Above, we see a portion of a fresco by Ghirlandaio in the Sassetti Chapel of Santa Trinita, Florence. Poliziano is seen here with his pupils, Lorenzo's sons and nephew.
In 1478 , after the Pazzi conspiracy, when the Pope was stirring up war against the Medici he hated, Lorenzo sent his wife and children to Pistoia, where they were the guests of the Panciaticchi, for safety. With them went Angelo Poliziano as tutor to Piero the eldest boy, then about six years of age. The stiff, proud Roman, Madonna Clarice, had never know how to gain her husband’s love, and did not get on well with his brilliant, sarcastic, rather Bohemian friends. She particularly disliked Poliziano’s growing influence over Piero, and at the end of the year there was an open rupture, when she dismissed him with scant courtesy. One pities them both. Clarice, already far gone in consumption, was irritable and anxious about her husband, whose attitude towars the Holy See she, with her education, could not approve; while Poliziano, used to the brilliant talk in the Medici palace, where he measured his wit with Luigi Pulci, Matteo Franco, Marsilio Ficino, Pico della Mirandola, etc., and Lorenzo himself, was bored to death and always longing to be back in Florence.
Janet Ross--over the years I've seen her name in citations.. Maybe she is someone worthy of knowing more about too !
ReplyDeleteYes, of course, why didn't I think of it. Now that you have suggested it, I see there's an autobiography of called "A Castle in Tuscany," and I've just ordered the Kindle sample from Amazon. Janet Ross was the great-aunt of Kinta Beevor, whose one book "A Tuscan Childhood" I very much enjoyed.
ReplyDeleteThe books both sound interesting ! I glanced through the wikipedia entry on Janet and was surprised to see that she was born a Duff-Gordon. I did some research a couple of years ago on Lucy Lady Duff-Gordon, a fashion designer whose Duff-Gordon husband was the brother of Janet's father! I wonder if they knew each other?
ReplyDeleteAn erudite follower has pointed out (elsewhere) that Ernst Gombrich, an exceptionally famous art historian/art critic, argues that the first child in the line with Poliziano is Giovanni, later Leo X.
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