The Golden Days of the Renaissance in Rome: From the Pontificate of Julius II to that of Paul IIIHoughton, Mifflin, 1906 - 340 pages |
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Page x
... FARNESE , SISTER OF POPE PAUL III ( from the allegorical statue by Guglielmo della Porta , in St. Peter's ) • ONE OF THE COURTS OF THE PALAZZO DI VENEZIA , THE FAVORITE RESIDENCE OF PAUL III ( by Meo del Caprino and Jacopo da ...
... FARNESE , SISTER OF POPE PAUL III ( from the allegorical statue by Guglielmo della Porta , in St. Peter's ) • ONE OF THE COURTS OF THE PALAZZO DI VENEZIA , THE FAVORITE RESIDENCE OF PAUL III ( by Meo del Caprino and Jacopo da ...
Page xii
... FARNESE OVERLOOKING THE GARDEN OF AGOSTINO CHIGI ( a view of the district by the Porta Settimiana , taken before its modern transformation ) · 273 282 286 297 . • 309 • THE PORTICO OF BACCIO PONTELLI IN THE CASTLE OF LA MA- GLIANA · 319 ...
... FARNESE OVERLOOKING THE GARDEN OF AGOSTINO CHIGI ( a view of the district by the Porta Settimiana , taken before its modern transformation ) · 273 282 286 297 . • 309 • THE PORTICO OF BACCIO PONTELLI IN THE CASTLE OF LA MA- GLIANA · 319 ...
Page 24
... Farnese , uncle and nephew , one Pope , one the head of the Sacred College , can only be appreciated by comparing the state of the city at the beginning of the century with its condition at the death of Paul III . Let us choose as a ...
... Farnese , uncle and nephew , one Pope , one the head of the Sacred College , can only be appreciated by comparing the state of the city at the beginning of the century with its condition at the death of Paul III . Let us choose as a ...
Page 41
... Farnese , the Maffei , the Soderini , and the Vittori , to whom Rome was indebted for its best attractions , which , alas ! exist no more . The Cesarini villa was laid out in ter- races on the slope of the Cespian near San Pietro in ...
... Farnese , the Maffei , the Soderini , and the Vittori , to whom Rome was indebted for its best attractions , which , alas ! exist no more . The Cesarini villa was laid out in ter- races on the slope of the Cespian near San Pietro in ...
Page 100
... Farnese to the chair of St. Peter as a true godsend , in the firm belief that his advent would put an end to the material and moral disadvantages under which they had labored for centuries . The fulfilment of these anticipations will be ...
... Farnese to the chair of St. Peter as a true godsend , in the firm belief that his advent would put an end to the material and moral disadvantages under which they had labored for centuries . The fulfilment of these anticipations will be ...
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Common terms and phrases
Agostino Chigi Angelo Antonio artist Ascanio Colonna Baccio Pontelli Baldassare Peruzzi Banchi basilica beautiful Borgo Bramante Campo Capitol Capitoline hill Cardinal Alessandro castle Cesarini chapel church of San Clement VII columns Conservatori Conzaga Corso court death Domenico ducats duke engraving Fabio fact Farnese Federico Ferrara Flaminio Vacca Florence Fornarina Francesco garden Giovanni Giovanni da Udine Girolamo Giulia hundred Italy Jubilee Julius Lafreri Lateran LENOX TILDEN FOUNDATIONS Leo X loggia Lorenzetto Lorenzo Magliana Mantua marble Maria del Popolo master Medici medieval Michelangelo Monte monument Naples painted palace Palazzo Paul Peter's Piazza Pius plague pontificate Pope Pope Paul III Pope's Porta portrait present PUBLIC LIBRARY ASTOR Raphael Renaissance representing Roma Roman Rome San Pietro Santa Maria says scudi Siena sixteenth century Sixtus statues street temple thousand Tiber Trastevere Urbino Vasari Vatican villa Vittoria Colonna walls YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY
Popular passages
Page 215 - He for his part, loved her so, that I remember to have heard him say that he regretted nothing except that when he went to visit her upon the moment of her passage from this life, he did not kiss her forehead or her face, as he did kiss her hand. Her death was the cause that oftentimes he dwelt astonied, thinking of it, even as a man bereft of sense.
Page 215 - In particular, he greatly loved the Marchioness of Pescara, of whose divine spirit he was enamoured, being in return dearly beloved by her. He still preserves many of her letters, breathing honourable and most tender affection, and such as were wont to issue from a heart like hers. He also wrote to her a great number of sonnets, full of wit and sweet longing. She frequently removed from Viterbo and other places, whither she had gone for solace or to pass the summer, and came to Rome with...
Page 62 - ... and sparkling eyes, her generosity and carelessness with money, her grace of carriage and charm of conversation, she was received in Naples, Rome, Florence, and Ferrara like a visiting princess. The Mantuan ambassador at Ferrara described her entry in an undiplomatic letter to Isabella d'Este (1537): I have to record the arrival among us of a gentle lady, so modest in behavior, so fascinating in manners, that we cannot help considering her something divine.
Page 73 - ... in this, as in so many other matters of urban administration, it was under Augustus that an abundant supply was first procured and maintained by an excellent system of management. Frontinus, to whose work de Aqueductibus we owe almost all that we know about the Roman water-supply, tells us that for four hundred and .forty-one years after the foundation of the city the Romans contented themselves with such water as they could get from the Tiber, from wells, and from natural springs, and adds that...
Page 90 - Caetani no longer exists,1 but the front of the church is still covered with the records of floods, of which I quote one instance : " In the year of our Lord one thousand five hundred and thirty, the seventh of the pontificate of Pope Clement VII, on the eighth day of October, the flood reached this line, and the whole city would have perished if the Blessed Virgin had not made the waters recede.
Page 227 - Aquila, testamentary executors and recipients of the last wishes of Raphael, have raised this memorial to his affianced wife, Maria, daughter of Antonio of Bibbiena, whom death deprived of a happy marriage," etc. As regards the second and truest love of Raphael, the accounts given by his early biographers rest more on tradition than on facts. We only know the girl to have been dinal Bibbiena his commission for the cartoons of the tapestries.
Page 215 - Anna, according to the provision of her will ; but such was the cowardly fear which seized all those who had been associated with the deceased lady, lest the Inquisition should involve them in the disgrace with which her memory was threatened, that the coffin was abandoned in a corner of the chapel, without any display of those impressive ceremonies with which the Catholic Church is wont to i Translation of Christopher Hare, The Most fUu»triota Ladies of the Italian Renavaance, p.
Page 144 - Ange , qui étoit plus sincère que les grands artistes ne sont ordinairement, avoit prié instamment la comtesse Isabelle, après qu'il lui eut fait présent de son Cupidon, et qu'il eut vu l'autre, qu'on ne montrât l'ancien que le dernier, afin que les connoisseurs pussent juger en les voyant, de combien, en ces sortes d'ouvrages, les anciens l'emportent sur les modernes.
Page 45 - If we except a few churches which by accident have been spared the heinous transformations of the seventeenth century, a few baronial towers not yet whitewashed or turned into tenements, and a few private houses which have not yet fallen into the hands of speculators, Rome offers no connecting link between the classic and the modern age.