The volume collects a series of essays, written by well-known Italian scholars (such as Francesco Paolo Fiore, Luisa Giordano, Franco Piperno and Alessandro Cecchi) discussing the close interrelationship that took shape in Italy along the fifteenth century between the development of Renaissance art on the one hand and the affirmation of seigneurial courts and seigneurial court culture on the other. The patronage of the ruling families of the small Italian city-states greatly favored the flourishing of the figurative arts and architecture, but also music, literature, and theater. The book starts with an introduction by Marco Folin on the critical issues of court art and its historiography, followed by an important essay on the historical and...