Book Description
A set of case studies exploring the tastes, passions, and possessions of cardinals in Renaissance and Baroque Rome.
Author : Mary Hollingsworth
Publisher : Penn State University Press
Page : 482 pages
File Size : 13,51 MB
Release : 2010
Category : Art
ISBN :
A set of case studies exploring the tastes, passions, and possessions of cardinals in Renaissance and Baroque Rome.
Author : Mary Hollingsworth
Publisher : BRILL
Page : 723 pages
File Size : 20,35 MB
Release : 2019-12-30
Category : Religion
ISBN : 9004415440
A Companion to the Early Modern Cardinal is the first comprehensive overview of its subject in English or any language. Cardinals are best known as the pope’s electors, but in the centuries from 1400 to 1800 they were so much more: pastors, inquisitors, diplomats, bureaucrats, statesmen, saints; entrepreneurs and investors; patrons of the arts, of music, literature, and science. Thirty-five essays explain their social background, positions and roles in Rome and beyond, and what they meant for wider society. This volume shows the impact which those men who took up the purple had in their respective fields and how their tenure of office shaped the entangled histories of Rome and the Catholic Church from a European and global perspective.
Author : EDWARD EDWARDS
Publisher :
Page : 684 pages
File Size : 43,39 MB
Release : 1869
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Author :
Publisher :
Page : 1248 pages
File Size : 22,76 MB
Release : 1872
Category :
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Author : Great Britain. Public Record Office
Publisher :
Page : 1214 pages
File Size : 19,8 MB
Release : 1872
Category : Great Britain
ISBN :
Author : Charles Purton Cooper
Publisher :
Page : 666 pages
File Size : 26,54 MB
Release : 1833
Category :
ISBN :
Author : Giulia Vidori
Publisher : Firenze University Press
Page : 208 pages
File Size : 44,69 MB
Release : 2021-04-14
Category : Biography & Autobiography
ISBN : 885518265X
Ippolito II d’Este (1509-1572), cardinal and prince of Ferrara, played a crucial role in shaping the political and cultural connections between Italy and France. Seen by his contemporaries as staunchly ‘French’, his life rather followed a difficult balance between the political and spatial entities – Rome, Paris, and Ferrara – through which he continuously moved and from which he derived his power. Following his career as cardinal protector of the Valois crown, royal administrator of Siena on behalf of Henry II, and papal legate to France on the eve of the Wars of Religion, this book argues that Ippolito’s apparent diplomatic access ultimately weakened his family’s position in Italy and left it ill-equipped to compete in the changing politics of the peninsula.
Author : Alessandra Benedicty-Kokken
Publisher : Lexington Books
Page : 437 pages
File Size : 41,34 MB
Release : 2014-11-12
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 0739184660
This book recuperates the important history that Haitian thought around Vodou possession has had in French critical theory. The author takes the period of the 1930s and ‘40s, as the centerfold of a more complex network of relations that places Haiti as one of the pivots of a more expanded intellectual conversation around “possession,” which links anthropology, literature, psychoanalysis, human rights, and visual arts in France, Haiti, and the United States. Benedicty argues that Haiti as the anthropological other serves as a kick-starter to an entire French-based theoretical apparatus (Breton, Leiris, Bataille, de Certeau, Foucault, and Butler), but once up and running, its role as catalyst is forgotten and the multiple iterations of the anthropological other are cast back into the net of Michel-Rolph Trouillot’s “Savage slot.” The book offers the reader unfamiliar with Haiti a comprehensive interdisciplinary study of twentieth and early twenty-first century Haitian thought, including a detailed timeline of important moments in the intellectual history that connects Haiti to France and the United States. The first part of the book is about global dispossessions in the first decades of the twentieth century; the second part points to how the narratives of ‘Haiti’ are intimately linked to a Franco-U.S.-American discursive space, constructed over the course of the twentieth century, a discursive order that has conflated the representation of ‘Haiti’ with an understanding of Vodou primarily as an occult religion, and not as a philosophical system. The third and fourth parts of the book examine how the novels of René Depestre, Jean-Claude Fignolé, and Kettly Mars have revisited the notion of possession since the fall of the Duvalier dictatorships.
Author :
Publisher :
Page : 430 pages
File Size : 15,70 MB
Release : 1906
Category : England
ISBN :
Author : William John Hardy
Publisher :
Page : 422 pages
File Size : 32,18 MB
Release : 1906
Category : Berkshire (England)
ISBN :