no. 724114)
team: Claire Weeda, Janna Coomans and Lola Digard. The Archivio di Stato di Bologna continues to be
a uniquely pleasant and productive place to work, and we would like to acknowledge our debt to the
local staff and scholars, especially Massimo Giansante, Rosa Smurra, Rosella Rinaldi and Daniele
Bortoluzzi. These efforts will culminate in June 2021 in a launch of medieval Bologna’s online health map.
1
For the use of historical data in GIS, see A.K. Knowles and A. Hillier (eds.), Placing History: How Maps,
Spatial Data, and GIS Are Changing Historical Scholarship (Redlands, CA, 2008); D. DeBats and I. Gregory,
‘Introduction to historical GIS and the study of urban history’, Social Science History, 35 (2011), 455–63;
I. Gregory and A. Geddes (eds.), Toward Spatial Humanities: Historical GIS and Spatial History
(Bloomington, 2014); I. Gregory and P. Ell, Historical GIS. Technologies, Methodologies and Scholarship
(New York, 2007). Key archaeological texts include J. Conolly and M. Lake, Geographical Information
Systems in Archaeology (Cambridge, 2006); A. Scianna and B. Villa, ‘GIS applications in archaeology’,
Archeologia e Calcolatori, 22 (2011), 337–63.
© The Author(s), 2020. Published by Cambridge University Press.
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Taylor Zaneri and G. Geltner
were shaped: by a range of administrators, by cities’ physical, social, political and
biological environments and by contemporary interpretations of risk and health
by diverse residents. Moreover, the (sometimes unexpected) correlations and divergencies exposed by working in a digital platform enriches pre-modern urban historians’ toolkit in exploring a range of questions about cities’ morphology,
metabolism, industry, social life and more. Last but not least, data safely mapped
is also data responsibly stored for augmentation, reuse and appropriation by further
scholars and projects, including in comparative synchronic and diachronic contexts. Late thirteenth- and fourteenth-century Bologna is a case in point, thanks
to typical yet exceptionally well-preserved sources.
Like numerous European cities in and beyond its highly urbanized region,
Bologna too devised and enforced preventative health measures designed to impact
all residents.2 It did so, moreover, in dialogue with a prevalent medical and
natural-scientific system known as Galenism, whose interests in the inter-related
aspects of physical and social health were deep and manifest. The Galenic prism
privileged here is emphatically not an exclusive one. Concepts of health and nature
do not always and everywhere descend from an intellectual elite downwards
(let alone along a single path), and are more likely negotiated between individuals
and communities, and between governments and citizens on an ongoing basis.
What is more, ideas and practices co-exist among competing theories and objectives, and have to reckon with physical urban infrastructure as well as the practical
limitations of households, neighbourhood officials and urban government.
Nonetheless, preventative action and Galenism constitute a central nexus for understanding public health across vast regions for more than two millennia, and whose
operation Bolognese sources and their analysis shore up.
The present article begins by briefly explaining the latter paradigm, before moving to examine evidence for municipal policy concerning the promotion of healthy
environments, in particular as it emerges from studying the records of Bologna’s
roads officials, also known as the fango or dirt masters. Their richly documented
activities, augmented by further data, provide the basis for a geospatial analysis,
which focuses on two critical aspects of urban health as both predictors and subjects of preventative interventions, namely waste disposal and hazardous commercial activity. The level of spatial accuracy, along with the quantity and richness of
the data, is extraordinary for the late thirteenth and fourteenth centuries and permits sophisticated and detailed analyses for Bologna. More scarce but identical
records from additional cities (not analysed in this article) strongly suggest that
this sophistication was typical at least throughout the Italian peninsula’s centre
and north.
The use of spatial analysis in the domain of public health is hardly new; reflecting linkages between place and health goes back millennia. Some scholars have
termed this ‘medical geography’ or ‘health geography’, that is, the application of
a spatial perspective to human and environmental health. One of the most notable
2
For England, see C. Rawcliffe, Urban Bodies: Communal Health in Late Medieval English Towns and
Cities (London, 2013); for Italy, see G. Geltner, Roads to Health: Infrastructure and Urban Wellbeing in
Later Medieval Italy (Philadelphia, 2019); for the Low Countries, see J. Coomans, Community, Urban
Health and the Environment in the Late Medieval Low Countries (Cambridge, forthcoming).
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Urban History
3
examples of this is John Snow’s cholera map drawn during the 1854 epidemic in
London.3 With the development of GIS, researchers in the 1980s and 1990s undertook public health studies to map the spread of infectious diseases, as well as to
identify environmental hazards or other spatially dependent risks.4 While the use
of GIS is common in modern epidemiological and public health studies, its
employment in historical and especially pre-modern health studies is relatively
recent. Still, there are several successful examples which point to the potential of
GIS analyses in this field; these include the DECIMA project for early modern
Florence,5 along with several studies which have mapped the transmission of
Yersinia pestis to and within Europe.6 Our study, while building on earlier methodologies, focuses on another important aspect of health: the cleanliness and hygiene
of Bologna in the later thirteenth and fourteenth centuries, as it related to the disposal and management of waste as recorded by the Ufficio del fango. In doing so, it
broadens the scope of pre-modern health studies in GIS.
Many datapoints in this study were recorded by urban officials, who noted the
parish church (and more rarely the market or street) in which the offence took
place. For locations outside the city walls, generally only the town or rural parish
in which the charge was noted. However, most of the allegations the fango officials
noted were inside the city itself. We have included all offences in the table in the
Appendix, but for this study we have only mapped those events which took
place within an urban parish. These were in turn mapped on the basis of the parish,
except in cases in which the market or street was specified. There were nearly a
hundred parishes in the period under examination, and most church structures
still exist today and are readily identifiable. These locations were crossed with population figures from the year 1296, also collected by parish, recording every head of
household that year. The combination allows for a detailed study, not only of what
city officials claimed they detected, but also how their activities and routes were
3
G. Musa et al., ‘Use of GIS mapping as a public health tool – from cholera to cancer’, Health Services
Insights, 6 (2013), 111–16; M. Meade and M. Emch, Medical Geography (New York, 2010), 73–6; J. Mayer
and M. Meade, ‘A reformed medical geography reconsidered’, Professional Geographer, 46 (1994), 103–6;
R. Kearns, ‘Place and health: towards a reformed medical geography’, Professional Geographer, 45 (1993),
139–47. See also R. Kearns and D. Collins, ‘Health geography’, in T. Brown, S. McLafferty and G. Moon
(eds.), A Companion to Health and Medical Geography (Chichester, 2010), 15–32. For an analysis of
Snow’s cholera map, see T. Koch, Disease Maps: Epidemics on the Ground (Bristol, 2011). And see
T. Koch, Cartographies of Disease (Redlands, CA, 2005).
4
See P. Kanaroglou, E. Delmelle and A. Paez (eds.), Spatial Analysis in Health Geography (London,
2018). For a methodological overview, see A. Gatrell and S. Elliott, Geographies of Health: An
Introduction (Chichester, 2015).
5
N. Terpstra and C. Rose (eds.), Mapping Space, Sense, and Movement in Florence: Historical GIS and the
Early Modern City (London, 2016), in particular in this volume, J. Henderson and C. Rose, ‘Plague and the
city: methodological considerations in mapping disease in early modern Florence’, 125–46, and N. Eckstein,
‘Mapping fear: plague and perception in Florence and Tuscany’, 169–86. See also J. Henderson, Florence
under Siege: Surviving Plague in an Early Modern City (New Haven, 2019).
6
For plague studies using GIS, see M. Welford and B. Bossak, ‘Revisiting the medieval Black Death of
1347–1351: spatiotemporal dynamics suggestive of an alternate causation’, Geography Compass, 4 (2010),
561–75; B. Schmida et al., ‘Climate-driven introduction of the Black Death and successive plague reintroductions into Europe’, PNAS, 112 (2015), 3020–5; R. Yue, H. Lee and C. Wu, ‘Trade routes and plague
transmission in pre-industrial Europe’, Scientific Reports, 7 (2017), 1–10.
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4
Taylor Zaneri and G. Geltner
impacted by the distribution and concentration of people and industries across the
city.
Subsequent sections consider periodization, professional occupation and most
importantly location, in order to trace continuity and change in preventative programmes, underscoring the opportunities offered as well as the limits imposed by
using a Galenic prism. The conclusion situates the results of the Bolognese casestudy in and beyond its region to underscore first, the preponderance of similar
prophylactic programmes in an era better but wrongly known for its hygienic
apathy; and secondly, the possibilities of fostering a more informed dialogue
with scholars exploring other urban environments and reconstructing an emic
understanding and experience in earlier periods.
Galenism
Since Antiquity, and for more than two thousand years, physicians, policy-makers
and urban officials laboured under the medical paradigm known today as Galenism
or humoralism, a system introduced in Hippocratic writings such as Airs, Waters,
Places and Epidemics in the fifth century BCE, and further developed by Galen (129
– c. 200/219 CE) and his students in later centuries. At its core, humoral medicine
sought to define and preserve a certain balance (symmetria) between an individual’s
four bodily humors: blood, yellow bile, black bile and phlegm. Yet Galenism foresaw no ideal, or for that matter, perennial balance even within an individual body’s
humors, since bodies too were enmeshed within a highly dynamic and complex
natural system, itself constantly striving for balance. Thus, while Galenic authors
and practitioners gave much thought to one’s origins, including parentage and
place and date of birth, they were no less reliant for insights into an individual’s
constitution (also known as complexion) on one’s social, cultural and economic circumstances, and the climatic attributes of one’s residence or itinerary. Personal and
communal health, therefore, were not merely a stable balance of four humors, but
rather a vibrant interplay among numerous tendencies and qualities, all in a state of
constant flux. As such, the system’s complexity foreshadows recent environmentalists’ and ecologists’ conceptualization of the balance of nature.7
Commentators on the Galenic corpus, probably in fourth-century Alexandria,
began specifying that personal and collective health could be shaped by several
external factors that came to be known as the ‘six non-naturals’. Five of these
were quite organic and behavioural, namely sleep and wakefulness, exercise and
rest, food and drink, secretion and excretion, and mental affections, while the
main quality of a sixth – air – was more decidedly environmental.8 The articulation
of these six aspects underscored yet again how much the goal of Galenic health
consisted in finding equilibrium, one might say even tentative peace, among
7
S.L. Pimm, The Balance of Nature? Ecological Issues in the Conservation of Species and Communities
(Chicago and London, 1991).
8
L.J. Rather, ‘The six things non-natural: a note on the origins and fate of a doctrine and a phrase’, Clio
Medica, 3 (1968), 337–47; L. García-Ballester, ‘On the origins of the six non-natural things in Galen’, in
J. Kollesch and D. Nickel (eds.), Galen und das hellenistische Erbe: Verhandlungen des IV.
Internationalen Galen-Symposiums veranstaltet vom Institut für Geschichte der Medizin am Bereich
Medizin (Charité) der Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin 18.–20. September 1989 (Stuttgart, 1993), 105–15.
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Urban History
5
often competing needs. Conversely, when a person or society failed to steer itself
towards such balance, disease would ensue. For disease was shortage, excess or
an imbalance produced either by individual misbehaviour or inadvertent exposure
to harmful elements caused by ignorance, sabotage or neglect.
Galenic medicine, in other words, espoused prevention through correct behaviour and a programme of environmental upkeep designed to reduce harm, including when it came to spreading disease. Before germ theory became prevalent – a
rather recent development – it is often forgotten that societies working within a
humoral paradigm recognized two, partly overlapping vectors of disease transmission. The first was miasma, air corrupted by decomposing matter, which in turn
assaulted those who were exposed to it either through skin contact or by inhaling
it through the nose or mouth. Reducing miasma or else avoiding it altogether was
therefore a key plank in any environmental protection programme. The second vector was ocular intromission, that is the implantation of disease through one’s
observing eyes as they took in corrupted matter such as blood, dung, stagnant
water or rotting carcasses. Reducing these matters’ presence in the urban environment or else promoting ways to avoid them, for instance by industrial zoning, regulating burials and instructing butchers on how to dispose of their waste, was a
common technique used by urban regimes explicitly pro maiori sanitate hominum,
for people’s greater health.9
Already prevalent in the Greek and Roman worlds, the humoral approach to the
human body and its environment lived on in Byzantine and Arabic medicine
(which also took it across Eurasia and the Indian Ocean), and was picked up steadily since the eleventh century in western Europe, with southern Italy and Spain
often acting as bridgeheads of textual and practical transmission. Armies, monasteries, trade convoys, pilgrims, the papal court and of course cities and their new
universities were all hubs of deliberation and experimentation with new and revived
forms of prophylactic measures. And it was here, under Latin Christian hegemony,
that both miasma and intromission were also conceptualized as the result of moral
and not merely physical corruption, leading to devising preventative programmes
that made no essential distinction between communal piety and physical
well-being.10 To be sure, pursuing preventative behaviours to promote health was
challenging enough on a personal and domestic level; maintaining such standards
city-wide required significant resources and a broad co-operation among different
stakeholders. If people were to stay healthy, there was a broad consensus that
everyone had to contribute to cities’ healthscaping, that is to create a place where
health could bloom.
9
R. Greci, ‘Il controllo della città: l’ufficio dei fanghi e strade a Bologna nel XIII secolo’, Storia della città,
47 (1988), 119–24; Geltner, Roads to Health, 34–67. See also R. Greci, ‘Il problema dello smaltimento dei
rifiuti nei centri urbani dell’Italia medievale’, in Città e servizi sociali nell’Italia dei secoli 12.–15 (Pistoia,
1990), 439–64.
10
P. Horden, ‘Ritual and public health in the early medieval city’, in S. Sheard and H. Power (eds.), Body
and City: Histories of Urban Public Health (Aldershot, 2000), 17–40; A. Agresta, ‘From purification to protection: plague response in late medieval Valencia’, Speculum, 95 (2020), 371–95.
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Taylor Zaneri and G. Geltner
Urban healthscaping, viarii and the Bolognese fango officials
As urban (and princely, and papal) regimes across western Europe attempted to
centralize and buttress claims to legitimacy, stressing their role as being responsible
for their subjects’ health became a rhetorical and practical commonplace, informing policies designed to define and protect the public good. Street cleaning, labour
safety, artisanal zoning, waste disposal, animal rearing, produce quality at the market and in taverns, curfew, the location of alms houses and leprosaria and the hiring
of communal physicians: all were biopolitical measures consciously presented and
often understood as reducing harm and promoting health at the population level.11
Less visible in urban historiography, perhaps, but no less influential in rolling out
these policies across Italy were infrastructure specialists: public works or roads officials (viarii), known uniquely in Bologna as the fango or dirt masters. Their key
task was to build and maintain public amenities, including canals, roads, bridges,
walls, fountains and markets.12 Yet in doing so, they often became a regime’s
eyes, ears and noses on the ground, detecting and addressing violations and neglect
perceived – also from a Galenic perspective – as threatening to neighbours and visitors by causing miasma and intromission.13 At a very pedestrian and thus influential level, therefore, roads officials served as healthscapers, defenders of the urban
environment in myriad sites in each city. What follows is the analysis of one
such outfit, operating in Bologna at least since the mid-thirteenth century. It is
based on the outfit’s well-preserved records, alongside information on the city’s
topography and its evolving demography and morphology, which combine to demonstrate how residents defined and promoted urban health and the extent to which
a Galenic thought informed these practices.
In the fango office, Bolognese magistrates created a tool for identifying perceived
physical and moral health hazards, often relying on Galenic terms, which provided
a legal means to report and deter risky behaviours. The office itself comprised a
small group of mid-ranking officials whose job involved building and inspecting
the city’s roads, wells, buildings, markets and other (putatively) public infrastructures, documenting violations and hazards involving improperly disposed waste,
blocked doorways and egresses, unsealed roads, unsafe buildings, wandering animals, improper and illicit commercial transactions as well as unwelcome activities
of prostitutes and gamblers.14 It was a modest but highly visible sign of how the city
11
M. Foucault, Birth of Biopolitics. Lectures at the College de France, 1978–1979, trans. Graham Burchell
(New York, 2011), 1–47.
12
G. Geltner, ‘Public health’, in S. Blanshei (ed.), A Companion to Medieval and Renaissance Bologna
(Leiden, 2018), 103–28; G. Geltner, ‘Healthscaping a medieval city: Lucca’s Curia viarum and the future
of public health history’, Urban History, 40 (2013), 395–415; S. Blanshei, Politics and Justice in Late
Medieval Bologna (Leiden, 2010), 511–13.
13
Archivio di Stato di Stato di Bologna, Podestà, Ufficio delle acque, strade, ponti, calanchi, seliciate e
fango (henceforth ASB Fango). See Geltner, Roads to Health, 153–5, also for how residents lodged their
own complaints, framing them in Galenic terms.
14
Greci, ‘Il controllo della città’; B. Breveglieri, ‘Il notaio del fango’, Atti e Memorie della Deputazione di
Storia Patria per le Province di Romagna, 55 (2005), 95–152; G. Albertani, ‘Igiene e decoro: Bologna
secondo il registro del “notaio del fango” (1285)’, Storia Urbana, 116 (2007), 19–36; G. Albertani,
‘Igiene e manutenzione. Il caso di Bologna nei programmi legislativi e nella realtà quotidiana del XIII
secolo’, in A. Campanini and R. Rinaldi (eds.), Artigiani a Bologna: identità, regole, lavoro, secc. XIII–
XIV (Bologna, 2008), 165–86.
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Urban History
7
invested in enforcing a public health programme. In addition to the regular fango
inspections, residents themselves could also complain to the fango notary about
hazardous acts or unhygienic conditions in their neighbourhoods, workplaces
and public sites. In other words, the regulation and management of the city environment was not just a top-down process but also involved ordinary residents settling disputes privately and, the latter having failed, publicly.
Although dirt masters were hardly the only urban officials to enforce
health-related policies, the cache of documents they left is immense. The present
article draws on a sample of around 3,500 cases taken from a series spanning
just under a century, stretching from 1287 to 1383. It records fango officials undertaking regular inspections of the city streets, infrastructure and markets. When violations were observed, they were noted in a register along with information about
the location and details of the offence. These outfits produced dozens of registers
for the period under examination, whose locational specificity underpins a spatial
analysis of how urban regimes understood and confronted health challenges. The
information likewise provides insight into how Galenic principles interacted with
the practical pursuit of healthy streets and public spaces in Bologna.
Information extracted from the fango registers illuminates two levels in particular of human activities and decision-making. On the one hand, it is a record of the
activities that Bolognese residents were engaged in, such as commerce, animal rearing, the production of goods such as cloth, paper and metal, the disposal of waste
and the maintenance of public infrastructures such as wells, drainages and sewages.
These processes were filtered through the eyes of fango officials, and thus are subject to a second order of decision-making, namely that of a city administration
seeking to document and control what it envisioned as deviant behaviours. With
that in mind, this article traces the choices of both Bolognese residents and
fango officials, examining in particular how the municipality shifted its conceptions
and policing of conceived dangers over this long period. Pursuing this goal also
sheds light on how the experience of a healthy city, both physically, socially and
morally, varied across the city and in time, for instance by gender, profession
and location. Our results indicate that the most pointed change appears to be
the shift from violations centred on waste creation and mismanagement (at the
end of the thirteenth century) to offences dominated by improper and illicit commercial activities (at the end of the fourteenth century), attesting the changing risks
and problems, as well as evolving and flexible conceptions of health.
Historical and demographic context
Like many Italian cities, Bologna’s origins stretch back millennia, to the Etruscan
and Roman eras. And it was the Romans who implemented the basic grid pattern
of the current city centre as well as constructed sewage and water systems.15
15
F. Bocchi, Atlante Storico delle città italiane. Bologna, I, Da Felsina a Bononia: dalle origini al XII secolo
(Bologna, 1995); F. Bocchi, Atlante Storico delle città italiane. Bologna, II, Il Duecento (Bologna, 1996). For
an archaeological perspective, see R. Curina, L. Malnati, C. Negrelli and L. Pini (eds.), Alla ricerca di
Bologna antica e medievale. Da Felsina a Bononia negli scavi di Via d’Azeglio (Florence, 2010), especially
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Taylor Zaneri and G. Geltner
Thereafter, Bologna developed by expanding and incorporating what were once
suburbs into the urban confines.16 Roman Bologna was surrounded by a defensive
wall, which was expanded during the later Lombard period.17 A new set of walls
was constructed in the eleventh and twelfth centuries, followed by an additional
set in the fourteenth century as the city population grew (see Figure 1). Thanks
to excellent demographic information for Bologna, the city’s morphology is easily
correlated with population growth. Some demographic information can be distilled
from local estimi, lists used for tax purposes in which all heads of household
recorded their names, debts and property.18 These documents were then turned
over to city officials, who tended to take them at face value, despite authors’ presumable incentive to under-report the size and value of their properties. Finally,
estimi were organized by parish. On the basis of these estimi, historians tend to
agree that in the late thirteenth century (where our dataset begins), Bologna
reached its demographic peak of between 55,000 and 65,000 people,19 although
the population may have been even larger.20 Working in a GIS environment facilitates mapping the number of households in each parish, revealing how the
the sections R. Curina, ‘Il condotto idrico e le strutture di età romana: l’organizzazione del suburbio meridionale’, 59–71, and C. Negrelli, ‘La sequenza insediativa’, 15–53. And see J. Ortalli and L. Pini (eds.), Lo
scavo archeologico di Via Foscolo-Frassinago a Bologna: aspetti insediativi e cultura materiale (Bologna,
2002); F. Bergonzoni and G. Bonora, Bologna romana, I, Fonti letterarie – Carta archeologica del centro
urbano, Fonti per la storia di Bologna (Bologna, 1976).
16
Other medieval excavations include M. Librenti and C. Negrelli, ‘L’Indagine nella chiesa di S. Maria dei
Servi e l’archeologia in ambito urbano a Bologna’, in R. Fiorillo and P. Peduto (eds.), III Congresso
Nazionale di Archeologia Medievale (Florence, 2003), 279–85; S. Gelichi and R. Merlo (eds.),
Archeologia medievale a Bologna. Gli scavi nel Convento di San Domenico (Bologna, 1987); S. Gelichi,
C. Cavallari and M. Medica (eds.), Medioevo svelato: storie dell’Emilia-Romagna attraverso l’archeologia
(Bologna, 2018).
17
C. DeAngelis and R. Dondarini, Atlante storico delle città italiane. Bologna III, Da una crisi all’altra:
(secoli XIV–XVII) (Bologna, 1997), 21–2; M. Librenti and R. Michelini, ‘La seconda cerchia di Bologna’, in
G. Volpe and P. Favia (eds.), V Congresso nazionale di Archeologia Medievale (Borgo San Lorenzo, 2009),
194–9.
18
R. Smurra, ‘Progetto Fonti medievali in rete’, Centro Gina Fasoli: www.centrofasoli.unibo.it, accessed 1
Jan. 2019; R. Smurra, ‘Fiscal sources: the estimi’, in Blanshei (ed.), A Companion, 42–55; R. Smurra, Città,
cittadini e imposta diretta a Bologna alla fine del Duecento. Ricerche preliminari (Bologna, 2007). See also
M. Giansante, ‘Il quartiere bolognese di Porta Procola alla fine del Duecento. Aspetti economici e sociali
dell’estimo del 1296–7’, Il Carrobbio, 11 (1985), 123–41; D. Micheletti, ‘Gli estimi del comune di
Bologna il quartiere di Porta Ravennate (1296–97)’, II Carrobbio, 7 (1981), 293–304; D. Rocca, ‘Gli estimi
del Comune di Bologna. Il quartiere di Porta Stiera nel 1296/97’, University of Bologna Ph.D. thesis, 1984/
85; M. Vallerani (ed.), ‘Il valore dei cives. La definizione del valore negli estimi bolognesi del XIV secolo’, in
Valore delle cose e valore delle persone (Viella, 2018), 241–70; R. Dondarini, Bologna medievale. Nella storia
delle città (Bologna, 2000); E. Erioli, ‘Aspetti demografici della Bologna medievale. Riflessioni metodologiche e prospettive di ricerca’, I quaderni del m.æ.s., 5 (2017), 23–50.
19
Smurra, ‘Progetto Fonti medievali in rete’; S.K. Wray, Communities and Crisis: Bologna during the
Black Death (Leiden, 2009), 62–5; A. Pini, Città medievali e demografia storica: Bologna, Romagna,
Italia; (secc. XIII–XV) (Bologna, 1996); A. Pini, ‘Problemi di demografi a bolognese del Duecento’, Atti
e Memorie della Deputazione di Storia Patria per le Province di Romagna, 16–17 (1969), 180–222;
R. Dondarini, ‘La popolazione del territorio bolognese fra XIII e XIV secolo: stato e prospettive delle
ricerche’, in R. Comba and I. Naso (eds.), Demografi a e società nell’Italia medievale (Cuneo, 1994),
203–30.
20
See D. Bortoluzzi, ‘Nuove proposte per una stima della popolazione bolognese tra la fine del Duecentro
e il 1348’, Deputazione di Storia Patria per le Province di Romagna, forthcoming.
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9
Figure 1. Population distribution in Bologna, 1296
Source: R. Smurra, ‘Fiscal sources: the estimi’, in S. Blanshei (ed.), A Companion to Medieval and Renassiance Bologna
(Leiden, 2018), 45–8; S.K. Wray, Communities and Crisis: Bologna during the Black Death (Leiden, 2009), 266; M. Fini,
Bologna sacra: tutte le chiese in due millenni di storia (Bologna, 2007).
population was distributed throughout the city. Figure 1 is based on the 1296 estimo
and suggests that most people at that time lived within or around the second ring of
walls. The eight churches in grey comprised over 25 per cent of the households
listed in the 1296 estimi (parish confines likely included territory on either side
of the wall). Still, this suggests that the zone around the second ring of walls was
densely populated, with major implications for the cleanliness and hygiene of
this sector.
In the middle of the examined period, an epidemic of Yersinia pestis took place,
also known as the Black Death (1346–53), which killed somewhere between 40–60
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10
Taylor Zaneri and G. Geltner
per cent of western Europe’s population, including that of Bologna.21 The city continued to function through this major crisis,22 enforcing public health measures
that were in place well beforehand, as was the case in other Italian cities.23
Indeed, and as we will argue below, environmental health and urban cleanliness
were constant concerns of local residents and officials well before the epidemic’s
onset. This points to a long-standing and sophisticated understanding of health
and the ability to foresee risks and implement solutions, in response to pressures
on the urban infrastructure rather than merely react to cataclysms. At any rate,
mapping archival and other data suggests that the scope of this office and the activities with which it was concerned shifted over time due to a mixture of events and
processes that is not always possible to pin down.
Mapping fango registers
Fango notaries recorded a description of the offence and location, the gender and
profession of the offender, the offender’s residence and legal actions rendered. The
registers date from various years between 1287 to 1383, yet are unequally distributed chronologically. This mostly reflects the extant volumes’ illegibility around the
middle decades of the fourteenth century, rather than any lack of activity in this
period, although almost no records survive from the immediate Black Death
era.24 While extracting data from the extant and most legible registers, information
was divided into three time baskets: 1287–1323, 1330–47 and 1355–83. The division sought to balance between the years present and number of cases for each
year, yet in a manner that would allow for an analysis of health and regulatory practices before and after the plague. From 1287 to 1323, the most legible registers survive from eight calendar years: 1287, 1298–1301, 1309, 1317 and 1323. From 1330
to 1347, registers were selected for legibility from 10 years: 1330–35, 1337, 1342,
1345 and 1347. Finally, from 1355 to 1383 registers from 9 years were similarly chosen: 1355, 1357, 1360–61, 1369, 1378–79 and 1382–83. This fairly equal distribution of years, however, contrasts with an unequal spread of cases; the dataset
contains 1,952 incidents in the first period, 370 in the second, 1,207 in the third
and 11 undated records (see Appendix). These include both cases inside and
21
Overviews for Europe include O. Benedictow, The Black Death 1346–1353: The Complete History
(Woodbridge, 2000); R. Horrox (ed.), The Black Death (Manchester, 1994); S. Cohn, The Cult of
Remembrance and the Black Death: Six Renaissance Cities in Central Italy (Baltimore, 1992); M. Green
(ed.), Pandemic Disease in the Medieval World; Rethinking the Black Death (Kalamazoo, 2015). For the
population of Bologna during this period, see R. Greci and A. Pini, ‘Una fonte per la demografia storica
medievale: le “Venticinque” bolognesi (1247–1404)’, Rassegna degli archivi di Stato, 36 (1977), 337–417;
A. Pini, ‘Forme di conduzione, rendita fondiaria e rese cerealicole nel Bolognese dopo la peste del 1348:
l’azienda del convento di San Domenico’, in V. Fumagalli and G. Rossetti (eds.), Medioevo rurale: sulle
tracce della civiltà contadina (Bologna, 1980), 259–97.
22
Wray, Communities and Crisis, 99–146.
23
Geltner, Roads to Health; G. Geltner, ‘The path to Pistoia: urban hygiene before the Black Death’, Past
& Present, 246 (2020), 3–33.
24
ASB Fango registers in this sample are as follows, with the number of records from each year in parentheses: 1287 (342), 1298 (189), 1299 (47), 1300 (143), 1301 (564), 1309 (237), 1317 (382), 1323 (48), 1330
(11), 1331 (14), 1332 (49), 1333 (80), 1334 (52), 1335 (84), 1337 (34), 1342 (1), 1345 (8), 1347 (37), 1355
(3), 1357 (7), 1360 (2), 1361 (370), 1369 (306), 1378 (144), 1379 (282), 1382 (49), 1383 (44) and loose
records 1286–1370 (11).
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11
outside the city, with the former type much more prominent. In total there are
3,540 records, of which 2,262 could be assigned to a specific parish, piazza or street
in the city of Bologna. All other entries did not record location or recorded an
ambiguous one; the latter records were not mapped but still were included in the
table analyses below.
Allegations made in the recorded cases were classified under 10 broad categories:
(1) animals – illicit presence of non-human animals; (2) building violation – an
improper or risky construction; (3) blockage – physical impediment to streets, porticos or drains; (4) commerce – products sold in bad faith or of poor quality, or
products sold off-site or off-hours and thus unsupervised; (5) damage – intentional
destruction of buildings or property; (6) filth – leaving refuse in illicit areas, keeping
faulty and exposed latrines and their drains; (7) gambling – playing prohibited
games considered a moral pollution; (8) neglect – failure to maintain infrastructure;
(9) prostitution – another form of moral pollution; and (10) safety – usually
unsupervised or overloaded carts in a public area.
Among the latter, three types of offences in particular were perceived as hazardous to people’s physical health, namely blockage, filth and neglect. All of them were
believed to put people in harm’s way, by causing miasma and/or rendering certain
sites more dangerous due to limited circulation or increasing risks of ocular intromission. There is some overlap between the three categories, although we tried to
remain consistent with our sometimes-arbitrary allocations. Thus, for example,
poorly maintained drains and wells were classified as a form of neglect, while
dirt in front of a residence fell under the category of blockage, and dung found
near a well was counted as a filth violation. At any rate, from a Galenic perspective,
all of these offences would have had a proclivity for generating miasmas emerging
from stagnant water or waste out in the open, or by presenting passers-by with dangerous sights such as rotting carcasses. Thus, for the spatial analysis in GIS, the
records for these three categories were amalgamated and the combined number
mapped for each of the three periods.
The second main strand of analysis concerned the location and density of commercial offences. Commercial offences dominated fango violations for the last period under examination, and it is clear that ensuring a vibrant and properly regulated
economy was also a major concern of urban officials, part of their overall conception
of a healthy city.25 Whatever other claim they may support, these offences’ common
detection underscores that fango officials in Bologna understood the importance of
keeping streets, public spaces and water sources free and clean of waste, and limiting
dishonest and unscrupulous commercial transactions. Enforcing preventative regulations was not just a matter of civic pride, but an issue perceived as directly impacting
the wellbeing and the functioning of the urban environment.26
25
R. Rinaldi (ed.), ‘Una città di mercati’, in Nella città operosa: Artigiani e credito a Bologna fra Duecento
e Quattrocento (Bologna, 2016), 11–56. For the distribution of artisans and commercial activities, see
C. Arnaud, Topographien des Alltags Bologna und Straßburg um 1400 (Berlin, 2018); and C. Arnaud,
‘Mapping urban communities. A comparative topography of neighbourhoods in Bologna and Strasbourg
in the late Middle Ages’, in J. Colson and A. van Steensel (eds.), Cities and Solidarities: Urban
Communities in Pre-Modern Europe (New York, 2017), 60–78.
26
For a discussion, see Geltner, Roads to Health.
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Taylor Zaneri and G. Geltner
Figure 2. Fango violations by period
Note: The data here are presented for the first time in this article, extending the work of G. Geltner, Roads to Health:
Infrastructure and Urban Wellbeing in Later Medieval Italy (Philadelphia, 2019).
Source: Archivio di Stato di Stato di Bologna, Podestà, Ufficio delle acque, strade, ponti, calanchi, seliciate e fango
(henceforth ASB Fango).
The data also underscore a dynamic process. As the Appendix and Figure 2 suggest, recorded offences change markedly over time. In particular, there are far more
violations, in the first period, from 1287 to 1323, that relate to waste mismanagement, than in later periods (1,165 in period 1, 119 in period 2 and 204 in period
3). In fact, in period 1, nearly 60 per cent of all recorded fango violations concern
waste production or mismanagement (the combination of blockage, filth and neglect). By contrast, in the two later periods, approximately 60 per cent of the allegations involve commerce, indicating a shift in the kinds of offences that were being
reported. Whatever their focus, it is clear that concerns about urban hygiene and
environmental cleanliness predate the Black Death’s onset.
Figure 2 represents the fines meted out by fango officials in each of the three
time baskets, highlighting the office’s changing focus from offences related to the
creation and mismanagement of waste to commercial regulation. The shift is
hard to explain, although decreased attention to waste disposal violations may
echo some scholars’ suggestion that the local sewage system was covered over
between the first and second periods.27 This would have dramatically changed
waste disposal practices, or at least their spatial profile as regards policing, given
27
C. Ghirardacci, Della historia di Bologna: parte terza, ed. A. Sorbelli (Città di Castello, 1912–32);
L. Sabbionesi, ‘“Pro maiore sanitate hominum civitatis…et borgorum”: lo smaltimento dei rifiuti nelle
città medievali dell’Italia settentrionale’, Università Ca’ Foscari Ph.D. thesis, 2016, 250–8; F. Bocchi,
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Urban History
13
Figure 3. Distribution by gender
Source: ASB Fango.
that covered sewers would reduce violations for previously unsealed channels,
ditches and latrines, which from a Galenic point of view were especially hazardous,
both as miasma generators and sites for ocular intromission. More importantly, the
system’s overhaul underscores the city officials’ ability to recognize dangers to the
city and to implement solutions at the population level. At any rate, the shift from
waste creation and mismanagement citations to violations centred on commercial
activities is worth exploring.
Beyond the improvements made to the canal and drainage system, it may also
point to evolving or changing paradigms of health management and urban risks.
Conceptions and enactments of health are and were dynamic, and it is unsurprising
that city officials would rethink how they regulated their city or where they focused
their efforts with limited resources at their disposal. To this end, analysing data in
GIS reveals changes in violation types, in the profiles of the offenders (profession
and location) and the locations in which city officials concentrated. All of these are
mapped, quantified and explored in the next section.
Gender and profession in the fango charges
Both policing activities and residents’ (mis)behaviour participated in the cultural
reproduction of social categories and as such they disclose gender disparities in
number and type of violations (see Figure 3). Broadly speaking, men are more frequently cited than women for all charges throughout the subperiods and, notably,
males received the majority of citations for waste charges (the combination of
blockage, filth and neglect). On the other hand, women are most often denounced
‘Gestione delle acque e politica delle infrastrutture a Bologna all’inizio dell XIII secolo’, in C. Travaglini
(ed.), La città e il fiume: secoli XIII–XIX (Rome, 2008), 23–9; Bocchi, Il Duecento, 21.
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14
Taylor Zaneri and G. Geltner
for commerce-related violations, that is illicit or improper sales; the category comprises over 50 per cent of citations for women in all periods, underscoring their significant involvement in that sector, which is otherwise sometimes difficult to
document.28
Fango officials not only altered the kinds of violations they policed, but also
shifted their focus in terms of those whom they cited, as can be seen in Table 1.
The pattern holds for both waste violations as well as commercial violations,
once again spotlighting evolving conceptions of health and risk among city officials.
In the beginning of the period under study, the top-cited professions for waste violations were ministeriales (elected parish officials), sellers of ready food, meat and
fish mongers and vendors and grocers. Yet by the later fourteenth century, officials
all but disappear, accompanied by the preponderance of taverners and innkeepers,
metalworkers, as well as cloth manufacturers and sellers. Within this admittedly
limited sample, accused professionals tended to be male.
Meat and fish mongers alongside vendors and grocers continued to be policed in
both periods. The focus on butchers and meat workers is unremarkable, particularly since their activities carried major pollution risks from a humoral perspective
and as such were heavily regulated in the Bolognese statutes throughout the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries.29 Similar hygienic risks were thought to be attendant upon artisans such as metalworkers and cloth manufacturers, whose work
polluted the air. To a significant extent, therefore, the focus on workshops can
be said to reflect (and in any case agrees with) Galenic medical principles.30
Evidence for the dirt masters’ shifting gaze emerges likewise from examining
commercial violations. In particular, the sample suggests that the city officials changed their focus from vendors and grocers to taverners and innkeepers, and to a
lesser extent meat and fish sellers (see Table 2). One notable point is the involvement of women, particularly female vendors and grocers, who constitute over 25
per cent (122 of 457 cases) of those held responsible for commerce violations.
Indeed, this group of occupations seems to be heavily female in both the first
and second periods (almost triple and double their male counterparts, respectively),
suggesting that women pursuing such trades in the public eye endured heavier scrutiny than men. It is entirely possible, of course, that the comparatively high degree
to which those women were scrutinized reflected officials’ class and not only gender
bias, or that the specific products sold by those women in particular were considered
strategic. The registers, however, do not provide such information, but it is unlikely that
gender played little or no role in such cases, also given that produce stalls could often be
owned and operated by a married couple, in which case allegations launched specifically at the female counterpart are telling. At any rate, by the end of the period, policing
shifted from food vendors to the regulation of more male-dominated professions
including taverners and innkeepers, as well as stricter regulation of butchers. Still,
female food vendors continue to make an appearance in fango records throughout
the analysed period, albeit in diminished numbers by its end.
28
D. Romano, Markets and Marketplaces in Medieval Italy c. 1100 to c. 1440 (London, 2015).
L. Frati (ed.), Statuti di Bologna dall’anno 1245 all’anno 1267, 2 vols. (Bologna, 1869–77); G. Fasoli and
P. Sella (eds.), Statuti di Bologna dall’anno 1288, 2 vols. (Vatican City, 1937–39).
30
Geltner, Roads to Health, 96–105.
29
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Table 1. Waste violations and profession distribution
Professional category
Ministeriales (elected parish officials)
Food preparers
Meat and fish sellers
Vendors, merchants, grocers, spice/wine sellers
Servants and carters
Metalworkers
Wood workers
Leather and fur workers
Cloth workers and sellers
Medical professionals
Taverners and innkeepers
Soldiers and prison guards
Priests and rectors
Parchment makers
Miscellaneous professionals
Miscellaneous residents
Total
Period 1
Period 2
31
13
12
10 (6 women)
4 (3 women)
0
3
2
1
1
1
3
1
0
1
3
86
0
0
3
0
0
0
0
1
1
6
3
1
1
5
0
3
24
Period 3
2
1
18
11 (1 woman)
2 (1 woman)
9
5
0
8
1
13 (3 women)
0
0
0
3
0
73
Source: ASB Fango.
Table 2. Commercial violations by profession and gender
Period 1
Period 2
Period 3
Professional category
Men
Women
Men
Women
Men
Women
Vendors, grocers, spice/wine sellers, shopkeepers
Taverners and innkeepers
Meat and fish sellers
Food preparers
Wood workers
Leather and fur workers
Cloth workers and sellers
Metalworkers
Servants and carters
Candle and wax makers/sellers
Parchment makers
Lime sellers
Miscellaneous professionals
Total
41
60
6
13
4
0
0
0
2
2
0
0
0
128
122
8
0
1
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
133
35
15
9
15
4
0
0
0
0
7
0
2
1
88
62
1
3
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
66
21
312
48
5
0
0
21
24
8
0
2
1
2
444
23
5
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
29
Source: ASB Fango.
Distribution of violations across the city
Figures 4a, b and c display the density and location of waste-related violations,
using the kernel density feature in ArcMap for each of the three periods. This spatial function highlights dense clusters of offences, facilitating a comparison of how
the number and location of waste violations shifted over time. During the first period, offences relating to waste production and mismanagement are fairly ubiquitous
– there are clusters in the city centre, which housed the major markets, and around
the edges of the second ring of walls. Recall that there was a ditch or canal associated with this structure, where waste could have been easily (if illicitly) dumped.
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Taylor Zaneri and G. Geltner
Figure 4. Density of waste production and mismanagement offences 1287–1383
Source: ASB Fango.
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Urban History
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Figure 4. Continued
Waste concentrations around the second ring of walls were also a product of urban
expansion. During this period, the city was in the process of dismantling its second
ring of walls as it was constructing a third, and it appears that waste and construction debris were used to fill the nearby ditch.31 In sum, while illicit waste disposal in
public space regularly drew officials’ attention and preventative action, it was a fact
of life in Bologna. However, by the second period, waste disposal violations sharply
declined, and there are only two clusters of offences, namely to the north and east
of the city, a trend that continues into the final period.
The geographical shift was accompanied by an overall reduction in this category
of allegations, as mentioned before. In the period 1287–1323, the number of waste
disposal allegations is approximately 10 times those of the subsequent periods, a
trend attributable at least in part to the gradual covering of the city’s sewage system,
itself a preventative intervention in line with Galenic principles. Another possible
explanation is the population’s decline. The Black Death took place between the
second and third periods examined, effectively halving Bologna’s population, notwithstanding ongoing urban migration. Fewer inhabitants may have thus produced
less waste or else had greater recourse to under-supervised areas where they could
dispose of it unchallenged. The decrease in waste-related violations, however,
31
R. Dondarini and C. De Angelis, Atlante Storico delle città italiane. Bologna, III, Da una crisi all’altra
(secoli XIV–XVII) (Bologna, 1996), 11–21.
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Taylor Zaneri and G. Geltner
predates the plague, although it is hard to draw a firm conclusion given that the
second period has a small sample size. By the final period, at any rate, commerce
and safety allegations comprise approximately 80 per cent of cases (as opposed to
23 per cent in the first period), suggesting that there was a shift in the conception of
health threats, which led to more intensive policing of the products that people
could buy and sell. Thus, the officials altered their focus from waste offences to
offences related to commerce, while ostensibly retaining a Galenic view in that it
was necessary to regulate and control the flow of people and goods in order to
ensure the city’s dynamic balance.
Archival sources concerning preventative interventions can be supplemented by
archaeological evidence, including the city’s defences and canal network, as well as
by examining the city’s general topography. The second set of walls, gradually dismantled in favour of a third ring and flanked by a ditch or canal, seems to have constituted a zone in which much waste was dumped.32 The canal system had both
productive as well as waste-removal purposes, as water flowed through the city
from south to north, and from the centre towards the outskirts.33 Both infrastructures and their upkeep accordingly had significant implications for creating waste
sinks and which neighbourhoods bore this environmental burden. Thus, while
city officials were clearly concerned with waste disposal and made considerable
efforts to curb practices perceived as polluting neighbourhoods or blocking ideal
flows of input and output, they also had to contend with limited resources.
Officials working to limit practices they saw as potentially dangerous faced tens of
thousands of people, not to mention numerous non-human animals, and probably
focused on the practices they felt to be most problematic, visible or easy to enforce.
The regulation of commerce by fango officials
Rather than pursuing physical cleanliness as an independent goal, Bolognese officials saw it as an integral part of maintaining the city’s moral and social order. As
we have seen, dirt masters also regulated numerous commercial activities, constantly denouncing improper and illicit transactions or those made in bad faith.
This aspect of urban policing too evolved throughout the period under examination, in the neighbourhoods and spaces city officials chose to monitor.
32
For archaeological overviews of medieval waste disposal, see Sabbionesi, ‘“Pro maiore sanitate”’, 39–93;
and S. Gelichi, ‘L’eliminazione dei rifiuti nelle città romane del nord Italia tra antichità ed alto medioevo’, in
X. Raventós and J. Vallverdú (eds.), Sordes urbis: la eliminación de residuos en la ciudad romana: actas de la
Reunión de Roma (15–16 de noviembre de 1996) (Rome, 2000), 13–23; Bocchi, ‘Gestione delle acque’, 23–9.
33
S. Cremonini and E.A. Bracci, ‘Problemi di paleoidrografia in ambito urbano. Bologna: rassegna critica
di ipotesi e nuovi dati’, in Curina, Malnati, Negrelli and Pini (eds.), Alla ricerca di Bologna antica e medievale, 167–76; S. Cremonini, ‘Il quadro geopedologico. Indicazioni sull’evoluzione geomorfologica del pedecolle e del centro storico di Bologna negli ultimi 3.000 anni’, in Ortalli and Pini (eds.), Lo scavo
archeologico, 119–41; S. Cremonini, ‘Il torrente Savena oltre i limiti dell’analisi storica. Un esempio di
archeologia fluviale’, Atti e Memorie della Deputazione di Storia Patria per le Province di Romagna, 42
(1991), 159–205; A. Zanotti, Il sistema delle acque a Bologna dal XIII al XIX secolo (Bologna, 2000), 23–
84; A. Calbi, Acquedotto 2000: Bologna, l’acqua del duemila ha duemila anni (Bologna, 1985);
G. Gottardi, A. Bugini, S. Camprini and M. Manferrari, ‘Aspetti della tradizione scientificio-tecnica idraulica bolognese’, in M. Fontana (ed.), Bologna e l’invenzione delle acque: saperi, arti e produzione tra ’500 e
’800 (Bologna, 2001), 38–101.
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Generally speaking, in the later thirteenth century, fango officers were more heavily
focused on the activities of vendors and grocers. Yet, by the later fourteenth century, their targets were more likely innkeepers and taverners; the number of innkeeper and taverner allegations increased nearly fivefold, from 68 in the later
thirteenth century to 317 by the end of the fourteenth (see Table 2).
One way to understand this shift is by postulating changing conceptions of risk,
since both vendors and grocers (who sold foodstuffs in the marketplace), as well as
taverners and innkeepers (responsible for lodging, meat and wine sales), could present physical health risks by selling spoiled products and failing to maintain their
facilities. But they also could promote moral dangers through improper sales, or in
the case of taverners and innkeepers, occasion drunkenness or rowdy and impious
behaviour such as prostitution or gambling.34
The difference in policing foci between 1287 and 1383 emerges clearly by
sequencing their locations chronologically on the city’s map (see Figure 5 and
Table 3). In the later thirteenth century, one third of all violations (153) took
place in one of three market spaces: Piazza Maggiore (114), Porta Ravennate (28)
and Campo del Mercato (11), with the violations in Piazza Maggiore far outweighing the others. The Piazza Maggiore and Porta Ravennate markets were in the city
centre, while Campo del Mercato was located in the north.
The fango officials were clearly very concerned about regulating the commercial
activities that took place within and around the markets in the first period.
However, by the later fourteenth century, the records contain less citations around
the markets, and instead shift to the south and eastern part of the city. Allegations
in the later periods are also more dispersed, with the highest number of allegations
in any one parish numbering 23, a strong decline compared with 114 violations in
Piazza Maggiore during the first period.
Gender and commercial activity in Bologna
The fango registers not only reveal the gaze of the city administration, but also provide considerable insight into the activities and movements of the charged people
themselves. For instance, there are notable differences in the ways in which men
and women moved around the city and the spaces in which they conducted their
everyday activities. One such pattern emerges as regards commercial activities.
As mentioned above, while women make up a decreasing number of fango citations
across the registers, they were often involved in commercial activities as vendors.
There were, moreover, striking differences in the locations in which women and
men conducted allegedly illegal transactions. Most women’s commercial violations
are denounced in Piazza Maggiore. Women are listed as the offenders for 266
34
M. Vise, ‘To the Podesta or the Inquisitor?: adjudicating violence against God in Bologna, 1250–1450’,
in S. Blanshei (ed.), Violence and Justice in Bologna 1250–1700 (Lanham, MD, 2018), 187–206; Blanshei,
Politics and Justice, 19–20; T. Dean, Crime and Justice in Late Medieval Italy (Cambridge, 2007), 84–94;
G. Roberts, Police Power in the Italian Communes, 1228–1326 (Amsterdam, 2019), 189–90; M. Vallerani,
‘“Giochi di posizione” tra definizioni legali e pratiche sociali nelle fonti giudiziarie bolognesi del XIII
secolo’, in G. Ortalli (ed.), Gioco e giustizia nell’Italia di Comune (Treviso, 1993), 13–34; F. Pucci
Donati, Luoghi e mestieri dell’ospitalità nel Medioevo: alberghi, taverne e osterie a Bologna tra Due e
Quattrocento (Spoleto, 2018).
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Taylor Zaneri and G. Geltner
Figure 5. Commercial charge locations
Source: ASB Fango.
Table 3. Greatest number of commercial charges per location (N)
Period 1
Piazza Maggiore
Porta Ravennate
Campo Mercato
Period 3
114
28
11
S. Lucia
S. Cecila
S. Giorgio del Poggiale
S. Procolo
Piazza Maggiore
S. Biagio
S. M. Maddalena
S. Giacomo dei Carbonesi
23
22
19
16
13
13
12
11
Source: ASB Fango.
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Urban History
21
commercial violations during our analysis period. Of these, 219 have specified locations, and nearly 75 per cent took place in Piazza Maggiore. Men’s commercial allegations display a different pattern. There are 1,188 commercial allegations
attributed to men, of which 551 have a specified location that could be mapped.
Of the latter group, less than 10 per cent were recorded in Piazza Maggiore (see
Figures 6a–f). One way to explain the disparity is that women – especially lowerclass women – were more heavily scrutinized in centralized marketplaces, which
is ironically where they were more likely to work legitimately, a factor that played
a smaller role for men. At any rate, women’s appearance in the fango records of the
last period declined, as officials shifted their focus from the market towards the
more male-dominated taverns and inns farther away from the centre.
The available sources do not directly account for the latter shift. It may reflect
the dirt masters’ choice to target inns and taverns since, as points of consumption,
they were more efficiently policed both in terms of product quality (including
weights and measures) and immoral behaviour such as gambling, drunkenness
and prostitution.35 It is also possible that an internal or even casual decision was
taken by the city council to update the division of labour within the administration.
It would have left monitoring the market to the podestà’s famiglia, while the dirt
masters would be tasked with policing behaviours and food quality. It may also
be the case that city officials began to trust market vendors (often not incorporated
in guilds) to regulate themselves, or else feared that officials’ constant presence
would deter the flow of goods. Finally – and this too remains to be explored – factors of seasonality and adjusted amount of fines could have drawn dirt masters
away from markets and into neighbourhood taverns, for instance when young
wine was coming into town during the autumn, and old wine had to be quickly
consumed. But to repeat, these are merely possibilities, however logical, whose
explicit rationale cannot as yet be drawn from the written sources.
In summary, spatial analysis in GIS reveals the dynamic nature of health
policing, processes that are hard to detect by identifying environmental factors
or documentary analysis alone. Tracing the location and type of offences cited by
fango officials in this way provides a unique insight into how earlier urban officials
conceived of health risks and implemented protocols to mitigate them. Fango data
show that the city administration was attuned to the changing hazards of urban life,
over a half-century before the outset of the Black Death. Officials shifted their attention over the course of this period from violations based on infrastructure failure
and waste neglect to more commercially oriented citations. They also altered
their spatial focus from market violations to more peripheral zones of the city, in
lockstep with the city’s changing morphology and population density.
Conclusion: pre-modern healthscaping revisited
Bolognese fango officials are unique for their abundance of surviving records which,
in combination with other written and material sources, undergird the foregone
analysis. Elsewhere across the peninsula, however, scores of similar, if more thinly
documented outfits laboured to build and protect urban environments, informed
35
Dean, Crime and Justice, 88–92; Roberts, Police Power, 18.
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22
Taylor Zaneri and G. Geltner
Figure 6. Commercial charges
Source: ASB Fango.
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Urban History
23
Figure 6. Continued
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Taylor Zaneri and G. Geltner
Figure 6. Continued
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Urban History
25
Figure 7. Viarii and camparii in central-northern Italy, c. 1200–1500. Black squares and dots represent
sites in which at least one of these outfits operated. Sites that were studied but where no evidence of
their activity survives are marked with a grey x.
Source: G. Geltner, Roads to Health: Infrastructure and Urban Wellbeing in Later Medieval Italy (Philadelphia, 2019).
by Galenic preventative health principles to differing degrees. Figure 7 depicts 84
sites where roads officials or viarii operated between 1250 and 1500, and who
often had as their rural counterparts a group of camparii or field masters looking
after hinterland infrastructure to secure urban flows of energy and waste. These
groups, to recall, worked alongside numerous other municipal officials as well as
guild members, charitable organizations, university advisors, the church and local
physicians to fight disease and promote health among all urban dwellers.
Nor was this state of affairs unique to Italy. Viarii and other infrastructure specialists, not to mention guild, medical, military and religious officials who occupied
themselves with communal health, are well attested for numerous cities since their
foundation and proliferation in the British Isles, Iberia, Germany, the Low
Countries, Scandinavia, the Balkans, Byzantium and elsewhere.36 That is not to
argue for a uniform healthscape or healthscaping practices across western Europe,
let alone the pre-modern world, even in regions that shared a learned medical tradition. Across the vast Islamicate world, for instance, the work of a religious urban
official called the muhtasib, or market inspector, involved the regular monitoring
of public hygiene since at least the ninth century, working within a decidedly
Galenic paradigm but defining himself as a moral custodian of the city.37
36
An updated bibliography on pre-modern public health in different world regions is available at: https://
premodernhealthscaping.hcommons.org/documents/.
37
P. Chalmeta Gendrón (ed.), ‘“El ‘Kitāb fī Ādāb al-Hisba” (Libro del buen gobierno del zoco) de
Al-Saqatī’, Al-Andalus, 32 (1967), 125–62 and 359–97; 33 (1968), 143–95 and 367–434; ‘Abd al Rahman
b. Nasr al-Shayzarī, The Book of the Islamic Market Inspector [Nihāyat al-Rutba fī Talab al Hisba (The
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26
Taylor Zaneri and G. Geltner
Given the overlap in medical paradigms between vast swathes of the pre-modern
world, the geospatial analysis of data from Bologna offers some parameters and
indicators for, in the first instance, preventative health measures in a humoralmedical context and a fortiori awareness thereof. Furthermore, it tests a methodology for tracing change over time and in response to diverse events and processes,
including war, famine, epidemic disease, political upheaval, economic downturns
and administrative overhauls. The rare abundance of Bolognese documents thus
offers a unique opportunity, yet at the same time emphatically rejects the notion
that these types of data are the only valid indicators for the existence and quality
of group prophylactics.38 If, however, they do open up vistas for scholars working
on different societies and medical and environmental paradigms, we will have taken
a small step towards a flexible and inclusive methodology that would foster more
transregional and comparative dialogue.
Appendix
Cumulative offences by type (N = 3,540)*
1330–47●
1287–1323●
1355–83●
Offence type
N (mappable) % of total N (mappable) % of total N (mappable) % of total
1. Animals
2. Blockage1
3. Building violation
4. Commerce2
5. Damage
6. Filth1
7. Gambling
8. Neglect1
9. Prostitution
10. Safety
11. Unknown
Totals
307 (160)
137 (133)
0
457 (291)
0
304 (274)
0
724 (644)
0
3 (0)
20 (20)
1,952 (1,522)
15.73
7.02
0.00
23.41
0.00
15.57
0.00
37.09
0.00
0.15
1.02
100
6
42
2
216
(4)
(36)
(2)
(179)
0
45 (37)
5 (5)
32 (12)
0
15 (2)
7 (3)
370 (280)
1.62
11.35
0.54
58.38
0.00
12.16
1.35
8.65
0.00
4.05
1.89
100
1 (1)
64 (50)
0
784 (298)
8 (0)
136 (98)
18 (0)
4 (2)
8 (8)
179 (0)
5 (3)
1,207 (460)
0.08
5.30
0.00
64.95
0.66
11.27
1.49
0.33
0.66
14.83
0.41
100
*The three periods total 3,529 records. There are also 11 undated records which fall between 1286 and 1370.
●
Not all years are represented for each period, as explained above.
1
The categories of blockage, filth and neglect were combined into one for GIS analysis.
2
Commerce was analysed as a stand-alone category in GIS.
Source: ASB Fango.
Utmost Authority in the Pursuit of Hisba)], trans. R.P. Buckley (Oxford, 1999); A. Ghabin, Hisba, Arts and
Craft in Islam (Wiesbaden, 2009); T.F. Glick, ‘Muhtasib and mustasaf: a case study of institutional diffusion’, Viator, 2 (1971), 59–81; T.F. Glick, ‘New perspectives on the Hisba and its Hispanic derivatives’,
Al-Qantara, 13 (1992), 475–89.
38
See G. Geltner and J. Coomans, ‘Public health beyond the simplex of the pre: a multiscalar methodology’, forthcoming.
Cite this article: Zaneri T, Geltner G (2020). The dynamics of healthscaping: mapping communal hygiene
in Bologna, 1287–1383. Urban History 1–26. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0963926820000541
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