Based on a newly discovered inventory, the article examines the early years of Francesco Leopoldo Cicognara’s book collection. Begun in 1798 as a suitable activity for a diplomat and as a cover for subversive contacts in Masonic circles, the collecting activity is described during the turbulent years between 1798 and 1804. Cicognara’s attitude and interests seem to have changed during these years, so that the focus shifted from purely bibliophilic interests to the content of the books themselves, turning the collection into a scholarly tool for research in art histor
This book gives a survey of the career of the Renaissance antiquary Jacopo Strada (Mantua 1515- Vie...
Nota Bene is published during the academic year to acquaint the Yale community and others with the r...
The article discusses the MS S. Pantaleo 8, a remarkable collection of Dante’s works now kept at th...
Based on a newly discovered inventory, this article examines the early years of Francesco Leopoldo C...
The influential art library of Count Leopoldo Cicognara (1767-1834) testifies to his scholarship and...
The early years of Leopoldo Cicognara’s book collection’, the first of two articles by Barbara Stein...
The following paper by Silvia Massa was first presented at a session sponsored by the Bibliographica...
Leopoldo Cicognara’s (1767-1834) Storia della scultura (Venice, 1813-18; second edition, Prato, 1823...
This article analyses the relationship between one of early modern Italy’s most illustrious collecto...
This article focuses on Leopoldo Cicognara's role as an editor of art-historical books printed by th...
This article investigates how the card index of Leo S. Olschki can be used for the study of antiquar...
The Cavalieri del Lavoro is an Italian order of merit. In Rome, the archive, known as the Archivio S...
This article discusses Leopold von Ranke, the seminal historian, specifically his times in Venice, w...
This article focuses on Leopoldo Cicognara's role as an advisor of the Italian publisher Giachetti (...
The article seeks to examine the book collection which Tommaso Giustiniani (1477-1528) brought with ...
This book gives a survey of the career of the Renaissance antiquary Jacopo Strada (Mantua 1515- Vie...
Nota Bene is published during the academic year to acquaint the Yale community and others with the r...
The article discusses the MS S. Pantaleo 8, a remarkable collection of Dante’s works now kept at th...
Based on a newly discovered inventory, this article examines the early years of Francesco Leopoldo C...
The influential art library of Count Leopoldo Cicognara (1767-1834) testifies to his scholarship and...
The early years of Leopoldo Cicognara’s book collection’, the first of two articles by Barbara Stein...
The following paper by Silvia Massa was first presented at a session sponsored by the Bibliographica...
Leopoldo Cicognara’s (1767-1834) Storia della scultura (Venice, 1813-18; second edition, Prato, 1823...
This article analyses the relationship between one of early modern Italy’s most illustrious collecto...
This article focuses on Leopoldo Cicognara's role as an editor of art-historical books printed by th...
This article investigates how the card index of Leo S. Olschki can be used for the study of antiquar...
The Cavalieri del Lavoro is an Italian order of merit. In Rome, the archive, known as the Archivio S...
This article discusses Leopold von Ranke, the seminal historian, specifically his times in Venice, w...
This article focuses on Leopoldo Cicognara's role as an advisor of the Italian publisher Giachetti (...
The article seeks to examine the book collection which Tommaso Giustiniani (1477-1528) brought with ...
This book gives a survey of the career of the Renaissance antiquary Jacopo Strada (Mantua 1515- Vie...
Nota Bene is published during the academic year to acquaint the Yale community and others with the r...
The article discusses the MS S. Pantaleo 8, a remarkable collection of Dante’s works now kept at th...