Inventing the Renaissance
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The Renaissance is one of the most studied and celebrated eras of
history. Spanning the end of the Middle Ages to the beginning of
modernity, it has come to symbolise the transformative rebirth of
knowledge, art, culture and political thought in Europe. And for
the last two hundred years, historians have struggled to describe
what makes this famous golden age unique.In Inventing the
Renaissance, acclaimed historian Ada Palmer provides a fresh
perspective on what makes this epoch so captivating. Her witty and
irreverent journey through the fantasies historians have
constructed about the period show how its legend derives more from
later centuries’ mythmaking than from the often grim reality of the
period itself. She examines its defining figures and movements: the
enduring legacy of Niccolò Machiavelli, the rediscovery of the
classics, the rise of the Medici and fall of the Borgias, the
astonishing artistic achievements of Michelangelo, Leonardo, and
Cellini, the impact of the Inquisition and the expansion of secular
Humanism. Palmer also explores the ties between culture and money:
books, for example, could cost as much as grand houses, so the
period’s innovative thinkers could only thrive with the help of the
super-rich. She offers fifteen provocative and entertaining
character portraits of Renaissance men and women, some famous, some
obscure, whose intersecting lives show how the real Renaissance was
more unexpected, more international and, above all, more desperate
than its golden reputation suggests.Drawing on her popular blogs
and writing with her characteristic energy and wit, Palmer presents
the Renaissance as we have never seen it before. Colloquial, funny
and brilliant, you would never expect a work of deep scholarship to
make you alternately laugh and cry.