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The Medici: Rise of a Parvenu Dynasty, 1360-1537

Product ID : 43943637


Galleon Product ID 43943637
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About The Medici: Rise Of A Parvenu Dynasty, 1360-1537

In the affluent but militarily weak city of fifteenth and sixteenth-century Florence, an ambitious family of financiers from a modest provincial country background rose through shrewdness and wealth to ultimate command of the state. Eventually, the House of Medici would lend its Tuscan mercantile bloodline to the royal dynasties of France, Spain, Austria and England. Their astonishing story is inextricably intertwined with that of Florence itself. Using their artistic patronage of such geniuses as Brunelleschi, Fra Angelico, Botticelli, Donatello, Leonardo da Vinci and Michelangelo to legitimise and propagandise their regime, they inadvertently triggered the Florentine Renaissance in Italy which later spread throughout the whole of Europe and dragged the world out of the middle ages.This epic new narrative history of the Medici, which covers the crucial period from 1360 to 1537, charts the family’s meteoric rise from the humble, unassuming beginnings of Giovanni di Bicci, to the 'Pater Patriae', Cosimo de’ Medici, and his battle with Rinaldo degli Albizzi. It progresses to Cosimo's son Piero ‘the Gouty’, his grandson Lorenzo ‘il Magnifico’ and the golden age of Laurentian Renaissance Florence, touching upon the treachery of the Pazzi Conspiracy, the family’s expulsion and exile from Florence under Piero ‘the Unfortunate’ and the Medici’s subsequent restoration to power under the two notable but deeply flawed Medici popes: Leo X and Clement VII. Ultimately this grand narrative culminates in the brutal assassination of Duke Alessandro de’ Medici and the ascendancy of Cosimo I, Grand Duke of Tuscany, who would establish total Medici hegemony over Florence for the ensuing 168 years. Examining the family’s rise and the specific strategies and mechanisms by which they gained and maintained absolute political power, their saga is also placed within the wider context of the history of other key Renaissance Italian city-states and includes a sweeping