Article
Spanish
ID: <
oai:doaj.org/article:fb8cdc1656fc40f1a2eabd13e6cb2ccf>
·
DOI: <
10.33776/erebea.v7i0.3298>
Abstract
The test looks at the numerous voices of dissent in Naples against the Circa pastoralis bubble issued by Pio V in 1566, which stated that all monks had to be kept strictly. The main rebellion was the religious beliefs of S. Gregorio Armeno and S. Patrizia, a gelose guardianship of their own prerogatives and female representatives of the fringes among the least accommodative of the Neile nobility. Many of them left the convent despite not being subject to those rules; others were taken away from the secular arm of the viceré at the threat of their arms for the occasion. Some brought an action before the courts, both civil and ecclesiastical, leaving in the minutes of the trials they were instructed for the opportunity to remind them of their resistance to a rule that would then have been regulated much more strictly, not only monastic life, but also family relations within and outside the monasteries.