From Protections for miserabiles personae to Legal Privileges for International Travellers: The Historical Development of the Medieval Canon Law regarding Pilgrims
2019
Religious pilgrims of the Middle Ages enjoyed certain protections. Protection of person and property, access to
hospitality, and protections against fiscal abuse, such as extra tolls, remained constant and were well-established
within cultural assumptions about the special status of pilgrims. Nevertheless, historical development did take
place in canon law regulations regarding pilgrims. The Carolingian period emphasized the personal pastoral
responsibility of priests to give hospitality; meanwhile pilgrims were most often grouped with miserabiles
personae such as widows, orphans, and pauperes. It also stressed protection of person. In a changing socioeconomic and institutional landscape, the high Middle Ages began to associate pilgrims with groups such as
merchants. Protection of property at one’s home was more clearly established, along with other legal privileges.
Pilgrims also gained more specific spiritual privileges, such as being able to confess during an interdict. In general,
the legal regulations regarding pilgrims and the canonistic jurisprudence about them became more specific and
technically defined in the later period, especially in light of Roman law jurisprudence, more advanced legal
procedures, and new institutions such as religious orders devoted to offering hospitality to pilgrims.
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