Crime and its Punishment: Alfonso Ceccarelli's False Chronicles.

Autor: Kivistö, Sari
Předmět:
Zdroj: COLLeGIUM; 2015, Vol. 17, p148-175, 28p
Abstrakt: This article focuses on the tradition of false chronicles in the early modern period, presenting some famous impostors and forgers, their motives, methods and justifications for their work. One interesting figure in the history of forgeries was Alfonso Ceccarelli (1532-1583), a medical doctor who, in order to acquire easy money, began composing fictive historical documents such as family trees that traced a family's roots to important bishops, popes and ancient heroes. To give credibility to these fictive genealogies, Ceccarelli compiled historical manuscripts, which he passed off as genuine documents, and he referred to non-existent chronicles to verify his claims. When his frauds and forgeries were finally revealed and he was publicly accused in court, Ceccarelli confessed that he had indeed created many kinds of documents, but he appealed to his good intentions and insisted that when he added something to an old book, he justified it by adding truth. Ceccarelli's case is particularly fascinating because he was severely punished for his forgeries; before his death he produced an apology that questioned the distinctions between true and false histories. This article argues that Ceccarelli's story reveals important conventions in traditional historiography (to use his expression) and broadens our notions of the functions and significance of such falsifications in rewriting the past. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Databáze: Complementary Index