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The fifteen chapters move briskly from the Fall of the Roman Empire in the West through the growth of the Italian city-states, where, in the crucible of pandemic disease and social unrest, a new approach to learning known as humanism was forged, political and religious certainties challenged.
List of contents
Chapter 1 Out of the Ashes: The Rise of the Communes and Florence in the Age of Dante / Chapter 2 The Crises of the Fourteenth Century: Climatic, Epidemic, Demographic Disasters / Chapter 3 Back to the Future: Italian Humanists Recover the Classical Past / Chapter 4 Caput Mundi Again? The City of Rome Reborn / Chapter 5 Hearth and Home: Lay Piety, Women, and the Family / Chapter 6 Lords of the Renaissance: The Medici, Visconti, and Sforza Dynasties through 1466 / Chapter 7 The Mezzogiorno: The ‘Other Renaissance’ in Naples and Sicily / Chapter 8 La Serenissima: When Venice Ruled the Seas / Chapter 9 Magnificent Florence: Life Under Lorenzo De’ Medici / Chapter 10 1494: The Beginning of the Calamities of Italy / Chapter 11 Paradoxes of the High Renaissance: Art in a Time of Turmoil / Chapter 12 The 1527 Sack of Rome and its Aftermath / Chapter 13 Reformations: Political, Religious, and Artistic Upheaval / Chapter 14 The ‘Imperial Renaissance’: Italy During the Spanish Peace / Chapter 15 Celestial Revolutions: Heaven and Earth Collide at the Turn of the Seventeenth Century / Epilogue: The End of the Renaissance?
About the author
Lisa Kaborycha holds a Ph.D. in Medieval and Early Modern European History from the University of California, Berkeley and has been the recipient of a Fulbright Fellowship; a National Endowment for the Humanities Fellowship with the Medici Archive Project; and Harvard's Villa I Tatti Fellowship in Italian Renaissance Studies. In addition to
A Short History of Renaissance Italy, and
Voices from the Italian Renaissance, she is the author of
A Corresponding Renaissance: Letters Written by Italian Women, 1375-1650 (2016). For years Kaborycha taught courses in Renaissance History for the University of California and currently works as adjunct professor at the University of New Haven Tuscany Campus and lecturer at the British Institute of Florence.
Summary
The fifteen chapters move briskly from the Fall of the Roman Empire in the West through the growth of the Italian city-states, where, in the crucible of pandemic disease and social unrest, a new approach to learning known as humanism was forged, political and religious certainties challenged.