Accursia

Accursia (ca. 1230 - 1281) was allegedly an Italian jurist from Bologna, whose existence is debated. Accursia is said to have taught law in the Bologna studium,[1] becoming a model of a cultured woman, capable of carrying out the activities reserved for men.[2] Doubts about the existence of Accursia arose in the Eighteenth Century when the Camaldolese father Mauro Sarti, historian of the University of Bologna, found no trace of her in the ancient documents of the studium.[3] The earliest mention of Accursia is found in a document by the jurist Alberico da Rosciate, who wrote "I heard that Accursius had a daughter, who actually studyied at Bologna" suggesting that her existence was dubious.[4]

References

  1. Guidi Panziroli, De claris legum interpretibus. Libri quatuor. Octauij Panziroli auctoris ex fratre nepotis, cathedralis Ecclesiae Regij canonici opera, ac summa diligentia in lucem editi. Ad illustrissimum, et reuerendiss. D.D. Ioannem Iacobum Panzirolum, Cum duplici indice, vno capitum, altero rerum praecipuarum copiosissimo, Venetijs: apud Marcum Antonium Brogiollum, 1637, p. 121
  2. Jane Stevenson (2005). Women Latin Poets: Language, Gender, and Authority, from Antiquity to the Eighteenth Century. Oxford University Press, 2005. p. 150. ISBN 9780198185024.
  3. Mauro Sarti, De claris Archigymnasii Bononiensis professoribus a saeculo XI usque ad saeculum XIV. Tomi I, Pars I. Bononiae: ex typographia Laelii a Vulpe Instituti Scientiarium typographi, 1769, p. 144. Il Sarti peraltro non trovò traccia neanche di Bettisia Gozzadini, altra leggendaria giurista del XIII secolo
  4. Tiraboschi, Girolamo (1823). Storia della letteratura italiana con Indice generale Vol 4. Milan: SocietĂ  tipografica de' classici italiani. p. 415. audivi quod Accursius unam filiam habuit, quae actu legebat Bononiae


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