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Beyond the Palio: Urbanism and Ritual in Renaissance Siena

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ISBN: 978-1-405-15572-4

November 2006

Wiley-Blackwell

160 pages

Description
Beyond the Palio is an interdisciplinary collection of essays examining the components and importance of ritual events and ceremonies in Renaissance Siena.
  • Brings together studies based upon diverse disciplinary and methodological approaches to a common theme.
  • Provides specific case studies and useful comparisons to well-known monographic studies of ritual in Florence and Venice.
  • Concentrates on a single city to emphasize the important function of public rituals to life during the early modern period.
  • Looks at both local ritual life and the ways it was presented to and viewed by those outside the city.
About the Author
Philippa Jackson is completing research at the Warburg Institute in London on the patronage of Pandolfo Petrucci, the leading citizen of the Sienese republic at the beginning of the sixteenth century. She has written on the cult of Mary Magdalen under his regime and is currently preparing a book entitled Pandolfo Petrucci: Politics and Patronage in Renaissance Siena. Her major interests are in Renaissance cultural history and cardinals of the late fifteenth and early sixteenth centuries.


Fabrizio Nevola teaches at the Università degli Studi di Siena. He has held fellowships at the Canadian Centre for Architecture (Montreal) and Villa I Tatti, The Harvard University Center for Italian Renaissance Studies (Florence) and was AHRB Research Fellow at the University of Warwick (2001-4). His research focus is on the architectural and urban history of Renaissance Siena. He has published numerous articles (e.g. Art Bulletin, 2000 and Renaissance Studies, 2003) and has a book forthcoming entitled Architecture and Government in Renaissance Siena: Fashioning Urban Experience (1400-1555).

Features

  • Brings together studies based upon diverse disciplinary and methodological approaches to a common theme.
  • Provides specific case studies and useful comparisons to well-known monographic studies of ritual in Florence and Venice.
  • Concentrates on a single city to emphasize the important function of public rituals to life during the early modern period.
  • Looks at both local ritual life and the ways it was presented to and viewed by those outside the city.