Michele Carcano

Michele Carcano O.F.M. Obs. (Michael de Carcanis de Mediolano) (Lomazzo,[1] 1427- 20 March 1484) was an Italian Franciscan preacher. He is known for his part in founding the montes pietatis banking system, with Bernardine of Feltre.

Blessed Michele Carcano
Universal preacher of the Church
Born1427
Lomazzo,
Duchy of Milan,
Italy
Died20 March 1484
Lodi,
Duchy of Milan,
Italy
Venerated inCatholic Church
Feast20 March
Attributescross, skull,
PatronageSant'Anna Hospital chapel, Como

Background

Confessionale generale, 1500

The Montes Pietatius were charitable institutions of credit that lent money at low rates of interest, or without interest at all, upon the security of objects left in pawn, with a view to protecting persons in want from usurers. As Christians were forbidden to practice usury, i.e., taking loans on interest, it created a sort of monopoly of the credit business to the Jews. However, the so-called "Coarsini" (named after the town of Cavour in Piedmont), and the Lombards, who were a kind of travelling bankers, often charge interest much greater than Jewish lenders.

Life

Michele Carcano was born in 1427 to a noble family of Milan, he joined the Franciscans in 1442. After his ordination, he became an itinerant preacher.

The mons pietatis of Perugia was founded in consequence of Carcano's preaching in that city in 1461, in which he inveighed against the usury of the Jews. The fund for that charitable establishment was made up in part by voluntary contributions and in part by money lent by the Jews themselves.[2]

He preached against usury, which he connected to the Jews. His anti-Semitic discourses did much to embolden persecution against Jews, particularly in the case of the blood libel concerning Simon of Trent. On Holy Thursday in the year 1475, the child, then about 20 months old, son of a gardener, was missed by its parents. On the evening of Easter Sunday the body was found in a ditch. Several Jews were accused of the alleged murder, cruelly tortured, and executed.[3]

His sermons were later printed as Sermones quadragesimales fratris Michaelis de Mediolano de decem preceptis (1492). They include arguments in favour of religious art.[4]

References

  1. Sito Ufficiale della Rievocazione Storica Pace di Lomazzo 1286 Archived 2008-04-09 at the Wayback Machine
  2. Benigni, Umberto. "Montes Pietatis." The Catholic Encyclopedia Vol. 10. New York: Robert Appleton Company, 1911. 29 January 2019 This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  3. Wolfsgrüber, Cölestin. "Trent." The Catholic Encyclopedia Vol. 15. New York: Robert Appleton Company, 1912. 30 January 2019
  4. Geraldine A. Johnson, Renaissance Art: A Very Short Introduction (2005), p. 37.
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