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E-grāmata: Prince and the Condottiero in Italian Humanism and Renaissance: Literature, History, Political Theory and Art

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This volume explores the process of definition, evolution and representation of the figures of the prince and the condottiero in fifteenth- and sixteenth-century Italy: two roles that often appear as interconnected and, in some cases, are embodied by the same political actor. By adopting an interdisciplinary approach and considering different cultural centres (e.g. Milan, Florence, Naples, Ferrara), the contributions to this book examine different forms and genres through which these key political figures have been portrayed and theorised: historical narratives, political treatises, chivalric romances, historical-epic poetry, and visual and artistic representations. These media overlap in various ways but have been rarely considered through a comparative and unified perspective. This viewpoint helps to highlight the synergies, similarities and specificities of these fields and brings recognition to their contribution to the evolution of political ideologies in the Italian Renaissance.
Contents: Marta Celati: The Felix Prince-Condottiero in Humanist
Literature: The Portrayal of Alfonso the Magnanimouss Felicitas Antonietta
Iacono: Le parole del re- condottiero Hester Schadee: Poggio Bracciolinis
Mirrors-for-Prelates: Constructing Grievable Lives James Hankins: Italian
Humanists on Reform of the Condottieri System: The Case of Francesco Patrizi
of Siena Guido Cappelli: Classicismo e tirannide nellItalia umanistica
Maria Pavlova: Dengnissimo mio chapitano: The Figure of the Military
Commander in Lorenzo degli Olbizi and Leonardo di Francesco Benci Valentina
Gritti: Eroi antichi alla corte di Ferrara: Alessandro, Cesare, Ciro il
Grande ed Ercole specula principis della casa dEste Anna Carocci: Buoni e
cattivi: Agnadello nelle guerre in ottava rima Claudia Daniotti: Ancient
Heroes to Teach the Young Ludovico il Moro: Alexander the Great and the
Indian King Porus in the Codice Sforza Daniel Jaquet: The Condottiero in
Bronze: Portrait Medals of Masters of Arms in Italian Courts (14801580)
Livia Stoenescu: The Dynastic Portrait of Charles V and the Habsburgs in the
Ephemera of Early Modern Italian Art Stefano Jossa: Un principe caduto da
cavallo: Il Principe e Gli Heroici di Giovan Battista Pigna tra poetica e
politica Bryan Brazeau: Highway to Heaven? Dissimulating Christian
Leadership in Torquato Tassos Gerusalemme Liberata Simone Testa: Sanguine
and Melancholic: The Ideal Prince according to Scipione Di Castro Cristina
Zampese: Salerno alto e gentile: Fermenti intellettuali e rovina politica
nel principato di Ferrante Sanseverino e Isabella Villamarina Eugenio
Refini: The Unhappy Prince: Queering a Renaissance Myth.
Marta Celati is Professor of Medieval and Humanist Literature at the University of Pisa. She was previously Leverhulme Research Fellow at the University of Warwick, Part-time Lecturer at the University of Oxford, and Frances Yates Short-term Fellow at the Warburg Institute. Her research mainly focuses on humanist and Renaissance literature.



Maria Pavlova is Honorary Research Fellow at the University of Warwick and the University of Oxford. She has held research fellowships at Villa I Tatti, Warwick and Oxford, and in 2023 she was Visiting Lecturer in the Department of Humanities and Arts at the Technion. Her research focuses on Italian Renaissance literature and history.