Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Item

The fires of hell and the burning of heretics in the accounts of the executions at Orleans in 1022

Barbezat, Michael D.
Citations
Google Scholar:
Altmetric:
Abstract
This article examines the significance of hell and hellfire in the sources for the first recorded burning of humans for the crime of heresy in the medieval West at Orleans in 1022. It suggests that the main sources for this event describe the execution of the heretics by fire as an enactment of their eschatological destinies. The division of humanity into two overarching communities, namely the saved and the damned, shapes both the accounts near-contemporaries offered of this event and also the context in which they placed it. The exposure and destruction of the heretics at Orleans reinforces the shared identity of Christian society. The fires of execution literally handed the heretics at Orleans off to the fires of hell, enacting in miniature the fate that awaited all those who failed to take their place within a united Christian society, be they heretics, Muslims or Jews.
Keywords
hell, heresy, execution, fire, apocalypticism
Date
2014
Type
Journal article
Journal
Journal of Medieval History
Book
Volume
40
Issue
4
Page Range
399-420
Article Number
ACU Department
Relation URI
Source URL
Event URL
Open Access Status
License
File Access
Controlled
Notes