Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Introduction
- 1 The Place of Renaissance Italy in the History of Emotions
- 2 The Emotional Language of Justice in Late Medieval Italy
- 3 The Anxiety of the Republics: “Timor” in Italy of the Communes during the 1330s
- 4 Humiliation and the Exercise of Power in the Florentine: Contado in the Mid-Fourteenth Century
- 5 The Words of Emotion: Political Language and Discursive Resources in Lorenzo de Medici’s Lettere (1468-1492)
- 6 Metaphor, Emotion and the Languages of Politics in Late Medieval Italy: A Genoese Lamento of 1473
- 7 Debt, Humiliation, and Stress in Fourteenth-Century Lucca and Marseille
- 8 Renaissance Emotions: Hate and disease in European perspective
- 9 The Emotive Power of an Evolving Symbol: The Idea of the Dome from Kurgan Graves to the Florentine Tempio Israelitico
- 10 The Emotions of the State: A Survey of the Visconti Chancery Language (Mid-Fourteenth-Mid- Fifteenth Centuries)
- 11 Control of Emotions and Comforting Practices before the Scaffold in Medieval and Early Modern Italy (with Some Remarks on Lorenzetti’s Fresco)
- 12 “Bene Comune e Benessere”: The Affective Economy of Communal Life
- Contributors
11 - Control of Emotions and Comforting Practices before the Scaffold in Medieval and Early Modern Italy (with Some Remarks on Lorenzetti’s Fresco)
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 December 2023
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Introduction
- 1 The Place of Renaissance Italy in the History of Emotions
- 2 The Emotional Language of Justice in Late Medieval Italy
- 3 The Anxiety of the Republics: “Timor” in Italy of the Communes during the 1330s
- 4 Humiliation and the Exercise of Power in the Florentine: Contado in the Mid-Fourteenth Century
- 5 The Words of Emotion: Political Language and Discursive Resources in Lorenzo de Medici’s Lettere (1468-1492)
- 6 Metaphor, Emotion and the Languages of Politics in Late Medieval Italy: A Genoese Lamento of 1473
- 7 Debt, Humiliation, and Stress in Fourteenth-Century Lucca and Marseille
- 8 Renaissance Emotions: Hate and disease in European perspective
- 9 The Emotive Power of an Evolving Symbol: The Idea of the Dome from Kurgan Graves to the Florentine Tempio Israelitico
- 10 The Emotions of the State: A Survey of the Visconti Chancery Language (Mid-Fourteenth-Mid- Fifteenth Centuries)
- 11 Control of Emotions and Comforting Practices before the Scaffold in Medieval and Early Modern Italy (with Some Remarks on Lorenzetti’s Fresco)
- 12 “Bene Comune e Benessere”: The Affective Economy of Communal Life
- Contributors
Summary
Introduction
As preliminary remarks, I would find it useful to come back to the detail of Ambrogio Lorenzetti's fresco figuring as front image of the conference for which this paper was originally written [fig. 1]. The winged woman flying just over the countryside is Securitas (“Security”), embodying the political response of Justice to the “anxiety of the Republics.”1 Such anxiety is in turn represented by Timor (“Fear”), which is put in the fresco just in front of Securitas, on the opposite side of the room. Here's a transcription of Security's cartiglio (“scroll”):
Senca pavra ognvom franco camini
elavorando semini ciascvno
mentre che tal comvno
manterra qvesta do(n)na i(n) signoria
chel alevata arei ogni balia.
The image vividly shows how the signoria (“dominion”) of this lady (the Justice) is possible: this delicate angel-shaped figure fierily exhibits on its hand a gallows with a hanged man. The essential condition that allows a citizen to walk free (ogn’uom franco camini) is that the criminal justice efficiently works. Why, however, is such the only virtue represented outside the city, in the so-called effects of good government in the countryside? I’d like to propose a little suggestion, hopefully convincing, for that. If we better take a look at the whole fresco [fig. 2], Securitas is actually not flying in the open country, but just outside the city walls. Indeed, that was the place where criminal justice usually achieved its office: a parallel look at the famous Pianta della Catena [fig. 3], for instance, shows that the scaffold for public executions was normally placed just outside the city walls, in Florence as well in Siena and in almost all the Italian cities.
There is however another subtler – but not less meaningful – hint in Lorenzetti's detail, which I think was completely ignored until now.3 By focusing a little more on the silhouette of the hanged man, we can in fact easily figure out a devil's face in what normally seems to be a white simple dress stirred up by the wind [fig. 4].
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- Emotions, Passions, and Power in Renaissance Italy , pp. 209 - 236Publisher: Amsterdam University PressPrint publication year: 2015