Italian Renaissance - Italy - North of Europe...
Share travel photos on the Exploitz.com website, the leading travel photography site on the Internet!
exploitz.com


Italy Hotels
Italy Hostels
Italy Sights

Italy Posters
Customize your home,school or office with a Italy poster!

Florence 398526
Italy 1935 399235
Italian Aerial Lines 397466
Viobuton and Co Bologna
Palazzo Dell Accademia
Italian Poppies serigraph
Tuscany I 357561
Palazzo
Last View of Tuscany
Positano The Amalfi Coast
Portofino I
Venice 129555
American Girl in Italy 1951 151245
Italian Cypress
In Bibl Vaticana
Carnival of Venice
Summer House in Tuscany
Sguardo Su Portofino 318366
American Girl in Italy 1951
Sunflowers in Umbria Italy
View from the Palazzo
Portofino Sunlight
Venice Canal 264872
Italian Wine Landscape
Italian Travels I
Italian Travels II 362830
View to the Amalfi Coast
Pergola in Amalfi 326785
View to The Amalfi Coast 147533
Pergola in Amalfi 147535
Distesa di Girasoli
Italian Place
Italian Waves I
Italian Waves II
Portofino 264946
Venice 400879
Portovenere Italy
Italian Excursion
Portofino Valley
Images of Venice I 416352
Images of Venice II
Images of Venice III
Images of Venice IV 416355
At Portofino
Last Supper 310108
In Museo Vaticano I
In Museo Vaticano II
Eden Bologna 394863
Campionato Italiano 394612
Florence
Italy 1935
History: The Civilization of the Renaissance in Italy by Jacob Burckhardt

Index | pg. 49 |Previous Page - Next Page

North of Europe ...

The North of Europe, until Italian influence began to tell upon its writers-- for instance, on Trithemius, the first German who wrote the lives of famous men- -possessed only either legends of the saints, or descriptions of princes and churchmen partaking largely of the character of legends and showing no traces of the idea of fame, that is, of distinction won by a man's personal efforts. Poetical glory was still confined to certain classes of society, and the names of northern artists are only known to us at this period in so far as they were members of certain guilds or corporations.

The poet-scholar in Italy had, as we have already said, the fullest consciousness that he was the giver of fame and immortality, or, if he chose, of oblivion. Boccaccio complains of a fair one to whom he had done homage, and who remained hard-hearted in order that he might go on praising her and making her famous, and he gives her a hint that he will try the effect of a little blame. Sannazaro, in two magnificent sonnets, threatens Alfonso of Naples with eternal obscurity on account of his cowardly flight before Charles VIII. Angelo Poliziano seriously exhorts (1491) King John of Portugal to think betimes of his immortality in reference to the new discoveries in Africa, and to send him materials to Florence, there to be put into shape _(operosius excolenda), _otherwise it would befall him as it had befallen all the others whose deeds, unsupported by the help of the learned, 'lie hidden in the vast heap of human frailty.' The king, or his humanistic chancellor, agreed to this, and promised that at least the Portuguese chronicles of African affairs should be translated into Italian, and sent to Florence to be done into Latin. Whether the promise was kept is not known. These pretensions are by no means so groundless as they may appear at first sight; for the form in which events, even the greatest, are told to the living and to posterity is anything but a matter of indifference. The Italian humanists, with their mode of exposition and their Latin style, had long the complete control of the reading world of Europe, and till last century the Italian poets were more widely known and studied than those of any other nation. The baptismal name of the Florentine Amerigo Vespucci was given, on account of his book of travels, to a new quarter of the globe, and if Paolo Giovio, with all his superficiality and graceful caprice, promised himself immortality, his expectation has not altogether been disappointed.

Amid all these preparations outwardly to win and secure fame, the curtain is now and then drawn aside, and we see with frightful evidence a boundless ambition and thirst after greatness, regardless of all means and consequences. Thus, in the preface to Machiavelli's Florentine history, in which he blames his predecessors Leonardo, Aretino and Poggio for their too considerate reticence with regard to the political parties in the city: 'They erred greatly and showed that they understood little the ambition of men and the desire to perpetuate a name. How many who could distinguish themselves by nothing praiseworthy, strove to do so by infamous deeds! ' Those writers did not consider that actions which are great in themselves, as is the case with the actions of rulers and of States, always seem to bring more glory than blame, of whatever kind they are and whatever the result of them may be. In more than one remarkable and dreadful undertaking the motive assigned by serious writers is the burning desire to achieve something great and memorable. This motive is not a mere extreme case of ordinary vanity, but something demonic, involving a surrender of the will, the use of any means, however atrocious, and even an indifference to success itself. In this sense, for example, Machiavelli conceives the character of Stefano Porcari; of the murderers of Galeazzo Maria Sforza (1476), the documents tell us about the same; and the assassination of Duke Alessandro of Florence (1537) is ascribed by Varchi himself to the thirst for fame which tormented the murderer Lorenzino Medici. Still more stress is laid on this motive by Paolo Giovio. Lorenzino, according to him, pilloried by a pamphlet of Molza, broods over a deed whose novelty shall make his disgrace forgotten, and ends by murdering his kinsman and prince. These are characteristic features of this age of overstrained and despairing passions and forces, and remind us of the burning of the temple of Diana at Ephesus in the time of Philip of Macedon



Index | pg. 49 |Previous Page - Next Page

Italy Hotels - Italy Hostels - Italy Sights

................................................................

Other popular Italy book pages:

Macaroni with Tomatoes
Macaroni alla Casalinga
Macaroni al Sughillo
Macaroni alla Livornese
Tagliarelle and Lobster
Polenta
Polenta Pasticciata








Italy Travel Guide
A good starting point for researching Italy for travel or reference.

Venice - Piazza St. Marco (St. Mark's Square)
Venice - Gondola along the Grand Canal
Venice - Walking around Venice Streets
Venice - Pictures from the Venice canals
Venice - From the Train Station to St. Mark's 1
Venice - From the Train Station to St. Mark's 2
Ceasar's European Discovery Pictures. Italy Pg.1
Breathtaking Italy and France
Ceasar's European Discovery Pictures. Italy Pg. 2
Florence and Venice
Arno River in Florence
Campania