Ecclesiastical Cultural Heritage

In the wide framework of cultural resources present on a territory, there are still instruments and assets that, for multiple reasons, do not enter in traditional mixed offer of a city or a region. Ecclesiastical cultural heritage is often part of the structures that public administrators let slip. For Italy, it seems like paradoxically. While an important part of the art history and of cultural heritage is related to the history of Church, and while there are almost no cultural itineraries that do not include an ecclesiastical reference, the so-called “ecclesiastical museums” are still a marginal part of the policies realized to improve cultural, social and economic growth of our territories.

In this article, we will discuss both the theoretical implication and the concrete opportunities that the empowerment of the ecclesiastical museums could generate for Italian territories, in terms of the touristic, cultural, and spiritual offer.

As occur for “secular” ones, the ecclesiastical museum expresses a set of differentiated values that we need to take into account: the economic and social values are, therefore, specific consequences of the intrinsic cultural and historical values represented by the artworks that the museums store and protect. Furthermore, ecclesiastical museums present an aspect that every kind of consideration needs to take into account: the relevance of the spiritual and religious values and the role of the artworks as an important tessera in the wider mosaic of evangelization function.

Introduction

In the wide framework of cultural resources present on a territory, there are still instruments and assets that, for multiple reasons, do not enter in a traditional mixed offer of a city or a region. Ecclesiastical cultural heritage is often part of the structures that public administrators let slip. For Italy, it seems like paradoxical. While an important part of the art history and of cultural heritage is related to the history of the Church, and while there are almost no cultural itineraries that do not include an ecclesiastical reference, the so-called “ecclesiastical museums” are still a marginal part of the policies realized to improve the cultural, social and economic growth of our territories.

In this article, we will discuss both the theoretical implication and the concrete opportunities that the empowerment of the ecclesiastical museums could generate for Italian territories, in terms of the touristic, cultural, and spiritual offer.

As occur for “secular” ones, the ecclesiastical museum expresses a set of differentiated values that we need to take into account: the economic and social values are, therefore, specific consequences of the intrinsic cultural and historical values represented by the artworks that the museums store and protect. Furthermore, ecclesiastical museums present an aspect that every kind of consideration needs to take into account: the relevance of the spiritual and religious values and the role of the artworks as an important tessera in the wider mosaic of evangelization function.

The article will therefore discuss three main aspects of the Italian ecclesiastical museums: the first chapter, “From religious to spiritual” will briefly deal with the theoretical dimension of the role and the relevance of ecclesiastical collections and their inclusion in a broader cultural dimension. The second chapter “Ecclesiastical Museums and their services” will analyze services and main characteristics shown by ecclesiastical museums in Italy. The third section will finally introduce the potentiality of the introduction of ecclesiastical museums in different networks, considering the recent growth of cultural and spiritual products or services.

 

From religious to spiritual

In this article we will not aim at discussing the relationship between religion and spirituality; this topic should deserve a wider reflection and a more appropriate contextualization. Nevertheless, considering the spiritual role that Church plays in the contemporary world is functional to the recognizing of the cultural and social values held by ecclesiastical museums.

By analyzing recent Encyclical Letters, in particular, those signed by Francis Pontiff, the role of spirituality emerges as an important branch of human life, particularly connected with the cultural and social dimensions of peoples:

Respect must also be shown for the various cultural riches of different peoples, their art and poetry, their interior life and spirituality [1];

There needs to be a distinctive way of looking at things, a way of thinking, policies, an educational programme, a lifestyle, and a spirituality which together generate resistance to the assault of the technocratic paradigm [2]

“We need to remember that men and women have “the capacity to improve their lot, to further their moral growth and to develop their spiritual endowments” [3]

Cultural limitations in different eras often affected the perception of these ethical and spiritual treasures [4]

A great cultural, spiritual and educational challenge stands before us, and it will demand that we set out on the long path of renewal [5];

More than in ideas or concepts as such, I am interested in how such a spirituality can motivate us to a more passionate concern for the protection of our world [6]

An adequate understanding of spirituality consists in filling out what we mean by peace, which is much more than the absence of war [7];

Thus, a community can break out of the indifference induced by consumerism. These actions cultivate a shared identity, with a story that can be remembered and handed on. In this way, the world, and the quality of life of the poorest, are cared for, with a sense of solidarity which is at the same time aware that we live in a common home which God has entrusted to us. These community actions, when they express self-giving love, can also become intense spiritual experiences. [8];

Despite these reflections are strongly related to an ecological concern, they could have direct implications in the Church cultural approach too.

In this sense, they are in line with the words of another Encyclical signed by Pope Paul VI, in which the Pontiff underlined the role of economic development for societal change:

In the present day, however, individual and group effort within these countries is no longer enough. The world situation requires the concerted effort of everyone, a thorough examination of every facet of the problem—social, economic, cultural, and spiritual. [9]

Organized programs designed to increase productivity should have but one aim: to serve human nature. They should reduce inequities, eliminate discrimination, free men from the bonds of servitude, and thus give them the capacity, in the sphere of temporal realities, to improve their lot, to further their moral growth, and to develop their spiritual endowments. When we speak of development, we should mean social progress as well as economic growth. It is not enough to increase the general fund of wealth and then distribute it more fairly. […]. Man is truly human only if he is the master of his own actions and the judge of their worth, only if he is the architect of his own progress [10]

Indeed, this approach, whose relevance today is strong as ever, could represent a starting point to re-thinking the Ecclesiastical Museum as an important resource to reflect on the relationship between religions (not only Catholic Church) and the contemporary world and its growing atheism and agnosticism [11] [12] [13] [14] [15]  [16] [17] [18] [19]

 

One of the more important documents produced by the Church regarding the topic [20] (The Pontifical Commission for the Cultural Heritage of the Church, 2001), expresses some of the most important components of Ecclesiastical Museums. In the “circular letter”, Ecclesiastical Museums are appointed as drivers of both

cultural and evangelic functions: firstly, it is acknowledged the appeal of cultural treasures in promoting the new evangelization, thanks to the variety of artistic forms [that] shows constant creation of Christian cultures.

In this sense, “[Ecclesiastical] Museums are structures that bring to light the variety of Christian cultural contributions [as well as they are] place to store and protect what is no longer in use[21]

Finally, “[Ecclesiastical] Museum [should be a] centre for bringing together culture and evangelization” and, therefore, it is claimed that “community has to support work of museum”. [22]

The document, in fact, expresses the museum as the place where there are developed (in an ecclesial sense) functions of preservation, a presentation with the aim of safeguarding memory.

This definition, and the others expressed by the same document, does not differ from the Museum Definition expressed by ICOM: A museum is a non-profit, permanent institution in the service of society and its development, open to the public, which acquires, conserves, researches, communicates and exhibits the tangible and intangible heritage of humanity and its environment for the purposes of education, study and enjoyment. [24]

 

Ecclesiastical Museums and their services

 

This substantial similitude of aims and objectives, allow us in analyzing the “Ecclesiastical Museum” object following the same methodologies with which is possible to analyze every kind of museum present on a territory.

As occurs in most analysis of museums characteristics, this kind of cultural institutions, besides the proper artworks stored and displayed, could be classified on the basis of the services that they provide to visitors.

Such an approach starts from the basic assumption that the focus of museum organization should be centered on the visitor experience and that a wide set of services offered to visitors implies a concrete commitment of the management of the museums in providing visitors with proper cultural and added-value services.

The following analyses are based upon the set of data made available by the General Register Office of Ecclesiastical Cultural Institutes [25]

In the first map, we show the distribution of the ecclesiastical museums diversified on the kind of institution and legal entity.

 

The 280 registered ecclesiastical museums are, in this sense, classified as the table that follows

The General Register Office of Ecclesiastical Cultural Institutes, furthermore, register the presence/absence of various kind of services, that we classified in main categories:

 

The maps that follow underline the distribution of ecclesiastical museums for the category expressed

Finally, the following map shows the distribution of Ecclesiastical Museums differentiated on the basis of the quantitative adoption of the services analyzed, where the purple pin indicates museums providing visitors with no service at all; orange pins indicate that the museums can provide visitors with 0-25% of the globally set of services; dark blue pins indicate, for more than 25 and less of the 50%, grey pins indicate museums providing between the 50% and the 75% of the set of services and, turquoise pins indicate full services museums.

Thanks to the map visualization it is possible to underline some trends within the geographical distribution of the Ecclesiastical Museum. Despite the distribution of a single category of services does not show important differences between north and south of Italy, the distribution aggregated show a concentration of museums that offer more than 75% of the services listed, in the northern side of the Country.

 

 Final Remarks

 

Proposed analyses have visible limits that are important to underline: first, the categories are arbitrary. This implies that different categorizations are possible and that could lead to different results. Second, in the single category analyses, an on-off approach has been adopted: in other terms, a museum providing visitors with 3 of 4 services included in the category has been classified with 0. This approach has been adopted in order to show consistent results. Third, the categories include both services space-related and management-related. This implies that for some museums providing visitors with specific services is not possible at all.

In spite of these limits, the conducted analyses allow us to highlight two main characteristics of the Ecclesiastical Museums. The first remark is that ecclesiastical museums represent a widespread network of cultural resources along with all the Country. The second one is that this network is represented by museums that are, to a various degree, concerned with the production and the providing of different categories of services to their visitors.

These characteristics define a set of resources that could play an important role in the cultural offer of territories.

This is particularly true in recent times, also thanks to the affirmation and the rise of particular cultural and touristic consumption that could be easily associated with a visit in small museums, especially in non-conventional cities or small towns.

It is not only the case of religious tourism, which combines natural elements with a spiritual and experiential attitude, but also the case of sustainable tourism (in its wider sense) that could combine peculiar characteristics of the touristic experience (food, wine, nature, routes) with the discovering of unexpected beauties.

In this sense, a territorial offer mixing both naturalistic and cultural elements could represent a valid experience for those tourists or citizens that are unlikely to be satisfied by hit-and-run visits and that are, rather, more attracted by meaningful experiences.

Following the results of a recent survey addressed to “Via Francigena” routers, the reasons that lead persons to participate to this kind of experience are various:

For the Ecclesiastical Museums, it could be an important opportunity to reach a different kinds of visitors and to empower the evangelization function that is one of the main objectives that they pursue.

The creation of such a network could help bone’s territories [26] and marginal destinations [27] in reaching an autonomous cultural and touristic identity through which set up and communicate a cultural offer concretely matching potential visitors’ needs.

 

 

 

References

[1] Laudato sì: Page 45;

[2] Luadato sì: Page 84;

[3] Laudato sì: Page 94;

[4] Laudato Sì: Page 147;

[5] Laudato Sì: Page 149;

[6] Laudato Sì: Page 148;

[7] Laudato Sì: Page 164;

[8] Laudato Sì: Page 168;

[9] Populorum Progressio (1967), Page: 3

[10] Populorum Progressio (1967), Page 6

[11] The World’s Newest Major Religion: No Religion; National Geographic https://news.nationalgeographic.com/2016/04/160422-atheism-agnostic-secular-nones-rising-religion/

[12] ATHEISM, AGNOSTICISM, AND NONBELIEF: A QUALITATIVE AND QUANTITATIVE STUDY OF TYPE AND NARRATIVE https://scholar.utc.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1536&context=theses

[13] The Inexpressible God http://booksandjournals.brillonline.com/content/journals]/10.1163/157092598×00149

[14] From Being to Becoming: Science and Theology in the Eighteenth Century https://www.asa3.org/ASA/PSCF/1991/PSCF12-91Miles.html

[15] Ateísmo crescente? http://correio.rac.com.br/_conteudo/2014/05/colunistas/inhauser/175128-ateismo-crescente.html

[16] Religioni Europa: la mappa dei paesi più atei https://www.termometropolitico.it/1261770_religioni-europa-mappa-paesi-atei.html

[17] Arabi senza Dio. Ateismo e libertà di culto in Medio Oriente https://books.google.it/books?id=LUh3CgAAQBAJ&pg=PT101&lpg=PT101&dq=ateismo+crescente&source=bl&ots=NsrLyXA7Dz&sig=-CvrpgWU4Rzv_V5M1qnWYfUq2DY&hl=it&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwjehNCa0-vZAhVRC-wKHUGCA4wQ6AEIUDAG#v=onepage&q=ateismo%20crescente&f=false

[18] Ateísmo crescente preocupa países do Oriente Médio https://www.paulopes.com.br/2017/07/ateismo-crescente-preocupa-paises-do-oriente-medio.html#.Wqj_lujOVPY

[19] Secular Humanism and Atheism beyond Progressive Secularism https://academic.oup.com/socrel/article-abstract/68/4/407/1599669

[20] THE PASTORAL FUNCTION OF ECCLESIASTICAL MUSEUMS

[21] Ibid;

[22] Ibid;

[23] Ibid;

[24] http://icom.museum/the-vision/museum-definition/

[25] ANagrafe dei Beni Culturali Ecclesiastici  http://www.anagrafebbcc.chiesacattolica.it/anagraficaCEIBib/

[26] Bone’s Territories: Territorial Heritage and Local Autonomy in Italian Inner Areas

https://www.tafterjournal.it/2015/09/15/bones-territories-territorial-heritage-and-local-autonomy-in-italian-inner-areas.pdf

[27] Development of marginal destinations: the case of Menfi

Development of marginal destinations: the case of Menfi