During the last years of his life, Poggio Bracciolini (1380-1459), former Apostolic Secretary and Chancellor of Florence, was working on a long text that he characterized, in a letter written in 1458, as lacking a well-defined structure. This was most probably his history of the people of Florence (Historiae Florentini populi, the title given in Jacopo’s dedication copy to Frederick of Montefeltro, Duke of Urbino), revised and published posthumously by Poggio’s son, Jacopo Bracciolini (1442-1478). Contrary to what is often assumed, Poggio’s treatise was not a continuation, nor even a complement, to Leonardo Bruni’s (1370-1444) official history of Florence. It concentrates on the most recent history of Florence from the fourteenth-century co...
This collection draws strength from its cross-disciplinarity, featuring contributions by scholars wh...
Manuscript Magliabechiano VIII.1445 of the Biblioteca Nazionale di Firenze seems to be the only witn...
This study examines how the economic elite of Florence, Italy during the fifteenth century exerted p...
During the last years of his life, Poggio Bracciolini (1380-1459), former Apostolic Secretary and Ch...
During the last years of his life, Poggio Bracciolini (1380-1459), former Apostolic Secretary and Ch...
Thanks to his part in the rediscovery of Lucretius in the Renaissance Poggio Bracciolini has been mu...
This article presents the critical editions of two texts: a letter by the Duke of Milan Filippo Mari...
Manuscript Magliabechiano VIII.1445 of the Biblioteca Nazionale di Firenze seems to be the only witn...
Poggius Florentinus delighted in his local identity but he also, famously, had an international care...
This article presents the critical editions of two texts: a letter by the Duke of Milan Filippo Mari...
Thanks to his part in the rediscovery of Lucretius in the Renaissance Poggio Bracciolini has been mu...
Bartholomew of San Concordio translated his Documenta antiquorum into the vernacular presumably arou...
Poggio Bracciolini’s last work, the Historiae Florentini populi, was edited and dedicated to Federic...
The strangest Renaissance inscription is the dedication plaque of Poggio Bracciolini in the church o...
and dedicated to Federico di Montefeltro by Jacopo di Poggio in 1472. Jacopo also translated the wor...
This collection draws strength from its cross-disciplinarity, featuring contributions by scholars wh...
Manuscript Magliabechiano VIII.1445 of the Biblioteca Nazionale di Firenze seems to be the only witn...
This study examines how the economic elite of Florence, Italy during the fifteenth century exerted p...
During the last years of his life, Poggio Bracciolini (1380-1459), former Apostolic Secretary and Ch...
During the last years of his life, Poggio Bracciolini (1380-1459), former Apostolic Secretary and Ch...
Thanks to his part in the rediscovery of Lucretius in the Renaissance Poggio Bracciolini has been mu...
This article presents the critical editions of two texts: a letter by the Duke of Milan Filippo Mari...
Manuscript Magliabechiano VIII.1445 of the Biblioteca Nazionale di Firenze seems to be the only witn...
Poggius Florentinus delighted in his local identity but he also, famously, had an international care...
This article presents the critical editions of two texts: a letter by the Duke of Milan Filippo Mari...
Thanks to his part in the rediscovery of Lucretius in the Renaissance Poggio Bracciolini has been mu...
Bartholomew of San Concordio translated his Documenta antiquorum into the vernacular presumably arou...
Poggio Bracciolini’s last work, the Historiae Florentini populi, was edited and dedicated to Federic...
The strangest Renaissance inscription is the dedication plaque of Poggio Bracciolini in the church o...
and dedicated to Federico di Montefeltro by Jacopo di Poggio in 1472. Jacopo also translated the wor...
This collection draws strength from its cross-disciplinarity, featuring contributions by scholars wh...
Manuscript Magliabechiano VIII.1445 of the Biblioteca Nazionale di Firenze seems to be the only witn...
This study examines how the economic elite of Florence, Italy during the fifteenth century exerted p...