From Giotto's artistic revolution at the dawn of the fourteenth century to the scientific discoveries of Galileo in the early seventeenth, this book explores the cultural developments of one of the most remarkable and vibrant periods of history--the Italian Renaissance. What makes the period all the more amazing is that this flowering of the visual arts, literature, and philosophy occurred against a backdrop of political turbulence involving civic factionalism, repeated foreign invasions, and war.
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. Traversing the entire Italian Peninsula-- Florence, Rome, Milan, Venice, Naples and Sicily--this book examines the rich regional diversity of Renaissance cultural experience and considers men's and women's lives, their changing social attitudes and beliefs across three centuries. This second edition has been updated throughout, it now contains 40 colour images and includes new material on minorities, heretics, and witches.
Readers will need no preliminary background on the subject matter, as the story is told in a lively readable narrative. Interdisciplinary in nature, its characters are merchants, bankers, artists, saints, soldiers of fortune, poets, popes, and courtesans. With brief literary excerpts, first-hand accounts, and color images that help bring the era to life, this is an ideal text for students in a college survey course, as well as for the interested general reader or traveler to Italy who is curious to learn more about the extraordinary heritage 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, 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.