Burckhardt Civilization

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books include Th e Architecture of the Italian Renaissance (third edition, 1986)

and Renaissance Architecture, as well as The Penguin Dictionary of Art and


Artists with his wife Linda (the sixth edition of which was published in
1989), with whom he also wrote The Art of the Renaissance, first published
JACOB BURCKHARDT
in 1963. I '

.
The Civilization of the
l .

. Renaissance in· Italy


,l
I
I
,I
Translated by s. ,G. 9· M,IDDLEMORE
with, a new Introduction by PETER BURKE
• I and Notes by PETER MURRAY

I ,,.

PENGUIN BOOKS
~ IT I\

PENGUIN BOOKS

Published by the Penguin Group


CONTENTS
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THE CIVILIZATION OF THE
This edition first published 1990 RENAIS.~ANCE IN ITALY
Reprinted with a new Chronology and updated Further Reading 2004
PART I
031
The State as a Work ofA;t
Introduction and Chronology copyright C Peter Burke, 1990, 2004
Notes copyright C Peter Murray, 1990
Introduction
All rights reserved 19
Despots of the Fourteenth Century. 22
Printed in England by Clays Ltd, St Ives pk
Filmset in IO/ 12 pt Monophoto Bembo Despots of the Fifteenth Century
27
The Smaller Despotisms
Except in the United State, of America, this book is sold subject ,3~
to the condition that it shall not, by way of trade or otherwise, be lent, The Greater Dynasties .
1 ,·•vi 40
te-sold, hired out, or otherwise cin:ulatcd without the publisher's The
, Opponents of the Despots
prior consent in :my form of binding or cover other than that in S3
which it is published and without a similar condition including this The Republics: Venice and Florence
S7
condition being imposed on the subsequent purchaser Foreign Policy
73
ISBN-13: 978--0-140--44534-3
War as a Work of Art
79
The Papacy Il
' 81
www.greenpenguin.co.uk Patriotism
96
PART D

IJ, p --
MIX
Penguin Books is committed to a sustainable
future for our business, our readers and our planet. The Development of the Individual
v•
'

-
FSC
rupon,IW• IOUfON
FSC" C018179
This book is made from Forese Stewardship
Council™ certified paper. Personality
Glory
Ridicule and Wit
98
~04
Il,0
PART UI
The Revival of Antiquity
Introductory
120
vi CIVILIZATION OP THB RBNAISSANCB
vii
The Ruins of Rome 123
PART VI
The Classics 129 Morality and Religion
The Humanists 13.S
Univcnities and Schools 140 Morality and Judgement
271
Propagaton of Antiquity 143 Morality and Immorality
272
Reproduction of ~tiquity: Letter-Writing and Latin Religion in Daily Life
289
Speeches ·I.SI Strength of the Old Faith
306
The Treatise, and History in Latin I .S9 Religion and the Spirit of the Renaissance 312
.Antiquity as the Common Source 'i63 Influence of Ancient Superstition
32~
Nco-LatinP~~ I~ General Spirit of Doubt
344
Fall ofthc'Humanists in thè Sixteenth Century 17.7 NOTES · Peter Murray
353
PART IV Full titles of works most .frequently quoted by Burclehardt 368
Th« Dis~very of tht World and of Man Chronology
371
Further Reading
373
Journeys of the Italian s 18.s INDEX
375
The Natural Sciences in Italy 187
I ,1 ~ .f
Discovery of the Beauty of Landscape · 192
Discovery of Man ' · 198
. '
Biography in the Middle Ages and in tbc Ren'aissance 213
"\
Description of the Outward Man 222
I
Description of Human Life 22.s

PART V ~
Society and Festivals 1 ' ...

Equality of Classes 230


Costumes and Fashions 23.S
Language and Society 240
Social Etiquette 243
Education of the Cortigiano 246
Music 248
Equality of Men and Women 2,SO
Domestic Life 253
Festivals 256
THB DBVBLOP¥BNT OF THE INDIVIDUAL 99

under the spell of race. For Italy the august poet, through the wealth
n
of individuality which he setI forth, was the most national herald of his
timer.But this unfolding of the treasures of human nature in literature
PART Il
and art - this many-sided representation and criticism - will be
discussed in separate chapters; here we have to deal only with the
The Development of the Individual psychological fact itself. This fact appears in the most decisive and
unmistakable form. The Italians of the fourteenth century knew little
PERSONALITY of false modesty or of hypocrisy in any shape; not one of them was
afraid of singularity, ofbeing and seeming unlike his neighbours.
IN THE character of these states, whether republics or despotisms, lies Despotism, as we have already seen, fostered in the highest- degree
not the only but the chief reason for the early development of the the individuality nob only of the tyrant or condottiere himself, 33 but
Italian. To this it ·is due that he was the first-bom among the sons of also of the men whom 'he· prötected or used as his tools -·the secretary,
modem Europe. · minister, poet and companion. These people were forced to know all
In the Middle Ages both sides of human consciousness - that which the inward resources @f their own nature, passing or permanent; and
was turned within as that which was turned without - lay dreaming or their enjoyment of life was enhanced and concentrated by the desire
half awake beneath a common veil. The veil was woven of faith, to obtain the greatest satisfaction front a possibly very brief period of
illusion and childish prepossession, through which the world and power and influence.
history were seen clad in strange hues. Man was conscious of himself But even the subjects whom they ruled over were not free from the
only as a member of a race, people, party, family or corporation - same impulse. Leaving out of account those who wasted their lives in
only through some general category. In Italy this veil first melted into secret opposition and conspiracies, we speak of the majority who were
air; an objective treatment and considfration of the state and of all the content with a strictly private station, like most of the urban population
things of this world became possible. The subjective side at the same of the Byzantine empire and the. Muhammadan states. No doubt it
time asserted itself with corresponding emphasis; man became a spirit- was often hard for the subjects of a· Visconti to maintain the dignity of
ual individual,32 and recognized himself as such. In the same way the their persons and families, and multitudes must have lost in moral
Greek had once distinguished himself from the barbarian, and the character through the servitude they lived under-Burthis was not the
Arab had felt himself an individual at a time when other Asiatics knew case with regard to individuality; for political impotence does not
themselves only as members of a race. It will not be difficult to show hinder the different tendencies and manifestations of private life from
that this result was due above all to the political circu~stances of thriving in the fullest vigour and variety:Wealth and culture; so far as
Italy. display and rivalry were not forbidden to them, a municipal freedom
In far earlier times we can here and there detect a development of which did not cease to be considerable, and a Church which, unlike
free personality which 'in northern Europe either did not occur at all, that of the Byzantine or of the Muhammadan world, was not identical
or could not display itself in the same manner. The band of audacious with the state - all these conditions undoubtedly favoured the growth
wrongdoers in the tenth century described to us by Liudprand, some of individual thought, for which the necessary leisure was furnished by
of the contemporaries of Gregory Vll (for example, Benzo of l\lba) the cessation of party conflicts, The private man, indifferent to politics,
and a few of the opponents of the first Hohenstaufen show us characters and busied partly with serious pursuits, partly with the interests of a
of this kind. But at the close of the thirteenth century Italy began to dilettante, seems to have been first fully formed in these despotisms of
swarm with individuality; the ban laid upon human personality was the fourteenth century. Documentary evidente cannot, of course, be
dissolved; and a thousand figures meet us each in its own special shape required on such a point. The novelists, from whom we might expect
and dress. Dante's great poem would have been impossible in any information, describe to us oddities inplenry, but only from one point
other country of Europe, if only for the reason that they all still lay
IOO CIVILIZATION OF THE RENAISSANCE THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE INDIVIDUAL IOI

of view and in so far as the needs of the story demand. Their scene, learned everything,' says Ghiberti, 35 'is nowhere a stranger; robbed of
too, lies chiefly in the republican cities. his fortune and without friends, he is yet the citizen of every country,
In the latter, circumstances were also, but in another way, favourable and can fearlessly despise the changes of fortune.' In the same strain an
to the growth of individual character. The more frequently the govern- exiled humanist writed: 'Wherever a learned man fixes his seat, there' is
ing party was changed, the more the individual was led to make the home.'36 I
utmost of the exercise and enjoyment of power. The statesmen and , An acute and practised eye might be able to trace, step öy step, the
popular leaders, especially in Florentine history, acquired so marked a increase in the numbeé of complete men during the fifteenth century.
personal character that we can scarcely find, even exceptionally, a Whether they had before them as a conscious object the harmonious
parallel to them in contemporary history, hardly even in Jacob von development of their spiritual and material existence is hard to say; but
Artevelde. several of them attained it, so far as is consistent with the imperfection
The members of the defeated parties, on the other hand, often came of all that is earthly. It may be better to renounce the attempt at an
into a position like that of the subjects of the despotic states, with the estimate of the share which fortune, character and talent had in the life
difference that the freedom or power already enjoyed, and in some of Lorenzo il Magnifico. But look at a personality like that of Ariosto,
cases the hope of recovering them, gave a higher energy to their especially as shown in his satires. In what harmony are there expressed
individuality. Among these men of involuntary leisure we find, for the pride of the man and the poet, the-irony with which he treats his
instance, an Agnolo Pandolfini. (d. 1446), whose work on domestic own enjoyment, the most delicate satire, and the· deepest goodwill!
economy34 is the first complete programme of a developed private When this impulse I to the highest individual development was
life. His estimate of the duties of the individual. as against the dangers combined with a powerful and varied nature, which had mastered all
and thanklessness of public life is in its way a true monument of the elements of the culture of the age, then arose the 'all-sided man' -
the age. l'uomo universale - who belonged to Italy alone. Men there were of
Banishment, too, has this effect above all, that it either wears the encyclopedic knowledge in many countries during the Middle Ages,
exile out or develops whatever is greatest in him. 'In all our more for this knowledge was confined within narrow limits; and even: in
populous cities,' says Gioviano Pontano, 'we see a crowd of people the twelfth century there were universal artists, but the problems of
who have left their homes of eheir.own free will; but a man takes his architecture were comparatively simple and uniform, and in sculpture
virtues with him wherever he goes.' And, in fact, they were by no and painting the matter was of more importance than the form. But in
means only men who had been actually exiled, but thousands left their Italy at the time of the Renaissance we find artists who in every
native place voluntarily, because they found its political or economical branch created new and perfect works, and who also made the greatest
condition intolerable. The Florentine emigrants at Ferrara and the impression' as men. Others, outside the arts they practised, · were
Lucchese in Venice formed whole colonies by themselves. masters of a vast circle -of spiritual interests.
The cosmopolitanism which grew up in the most gifted circles is in Dante, who, even in his lifetime, was called by some a poet, by
itself a high stage of individualism. Dante, as we have already said, others a philosopher, by others a theologian, pours forth in' all his
finds a new home in the language and culture of Italy, but goes writings a stream of pe~sonal force by which the reader, apart from
beyond even this in the words, 'My country is the whole world.' And the interest of the subject, feels himself carried away. What power of
when his recall to Florence was offered him on unworthy conditions, will must the steady, unbroken elaboration of the' Divine Comedy have
he wrote back: 'Can I not everywhere behold the light of the sun and required! And if we look' at the matter of the poem, we find that in the
the stars; everywhere meditate on the noblest truths, without appearing whole spiritual or physical world there is hardly an important subject
ingloriously and shamefully before the city and the people? Even my which the poet has not fathomed, and on which his utterances - often
bread will not fail me,' The artists exult no less defiantly in their only a few words - are' not the most weighty of his time. For the
freedom from the constraints of fixed residence. 'Only he who has plastic arts he is of the first importance, and this for better reasons than
102 CIVILIZATION OF TH,B RBNAISSANCB THB DBVBLOPMBNT OF THB INDIVIDUAL
IO'J
the few references to contemporary artists - he soon became himself years, till exhaustion brought on a severe illness. In his twenty-fourth
the source of inspiration. year, finding his memory for words weakened, but his sense of facts
The fifteenth century is, above all, that of the many-sided men. unimpaired, he set to work at physics and mathematics. And all the
There is no biography which does not, besides the chief work of its while he acquired every sort of accomplishment and dexterity, cross-
hero, speak of other pursuits all passing beyond the limits of dilet- examining artists, scholars and artisans of all descriptions, down to the
tantism. The Florentine merchant and .statesman was often learned in cobblers, about the secrets and peculiarities of their craft. Painting and
both the classical languages; the most famous humanists read the Ethics modelling he practised by ,the way, and especially excelled in admirable
and Politics of Aristotle to him and his sons; even the daughters of the likenesses from memory. Great admiration was excited by his mysteri-
house were highly educated. It is in these circles that private education ous camera obscura, in which he showed at one time the stars and the
was first treated seriously. The humanist, on his side, was compelled to moon rising over rocky ~s, at another wide landscapes with moun-
the most varied attainments, since his philological learning was not tains and gulfs receding into dim perspective, and with fleets advancing
limited, as it is now, to the theoretical knowledge of classical antiquity, on the waters in shade· or sunshine. And that which others created
but had to serve the practical needs of daily life. While studying Pliny, he welcomed joyfully, and held every human achievement which
he made collections of natural history; the geography of the ancients followed the [aws of beauty for something almost divine. To all this
was his guide in treating of modem geography; their history was his must be added his literar~ works, first of all those on art, which are
pattern in writing contemporary chronicles, even when composed in landmarks and authorities of the first order for the Renaissance of
Italian; he not only translated the comedies of Plautus, but acted as form, especially in architecture; then his -Latin prose writings - novels
manager when they were put on the stage; every effective form of and other works - of which some have been taken, for productions of
ancient literature down to the dialogues of Lucian he did his best to antiquity; his elegies, eclogues and humorous dinner-speeches. He also
imitate; and besides all this, he acted as magistrate, secretary and wrote an Italian treatise on domestic life38 in four books; and even a
diplomatist - not always to his own advantage. funeral oration on his dog. His serious and witty sayings were thought
But among these many-sided men, some who may truly be called worth collecting, and specimens of them, many columns long, are
all-sided tower above the rest. Before analysing the general phases of quoted in his biography. And all that he had and knew he imparted, as
life and culture of this period, we may here, on the threshold of the rich natures always do, without the least reserve, giving away his chief
fifteenth century, consider for a moment the figure 0£ one of these discoveries for nothing. But the deepest spring of his nature has yet to
giants - Leon Battista Alberti (b. 1404?, d. 1472), His biograph:y,37 be spoken of - the sympathetic intensity with which he entered into
which is only a fragment, speaks of him but little as an artist, and the whole life around him .. At the sight of noble trees and waving
makes no mention at all of his great significance in the history of cornfields he shed tears; handsome and dignified old men he honoured·
architecture. We shall now see what he was, apart from these special . as 'a delight of nature'; and could never look at them enough. Perfectly
claims to distinction, , formed animals won his goodwill as being ~specially favoured by
In all by which praise is won, Leon Battista was from his childhood nature; 'and more-than once, when he was ill, the sight of a beautiful
the first. Of his various gymnastic feats ,and exercises we read with landscape cured him. No wonder that those.who saw him in this close
astonishment how, with his feet together, he could spring over a man's and mysterious communion with the world ascribed to him the gift of
head; how, in the cathedral, he threw a coin in the air till it was heard prophecy. He was said to have foretold a bloody catastroph~ in the
to ring against the distant roof; how the wildest horses trembled under family of Este, the fate of Florence, and the death of the popes years
him. In three things he desired to appear faultless to others, in walking, before they happened, and, to be able to read into the countenances
in riding, and in speaking. He learned music without a master, and yet and the hearts of men. It need not be added that an iron will pervaded
his compositions were admired by professional judges. Under the and sustained his whole personaliry: like all the great men: of the
pressure of poverty, he studied both civil and canonical law for many Renaissance, he said, 'Men can do all things if they will/
104 CIVILIZATION OF'THB RBNAISSANCB
THB DBVBLOPMENT OF THE INDIVIDUAL 105

And Leonardo da Vinci was to·Albetti as the finisher to the beginner, prayers and those of others for their deliverance. And in a famous
as the master to the dilettante. Would only that Vasari's work were passage, the passion for fame - 'lo gràn disio dell' eccellenza' - is reproved
here supplemented by a description like that of Alberti! The colossal for the reason that intellectual glory is not absolute, but relative to the
outlines of Leonardo's nature can never be more than dimly and times, and may be surpassed and eclipsed by greater successors. ·
distantly conceived. The new race of poet-scholars which arose soon after Dante quickly
made themselves masters of this fresh tendency. They did so in a
GLORY double sense, being themselves the most acknowledged celebrities of
Italy, ,and at the same time, as poets and historians, consciously dis-
To this inward development of the individual corresponds a new sort posing of the reputation lof others. An outward symbol of this sort of
of outward distinction - the modem form of glory. 39 fame was the coronation of the poets, of which we shall speak later on.
In the other countries of Europe the different classes of society lived A contemporary of Dante, Albertinus Musattus or Mussatus,
apart, each with its own medieval caste sense of honour. The poetical crowned poet at Padua' by the bishop and rector, enjoyed a fame
fame of the troubadours and Minnesingers was peculiar to the knightly which fell little short of deification. Every Christmas Day the doctors
order. But in Italy social equality had appeared before the time of the and students of both colleges at the university came in solemn proces-
tyrannies or the democracies. We there find early traces of a general sion before his house with trumpets and, as it seems, with burning
society, having, as will be shown more fully later on, a common tapers, to salute him and bring him presents. His reputation lastedtill,
ground in Latin and Italian literature; and such a ground was needed in IJ 18, he fell into disgrace· with the ,ruling tyrant of the House rof
for this new element in life to grow in. To this must be added that the Carrara.
Roman authors, who were now zealously studied, are filled and This new incense, whièh once was offered only to saints and heroes,
saturated with the conception of fame, and that their subject itself - was given in clouds ,to Petrarch, who persuaded himself in his later
the universal empire of Rome - stood as a permanent ideal before the years that it was but a foolish and troublesome thing. His letter 'To
minds ofltalians. From henceforth all the aspirations and achievements Posterity' is the confession of an old 'and famous man, who is forced to
of the people were governed by a moral postulate, which was still gratify the public curiosity. He admits that he wishes for fame in the
unknown elsewhere in Europe. times to come, but would rather-be without it in his own day. In his
Here, again, as in all essential points, the first witness to be called is dialogue on fortune and tnisfortune, the interlocutor, who maintains
Dante. He strove for the poet's garland with all the power of his soul. the futility of glory, has the best of the contest. But, at the same time,
As publicist and man of letters, he laid stress on the fact that what he Petrarch is pleased that the autocrat of Byzantium knows him as well
did was new, and that he wished not only to be, but to be esteemed, by his writings as Charles IV knows him. And in fact, even in his
the first in his own walks. But even in his prose writings he touches on lifetime, his fame extended far beyond Italy. And the emotion which'
the inconveniences of fame; he knows how often personal acquaint- he felt was natural when his friends, on the occasion of a visit to his
ance with famous men is disappointing, and explains how this is due native Arezzo (1350), took him to the house where he was bom, and
partly to the childish fancy of men, partly to envy, and partly to the told him how the city had, provided-that no change should be made in
imperfections of the hero himself. And in his great poem he firmly it. In former times the dwfllings of certain great saints were preserved
maintains the emptiness of fame, although in a manner which betrays and revered in this way, \like the cell of St Thomas Aquinas in the
that his heart was not set free from the longing for it. In paradise the Dominican convent at Naples, and the Portiuncula of St Francis near
sphere of Mercury is the seat of such blessed ones as on earth strove Assisi; and one or two great jurists also enjoyed the half-mythical
after glory and thereby dimmed 'the beams of true love'. It is character- reputation which led to this honour. Towards the close of the four-
istic that the lost souls in hell beg of Dante to keep alive for them their teenth century the people. at Bagnolo,: near Florence, 'called an old
memory and fame on earth, whilethose in purgatory only entreat his building the 'Studio' of Accursius (b. a. n50), but, nevertheless,
106 CIVILIZATION OF THE RENAISSANCE
THE DEVELOPMENT OP THE INDIVIDUAL 107
suffered it to be destroyed. It is probable that the great incomes and
fit of aristocratic insolence, the guardian of the young Gonzàga, Carlo
the political influence which some jurists obtained as consulting lawyers
Malatesta, caused it to bfpulled down in' 1392, and was afterwards
made a lasting impression on the. popular imagination.
forced, when he found the fameof the old poet too strong for him, to
To the cultus of the birthplaces of famous men must be added that
set it up again. Even then, perhaps, the grotto, a couple of miles from
of their graves, and, in the case of Petrarch, of the spot where he died.
the town, where Virgil was said co have meditated, was shown to
In memory of him Arquà became a favourite Jtesort of the Paduans,
strangers, like the 'Scuola di Virgilio' at Naples. Como claimed both
and was dotted with graceful little villas. At this time there were no
the Plinys for its own, and' at the end of the fifteenth century erected
'classic spots' in northern Europe, and pilgrimages were only made to
statues in their honour, sit~ng under graceful baldachins on the façade
pictures and relics. It was a point of honour for the different cities to of the cathedral.
possess the bones of their own and foreign celebrities; and it is most
History and the new topography were now careful to leave no local
remarkable how seriously the Florentines, even in the fourteenth
celebrity unnoticed. At the same period the northern chronicles only
century - long before the building of Santa Croce - laboured to make
here and there, among the list of popes, emperors, earthquakes and
their cathedral a pantheon. Accorso, Dante, Petrarch, Boccaccio and
comets, put in the remark that at such a time this or that famous man
the jurist Zanobi della Strada were to have had magnificent tombs 'flourished'. We shall elsewhere have to show how, mainly under the
there erected to them.· Late in the fifteenth century, Lorenzo il Mag-
influence of this idea of fame, an admirable · biographical literature
nifico applied in person to the Spoletans.iasking them to give up the
was developed. We must here limit ourselves to the local patriotism
corpse of the painter Fra Filippo Lippi for the cathedral, and received of the topographers who recorded the claims, of their native cities to
the answer that they had none too many ornaments to the city, distinction. · 1. r
especially in the shape of distinguished people, for which reason they
In the Middle Ages, the ciries were proud of their saints and of the
begged him to spare them; and, in fact, he had to be contented with
bones and relics in their churches. With these the panegyrist of Padua
erecting a cenotaph. And even Dante, in spite of all the applications to in 1450, Michele Savonarola, begins his list; from them he passes to
which Boccaccio urged the Florentines with bitter emphasis, remained 'the famous men who were no saints, but who, by their great intellect
sleeping tranquilly by the side of San Francesco at Ravenna, 'among and force [virtus] deserve to'be added [adnecti] to the saints' -just as in
ancient tombs of emperors and vaults of saints, in more honourable· classical antiquity the distinguished man came close upon the hero.
company than thou, 0 Home, couldst offer him'. It even happened The further enumeration is most characteristic of the time. First comes
that a man once took away unpunished the lights from the altar on Antenor, the brother of Priam, who founded Padua with a band of
which the crucifix stood, and set them by the grave, with the words, Trojan fugitives; King Dardànus, who -defeated Attila in the Euganean
'Take them; thou art more worthy of them than He, the Crucified hills, followed him in pursuit and struck him dead at Rimini with a
One!' , chess-board; the Emperor Henry IV,' who built the cathedral; a King
And now the Italian cities began again to remember their ancient Marcus, whose head was preserved in Monselice; then a couple of
citizens and inhabitants. Naples, perhaps, had never forgotten its tomb cardinals and prelates as founders -of colleges, churches and so forth;
of Virgil, since a kind of mythical halo had become attached to the the famous Augustinian theologian, Fra Alberto; a string of philos-
name. , ..
ophers beginning with Paolo Veneto and the celebrated Pietro of'
The Paduans, even in the sixteenth century, firmly believed that Albano; the jurist Paolo Padovano; then Livy and the poets Petrarch,
they possessed not only the genuine bones of their founder, Antenor, Mussato, Lovato. If there is any want of militáry celebrities in the list,
but also those of the historian -Livy.40 'Sulmona,' says Boccaccio, the poet consoles himself for it by the abundance of learned men
'bewails that Ovid lies buried far away in exile; and Parma rejoices whom he has to show, and by the more durable character of intellectual
that Cassius sleeps within its walls.• The Mantuans coined a medal in glory, while the fame of the1soldier is buried with his body, or, if it
1257 with the bust of Virgil, and raised a statue to represent him.' In a lasts, owes its permanence only to •the scholar. It is nevertheless
108 CIVILIZATION ,OF THE RENAISSANCE THE DBVEljOPMENT OP THE INDLVIDUAL 109

honourable to the city that foreign warriors lie buried here by their he will try the effect ofa little blame. Sannazaro, in two magnificent
own wish, like Pietro de' Rossi of Parma, Filippo Arcelli of Piacenza, sonnets, threatens Alfonso of Naples with eternal obscurity on account
and especially Gattamelata ofNarni (d. 1443), whose brazen equestrian of his cowardly flight before Charles VIII. Angelo Poliziano seriously
statue, 'like a Caesar in triumph', already stood by the church of the exhorts (1491) King john of Portugal to think betimes of his im-
Santo. The author then names a crowd ofjurists and physicians, nobles mortality in reference t~ the new discoveries in Africa, and to send
'who had not only, like so many others, received, but deserved, ·the him materials to Florence, there to be put into shape (operosius ex-
honour of knighthood'. Then follows a list of famous mechanicians, colenda), otherwise it would befall him,as it had befallen all theothers
painters and musicians, which is closed by, the name of a fencing- whose deeds, unsupported bythe help of the learned, 'lie hidden in the
master Michele Rosso, who, as the most distinguished man in his vast heap of human frailty', The king, or his humanistic chancellor,
profession, was to be seen painted in many places. agreed to this, and promised that at least the Portuguese chronicles of
By the side of these local temples of fame, which· myth, legend, African affairs should be translated into Italian and sent to Florence to
popular admiration and literary tradition combined to 'create, the be done into Latin. Whether the promise was kept is not known.
poet-scholars built up a great pantheon ofworld-wide celebrity. They These pretensions are by no means so groundless as they may appear at
made collections of famous men and famous women, often in direct first sight; for the form in which events, even the greatest, are told to
imitation of Cornelius N epos, the pseudo-Suetonius, Valerius Maxim- the living and to posterity is anything but a matter of indifference.
us, Plutarch (Mulierum virtutes), Hieronymus (De viris illustribus) and The Italian humanists, with their mode of exposition and their Latin
1 '
others; or they wrote of imaginary triumphal processions and Olym- style, had long the complere control of the reading world of Europe,
pian assemblies, as was done by Petrarch in his ·Trionfo dellafama, and and till last century the Italian poets were more widely known and
Boccaccio in the Amorosa visione, with hundreds of names, of which studied than those· of any other nation. The baptismal name of the
three-fourths at least belong to antiquity and the rest to the Middle Florentine Amerigo Vespucci was given, on account of his book of
Ages. 41 By and by this new and comparatively modern element was travels, to a new quarter of the globe, and if Paolo Giovio, with all his
treated with greater emphasis; the historians began to insert descriptions superficiality and gracefuj caprice, promised himself immortality, his
of character, and collections arose of the biographies of distinguished expectation has not altogether been disappointed,
contemporaries, like those of Filippo Villani, V espasiano Fiorentino, Amid all these preparations outwardly to win and secure fame, the
Bartolommeo Facio and lastly of Paolo Giovio. curtain is now and theni drawn aside, and we see with frightful
The north of Europe, until Italian influence began to tell upon its evidence a boundless ambition and thirst after greatness, independent
writers - for instance, on Trithemius, the first German who wrote the of all means and consequ~nces. Thus, in the Preface to Machiavelli's
lives of famous men - possessed only either legends of the saints, or Florentine history, in which he blames his , predecessors Leonardo,
descriptions of princes and churchmen partaking largely of the charac- Aredno and Poggio for their too considerate reticence with regard to
ter of legends and showing no traces of the idea of fame, that is, of the political parties in the.city: 'They erred greatly and showed that
distinction won by a man's personal efforts. Poetical glory was still they understood little the ambition of men and the desire to perpetuate
confined to certain classes of society, and the names of northern artists a name. How many who could distinguish themselves by nothing
are only known to us at this period in so far as they were members of praiseworthy strove to do so by infamous deeds! Those writers did
certain guilds or corporations. not consider that actions which are great in themselves, as is fhe case
The poet-scholar in Italy had, as we have already said, the fullest with the actions of rulers and of states, always seem to bring more
consciousness that he was the giver of fame and immortality, or, if he glory than blame, of whatfver kind they are and whatever the result
chose, of oblivion. Boccaccio complains of a fair one to whom he had of them may be.' In more, than one remarkable and dreadful under-
done homage, and who remained hard-hearted in order that he might taking the motive· assigned by serious writers is the burning desire to
go on praising her and making her famous, and he gives her a hint that achieve something great and memorable. This motive is not a· mere
IIO CIVILIZATION OF THB RBNA1SSANCB
THB DBVBLOPMBNT OF THB INDIVIDUAL III

extreme case of ordinary.vanity, but something demonic, involving a world far behind, and who, if·only-on account óf his great picture of
surrender of the will, the use of any means, however atrocious, and the deceivers, must be called the chief master of colossal comedy. With
even an indifference to success itself. In this sense, for example, Machi- Petrarch begin the collections of witty sayings after the pattern of
avelli conceives the character of Stefano Porcari; of the murderers of Plutarch (Apophthegmata, etc.).
Galeazzo Maria Sforza (p. 54), the documents tell us about the same; What stores of wit were concentrated in Florence during this cen-
and the assassination of Duke Alessandro of Florence (1537) is ascribed tury is most characteristically shown in the novels of Franco Sacchetti.
by Varchi himself to the thirst for fame which tormented the· murderer These are, for the most part, not stories but answers, given under
Lorenzino Medici. Still more stress is laid on this motive by Paolo certain circ1:1mstances - sh0cking pieces of naiveté, with which silly
Giovio. Lorenzino, according. to him, pilloried by a pamphlet of folks, court jesters, rogues land profligate women make their retort.
Molza, broods over a deed whose novelty shall make: his disgrace The comedy of the tale lies in the startling contrast of this real or
forgotten, and ends by murdering his kinsmen and prince. These are assumed naïveté with conventional morality and the ordinary relations
charact-eristic features of this age of overstrained and despairing passions of the world - things are made to stand on their heads. All means of
and forces, and reminds us of the burning of the temple of Diana at picturesque representation are made use of, including. the introduction
Ephesus in the time of Philip of Macedon. of certain North Italian diá1ects. Often the place of wit is taken by
mere insolence, clumsy trickery, blasphemy and obscenity; one or two
RIDICULE AND WIT jokes told of condottieri are among the most brutal and malicious which
are recorded. Many of the ~urle are thoroughly comic, but many are
The corrective, not only of this modern desire for fame, but of all only· real or supposed evidence of personal superiority, of triumph
highly developed individuality, is found in ridicule, especially when over another. How much people were willing to put up with, how
expressed in the victorious form of wit. We read in the Middle Ages often the victim was satisfied with getting the laugh on his side by a
how hostile armies, princes and nobles provoked one another with retaliatory trick, cannot be said; there was much heartless and pointless
symbolical insult, and how the defeated party was loaded with symboli- malice mixed up with it all! and life in Florence was no doubt often
cal outrage. Here and there, too, under the influence of classical made unpleasant enough from this cause. 42 The inventors and retailers
literature, wit began to be used as a weapon in theological disputes, of jokes soon became inevitable figures, and among them there must
and the poetry of Provence produced a whole class of satirical composi- have been some who were classical - far superior to all the mere court-
tions. Even the Minnesingers, as their political poems -show, could jesters, to whom competition, a changing public and the quick appre-
adopt this tone when necessary. But wit could not be an independent hension of the audience, all advantages of life, in Florence, were
element in life till its appropriate victim, the developed individual wanting. Some Florentine . wits went starring among the despotic
with personal pretensions, had appeared. Its weapons were then-by no courts of Lombardy and Romagna, and found themselves much
means limited to the tongue and the pen, but included tricks and better rewarded than at home, where their talent was cheap and
practical jokes - the so-called burle and heffe - which form a chief plentiful. The better type of these people is the amusing man (l'uomo
subject of many collections of novels. piacevole), the worse is the buffoon and the vulgar parasite who
The Hundred Old Tales, which must have been composed about the presents himself at weddings and banquets with the argument, 'Ifl am
end of the thirteenth century, have as yet neither wit, the fruit of not invited, the fault is not mine.' Now and then the latter combine to
contrast, nor the burla, for their subject; their aim -is merely to give pluck a young spendthrift, but in general they are treated and despised
simple and elegant expression· to wise sayings and pretty stories or as parasites; while wits of higher position bear themselves like princes,
fables. But if anything proves the great antiquity of the collection, it is and consider their talent as ~omethihg sovereign. Dolcibene, whom
precisely this absence of satire. For with the fourteenth century comes Charles IV had pronounced fo ·be the 'king of Italian jesters', said to
Dante, who, in the utterance of scorn, leaves all other poets in the him at Ferrara: 'You will conquer the world, since you are my friend
II2 CIVILIZATION OP THB·RBNAISSA.NCB · THE DBVBLO,MENT OP THB INDIVIDUAL . ;11'3

and the pope's; you fight with the sword, the pope with his bulls, and compelled, adorned with laurel and purple, to amuse the papal guests
I with my tongue.' .This is no mere jest, but the foreshadowing of with his recitations, and a~ last, when all were ready to split with
Pietro Aretino. , , laughter, to mount a gold-hamessed elephant. in the court of the
The two most famous jesters about the middle of the fifteenth Vatican, sent as •a present' to. Rome by Emmanuel "the Great of
century were a priest near Florence, Arlotta (1483), for more refined Portugal, while the pope looked down from above through his eye-
wit (facezie), and the court-fool of Ferrara, Gonnella,. for buffoonery. glass. The brute, however, was-so terrified by the noise of the trumpets
We can hardly compare their stories. with ·those of the Parson of and kettledrums, and, the \cheers of the crowd, that there was no
Kalenberg and Till Eulenspiegel, since the latter arose in a different getting him over the bridgjof Sant' Angelo.
and half-mythical manner, as fruits of the imagination 0f a whole The parody of what is s ,)emn or sublime,' which here meets us in
people, and touch: rather on what is general and intelligible to all, the case of a procession; had already. taken an important place in
I
while Arlotto and ·Gonnella were historical beings, coloured and poetry. 43 It was naturally compelled to -choose victims of another kind
1
shaped by local influences. But if the comparison be allowed, and than those of Aristophanes, who introduced the great tragedians into
extended to the jests of the non-Italian nations, we shall find in general his plays. But the same mafrity of culture which- at a certain period
that the joke in the French fabliaux, as among ·the Germans, as chiefly produced parody among the Greeks did- the same in Italy, By the close
directed to the attainment of some advantage or enjoyment, while the of the fourteenth century the love-lom wailings of Petrarch's sonnets
wit of Arlotto and the practical jokes of Gonnella are an end in and others of the same kind were taken off by caricaturists; and the
themselves, and exist simply for the sake of the triumph of production. solemn air of this form of v:erse was parodied in· lines of mystic
(Till Eulenspiegel again forms a class ,by himself, as .the personified twaddle. A constant invitation to parody was offered by the Divine
quiz, mostly pointless enough, of particular classes and professions.) Comedy, and Lorenzo il Magnifico wrote the most admirable travesty
The court-fool of the Este saved himself more than once by his keen in the style of the Inferno (Simposio or I Beoni). Luigi Pulci obviously
satire and refined modes of vengeance. , imitates the improvoisatost iy his Morgante, and both his poetry and
The type of the uomo piacevole and the bujfone long survived the Boiardo's are in part, at least] a half-conscious parody of'the chivalrous
freedom of Florence. Under Duke Cosimo flourished Barlacchia, and poetry, of the Middle Ages. Such a caricature·was deliberately under..
at the beginning of the seventeenth century Francesco Ruspoli and taken by the great parodist Teofilo Folengo (about 1520) .. Under
Curzio Marignolli. In Pope Leo K the genuine Florentine love of the name of Limemo Pitocco, he composed the Otlandino, in which
jesters showed itself strikingly. This prince, whose taste for the most chivalry appears only as a ludicrous setting for a crowd of modem
refined intellectual pleasures was insatiable, endured and desired at his figures and ideas. Under the· name of Merlinus Coccaius he described
table a number of witty buffoons and jack-puddings, among them the journeys and exploits otihis fantastic vagabonds (also in the same
two monks and a cripple; at public feasts he treated them with spirit of parody) in half-Latih hexameters, with all the affected pomp
deliberate scorn as parasites, setting before them monkeys and crow's of the learned Epos of the day (opus macaronicorum). Since then carica-
in the place of savoury meats. Leo, indeed, showed a peculiar fondness ture. has been constantly, and often brilliantly, represented on the
for the burla; it belonged to his nature sometimes to treat his ow.n Italian Parnassus. l
favourite pursuits - music and poetry - ironically, parodying them About the middle period of the Renaissance a theoretical analysis óf
with his factotum, Cardinal Bibbiena. Neither of them found it wit was undertaken, and its practical application in good society was
beneath him to fool an honest old secretary till he thought himself a regulated more precisely. Tlie theorist was Gioviano Pontano, ln his
master of the art of music. Thdmprovvisatore,.Baraballo of Gaeta, was work on speakingvespecially.in the third and fourth books, he tries by
brought so far by Leo's flattery that he applied in all seriousness for the means of the comparison of pumerous jokes, or facetiae, to arrive at a
poet's coronation ·on the Capitol. On the anniversary of St Cosmas general principle. How wit should be used among people of position is
and St Damian, the patrons of the House of Medici, he was first taught by Baldassare Castiglione in his Cort_igiano. 44 Its chief function
Il4 CIVILIZATION OF THE RENAISSANCE
THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE INDIVIDUAL IIS
is naturally to enliven those present by the repetition of comic or
wittiest tongues, Poggio's Facetiae are dated from the Chamber of Lies
graceful stories and sayings; personal jokes, on the contrary, are dis-
(bugiale) of the apostolic n~taries; and when we remember the number
couraged on the ground that they wound unhappy people, show too
of d~sappointed place-.huf\ter~1 of hopeless competitors and enemies of
much honour to wrong-doers, and make enemies of the powerful and
the favourites, of idle, pro/fligate prelates there assembled, it is intelli-
the spoiled children of fortune; and even in repetition, a wide reserve
gible how Rome became · the home of the savage pasquinade as
in the use of dramatic gestures is recommended to the gentleman.
well as of more philosophical satire. If we add to this the widespread
Then follows, not only for purposes of quotation, but as patterns for
hatred borne to the priests, and the well-known instinct of the mob to
future jesters, a large collection of puns and witty sayings, methodically
lay any horror to the charge of the great, there results an untold mass
arranged according to their species, among them some that are admir-
of infamy. Those who were able protected themselves best by con-
able. The doctrine of Giovanni della Casa, some twenty years later, in
tempt both of the false and true accusations, and by brilliant and joyous
his guide to good manners, 45 is much stricter and more cautious; with
display. More sensitive natures sank into utter despair when they
a view to the consequences, he wishes to see the· desire of triumph
found themselves. deeply involved inr guilt, and still more deeply in
banished altogethes from jokes and bur le. He is the herald of a reaction,
slander. In course of time calumny
I
became universal, and the strictest
which was certain sooner or later to appear.
Italy had, in fact, become a school for scandal, the like of which the
ril
virtue was most certain of to challenge the attacks of malice. Of the
great pulpit orator, Fra Egidio ofViterbo, whom Leo made a cardinal
world cannot show, not even in France at the time of Voltaire. In him
on account of his merits, aqd who showed· himself a man of the people
and his comrades there was assuredly no lack of the spirit of negation;
and a brave monk in the calamity of 1527, Giovio gives us to
but where, in the eighteenth century, was to be found the crowd of
understand that he preserved his ascetic pallor by the smoke of wet
suitable victims, that countless assembly of highly and characteristically
straw and other means of the same kind. Giovio is a genuine Curial in
developed hum.an beings, celebrities of every kind, statesmen, church-
these matters, He generally; begins by telling his story, then adds that
men, inventors and discoverers, men of letters, poets and artists, all of
he does not believe it, and then hints at the end that perhaps aftel' all
whom then gave the fullest and freest play to their individuality? This
there may be soi,iething in ,it. But the, true scapegoat of Roman scorn
host existed in.the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, and by its side the
was the pious and moral Ad,rian Vl. A general agreement seemed to be
general culture of the time had educated a poisonous brood of impotent
made to take him only on the comic side. He fell out from the first
wits, of bom critics and railers, whose envy called for' hecatombs of
with the formidable Francesco Berni, threatening to have thrown into
victims; and to all this was added the envy of the famous men among the Tiber not, as people said, the statue of Pasquino, but the writers of
themselves. In this the philologists notoriously led the way - Filelfo, the satires themselves. The vengeance for this was the famous Capitolo
Poggio, Lorenzo Valla and others, - while the artists of the fifteenth
against Pope Adriano, inspired not exactly by hatred; but.by contempt
century lived in peaceful and friendly competition with one another.
for the comical Dutch balbarian; the more savage menaces were
The history of art may take note of the fact. reserved for the cardinals who had elected him. The plague, which
Florence, the great market of fame, was in this point, as we have then was prevalent in Rome, was ascribed to him; Berni and others
said, in advance of other cities. 'Sharp eyes and bad tongues' is the sketch the environment of the pope with the same sparkling untruth-
description given of the inhabitants. An easygoing contempt of every- fulness with which the modern feuilletoniste turns black into white, and
thing and everybody was probably the prevailing tone of society. everything into anything. The biography which Paolo Giovip was
Machiavelli, in the remarkable Prologue to ;his Mandragola, refers commissioned to write by the Cardinal ofTortosa, and which was to
rightly or wrongly the visible decline of moral force to the general have been a eulogy, is for anyone who can read between-the lines an
habit of evil-speaking, and threatens his detractors with the news that unexampled piece of satire. It sounds ridiculous - at least for the
he can .say sharp things as well as they. Next .eo Florence comes the Italians of that time - to hear how Adrian applied to the Chapter of
papal court, which had long been a rendezvous of the bitterest- and S~agossa for the jaw-bone of ' St Lambert; how the devour Spaniards
IIÓ CIVILIZATION OF THE RENAISSANCE
THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE INDiiVIDUAl II7
decked him out till he looked 'like a right well-dressed pope'; how he
came in a confused and tasteless procession from Ostia to Rome, took Poggio and his opponents interchanged
I
are just as infamous in their
counsel about burning or drowning Pasquino, would suddenly break tone and purpose, but they were not composed for the press, but for a
off the most important business when dinner was announced; and sort of private circulation. Aretino made all his profit out of a complete
lastly, at the end of an unhappy reign, how he died of drinking too publicity, and in a certain sense may be considered the father of
much beer - whereupon the house of his physician was hung with modern journalism. His letters and miscellaneous articles were printed
garlands by midnight revellers, and adorned with the inscription, periodically, after they had hready been circulated among a tolerably
extensive public. I
'Llberatorl Patriae S.P.Q.R.' It is true that Giovio had lost his money
in the general confiscation of public funds, and had only received a Compared with the sharp pens of the eighteenth century, Aretino
benefice by way of compensation because he was 'no poet', that is to had the advantage that he was not burdened with principles, neither
say, no pagan. But it was decreed that Adrian should be the last great with liberalism nor philanthropy nor any other virtue, nor even with
victim. After the disaster which befell Rome in 1527, slander visibly science; his whole baggage consisted of the well-known motto, 'Veritas
declined along with the unrestrained wickedness of private life. odium parit'. He never, consequently, found himself in the false position
of Voltaire, who was forcedjto disown his.Pucelle and-conceal all his
But while it was still flourishing was developed, chiefly in Rome, the life the authorship of other works. Aretino put his name to all he
greatest railer of modem times, Pietro Aretino. A glance at his life and wrote, and openly gloried ill his notorious Ragionamenti. His literary
character will save us the trouble of noticing many less distinguished talent, his clear and sparkling style, his varied observation of men and
members of his class. things, would have made him a considerable writer under any circum-
We know him chiefly in the last thirty years of his life (1527-56), stances, destitute as he was of the power of conceiving a genuine work
which he passed in Venice, the only asylum possible for him. From of art, such as a true dramatic· comedy; and to the coarsest as well as
hence he kept all that was famous in Italy in a kind of state of siege; the most refined malice he added a grotesque w,it'so brilliant that in
some cases it does non fall short of that of Rabelais.
and here were delivered the presents of the foreign princes who
needed or dreaded his pen. Charles V and Francis I both pensioned In such circumstances, and, with such objects· and means, he set to
him at the same time, each hoping that Aretino would do some work to attack or circumvent his prey. The tone in which he appealed
mischief to the other. Aretino flattered both, but naturally attached to Clement VII not to complain or to think of vengeance, but to
himself more closely to Charles, because he remained master in Italy. forgive, at the moni.ent when the wailings of the devastated city were
After the emperor's victory at Tunis in 1535, this tone of adulation ascending to the Castel Sant'jAngelo, where the pope .himself was a
passed into the most ludicrous worship, in observing which it must prisoner, is the mockery of a devil or a monkey;•Sometimes, when-he
not be forgotten that Aretino constantly cherished the hope that is forced to give up all hope of presents, his fury breaks out into a
Charles would help him to a cardinal's hat. It is probable that he savage howl, as in the Capitolo to the Prince, of Salerno, who after
enjoyed special protection as Spanish agent, as· his speech or silence paying him for some time refused to do so any longer. On the other
could have no small effect on the smaller Italian courts and on public hand, it seems that the terrible Pierluigi Farnese, Duke of Parma,
opinion in Italy. He affected utterly to despise the papal court because never took any notice of him at all. As this gentleman had probably
he knew it so well; the true .reason was that Rome neither could nor renounced altogether the pleasures of a good reputation, it was not
would pay him any longer. Venice, which sheltered him, he was wise easy to cause him any annoyance; Aretino tried to do so by compar-
enough to leave unassailed. The rest of his relations with the great is ing his personal appearance to that of a constable, -a miller and a baker.
mere beggary and vulgar extortion. Aretino is most comical of all in the expression of whining mendicancy,
Aretino affords the first great instance of the abuse of publicity to as in the Capitolo to Francis I;!but the letters and poems made up of
such ends. The polemical writings which a hundred years earlier menaces and flattery cannot, notwithstanding all that is ludicrous in
them, be read without the deepest disgust, A .letter like that one of-his
II8 CIVILIZATION OP THE RENAISSANCE
THE DEVELOPMENT OP THE INDIVIDUAL II9
written to Michelangelo46 in November 1545 is, alone of its kind;
lived as he did is a matter of perfect indifference, as are also the
along with all the admiration he expresses for the Last Judgement he
charges him with irreligion, indecency and theft from the heirs of
edifying writings which he c~mposeq reasons of his own.47 It is in for
fact hard to say why he should have been a blasphemer. He was no
Julius II, and adds in a conciliating postscript, 'I only want to show
professor, or theoretical thinker or writer; and he, could extort no
you that if you are divino, I am not d' acqua.' Aretino laid great stress
upon it - whether from the insanity of conceit or by way of caricatur- money from God by thréa~'or flattery, and was co~sequently never
goaded into blasphemy by a refusal. A man like him does not take
ing famous men - that he himself should be called divine, as one of his trouble for nothing. ,
flatterers had already begun to do; and he certainly attained so much I '
It is a good sign of the present spirit of Italy that such a character
personal celebrity that his house at Arezzo passed 'for one of the sights
and 'suëh a career have become a thousand' times impossible; But
of the place. There were indeed whole months during which he never
historical criticism will always find in Aretino an imp0rtant study.
ventured to cross his threshold at Venice, lest he should fall in with J /• l ' :.r
some incensed Florentine like the younger Strozzi. Nor did he escape ,.·,·l ,,
the cudgels and the daggers of his enemies, although they failed to r ,,
have the effect which. Berni prophesied him in a famous sonnet: :Ht

Aretino died in his house, of apoplexy. ·,


The differences he made in his modes of flattery .are remarkable: in
dealing with non-Italians he was grossly fulsome; people· like Dulce
I
Cosimo of Florence he treated very differently. He praised the beauty ru· If~ j: 1.,
Ir n .
of the then youthful 'prince, who in fact did share this quality with r, ., ') t, ,,.I
J.;. ~ 'î ..

Augustus in no ordinary degree; he praised his moral conduct, with an J.' ,, • " r
11
oblique reference to the financial pursuits of Cosimo's mother Maria. ' jt;t ,f .~ .•
i!,J
l
Salviati, and concluded with a mendicant whine about the bad times ;t,1
,, "· I(

' I )}
and so forth. When Cosimo pensioned him.. which he' did liberally, ,.
considering his habitual parsimony -' to the extent, at last, of 160
ducats a year - he had doubtless an eye to Aretino's dangerous
character as Spanish agent. Aretino could ridicule and revile Cosimo, . J : J' !
I if ~.

.
,,,.,
,;
rl

and in the same breath threaten the Florentine agent that he would ,, r:- i ,.,
I•
obtain from the duke his immediatd recall; and if the Medicean prince I ir
~.i 't'·• ,ff., ir
felt himself at last to be seen through by · Charles V he would not i
care for Aretino's jokes and rhymes against him eo circulate at the
'I
imperial court. A curiously qualified piece of flattery was that addressed l
to the notorious Marquis of Marignano, who as castellan of Musso had \j
' I

I I ,•q
attempted to found an independent state. Thanking him for the gift of 1
)

a hundred crowns, Aretino writes: 'All the qualities which aprince


" I
I

J
d

11·
e t» t
.
should have are present in you, and all men.would think so, were it ··~!,, (

I I ~. (,1 I l.

not that the acts of violence inevitable at the beginning of all under- I ')(,
,r·, • .-,,
takings cause you to appear a trifle rough [aspro].' f T, , 1.i ·~ ,.
It has often been noticed as something singular that Aretino only
' •t
reviled the world, and not God also. The ·religious belief of a man who
,.. \,
·it .r, . ,,
I

I\

I Introduction
·,·, I 1,

JACOB llURCKHARDT AND THE


ITAL\AN RENAISSANCE

Jacob Burckhardt was not only one of the greatest historians of the
,.T
nineteenth century; he remains one of the most accessible to modern
readers. Born in 1818, the same year as Karl Marx, Burckhardt
belonged, to one of the best-known Basel families; monuments to
~ seventeenth-century Burckhardts can still be seen in the cathedral there.
Jacob Burckhardt senior was a clergyman of scholarly interests, who
collected coins and medals and wrote on local history, and at the age
of seventeen Jacob junior followed in his father's footsteps and carried
out research on behalf of a German professor who was writing a book
on the Swiss humanist Glareanus. Burckhardt was intended for the
Church and studied theology, at his father's suggestion, before losing
his faith and deciding to be a scholar. Between 1839 and 1842 he
studied at the university of Berlin. He followed courses on ancient
history, the history of architecture, and Arabic. He also attended the
seminars of the most famous living historian of the time, Leopold von
Ranke, and wrote. a paper for him on an early medieval topic, the
achievement of Charles Martell.
Burckhardt disliked Ranke as a person but admired him as a
historian. He considered publishing the paper on Charles Martell and
becoming a medievalist, but decided against both. His visits to Italy,
from 1837 onwards, and hisrfriendship with one of the younger
professors, Franz Kugler, had fired him with enthusiasm for cultural
history and for the classical and Renaissance. world. He returned to
Basel in 1843, took his doctorate, and began to lecture in the university
on a wide range of topics, including the history of painting, the
Middle Ages, the Counter-Reformation in Switzerland, and the
Roman emperors. At first he combined his academic duties with
the task of editing a conservative paper, the Basler Zeitung, for four or
five hours a day.
However, he came to feel an increasing dislike for politics, and also
2 CIVILIZATION OF THE RENAISSANCE
'I~TRODUCTION 3
for the 'degrading métier of journalist', and in 1846, when his friend of both sexes to whom he wrote lively 'and sentimental letters, not
Kugler asked for help in preparing a second edition of his successful infrequently signed 'Sa:ltimbanck'. '. ·• ,
Handbook of Art History, Burckhardt gave up the newspaper in order It is at first sight a ·little difficult to reconcile this person, or persona,
to spend more time on his research. The first-fruits of this research with that of the elderly Prdfessor Burckhardt, a close-cropped, digni-
were a major boek on The Age cf Constantine the Great, published fied and solitary bachelor lof modest and'conservanee tastes, ·who
in 1853, when the author was 35, followed two years later by an lived in two rooms above a baker's shop in the old town. He withdrew
extremely successful historical guide to the art treasures of Italy, The from political and social! life and concemrated on his teaching and· on
Cicerone. ·
being what he called 'a! good private individual'. However, he con-
These two books won Burckhardt a chair. He was called to the tinued to play the piano.and to indulge what he once called 'my passion
Zurich Polytechnic when it opened its doors in 1855, to· be the for travel, my mania for natural scenery and my interest in art',
professor of architecture an,.d art history. He lectured on the Renais- Like a good old-fashioned Swiss republican, he disliked pomp änd
sance, and it was here that he wrote his most · famous work, · The pretentiousness and, expressed this dislike in his-scyle oftlifé:1 At least
Civilization of the Renaissance in Italy.. However, he returned to Basel as one foreign 'visitor failed to recognize the distinguished scholar hehad
soon as he could, in 1858, and remained there for the rest of his life. come to see, only to be told, 'If you musrspëak to Jacob Burèkhatdt·,
From this time onwards Burckharde 'lived exclusively for his work as you must make do with 'tµé.' The professor was! however, a familiar
a teacher', as he put it himself, lecturing to a handfuk.of.seudents figure in the Basel of thé 1880s· and the early r89os, walking to his
during the week and to the general public on Saturdays-on history and lectures (as we see him in• ~ famous photograph), with a large blue
art history, and eefusing the fiattering invitation to succeed Ranke in portfolio 'of illustrations wider his· arm. The reaction of Basel' to
Berlin. Burckhardt's death suggests that he was loved as well as respected in
Burckhardt published littleafter 1860, apart from The Architecture his native city and was 'indeed · something of a local' institution, a
of the Renaissance in Italy (1867), a relatively technical study presented position which he retains to this day: It was in Basel that two of
more or less in note form (but attentive all the same to the social Burckhardt's books; on Rub~ns and on ·the history ofltalian an, were
and political context of building). It was only after his death, in posthumously published- as lwell. as. a complete edition of his letters
1897, that his remaining studies, for the most part notes I for his and a massive seven-volume intellectual biography, the life-work of a
lectures, appeared in print. His Rubens, Essays• on the History of Art in fellow-citizen, the €ultural historian Werner Kaegi, · ., · "!
Italy and Cultural History of Greece all appeared in '1898, followed ' As a l~ctur~r Burckhardt j~as in~sive, iro~ic and c~ustjc,; as may
by Reflections on World History (1905) and Judgements on· History 'and well, be imagined from ani Inspection-vof his Refiections ·on World
Historians (1929). History and Historical Fragments, in which one can almost hear him
talking. He impressed even the 24-yeat-old Nietzsche, who wrote that
The young Burckhardt was ardent, sentimental and artistic. He wore listening to Burckhardt talk on 'Great Men in·'History' was· thé first
his hair long, he played the piano and composed music, he sketched, time in his life that .he had enjoyed a lecture. He used to memorize his
he wrote poetry (and even published some, anonymously, in 1853). It lectures and deliver them without notes as if he were thinking aloud;
is easy to understand what attracted-him to Kugler, another unconven- but it is said that even his asides had been rehearsed. These asides
tional academic who composed songs and wrote plays· as well as (which have their equivalents in The Renaissance in Italy) include many
studying art history. 'Giacomo Burcardo' (as he called himself when disapproving references to the contemporary world. Butckhardt had a
he was fifteen) ·seems to have identified with Italy even before he had hearty dislike for the French Revolution, for the United States (which
seen it, and when he visited the country he found it a welcome escape he never visited), for mass democracy, uniformity, industtialism, militar-
from the Protestant piety of Basel, where art and its history were ism, nationalism, the railways, and what he called 'thë' whole power
suspect to some people as 'worldly' pursuits. He had a circle of friends and money racket' - developments which he saw to be both connected
4 CIVILIZATION OP THE RENAISSANCE
INTRODUCTION
and inevitable. In the age of the unification of Germany and Italy he 5
condemned the modern centralized state, 'worshipped as a god', as he sign of the time'. ff Burckhardt has to be labelled, the adjectives
put it, 'and ruling like a sultan'. He preferred to be a -good citizen 'sceptical', 'relativist' and, perhaps, 'intuitive' are probably less mislead-
and a good European (fluent not only in German, Italian and the ing than most. · j ·
dialect of Basel, but in French and even English). In the preface to the first edition of his Age of Constantine, in I 8 52,
the author declared that heiwas 'well aware that his treatment may bè
Burckhardt's conception of history was a very" different one from that impugned as being subjective', but explained that 'In works of general
of many of his contemporaries. He rejected both the positivism and history there is room for differences of opinion on fundamental
the Hegelianism which fascinated so many of his contemporaries all premises and aims, so that the same fact may seem essential and
over Europe. As a- student at the university of Berlin, he wrote important to one writer, for example, and 'to another mere rubbish
regretfully that.the philosophy of history was taught by followers of utterly without interest'. Wllat he offered was a personal interpretation,
Hegel, 'whom I cannot understand'. As a professor at the university of or better, 'view' or 'vision', (Anschauung); what he called a 'sketch of
Basel, he told his students that his lectures on the study of history the 'whole' (Gesamtschilderung). The visual metaphors are revealing;
would offer 'no philosophy of history", According to Burckhardt, there are many of them in the work of this connoisseur of painting,
there was no such thing; the idea of the philosophy of history was sculpture and architecture. What metaphors like 'outlines' (Umrisse) or
a contradiction in terms, 'for history co-ordinates; and hence is 'image' (Bild) reveal is thJ distance between Burckhardt and the
unphilosophical, while philosophy subordinates, and hence is un- tradition of narrative histofy. Where others wanted to tell a story,
historical'. In other words, history is unsystematic and systems are Burckhardt's aim was to paint the portrait of an age.
unhistorical. The term 'sketch' was probably employed not only out of modesty
This view is further from British historical empiricism than it may but also to suggest the impossibility of reaching definitive conclusions
look. Unlike many practising historians, Burckhardt was not philoso- about the past. In a similar way, in I86o, Burckhardt described his
phically illiterate. Despite his claim to be unfit for speculation and study of the Italian Renaissance as an 'essay' (Versuch) 'in the strictest
abstract thought, he was well acquainted with the ideas of Hegel and sense of the word', explainitig that 'To each eye ... the outlines of a
Schopenhauer as well as with those of the young Nietzsche, with given civilization [Kulturepoahe] present a different picture', 'and that
whom he used to go for walks discussing ideas. Although he was 'the same studies which have served for this work might easily, in
sceptical of the claims made for grand philosophical systems, his vision other hands, not only receive a wholly different treatment and applica-
of the past was not completely free of philosophical presuppositions, as tion, but lead also to essentially different conclusions'.
we shall see. In the preface to the second edition of Constantine, in J 880, Burck-
In any case, Burckhardt's position was as far from positivism as it hardt felt the need to· explain his approach in a 1· little more detail,
was from Hegel. Where the positivists saw history as a science, and describing the book as 'not so much a complete historical account as
historians as collecting 'facts' from the documents and giving what an integrated description, ffo/n the viewpoint of cultural history'. As
they considered to be an 'objective' account of what had 'actually' early as 1848 he had been planning a series of books on 'cultural
history' (K,ulturgeschichte). ' '
happened, Burckhardt saw history as an art, He regarded history as a
form of imaginative literature, akin to poetry. He wanted 'to write in Exactly what Burckhardt meant by 'cultural history' is not easy to
a readable style', to appeal to 'thinking readers of all classes' rather explain, just as it is difficult to translate the German term Kultur fin to
than to his fellow-scholars, and to concentrate on what was interesting English. As an approximation we may say that he employed the term
in the past rather than attempting to be exhaustive. He disliked in two senses. He used it in a narrow sense to refer to the arts, and in a
heaping up what he called 'mere facts' or 'external facts': 'One really wide sense to describe his holistic view of what we call 'a culture'. The
needs to use only such facts as are characteristic of an idea, or a clear ambiguity Is revealing. What it reveals is the' centrality of the arts in
Burckhardt's world-view, as in his life. After all, throughout his career
CIVILIZATION OP THll RllNAISSANCll INTRODUCTION 7
6
he both taught and wrote art history, from his early contribution» to different from the Switzerland he left behind, with sun instead of rain,
Kugler's handbook to the study of Rubens in his old age. One of his wine instead of beer, and' an outward-going people instead of an
pupils, Heinrich Wölffiin, achieved fame as an art historian1, and inward-looking-one. His sketchbooks give some idea of the fascination
described his master as primarily a historian of art. The,.Ren,aissance in this country had for him. His letters, too, are full of vivid descriptions,
Italy was originally intended to include a discussion of the art of the verbal vignettes of Italy and the Italians. At the age of twenty-eight he
period, and came to exclude art only because Burokhardt planned a was writing from Italy-lamenting the necessity to leave and declaring
separate volume on the subject. that 'I now know that I shall never really be happy again away from
Burckhardt's concern for cultural history became more exclusive Rome', its streets and gardens, a city where 'there is not the smallest
with the passing of the years. His reaction to the Franco-Prussian war trace of industry', while 'leisure has made politeness flourish like an
of 1&70 was to regard 'all mere "events" in the past', such as battles, as art'.
without value and to declare that 'From now on in my lectures, I shall Rome also appealed to Burckhardt's historical imagination. 'Part of
emphasize only cultural history.' His lectures on ancient Greece did in the pleasure of Rome is that it keeps one perpetually guessing and
fact concentrate on the Greek view of life and mentality (Denkweise) .. , arranging the ruins of the ages that lie so mysteriously, layer upon
At this point the contrast between Burckhardt's kind of historyand layer.' It was in Rome in 1&47 that the idea of writing a book on the
that of Leopold von Ranke is at its plainest. The yoµnger man Renaissance in Italy first started to his mind (much as the· idea of
acknowledged a considerable intellectual debt to the teaching of his writing about the decline and fall of the-Roman empire had started to
master, and he retained a lifelong admiration for Ranke' s History of the the mind of Gibbon). It was.in Rome in 1848, when-revolutions were
Popes and for his account of Germany in the age of the Reformation. breaking out all over Europe, that Burckhardt decided that he would
For his part Ranke praised Burckhardt's seminar papers .and his Age of work on 'The Age of Raphael'.
Constantine and recommended him for a chair at the university of The book that he dreamed of writing in 1847-8 was published in
Munich. However, the paths of these two great historians gradually 1860. In some respects it is a companion-piece to the Cicerone, published
diverged. Ranke's later works were rnore narrowly political than the five years earlier, for it assumes some knowledge of the art of the
earlier ones, while Burckhardt became increasingly preoccupied with period, and concentrates on -the culture which made the art possible.
cultural history. It was in the Cicerone that Burckhardt first stressed what he called
This kind of history was already the central theme of the book the 'realism' or 'naturalis!°f of the Renaissance (in the work of
Burckhardt published in 18~, at the age of forty-two, the book Ghiberti and Donatello, for example), and also the new concern
generally regarded as his masterpiece: The Civilization (or Culture) of for individuality.
the Renaissance în Italy (Die Kultur der Renaissance in Italien). He once In .other respects The Renaissance in Italy is a companion-piece to
wrote that a great historical subject 'must needs cohere sympathetically Constantine the Great. The earlier book had been concerned with the
and mysteriously to the author's inmost being', and this was certainly 'crisis' of classical culture, its 'senescence', in other words the transition
true for him in this case. He was very much in sympathy with the from the classical to the medieval. The later book deals with the end of
period and its artistic achievements, and also with the region he had the Middle Ages and with ,the revival of antiquity. Constantine deals
chosen, Italy. with the rise of other-worldfuJess in the fourth century, The, Renaissance
Like other northerners, from Goethe to Ibsen, from Wagner to with the rise of worldliness in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries. The
Warburg, Burckhardt found that his encounter with southern Europe, aim of both books is not, like most nineteenth-century works of
and with Italy in particular, was a major event in his life. This history, to tell a story, but to portray an age by cutting what the
attraction was in part a kind of psychological compensation (the 21- author elsewhere called 'cross-sections' (Querdurchschnitte) through the
year-old Burckhardt described Italy as 'a necessary sup,plement to my period and emphasizing 'the constant, the recurrent, and the typical'
whole being and life'). Italy was for him the Other, attractively (das sich Wiederholende, Konstante, Typische). The book on Constantine
8 CIVILIZATION OF THB'RBNAISSANCE I/NTRODUCTION; 9
was presented as a series of studies, omitting whatever 'could not-be ment of the Individual' apd 'The Discovery of the World and of
woven as a living element into the texture of the whole', for example Man'.
'property and wealth, industry and trade'. In ·a similar way the Renais- Perhaps the most farnous-statemene in this famous book is the
sance book, with its subtitle 'an essay', virtually omitted economic life following: f

(from guild organization to commercial capitalism). 1 ~, t


On what criteria did Burckhardt decide what to include? In order In the Middle Ages., .. map was conscious of himself enly as a.member ,
to understand his approach better, it may-be useful to make yet a third of a race, people, party, family, or corporation - qnly through some
juxtaposition, this time between the essay on the Renaissance and the general category, In Italy! this veil first melted into air; an object(ve
lectures he gave a few years later, in 1868-9 and 1870-'71, under the title rll
treatment of the state and the things of this world became possible.
The subjective side at the sfme time asserted itself with corresponding
'Introduction to the Study of History'. These lectures are organized
emp~asisi man became a',spiritÛal individual, and recognized himself as
around the idea of three 'powers', the state, religion and culture, and
their reciprocal interaction. 'Culture' is defined as the realm of the such. ,, 1
,: •' ,

spontaneous, including 'social intercourse, technologies, arts, literatures It is this insight - or theony - which. determines the selection of the
and sciences'. According to Burckhardt, 'There are primarily political concrete examples.not only for this chapter but for the whole book.
and primarily religious epochs, and finally epochs which seem to live Machiavelli's Prince stands for Renaissance objectivity and the .idea ~f
for the great purposes of culture.' Ancient Egypt; Mexico and Peru are the state as a work of art, r"hile autobiographies. like those of Pius II
examples of 'culture determined by the state'. The world of Islam ,
and Benvenuto Cellini, and the poems of Petrarch, with their 'abund-
illustrates 'culture determined by religion', -while the Greek polis ance of pictures of the inmost soul', illustrate the 'subjective side' of
reveals 'the state determined by culture'. the period. I
The Renaissance is clearly another example of anepoch which lives A major theme of The \Renaissance .in Italy is that 'it was not the
'for the great purposes of culture', and :'Burckhardt devotes the four revival of antiquity alone, but its union with the genius of the, Italian
central chapters of his book to culture, framing them by an introduc- people [dem italienfschen Volksgeistl, which achieved the conquest of
tion on politics and a conclusion on religion. The first chapter illustrates the Western world'. The historic importance of Italy is thatit was the
the effect of culture on politics. lt concentrates on the rise of a new, place where the medieval 'veil' first 'melted into 'air'. The Italian was,
self-conscious conception of the state, which may be illustrated from as he put it, 'the first-bom among the sons of modern Europe', just as
the Florentine and Venetian concern with gathering what would .later Petrarch was 'one of the .f~rst 'truly modem men'. However; Burck-
be called statistics. It is this new conception which Burckhardt calls hardt the historian, like Burckhardt the traveller, also found Italians
'the state as a work of art' (Der Staat als Kunstwerk). In a similar fascinating for, their own sake. The 'many-sided men' Leon Battista
manner the last chapter concentrates on the effect of culture on Alberti and -Leonardo da Vinci are described as 'giants/ who tower
religion, characterizing the religious attitudes of Renaissance Italians as over their contemporaries: tThe colo.ssal outlines of Leonardo's nature
both subjective and worldly. can never be more than dimly and distantly conceived.t-The city-states
Set in this frame come four chapters on the culture of the Renais- of Renaissance Italy, like those of ancient Greece, exerted a strong
sance. Of these, Chapter Three, 'The Revival of Antiquity', 'is the attraction on a historian whocame from a patrician family in a city
most conventional. Chapter Five, 'Society and Festivals', illustrates which had continued to be! ruled by its patricians until the 1830s. In
Burckhardt's relatively wide conception of culture as including not this case one might talk of an elective affinity between Burckhardt and
only the visual arts, literature and music, but also costume, language,' his subject. In his view, perhaps coloured by nostalgia for the world of
etiquette, cleanliness, and festivals sacred and profane, from Corpus his childhood, these city-states had enjoyed a harmonious mode of
Christi to Carnival. The most famous chapters, however, are the existence which the modem world had lost.
remaining two, dealing with what Burckhardt called 'The Develop- Yet the violent political history of Renaissance Italy also fascinated
IO C I V IL I Z A T I O N O P T H B R B N A I S S A N C B
I~TRODU·<i:,TI·ON II
Burckhardt: the civil war between two noble families of Perugia, for
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich.Iiegel, who placed more stress on the 'spirit
example, the Oddi and the Baglioni, or the 'insane thirst for blood' of of the age' (Zeitgeist). .l
Cesare Borgia, which leads the historian to speculate on what might
Despite Burckhardt's avowed rejection of the philosophers of his-
have happened had Cesare not been seriously ill on the occasion of his
tory, his work shows clear \traces of their ideas. The chapter on 'The
father's death. 'What a conclave would that have been, in which,
State-as a Work of Art', for example, parallels Hegel's discussion in his
armed with all his weapons, he had extorted his election from a Lectures on the,Philosophy ojjHistory of.the political. system of ancient
college whose numbers he had judiciously reduced by poison ... In
Greece as 'the political work of art' (Das politische Kunstwerk), while
pursuing such a hypothesis the imagination loses itself in an abyss.'
the chapter 'The Devélopbtent ·of the Individual' echoes Hegel's
It is with reference to comments like this that the intellectual
discussion of 'individuality\, ç,bjectivity and subjectivity. Sin Emst
historian Peter Gay, contrasting the 'sober moderation' ofBurckhardt's
Gombrich goes as far as to say that Burckhardt's work was 'built on
own Hfe with 'the extravagant violence on which he concentrates',
Hegelian foundations', pointing in particular to the idea of the Ze'itgeist.
diagnoses 'a secret infatuation with enormities'. I would rather speak
Gombrich is surely right to kuggest.that·the idea of the cultural unity
ofBurckhardt's ambivalence, and place more stress on thenortherner's
of a period like the Renaissance is central to Burckhardt's thought. It
perception of the hot-blooded south as the Other, and also on the underlies his attempt to see the age as a whole and also the organization
German cultural tradition of fascination with the demonic, a tradition of his essay, As we have just seen, however, this idea was not peculiar
which runs from Goethe through Wagner and Nietzsche to Thomas to Hegel, while Burckhardt nejected the distinctively Hegelian view of
Mann. history as the long march of the 'world spirit'. ,
I
Again, it may not be fanciful to suggest that the.concem with the
What is the place of Burckhardt's essay in the history of historical polarities of objective and subjective in The Renaissance, in Italy owes
writing? The idea of writing on cultural rather than political history was something, consciously or un9onsciously, to the philosophy of Schopen-
not a new one. Giorgio Vasari's Lives of the Artists (1550) is an early hauer, 'our philosopher', as Burckhardt used to call him on his walks
example of cultural history as well as one of Burckhardt's sources. with Nietzsche. It was Schqpènhauer's World as Will and Idea that
Voltaire's Essay on Manners (1756) is closer to Burckhardt's combination Burckhardt was eehoing when he contrasted the systematic character
of what we might call 'socio-cultural' history, since it deáls with topics of science, which ,.subordinates, with- the unsystematic character of
such as literature, learning, systems of values (such as chivalry) and even history, which co-ordinates. I
tablecloths and table manners from Charlemagne to the beginning of the Burckhardt also owed a good deal to earlier studies of the Italian
seventeenth century. Closer still to The Renaissance in Italy is a relatively Renaissance. The basic idea I o( a revival of classical antiquity was
neglected work by an eighteenth-century Italian scholar, Saverio formulated during the peripdjitself, from Petrarch to Nasari, who first
Bettinelli's Revival of Italy (1775), which deals with Italy's risorgimento used the abstract noun 'Renaissance' (rinascità). In the eighteenth and
in the fields oflearning, art and social life after the year rooo (the term nineteenth centuries the, idea ~as elaborated. Voltaire suggested that
risorgimento had not yet acquired its modern political meaning). the Renaissanc.e, 'the time of Italy's glor:y', was one of.the only-four
A central concept in Voltaire's Essay on Manners is that of the 'spirit' periods in human history ~orthy of consideration by a, thinking
or 'genius' of an age, of a people, oflaws, of chivalry, of Catholicism, person, or a person of taste. J The relationship between liberty and
of commerce and so on. Voltaire had no monopoly of the concept, culture in the Italian city-states was underlined by Burckhardr's
which can be found in contemporary French writers, such as Montes- fellow-countryman Sismondi in his History of the Italian Republics in the
. quieu, and also in British ones, such as William Robertson and David Middle Ages (1807-18). In his History of Painting in Italy (.1817) Stendhal
Hume. In the late eighteenth century it attracted some German philoso- revealed his fascination with individuals such as Cesare Borgia and
phers of history, notably Johann Gottfried Herder, who emphasized Pope Julius II1 suggesting tha, it was no accident, that great painters
the distinctive character or spirit of each people, their Volksgeist, and appeared in 'this century of passions'. ,,
12 ClVlLlZATIONIOP THE RENAISSANCE Il'{TRODU·CTION
13
Closest of all to Burckhardt in their approach were two scholars perfect equality with men'; there is too much evidence to the contrary.
who published their studies in the 18 sos, when he was already working Now that the history of science has become professionalized, with its
on his book. Italian humanism was placed firmly on thehistorical map own journals and research centres, Burckhardt's discussion of astrol-
in The Revival of Classical Antiquity ( 18 59) by Georg Voigt, who was ogy, alchemy and so on has come to look rather amateurish. Some
appointed to the chair of history at Munich, for which Ranke had of his interpretations of Remaissance -texts have been challenged, for
wanted to recommend Burckhardt, Voigt described the Middle Ages example his reading of Petrarch's famous letter describing his ascent of
in terms of what he called 'the corporative tendency', and the Renais- Mont Ventoux in Provence,. For Burckhardt, .this letter is a literal
sance, from Petrarch onwards, in terms of 'individuality and its rights'. description of an event in Petrarch's. life and also an illustration of the
In his Renaissance (written in 1842 and published in 1855), a volume in awakening of the modern sense of natural beauty.,More recent scholars,
his History of France, Jules Michelet characterized the period as one of however, see the letter as an,allegory, describing the ascent of the soul
'the discovery of the world, the discovery of man'. Voigt's and to God, and emphasize its quotations from the Bible and St Augustine.
Michelet's anticipations of Burckhardt's famous formulations suggest There are also what might be called 'structural' weaknesses in the
that The Renaissance in Italy was a true child of its time. It is 'Burckhardt, essay. Burckhardt himself, who confided the task of revising his book
however, with whom posterity associates the definition of the Renais- to someone elseo- to Bernhard Kugler (the son of his old teacher
sance in terms of the development of the individual and the discovery Franz) - wrote to him cheerfully admitting to its lack of concern with
of the world and of man, and this is a fair verdict in the sense that it the economic foundations of cultura] life. The criticism has been
was he who organized his whole essay around these ideas (together voiced many times since. It ,has also become commonplace to refer to
with that of 'modernity'), rather than around the more conventional the lack of concern with change shown by Burckhardt, in a study
concept of the revival of antiquity. concerned with some three hundred years of Italian history, from
The Renaissance in Italy was not an instant success. The first 200 Dante to the Counter-Reformation. This impression of immobility is
copies were in fact rather slow to sell, and it was nine years before a the result of Burckhardt's successful attempt to demonstrate the lateral
second edition was required. The book gradually grew in popularity, connections between different domains of Renaissance life. This weak-
however, reaching its tenth German edition in 1908 and its fourteenth ness, in other words; is no accident but the perhaps inevitable price of
edition in 1925. The 421 illustrations chosen by Ludwig Goldscheider Burckhardt's achievement. A weakness it remains none the less. ,
doubtless added to the work's popularity. It was translated into French Burckhardt has also been criticized for his lack of knowledge of and
in 1885, into Polish in 1905, into Italian in 1911. Burckhardt appeared sympathy for the Middle Ag~s, in contrast to which he defines his
in English translation relatively early, in 1878, just after the first three, Renaissance. Adjectives like 'childish' no longer seem appropriate when
j
volumes of the massive Renaissance in 1Italy (1875-86) by his imitator applied to this period (or indeed to any other). The suggestion that
John Addington Symonds. The' new editions of 1890, 1898, 1929, · medieval men did not feehtl}emselves to be individuals but were
1937, 1944, 1950 and now 1989 (not counting reprints) suggest that it conscious of themselves 'only through some general category' does not
has acquired the status of a classic. So has the translation, by Samuel easily square with the existence of twelfth-c.entury autobiographies such
Middlemore, a journalist who later lectured at the Malvern School of as those of Abelard and Guibert ofNogent. Indeed, the concept of'the
Art. development of the individual' is difficult to pin down. Is self-conscious-
Like other classics, The Renaissance in Italy has had many critics. ness the criterion of individualism? Or is it the desire for glory, 'fhe
After more than 120 years of increasingly specialized research, it is easy modem sense offame' as Burckhardt called it? Did medieval knights not
to point out exaggerations, rash generalizations and other weaknesses seek fame through their achievements in battles and tournaments? In this
in this famous essay. It is doubtful, for example, whether any historian case, as in that of the economic foundations of the Renaissance, the old
of the Italian Renaissance working today would be prepared to write, Burckhardt came to agree with his later critics. 'As far as individualism is
as Burckhardt did, that in this period 'women stood on a footing of concerned', he once remarked, 'J don't believe in it any more'.
14 CIVILIZATION OP THE RBNAISSAf'{CE
INTRODUCTION IS
Another of Burckhardt's problematic central ·concepts is 'mod-
discussed medieval exam~les which invalidate Burckhardt's view of
ernity'. To describe Renaissance Italians as the first modem men
Renaissance individualism, yet Misch spent his long career answering
encourages us to see them in our own-image and forget the many a question which Burckh:&dt had formulated.
differences between us and them. Another problem with modernity is
that it keeps changing. What looked modern in 1,800 does not necess-
Although he found celebrity an embarrassment, Burckhardt had (and
arily strike late twentieth-century eyes as modem at all, In any case, the continues to have) many! claims to fame. His book on The Agt of
sociological debate over 'modernization' has made us aware of the Constt1ntine the Gret1t is • remarkable essay on an age of cultural
dangers of assuming that there is only one path to the future, that
crisis and transition. His j Cicerone first brought . him to the notice
history is a one-way street. It is as misleading to describe the changes in of a wide public, and still gives him a place in the history of art
European culture and society in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries as history. His posthumous}~ published cultural history of Greece is still
'Italianization' as it is to describe more recent changes as,' Americaniza-
considered important by flassical scholars of the calibre of the late
tion'. The appeal ofltaly dn one instanceand the Unitéd States in the .Arnaldo Momigliano, who stresses its novelty and its potential value
other needs to be explained, and account has to be' taken of conscious for future research.. The a<\Ute, pessimistic observations on the present
or unconscious divergences from the model, its adaptation to local and the future to be found in Burclchardt's letters and in his reflec-
circumstances. tions on world history have attracted increasing attention in our
Burckhardt's view of the Renaissance may be easy to criticize, but it own time. Like the Norman aristocrat .Alexis de Tocqueville, this
is also difficult to replace. Much thesame goes for his vision of'cultural Basel patrician. may be regarded as a 'prophet of a mass age'. His
history. To late twentieth-century eyes, Burckhardt's view, of an emphasis on the subjectivity of historical writing and on cultural
epoch as a whole no longer seems completely convincing. He says too relativism, heretical in his own day, is now widely shared. His con-
little, for example, about the cultural conflicts'between the humanists cern with patterns of cul~re and with changing concepts of the
and the scholastic philosophers of the Renaissance;, or between one person has appealed to soëial anthropologists (from Ruth Benedict
kind of humanist and another. He' constructed his image of the to Clifford Geertz) as w~ as to socio-cultural historians. However,
Renaissance out of a relatively-narrow range of literary texts. •All the Burckhardt's name continues to be most closely associated with the
same, his work has been an inspiration to· later cultural historians, period and the country which he made his own: with the
despite their rejection of some of his conclusions. The great Dutch Renaissance in Italy. 1
historian Johan Huizinga wrote hls Waning of the Middle Ages (1919)
as a kind of riposte to Burckhardt, -emphasizing the theme-of decay Since the Penguin Classic edition of his Renaissance was first published
rather than rebirth and the -culture of France and Flanders rather than
in 1990, Burckhardr has continued to attract scholarly interest, and a
that ofltaly. At: the same time, his book paints the pertrait of an age in
number of important new saldies of the man and his work have appeared
Burckhardtian style. It is a work of imagination, intuition, <vision,
in print, ranging from his views on the ancient Greeks and his possible
Faithful to his principle that 'God is to be found in detail' (Der Liebe
anti-Semitism to his role in the establishment of art history as a disci-
Gott steekt im Detail), the German scholar Aby Warburg produced pline. The most important of these recent studies is Lionel Gossmans
short essays on Renaissance Italy, miniatures rather than a broad
Basel in the Age of Burckhard(, the most significant contribution to our
canvas. Yet he, like Huizinga, startedfrom the place-where Burckhardt
understanding of the man since Werner Kaegi's seven-volume biography,
had left off. So did Warburg"s friend Emst Cassirer, who criticized
as well as an exemplary discµssion of the relation between an intellec-
Burckhardt for omitting from his essay any serious consideration of
tual and his social and cultural milieu, including his fellow-citizen and
the philosophy of the period, but adopted ·a Burckhardtian framework
fellow-scholar Johan Jacob Bachofen. The late Francis Haskell's essay on
for his The Individual and the Cosmos in Renaissance·Philosophy (1927)·.
the ways in which historians have used images as evidence and as inspir-
Georg Misch's monumental History of Autobiography (3 vols., 1907-62)
ation devotes a few perceptive pages to the place of art in The Civilization
c>f the Renaissance in Italy.

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