The Evolution of the Grand Tour: Anglo-Italian Cultural Relations since the Renaissance
Autor Edward Chaneyen Limba Engleză Paperback – 29 apr 2000
Authors from Chaucer to Erasmus came to mock the custom but even the Reformation did not stop the urge to travel. From the mid-sixteenth century, northern Europeans justified travel to the south in terms of education. The English had previously travelled to Italy to study the classics; now they travelled to learn Italian and study medicine, diplomacy, dancing, riding, fencing, and, eventually, art and architecture. Famous men, and an increasing proportion of women, all contributed to establishing a convention which eventually came to dominate European culture. Documenting the lives and travels of these personalities, Professor Chaney's remarkable book provides a complete picture of one of the most fascinating phenomena in the history of western civilisation.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780714644745
ISBN-10: 0714644749
Pagini: 432
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 28 mm
Greutate: 0.75 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: Taylor & Francis
Colecția Routledge
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 0714644749
Pagini: 432
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 28 mm
Greutate: 0.75 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: Taylor & Francis
Colecția Routledge
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
Recenzii
"This is a brilliant, original and refreshing account, teeming with new and fascinating material." - J. B. Trapp, Professor Emeritus, History of the Classical Tradition, University of London
"Original and scholarly essays on a fascinating subject ... a remarkable book." - Lord Dacre of Glanton (Hugh Trevor-Roper)
"...I fell for its its irresistible enthusiasm. Chaney has a profound scholarly knowledge of Anglo-Italian historical relationships, but he is also a writer full of surprise and discursive curiosity ... a most beguiling delight." - Jan Morris' "Book of the Year" in the Independent
"Edward Chaney's fascinating book illuminates the magnetic attractions of Italy ... a work of meticulous scholarship about the origin and evolution of the Grand Tour." - John Mortimer, The Sunday Times
"[written with] verve and precision and tremendous authority ... this book, richly illustrated and handsomely produced, will become an indespensable work for cultural historians, Italophiles and all latter-day Grand Tourists." - Noel Malcolm, Sunday Telegraph
"this collection of 14 brilliant essays provides us with much new material and many new insights." - David Watkin, Country Life
"Chaney is a scholarly and learned writer and he sheds light on a wide range of topics ... A wealth of humane learning ... characterises this attractive volume." - Sir Keith Thomas, Apollo: International Magazine of the Arts
"This is a bran-tub of Anglo-Italian delights, sustained by seriousness and enthusiasm in equal measure." - Jonathan Keates, Literary Review
"To those who know, even in part, their sources in the continuing unravelling of the Grand Tour, this book is an indispensable, a quite golden, addition...Professor Chaney holds us all in his debt in this collection of occasional essays touching on subjects and conections that, quite simply, have not occurred to others less erudite than himself ... the style is of a plein air ease such that one might be listening to a soliloquy in the gardens of Villa Lante ... taken as a whole it could not be bettered." - Patrick Reyntiens, The Tablet
‘Edward Chaney’s fascinating book illuminates the magnetic attractions of Italy...’ - The Sunday Times
‘In his important new book, The Evolution of the Grand Tour, Edward Chaney provides a series of scholarly essays about the effect of travel to Italy on English culture’ - Catholic Herald
‘... irresistible enthusiasm... I found this compilation of writings a most beguiling delight.’ - The Independent
‘This collection is a treasure house of insights into one of the most fascinating cultural relationships in recent history.’ - Contemporary Review
‘Chaney is a scholarly and learned writer; and sheds light on a wide range of topics... [there is a] wealth of humane learning which characterises this attractive volume.’ - Apollo Magazine
‘Suffice it to say that as an anthology they provide an authoritative, lively and multi-faceted account of Anglo-Italian relations in the period from the sixteenth to the nineteenth century.’ - Burlington Magazine
‘This attractive book is written with a great verve, humour, lightness of touch, and an eye for the curious detail… based on extraordinarily large and diverse primary material, visual, manuscript, and printed, all brilliantly controlled and exploited with a close attention to chronology.’ - Sixteenth Century Journal
‘Chaney has written a book that is admirable for its elegance and learning, which explores the historic connections between England and Italy.’ - The Birmingham Post
‘Professor Chaney...is an immensely learned scholar... (The book) is full of enthusiasm.’ – Observer
"Original and scholarly essays on a fascinating subject ... a remarkable book." - Lord Dacre of Glanton (Hugh Trevor-Roper)
"...I fell for its its irresistible enthusiasm. Chaney has a profound scholarly knowledge of Anglo-Italian historical relationships, but he is also a writer full of surprise and discursive curiosity ... a most beguiling delight." - Jan Morris' "Book of the Year" in the Independent
"Edward Chaney's fascinating book illuminates the magnetic attractions of Italy ... a work of meticulous scholarship about the origin and evolution of the Grand Tour." - John Mortimer, The Sunday Times
"[written with] verve and precision and tremendous authority ... this book, richly illustrated and handsomely produced, will become an indespensable work for cultural historians, Italophiles and all latter-day Grand Tourists." - Noel Malcolm, Sunday Telegraph
"this collection of 14 brilliant essays provides us with much new material and many new insights." - David Watkin, Country Life
"Chaney is a scholarly and learned writer and he sheds light on a wide range of topics ... A wealth of humane learning ... characterises this attractive volume." - Sir Keith Thomas, Apollo: International Magazine of the Arts
"This is a bran-tub of Anglo-Italian delights, sustained by seriousness and enthusiasm in equal measure." - Jonathan Keates, Literary Review
"To those who know, even in part, their sources in the continuing unravelling of the Grand Tour, this book is an indispensable, a quite golden, addition...Professor Chaney holds us all in his debt in this collection of occasional essays touching on subjects and conections that, quite simply, have not occurred to others less erudite than himself ... the style is of a plein air ease such that one might be listening to a soliloquy in the gardens of Villa Lante ... taken as a whole it could not be bettered." - Patrick Reyntiens, The Tablet
‘Edward Chaney’s fascinating book illuminates the magnetic attractions of Italy...’ - The Sunday Times
‘In his important new book, The Evolution of the Grand Tour, Edward Chaney provides a series of scholarly essays about the effect of travel to Italy on English culture’ - Catholic Herald
‘... irresistible enthusiasm... I found this compilation of writings a most beguiling delight.’ - The Independent
‘This collection is a treasure house of insights into one of the most fascinating cultural relationships in recent history.’ - Contemporary Review
‘Chaney is a scholarly and learned writer; and sheds light on a wide range of topics... [there is a] wealth of humane learning which characterises this attractive volume.’ - Apollo Magazine
‘Suffice it to say that as an anthology they provide an authoritative, lively and multi-faceted account of Anglo-Italian relations in the period from the sixteenth to the nineteenth century.’ - Burlington Magazine
‘This attractive book is written with a great verve, humour, lightness of touch, and an eye for the curious detail… based on extraordinarily large and diverse primary material, visual, manuscript, and printed, all brilliantly controlled and exploited with a close attention to chronology.’ - Sixteenth Century Journal
‘Chaney has written a book that is admirable for its elegance and learning, which explores the historic connections between England and Italy.’ - The Birmingham Post
‘Professor Chaney...is an immensely learned scholar... (The book) is full of enthusiasm.’ – Observer
Cuprins
1. British and American travellers in Sicily from the 8th to the 20th century 2. Early Tudor tombs and the rise and fall of Anglo-Italian relations 3. Quo Vadis? Travel as education and the impact of Italy in the 16th century 4. The Grand Tour and beyond - British and American travellers in southern Italy, 1545-1960 5. Robert Dallington's Survey of Tuscany, 1605 - a British view of Medicean Florence 6. Documentary evidence of Anglo-Italian cultural relations in the 16th and 17 centuries 7. Inigo Jones in Naples 8. Pilgrims to pictures - art, English Catholics and the evolution of the Grand Tour 9. Notes towards a bibliography of Sir Balthazar Gerbier 10. English Catholic poets in mid-17th century Rome 11. Philanthropy in Italy - English observations on Italian hospitals, 1545-1789 12. Milton's visit to Vallombrosa - a literary tradition 13. George Berkeley's Grand Tours - the immaterialist as connoisseur of art and architecture 14. Epilogue - Sir Harold Acton, 1904-94.
Descriere
This book provides a complete picture of one of the most fascinating phenomena in the history of western civilisation, The Grand Tour.