Florence
Introduction
Florence has long been considered the epicenter of the Italian Renaissance because of the early and conspicuous development there of humanism and the city’s stunning innovations in the visual arts. Yet this landlocked city was also a major European economic center renowned for its thriving textile industries, extensive banking networks, and creative mechanisms of public finance. In contrast to the celebrated political stability of the Venetian republic, Florence was haunted by frequent political upheavals and deep social tensions that ultimately led to the collapse of the guild republic and the advent of the Medici principate in the early 16th century. Home to illustrious political figures such as Lorenzo de’ Medici, as well as thinkers like Machiavelli, Florence was at base a city of merchants and artisans throughout the republican period. It was their exceptional propensity for record keeping, as much as the city’s vaunted cultural achievements, that give Renaissance Florence its enduring reputation. Florentines began chronicling their own history in the 14th century, giving rise to a long and complex historiographical tradition. This entry focuses on the major areas of scholarly inquiry that have emerged since the 1950s.
General Overviews
Works by individual authors and multi-authored collections of essays provide complementary points of entry into Florentine studies: the first offer general syntheses, whereas the second tend to focus on specific themes.
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Article
- Alberti, Leon Battista
- Ariosto, Ludovico
- Art in Renaissance Florence
- Art in Renaissance Venice
- Art, 16th- and 17th-Century Flemish
- Art, 17th-Century Dutch
- Art, German
- Art, Spanish
- Artisans
- Astrology, Alchemy, Magic
- Austria
- Bacon, Francis
- Banking and Money
- Baroque
- Black Death and Plague: The Disease and Medical Thought
- Bohemia and Bohemian Crown Lands
- Bracciolini, Poggio
- Bruegel, Pieter the Elder
- Bruni, Leonardo
- Buonarroti, Michelangelo
- Burgundy and the Netherlands
- Calvin, John
- Calvinism
- Cardinals
- Catholicism, Early Modern
- Cervantes, Miguel de
- China and Europe, 1550-1800
- Christian-Muslim Exchange
- Cities and Urban Patriciates
- Civic Ritual
- Classical Tradition, The
- Columbus, Christopher
- Confraternities
- Convent Culture
- Costume
- Crime and Punishment
- Cromwell, Oliver
- Death and Dying
- Dentière, Marie
- Dialogue
- Drama, English Renaissance
- Dürer, Albrecht
- Elizabeth I
- England, 1485-1642
- Epic and Romance
- Erasmus
- Family and Childhood
- Ficino, Marsilio
- Florence
- France
- Francis I
- Galilei, Galileo
- General Church Councils, 1409-1517
- Ghetto
- Hanseatic League
- Henri IV
- Hispanic Mysticism
- Historiography
- Homes, Foundling
- Humanism
- Humanism, The Origins of
- Hundred Years War, The
- Hungary, The Kingdom of
- Iconology and Iconography
- Joan of Arc
- Julius II
- Kepler, Johannes
- Last Wills and Testaments
- Leo X
- Letter Writing and Epistolary Culture
- Libraries
- Literature, French
- Literature, Late Medieval German
- Literature, Spanish
- Luther, Martin
- Lyric Poetry
- Mannerism
- Manuzio, Aldo
- Marlowe, Christopher
- Marriage and Dowry
- Masculinity
- Maximilian I, Emperor
- Medici, Catherine de'
- Medici, Lorenzo de'
- Medicine
- Mediterranean
- Merici, Angela
- Mirandola, Giovanni Pico della
- Mission
- Montaigne, Michel de
- Music
- Navarre, Marguerite de
- Netherlands (Dutch Revolt/ Dutch Republic), The
- Nettesheim, Agrippa von
- Niccoli, Niccolò
- Opera
- Ottoman Empire
- Papacy
- Papal Rome
- Paris
- Parr, Katherine
- Persecution and Martyrdom
- Petrarch
- Plague and its Consequences
- Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, The
- Political Thought
- Poliziano, Angelo
- Printing and the Book
- Rabelais, François
- Reformation and Wars of Religion in France, The
- Reformation, English
- Reformation, German
- Reformation, The
- Rembrandt
- Renaissance, The
- Reuchlin, Johann
- Revolutionary England, 1642-1702
- Rienzo, Cola Di
- Rubens, Peter Paul
- Salutati, Coluccio
- Savonarola, Girolamo
- Schooling
- Scientific Revolution
- Shakespeare, William
- Spain
- Spanish Inquisition
- The Radical Reformation
- Thirty Years War, The
- Titian
- Tornabuoni, Lucrezia
- Trade Networks
- Transylvania, The Principality of
- Universities
- Valla, Lorenzo
- Velázquez
- Venice
- Vernacular Languages and Dialects
- Visitors, Italian
- Vives, Juan Luis
- Ward, Mary
- Warfare and Military Organizations
- Widowhood
- Witch Hunt
- Women Writing in Early Modern Spain
- Women Writing in English
- Women and Learning
- Women and the Visual Arts