Sneha Girap (Editor)

Francesco Calcagno

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
Francesco Calcagno


Died
  
1550

Francesco Calcagno Francesco Calcagno CiccioCalcagno Twitter

Palagonia: ucciso Francesco Calcagno, coinvolto nella morte del consigliere Leonardo


Francesco Calcagno (1528–1550) was a young Franciscan friar famously executed for blasphemy and sodomy by the Venetian Inquisition.

Contents

Francesco Calcagno Storia gay Processo a un libertino sodomita Francesco Calcagno

Calcagno and the Venetian Inquisition

Calcagno, a twenty-two-year-old Franciscan friar from Brescia, was interrogated in Brescia on 15 July 1550 and executed in Venice on 23 December 1550, after an investigation by the Holy Office of the Venetian Inquisition relating to the offenses of atheistic blasphemy and sodomy.

A witness familiar with Calcagno testified that the Franciscan slept with a boy almost every night, believed that Jesus engaged in sodomy with St. John, and denied the existence of God and Paradise, as well as the immortality of the human soul.

Calcagno admitted his guilt and mentioned that he had once talked to a certain Mr. Lauro di Glisenti da Vestone, an atheist who "said he didn't believe in anything, only what you could see with your eyes," and replied "Well then you can believe or say anything you want about Christ no matter how bad, like that he kept Saint John as his boy." He also argued that Paul the Apostle had condemned sodomy in his writings because he enjoyed the practice and wanted to keep it to himself. Calcagno also told the inquisitors that he had been influenced in his opinions by La cazzaria, a homoerotic 1530 dialogue by Antonio Vignali that was discreetly (but widely) circulated at the time.

The laicized friar maintained his rebellious attitude, continuing to parody the Catholic Church and its beliefs and celebrating Mass in spite of being forbidden from doing so.

References

Francesco Calcagno Wikipedia