Florence in the Early Modern World

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A01=Brian J. Maxson
A01=Nicholas Scott Baker
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art history
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Coluccio Salutati
comparative Mediterranean urbanism
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Cosimo II
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digital humanities mapping
early modern cities
early modern commerce
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Eurasia
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Giovan Battista Andreini
global Renaissance studies
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historiography
humanist intellectual exchange
Isabella Andreini
Islamic world
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Late Medieval
late medieval England
mapping
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Palazzo Pitti
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Renaissance Florence
Renaissance Italy
Rinaldo Degli Albizzi
Rome
Salone Dei Cinquecento
Scriptor Apostolicus
sixteenth-century Mediterranean
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Studia Humanitatis
transnational urban history
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Tuscan City
Tuscan humanists
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Product details

  • ISBN 9781138313316
  • Weight: 510g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 09 Jul 2019
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
  • Language: English
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Florence in the Early Modern World offers new perspectives on this important city by exploring the broader global context of the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, within which the experience of Florence remains unique.

By exploring the city’s relationship to its close and distant neighbours, this collection of interdisciplinary essays reveals the transnational history of Florence. The chapters orient the lenses of the most recent historiographical turns perfected in studies on Venice, Rome, Bologna, Naples, and elsewhere towards Florence. New techniques, such as digital mapping, alongside new comparisons of architectural theory and merchants in Eurasia, provide the latest perspectives about Florence’s cultural and political importance before, during, and after the Renaissance. From Florentine merchants in Egypt and India, through actual and idealized military ambitions in the sixteenth-century Mediterranean, to Tuscan humanists in late medieval England, the contributors to this interdisciplinary volume reveal the connections Florence held to early modern cities across the globe.

This book steers away from the historical narrative of an insular Renaissance Europe and instead identifies the significance of other global influences. By using Florence as a case study to trace these connections, this volume of essays provides essential reading for students and scholars of early modern cities and the Renaissance.

Nicholas Scott Baker is Senior Lecturer in early modern history at Macquarie University, Australia. He is the author of The Fruit of Liberty: Political Culture in the Florentine Renaissance, 1480–1550 (2013) and is completing a book on how Italians thought about the future during the Renaissance.

Brian Jeffrey Maxson is Associate Professor of History at East Tennessee State University, USA. He is the author of The Humanist World of Renaissance Florence (2014) and is currently working on a study of the distinction and manipulation of private and public conceptions in Renaissance Italy.

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