13: Rome, Banquets, and Scappi


Rome as example of 16th century states

  •  bureaucracies bigger, better organized.
    • Rome: both Church bureaucracy, Papal States administration
  • Social stratification
  • Value placed on education, knolwedge of ancient writers and modern
  • Value placed on arts and appreciation of ancient and modern
  • Courts (in most of Europe: ruler)
  • Religious confession built into political identity

Wars across Europe: 2 main eras

1494 1559 (1529): Wars of Italy

  • South, Milan under Hapsburg Control
  • Florence/Tuscany a duchy under Medici control (approval of HRE)
  • Rome and Papal States depend on Catholic allies for military support
  • also about the growing dominance of big European states

French Wars of Religion; violence in England

1618-1648: Thirty Years’ War

  • Main fighting in HRE
  • Treaty of Westphalia forces states across continent to recognize on another

Particular concern for us: prominent concerns about sovereignty, diplomacy

Why exemplary Rome?

  • International, mixed roles as capital
  • Need to rebuild after Schism plus Reformation allows opportunity to modernize

From the era of Platina to the era of Scappi

  • Need for physical infrastructure (streets, bridges, water)
  • Church needed to rebuild governance structures
  • Opportunity to fill clerical administrative ranks with mene of letters
  • Church’s own physical infrastructure (churches, residence)

City: Meastri delle strade

The Curia: Renaissance Europe’s biggest bureaucracy (from Martin V to Clement VII)

Late  Avignon   era  ca 500-600

1520: over 2k (including vacabilia)

 

Source: John D’Amico, Renaissance Humanism in Papal Rome

Curia-3

 Chancery (Palazzo della Cancelleria)

central church (Rome) more involved in decision-making across Europe (public and private)

Another set of re-organization moves: mid 16th c

residences: Palazzi (and villas)

Paul II (1464-71)

Palazzo Venezia: Renaissance palazzo, papal residence

 

Households: the Roman familia

  • Household staff
  • professional staff
  • residents
  • guests
  • size: from ca 20-ca 200

Other palazzi: well established in other Italian cities:

Exx: Florence, Palazzo Antinori, Palazzo Medici

 

 

 

Banquets and banquet culture

Communal meals: monasteries (refectory, dining hall)

Andrea del Castagno, Last Supper (1445-50), Museo di Cenacolo di Sant’Apollonia, Florence

Late Middle Ages: from manor house to chateau

The first stone of the Chateau de Chambord was laid in 1519.

Chateau de Chambord (Loire), begun 1519 (Francis I)

Chateau de Cambord website

Ancient models: Roman and Greek banquets: Ficino and Plato’s Symposium

Renaissance Rome: the households, Palazzi and villas of the papacy, cardinals and other elites

London: The Banqueting House (Whitehall), Inigo Jones (1619)

The Spanish triumphal arch (front), 1599 . Triumphal Gate decorated with a representation of king Philip II between his children, for the entrance of Archduke Albert and Isabella of Austria into Antwerp.  Historica narratio profectionis et inaugurationis serenissimorum Belgii principum Alberti et Isabellae Austriae archiducum,  1599.

From: The Triumphs of Maximilian, ca 1512

floating castle from the Entry of Henry II into Lyon, 1547; included dinner

 

Masque: dancers in costume, Florence, 1589 (Buontalenti)

Festival Book: 1589, Wedding in Florence of Ferdinando de’Medici and Christine of Lorraine    

17th century and beyond: commercial performances

Scappi and Visual Evidence

Book as a source:

  • recipes
  • menus
  • events
  • images

Households: the Roman familia

  • Household staff
  • professional staff
  • guests
  • size: from ca 20-ca 200

Building itself and kitchen location: cellar, separate wing or building

General sources of information: building; artifacts; account books; diaries; inventories; tax records

Visual evidence and interpretation

examples: natural history of plants and animals

Tradition: Dioscorides

Leonhard Fuchs, De historia stirpium, 1542: prunus

John James Audubon, Birds of America: Red-headed woodpecker

Lorenzo Campi: Fruit Seller

Vincenzo Campi: the Kitchen (1590), Brera

Pieter Aertsen, Meat Stall with Holy Family Giving Alms


Pump which draws, by means of pistons, water which has been raised by suction.
De re metallica libri XII
Agricola, Georgius
Published: 1556

 

Messisbugo Banchetti … 1549

Spectaculorum ...