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Death and ritual in Renaissance Florence

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Death and ritual in Renaissance Florence

Autor: Strocchia, Sharon T.
Ort, Verlag, Jahr: Baltimore, Md. u.a., Johns Hopkins Univ. Press, 1992
Umfang: XIX, 308 S.
ISBN/ISSN/ISMN 0801843642
Schlagwortketten: Florenz / Tod / Brauch / Geschichte 1400-1600
Schlagwortketten: Florenz / Bestattungsritus / Geschichte 1400-1600
Johns Hopkins University studies in historical and political science:   Alle Einzelbände

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Autor:Strocchia, Sharon T.
Titel:Death and ritual in Renaissance Florence
Von:Sharon T. Strocchia
Ort:Baltimore, Md. u.a.
Verlag:Johns Hopkins Univ. Press
Jahr:1992
Umfang:XIX, 308 S.
Illustrationsangabe:Ill.
ISBN/ISSN/ISMN:0801843642
Zusammenfassung:In what ways did the rituals associated with death in Renaissance Florence serve as an indicator of how Florentine society saw itself? In Death and Ritual in Renaissance Florence, Sharon Strocchia shows how these death rites - especially civic funerals - reflected Florence's quick rise to commercial wealth in the fourteenth century and steady progression toward displays of princely power in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries. Strocchia begins by examining the basic components of civic funerary rites and their symbolic meaning. Taking an interdisciplinary approach, she then traces the changes and continuities of these rites throughout the Renaissance. She shows how the rise of funeral pomp in the late fourteenth century as linked to social mobility, the redistribution of wealth, corporate politics, and the psychology of the post-plague decades. She analyses the impact of "elitism, statism, and civism" on civic and family rites after 1400 and charts the social effects of rising assumption trends. And she focuses on the complex cycles of change stemming from the establishment and rejection Medici control, which by entrenching patrician domination helped pave the way for the Medici principate. "Rather than simply recasting the traditional history of the city," Strocchia writes, "the history of death rites shows us the sheer intricacy of how ritual and society defined each other. These episodes point us toward culture in action: the tangled, dense, and decidedly unstable relations binding family and state, gender and politics, word and image."
Reihe:Johns Hopkins University studies in historical and political science
Bandangabe:110,1
Systematik:LN 37105
Systematik:NR 8520
BV-Nummer:BV007356263