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Paolo Giovio : the historian and the crisis of sixteenth-century Italy / T.C. Price Zimmermann.

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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Zimmermann, T. C. Price, 1934-
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Giovio, Paolo, 1483-1552.
Giovio, Paolo.
Catholic Church--Italy--Bishops--Biography.
Catholic Church.
Historians--Italy--Biography.
Historians.
Biographers--Italy--Biography.
Biographers.
Bishops--Italy--Biography.
Bishops.
Italy--History--1492-1559--Historiography.
Italy.
Italy--Church history--16th century.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (406 pages)
Edition:
Course Book
Place of Publication:
Princeton, N.J. : Princeton University Press, 1995.
Language Note:
English
System Details:
Mode of access: World Wide Web.
Summary:
Best-known for his sweeping narrative Histories of His Own Times and for his portrait museum on Lake Como, the Italian bishop and historian Paolo Giovio (1486-1552) had contact with many of the protagonists of the great events he so vividly described--the wars of France, Germany, and Spain, and the sack of Rome. He used the information he gleaned from his contacts to carry on an extensive correspondence that became a kind of proto-journalism. With his interests in history, literature, geography, exploration, medicine, and the arts, this man reflects almost the entire spectrum of High Renaissance civilization. In a biography surveying both Giovio's life and his works, T. C. Price Zimmermann examines the historian as a figure formed by fifteenth-century humanism who was caught in the changing temper of the Counter Reformation. Giovio's Histories remained a widely used account of the wars of Italy for nearly two hundred and fifty years, although his objectivity was often questioned owing to the patronage he received. Following Burckhardt, who began to restore Giovio's reputation more than a century ago, Zimmermann reveals a conscientious, independent-minded historian and an astute commentator on the entire Mediterranean world, the first to integrate the contemporary history of the Muslim nations with that of Europe, east and west. The book also stresses the important contributions Giovio made to the ethos of the Renaissance through his biographies and famous portrait museum, both tributes to the emerging sense of individual human personality.
Contents:
Front matter
Contents
Preface
Abbreviations Used in the Notes and Bibliography
CHAPTER ONE. Origines (1486-1511)
CHAPTER TWO. Humanist Physician (1512-1527)
CHAPTER THREE. Leonine Rome (1513-1521)
CHAPTER FOUR. Leo X and the Quest for the Libertas Italiae (1513-1521)
CHAPTER FIVE. Adrian VI (1521-1523)
CHAPTER SIX. Clement VII and the Sack of Rome (1523-1527)
CHAPTER SEVEN. Ischia (1527-1528)
CHAPTER EIGHT. Papal Courtier (1528-1534)
CHAPTER NINE. Transitions (1535-1538)
CHAPTER TEN. Courtier of the Farnese (1539-1544)
CHAPTER ELEVEN. The Elusive Prize (1545-1549)
CHAPTER TWELVE. De Senectute (1549-1552)
CONCLUSION: Ad Sempiternam Vitam
APPENDIX 1: Giovio's Ecclesiastical Benefices
APPENDIX 2: Sequence of Composition of the Histories
APPENDIX 3: First Editions of Giovio's Works
Notes
Select Bibliography
Index
Notes:
Description based upon print version of record.
Includes bibliographical references (p. [373]-381) and index.
ISBN:
9786612752339
9781400808953
1400808952
9781282752337
1282752332
9781400821839
1400821835
9781400813971
1400813972
OCLC:
705526999

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