When I first heard about the Sanctum Praeputium I thought it was a joke thought up by some medievalist. However, in the Middle Ages there was much debate if a little piece of Jesus Christ remained on Earth.
Relics played an important role in medieval Christianity. The physical remains of saints and holy figures were considered an essential part of the faith, offering a powerful connection with Heaven. As one twelfth-century monk wrote, “the divine power works through things that have been consecrated by use and contact with the hands,” of the saints. Relics were venerated and were brought out for multiple purposes, ranging from assisting with healing to being brought before an army to serve as inspiration.
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Relics could be man-made objects, such as cloaks or shoes, or they could be the body parts of the saints themselves – a tooth, hand, or even a head – the head of John the Baptist was particularly popular (with several of them circulating around the medieval world). There was intense demand by churches to have as many as relics as they could, the more prominent the better, as they drew in eager worshippers like tourists today. Some churches and monasteries would list hundreds of relics in their collection. The trade in these holy goods would lead to many frauds, thefts and plundering – the conquest of Constantinople in the Fourth Crusade saw much of the city’s relics being taken away to Western Europe.
The most important relics were those associated with Jesus Christ – such as the True Cross where he died upon, or the Mother’s Milk of Mary. However, since Jesus was said to ascend to Heaven with his body, there could not be any of his own bodily remains left – except, perhaps, those that he left behind before he was killed, such as his blood or his fingernails.
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All this brings us to the story of Jesus’ circumcision, which the Roman Catholic Church celebrated eight days after his birth on January 1st. Following the Jewish rite, Jesus was circumcised, which leaves the question of what became of his foreskin.
Very few articles have been written on the topic of the Holy Foreskin (known in Latin as Sanctum Praeputium), partly because in the year 1900 the Roman Catholic Church threatened to excommunicate anyone who did so. However, Robert Palazzo bravely did his research and his article “The Veneration of the Sacred Foreskin(s) of Baby Jesus: A Documentary Analysis,” offers some interesting details about this relic. He notes that apocryphal gospels, such as The First Gospel of Baby Jesus, which was written sometime before the sixth century, described how the foreskin was kept and passed down from generation to generation.
By the eleventh century, several churches in Europe explained they had the Holy Foreskin. The story usually went something like this: Jesus’ mother Mary kept the foreskin, along with the umbilical cord, and later gave it to Mary Magdalene. We then jump forward several centuries to the time of Charlemagne, when an angel gave the relic to the Emperor. From there it went to this church or that city, including to Rome. In 1421, it was even sent to Catherine of Valois in England, so that it would bring good fortune (and a pregnancy) to her marriage with Henry V.
Palazzo has been able to find at least 31 churches in Europe that claimed to have the Holy Foreskin sometime during the Middle Ages, including ones in Paris, Antwerp, Bologna, Compostela and Toulouse.
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Meanwhile, one can also read a lot of theological commentary about whether or not the Holy Foreskin could be real, much of it negative. For example, Anastasius Sinaita, a seventh-century writer, denied it could still exist:
We can be sure that he, having voluntarily submitted himself to the act of circumcision, will have kept his foreskin, so that it could be restored to his body following his resurrection, thus allowing him to ascend to his heavenly father with a perfect body, entire and intact.
The Czech reformer John Hus (1369-1415) was more blunt:
To teach that Christ’s foreskin survives is just as foolish as to teach that Christ’s head survives, cut off from his body.
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Meanwhile the mystic Catherine of Siena, wrote in her letters of getting a wedding ring from Jesus that he made from his foreskin. An even stranger story was told by Agnes Blannbekin (1244-1315), who revealed to her confessor:
She began to think about the foreskin of Christ, where it may be located… And behold, soon she felt with the greatest sweetness on her tongue a little piece of skin like the skin of an egg, which she swallowed. After she had swallowed it, she again felt the little skin on her tongue with sweetness as before, and again she swallowed it. And this happened about a hundred times.
The whole matter was even brought before Pope Innocent III (1198-1216), who was asked to decide whether or not the foreskin and umbilical cord was a true relic. The Pope replied, “Rather than attempt rash answers to such questions, it is better that they be left entirely to God.” This seems to be the line that the Papacy has taken since, although as the idea became criticized and mocked by Protestants, the Holy Foreskin has been gradually hidden away and not talked about by the church.
The last place known to have publicly shown the Holy Foreskin was the Italian village of Calcata, which lies 30 miles north of Rome. The locals claimed that the relic had been there since 1527 and every year on January 1st, it would be taken out of the local church and paraded around. Then in 1983, it mysteriously disappeared, taken from a shoebox underneath the priest’s bed. Many locals believe that it was the Vatican that was responsible for taking away their precious relic. It has, however, brought an end to one of the strangest stories of medieval Christianity.
Robert Palazzo, “The Veneration of the Sacred Foreskin(s) of Baby Jesus: A Documentary Analysis,” Multicultural Europe and Cultural Exchange in the Middle Ages and Renaissance, ed. James P. Helfers (Brepols, 2005)
By Peter Koniecczny
When I first heard about the Sanctum Praeputium I thought it was a joke thought up by some medievalist. However, in the Middle Ages there was much debate if a little piece of Jesus Christ remained on Earth.
Relics played an important role in medieval Christianity. The physical remains of saints and holy figures were considered an essential part of the faith, offering a powerful connection with Heaven. As one twelfth-century monk wrote, “the divine power works through things that have been consecrated by use and contact with the hands,” of the saints. Relics were venerated and were brought out for multiple purposes, ranging from assisting with healing to being brought before an army to serve as inspiration.
Relics could be man-made objects, such as cloaks or shoes, or they could be the body parts of the saints themselves – a tooth, hand, or even a head – the head of John the Baptist was particularly popular (with several of them circulating around the medieval world). There was intense demand by churches to have as many as relics as they could, the more prominent the better, as they drew in eager worshippers like tourists today. Some churches and monasteries would list hundreds of relics in their collection. The trade in these holy goods would lead to many frauds, thefts and plundering – the conquest of Constantinople in the Fourth Crusade saw much of the city’s relics being taken away to Western Europe.
The most important relics were those associated with Jesus Christ – such as the True Cross where he died upon, or the Mother’s Milk of Mary. However, since Jesus was said to ascend to Heaven with his body, there could not be any of his own bodily remains left – except, perhaps, those that he left behind before he was killed, such as his blood or his fingernails.
All this brings us to the story of Jesus’ circumcision, which the Roman Catholic Church celebrated eight days after his birth on January 1st. Following the Jewish rite, Jesus was circumcised, which leaves the question of what became of his foreskin.
Very few articles have been written on the topic of the Holy Foreskin (known in Latin as Sanctum Praeputium), partly because in the year 1900 the Roman Catholic Church threatened to excommunicate anyone who did so. However, Robert Palazzo bravely did his research and his article “The Veneration of the Sacred Foreskin(s) of Baby Jesus: A Documentary Analysis,” offers some interesting details about this relic. He notes that apocryphal gospels, such as The First Gospel of Baby Jesus, which was written sometime before the sixth century, described how the foreskin was kept and passed down from generation to generation.
By the eleventh century, several churches in Europe explained they had the Holy Foreskin. The story usually went something like this: Jesus’ mother Mary kept the foreskin, along with the umbilical cord, and later gave it to Mary Magdalene. We then jump forward several centuries to the time of Charlemagne, when an angel gave the relic to the Emperor. From there it went to this church or that city, including to Rome. In 1421, it was even sent to Catherine of Valois in England, so that it would bring good fortune (and a pregnancy) to her marriage with Henry V.
Palazzo has been able to find at least 31 churches in Europe that claimed to have the Holy Foreskin sometime during the Middle Ages, including ones in Paris, Antwerp, Bologna, Compostela and Toulouse.
Meanwhile, one can also read a lot of theological commentary about whether or not the Holy Foreskin could be real, much of it negative. For example, Anastasius Sinaita, a seventh-century writer, denied it could still exist:
We can be sure that he, having voluntarily submitted himself to the act of circumcision, will have kept his foreskin, so that it could be restored to his body following his resurrection, thus allowing him to ascend to his heavenly father with a perfect body, entire and intact.
The Czech reformer John Hus (1369-1415) was more blunt:
To teach that Christ’s foreskin survives is just as foolish as to teach that Christ’s head survives, cut off from his body.
Meanwhile the mystic Catherine of Siena, wrote in her letters of getting a wedding ring from Jesus that he made from his foreskin. An even stranger story was told by Agnes Blannbekin (1244-1315), who revealed to her confessor:
She began to think about the foreskin of Christ, where it may be located… And behold, soon she felt with the greatest sweetness on her tongue a little piece of skin like the skin of an egg, which she swallowed. After she had swallowed it, she again felt the little skin on her tongue with sweetness as before, and again she swallowed it. And this happened about a hundred times.
The whole matter was even brought before Pope Innocent III (1198-1216), who was asked to decide whether or not the foreskin and umbilical cord was a true relic. The Pope replied, “Rather than attempt rash answers to such questions, it is better that they be left entirely to God.” This seems to be the line that the Papacy has taken since, although as the idea became criticized and mocked by Protestants, the Holy Foreskin has been gradually hidden away and not talked about by the church.
The last place known to have publicly shown the Holy Foreskin was the Italian village of Calcata, which lies 30 miles north of Rome. The locals claimed that the relic had been there since 1527 and every year on January 1st, it would be taken out of the local church and paraded around. Then in 1983, it mysteriously disappeared, taken from a shoebox underneath the priest’s bed. Many locals believe that it was the Vatican that was responsible for taking away their precious relic. It has, however, brought an end to one of the strangest stories of medieval Christianity.
Further Readings:
Robert Bartlett, Why Can the Dead Do Such Great Things? (Princeton University Press, 2013)
David Farley, “Fore Shame: Did the Vatican steal Jesus’ foreskin so people would shut up about the savior’s penis?” Slate Magazine (December 2006)
Charles Freeman, Holy Bones, Holy Dust: How Relics Shaped the History of Medieval Europe (Yale University Press, 2011)
J.J. Mattelaer; R.A. Schipper and S. Das, “The Circumcision of Jesus Christ,” The Journal of Urology, Vol. 178:1 (2007)
Robert Palazzo, “The Veneration of the Sacred Foreskin(s) of Baby Jesus: A Documentary Analysis,” Multicultural Europe and Cultural Exchange in the Middle Ages and Renaissance, ed. James P. Helfers (Brepols, 2005)
James Aaron White, Ring of Flesh: Late Medieval Devotion to the Holy Foreskin, PhD Dissertation, University of Alberta, 2022
Top Image: The Circumcision – painting by Meister des Hohenlandenberger Altars, created c.1480 – Wikimedia Commons
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