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Church, State and Lay Piety Florence and Venice in the Renaissance HI320

Church, State and Lay Piety Florence and Venice in the Renaissance HI320

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Page 1: Church, State and Lay Piety Florence and Venice in the Renaissance HI320

Church, State and Lay Piety

Florence and Venice in the Renaissance HI320

Page 2: Church, State and Lay Piety Florence and Venice in the Renaissance HI320

Canaletto, San Pietro di Castello (C18th)

Page 3: Church, State and Lay Piety Florence and Venice in the Renaissance HI320
Page 4: Church, State and Lay Piety Florence and Venice in the Renaissance HI320
Page 5: Church, State and Lay Piety Florence and Venice in the Renaissance HI320
Page 6: Church, State and Lay Piety Florence and Venice in the Renaissance HI320

Titian, Doge Antonio Grimani presents

himself to the Faith (Palazzo Ducale, 1575-

6)

Page 7: Church, State and Lay Piety Florence and Venice in the Renaissance HI320

Palma il Giovane, Doge Francesco Venier beseeching the

Virgin Mary (Palazzo Ducale, 1595)

Page 8: Church, State and Lay Piety Florence and Venice in the Renaissance HI320

Medici Palace Chapel,

Florence, with frescoes by Benozzo

Gozzoli (1459-61)

Page 9: Church, State and Lay Piety Florence and Venice in the Renaissance HI320
Page 10: Church, State and Lay Piety Florence and Venice in the Renaissance HI320

“in the Italian Republics of the Renaissance

religion ceased to be, as it had been in the

Middle Ages, the preserve of specialists”

(J.J. Martin)

Page 11: Church, State and Lay Piety Florence and Venice in the Renaissance HI320
Page 12: Church, State and Lay Piety Florence and Venice in the Renaissance HI320

Continuities and Changes

Page 13: Church, State and Lay Piety Florence and Venice in the Renaissance HI320

Church and State

• “The church becomes increasingly more like a state, and the state becomes more and more involved in the religious sphere” (R. Bizzocchi)

Page 14: Church, State and Lay Piety Florence and Venice in the Renaissance HI320
Page 15: Church, State and Lay Piety Florence and Venice in the Renaissance HI320

• Venetian Popes Gregory XII (r. 1406-15), Eugenius IV (r.1431-47)

• nipoti - nepotism

Pinturicchio, Eugenius IV (Siena, 1502-7)

Page 16: Church, State and Lay Piety Florence and Venice in the Renaissance HI320

Florence

• Medici Popes Leo X and Clement VII

• War of the Eight Saints (1375-8)

• Interdicts 1376, 1478, 1511

Raphael, Leo X with Giulio de’ Medici (1518-19)

Page 17: Church, State and Lay Piety Florence and Venice in the Renaissance HI320

Archbishop of Florence

Antonino Pierozzi (Saint Antoninus),

1389-1459

Lorenzo Lotto, St. Antoninus, 1542

Page 18: Church, State and Lay Piety Florence and Venice in the Renaissance HI320

Venice• 1451 Patriarch of Grado

moved to Venice

• Tre savi contra l’eresia

• 1509 Interdict from Julius II

• Giovani resist papal influence

• 1606-7 InterdictGentile Bellini, Patriarch Lorenzo

Giustiniani (1459)

Page 19: Church, State and Lay Piety Florence and Venice in the Renaissance HI320
Page 20: Church, State and Lay Piety Florence and Venice in the Renaissance HI320

The Parish

Page 21: Church, State and Lay Piety Florence and Venice in the Renaissance HI320

Confraternities

• laudesi

• sacre rappresentazioni

Page 22: Church, State and Lay Piety Florence and Venice in the Renaissance HI320

SaSanta nta MaMaria ria NoNovelvellala

Santa Maria

Novella (Dominican

)

Santa Croce (Franciscan)

Page 23: Church, State and Lay Piety Florence and Venice in the Renaissance HI320

Santa Maria dei Frari (Franciscan)

San Giovanni e Paolo (Dominican)

Page 24: Church, State and Lay Piety Florence and Venice in the Renaissance HI320

Preachers

• Saint Bernardino of Siena (1380-44), Saint Antoninus (1389-1459), Savonarola (1452-98)

• Bernardino Ochino (1487-1564)

Page 25: Church, State and Lay Piety Florence and Venice in the Renaissance HI320

Religion in everyday life

• ‘The Merchant of Prato’ Francesco Datini: ‘in the name of God and profit’

Page 26: Church, State and Lay Piety Florence and Venice in the Renaissance HI320

•“Vengeance must fall on thee, thou filthy whore / Of Babylon, thou breaker of Christ’s fold” (Petrarch, Sonnets)