In 1306, when
Henry II of Jerusalem signed a patent to give the
Kingdom of Cyprus to the governorship of
Amalric, Lord of Tyre, the marshal of the temple accompanying Amalric reportedly said "Quod scripsi, scripsi" with disdain to Henry when he signed the patent. On being released from imprisonment in 1418,
Antipope John XXIII came, broken down and destitute, to Florence, and was given an asylum there by
Giovanni di Bicci de' Medici, who, when the deposed Pope died in the following year, erected to his memory
the tomb which is to be seen in the
Florence Baptistery. When the inscription was put up (after Giovanni's death),
Pope Martin V objected to the words "Quandam Papa" (former Pope) and wrote to the
Signoria demanding that they should be erased. The reply was a refusal, written by
Cosimo de' Medici, and couched in the words of Pontius Pilate, saying, "Quod scripsi, scripsi." The philosopher
Immanuel Kant used a play on "Quod scripsi, scripsi" in response to critics of his
Metaphysics of Morals, using "Quod scripsi, scribentes" (What I have written, I am writing). == References ==