In the Shadow of the Campo: Sienese Women and Their Families (c. 1400–1600)
The history of women in medieval and early modern Italy has largely been dominated by a scholarly focus on Florence and Venice, despite the historical signifi cance and rich archival holdings of other cities and regions on the peninsula. This chapter presents new information on the women of Siena an...
Saved in:
Published in | Across the Religious Divide pp. 130 - 144 |
---|---|
Format | Book Chapter |
Language | English |
Published |
United Kingdom
Routledge
2010
Taylor & Francis Group |
Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
ISBN | 9780415995863 0415995868 |
DOI | 10.4324/9780203866085-13 |
Cover
Summary: | The history of women in medieval and early modern Italy has largely been
dominated by a scholarly focus on Florence and Venice, despite the historical signifi cance and rich archival holdings of other cities and regions
on the peninsula. This chapter presents new information on the women
of Siena and evaluates their position in their families and communities in
regard to current trends in research on Italian women. Inquiry into the
lives of Sienese women has been diffi cult due to a drastic restructuring
of Sienese archives during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, in
which enormous quantities of codices, parchments, and loose documents
were discarded to make room for new material. Only documents reporting
names of well-known families, such as Piccolomini and Tolomei, escaped
destruction. As a result, research in the Sienese archives must be conducted
in two ways: (1) by studying individual parchments and scattered documents that provide information about wealthy and high-born women; and
(2) by examining the informative but as yet underused tax records and
notarial acts that allow us to examine the experiences of women of the
lower classes. Because early modern Siena was subject to the Florentine
principate, information on prominent Sienese families can also be found in
letters to the Medici dukes, detailing cases in the subject territory that often
reveal the confl icting interests of women and their kin. This chapter makes
use of all these varied sources-civic statutes, notarial acts, tax records of
Siena, and the letters from Medici ducal archives-to examine elite and
nonelite women from Siena and the surrounding countryside. |
---|---|
ISBN: | 9780415995863 0415995868 |
DOI: | 10.4324/9780203866085-13 |