About This Book
A compact narrative and guide that traces Florence's development from its medieval commune through the literary and political ferment of the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries into the Renaissance dominance of banking families and patronage. It interweaves political history—factional strife, republican institutions, and the rise and fall of dynastic power—with examinations of major artistic, architectural, and religious monuments, and includes topographical descriptions useful for visitors. Chapters move between political episodes and close readings of churches, palaces, bridges, and galleries, highlighting principal artworks, urban layout, and how civic life and artistic patronage shaped the city's identity.
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