02255nam0a2200349 45000010008000000050017000080100022000250100018000471000041000651010008001062000059001142100047001732150022002202250041002422600009002833200097002923270103003893300893004924100041013856070039014266070067014656070078015326070024016106070041016346070045016756760011017207000027017318010042017588520072018009090012018729200021018841-8546320230906103318.0 a978-90-485-5094-4 a90-485-5094-7 a20230906d20222022 y0frey ba aeng1 aItalian Courts and European Culture fMarcello Fantoni aAmsterdamcAsterdam University Pressd2022 a305 σ.d24 εκ.1 aRenaissance history, art and culture c2022 aΠεριέχει βιβλιογραφικές παραπομπές και ευρετήριο0 aRepublics and princes -- Italian courts and European culture -- The models -- Common denominators. aBetween the fifteenth and the eighteenth century, princely courts dominated the Italian political scene. These courts were effervescent centers of cultural production. As such, they became a model for European monarchies who imported Italian courtly forma del vivere ('style of life') to legitimize their power and to define social status. This phenomenon included architecture and painting, theater and music, manners and aesthetics, and all the objects, behaviors and beliefs that contributed to homogenize European culture in the age of the Old Regime. It involved a hemorrhage of art and a continuous circulation of people, texts and symbols. The foundational material for this process was classicism and its purpose was political. This delineates a new geography and chronology of a truly European cultural history. It also provides the key traits for the European cultural identity. 1tRenaissance history, art and culture aΙταλίαxΠολιτισμός aΙταλίαxΑυλές και αυλικοίxΙστορία aΕυρώπηxΠολιτισμόςxΙταλικές επιδράσεις aItalyxCivilization aItalyxCourts and courtiersxHistory aEuropexCivilizationxItalian influences a945.07 1aFantonibMarcello4070 aGRbNATIONAL GALLERYc20230906gAACR2 aINSTbLIBRARYe20230906h945.07 FANp036000037415q036000037415uBK b0029957 cΑΓΟΡΑz2023