The purpose of this contribution is to show the importance of the institution of the civic identity celebrations, in some Italian cities between the Middle Ages and the Renaissance, for the legitimacy of the respective ruling classes and for building the consensus of citizens. It compares three cities with different political assets: the Duchy of Milan, dominated by the absolutism of the prince; the republic of Florence, without a de facto lord; the republic of Venice, characterized by a mixed regime, given the lifetime of the Doge's office. The comparative approach allows on the one hand to show the central role played by the performing arts in political negotiation between rulers and governed, and on the other to highlight the different communication strategies used to elaborate the identity representation of cities in correspondence with political needs of the respective regimes.
L’obiettivo di questo contributo è mostrare l’importanza della istituzione delle feste di identità civica, in alcune città italiane tra medioevo e rinascimento, per la legittimazione dei rispettivi ceti dirigenti e per la costruzione del consenso dei cittadini. Esso mette a confronto tre città con assetti politici diversi: il ducato di Milano, dominato dall’assolutismo del principe; la repubblica di Firenze, priva di un signore di fatto; la repubblica di Venezia, contraddistinta da un regime misto, data la carica vitalizia del Doge. L’approccio comparativo consente da un lato di mostrare il ruolo centrale ricoperto dalle arti dello spettacolo nella negoziazione politica fra governanti e governati, e dall’altro di evidenziare le differenti strategie comunicative impiegate per elaborare la rappresentazione identitaria delle città in corrispondenza con le esigenze politiche dei rispettivi regimi.
Ventrone, P., Celebration of Identity in Thirteenth- to Fifteenth-Century Florence, Milan, and Venice, Identity in the Middle Ages. Approaches from Southwestern Europe, Arc Humanities Press, Leeds 2021: 407-432 [http://hdl.handle.net/10807/203959]
Celebration of Identity in Thirteenth- to Fifteenth-Century Florence, Milan, and Venice
Ventrone, Paola
2021
Abstract
The purpose of this contribution is to show the importance of the institution of the civic identity celebrations, in some Italian cities between the Middle Ages and the Renaissance, for the legitimacy of the respective ruling classes and for building the consensus of citizens. It compares three cities with different political assets: the Duchy of Milan, dominated by the absolutism of the prince; the republic of Florence, without a de facto lord; the republic of Venice, characterized by a mixed regime, given the lifetime of the Doge's office. The comparative approach allows on the one hand to show the central role played by the performing arts in political negotiation between rulers and governed, and on the other to highlight the different communication strategies used to elaborate the identity representation of cities in correspondence with political needs of the respective regimes.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.