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Pope Joan by Donna Woolfolk Cross
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Whenever you see a legend, you can be sure, if you go to the very bottom of things, that you will find history. Vallet de Viriville

Joan Anglicus is a frustrated young girl. The brightest and most scholarly of all her siblings, she is often denied the chance to learn because of her sex. The Dark Ages were a time when womens brains were thought to be smaller than a man's and only needed for child bearing. Why teach a girl to read and write? Joan cannot accept this. She runs away with her older brother, and after he is killed in a Viking attack, she disguises herself and assumes his identity at a Benedictine monastery. As Brother John Anglicus, she is sought out for her great healing abilities and religious intellect, until eventually she is elevated to the highest throne in the world at the time, the papacy.

The story of Pope Joan, a woman who lived disguised as a man and rose to become pope of the Church in the ninth century, is one of the most fascinating in Western history, and one of the least known. Most that have heard of her regard her story as a legend contrived by Protestant reformers, or so the Catholic Church would have you believe, not at all based on facts. But as Viriville said, legend and history are often one in the same.

Even though much is not known of the Dark Ages, Woolfolk Cross has done her homework here. This book is well-researched and well-written. I was completely sucked in and had a hard time putting it down. I found the history fascinating. These troubled times were especially difficult for women - as they still are today in some countries. They had no property rights, no opportunity for education. They could be beaten and raped by their husbands at will. So it seems completely logical that a woman would chose to disguise herself as a man. She certainly wouldn鈥檛 have been the only woman in history to do so.

So why deny she existed at all? Extreme mortification of course, that a woman could deceive so many. History provides many examples of the deliberate falsification of records to suit the masses. But what of the proof? What of the so-called chair exam, where each candidate was examined to prove his manhood as part of the medieval papal conservation ceremony for almost six centuries? What of the 鈥渟hunned street鈥� in Rome on which Joan reportedly 鈥淛ohn Anglicus gave birth to a child鈥︹€�

Even with these facts, given the confusion of the ninth century, it is impossible to know for sure if she existed. We may never know if there really was a Pope Joan. True or not, I sure had a good time reading about it though. An excellent book.

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Reading Progress

March 9, 2009 – Shelved
April 9, 2009 –
page 85
20.14%
April 13, 2009 –
page 175
41.47%
Started Reading
April 14, 2009 –
page 300
71.09%
April 14, 2009 – Finished Reading

Comments Showing 1-2 of 2 (2 new)

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message 1: by Suzette (new)

Suzette When you get to this one I'll be anxious to hear how you like it. I heard about it from a lady at the pool last summer and it sounds really interesting, but a little odd at the same time. I'll see what you think before I venture into it.


Johannes The chair exam is just two chairs the pope had to sit on, as a sign to get might which by the roman population was vulgarly interpreted as a test of manhood... The way of the procession probably simply changed because the old way (via santi Quattro coronati) was too narrow...


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