Apologetic writings / Girolamo Savonarola ; edited and translated by M. Michèle Mulchahey.
2015
DG737.97 .A25 2015 (Mapit)
Available at General Collection
Items
Details
Title
Apologetic writings / Girolamo Savonarola ; edited and translated by M. Michèle Mulchahey.
Uniform Title
Works. Selections. English. 2015
ISBN
9780674054981 (hardcover)
0674054989 (hardcover)
9781472452078
1472452070
0674054989 (hardcover)
9781472452078
1472452070
Published
Cambridge, Massachusetts : Harvard University Press, 2015.
Language
English
Language Note
English translation with Latin text on verso.
Description
xliv, 413 pages ; 22 cm.
Call Number
DG737.97 .A25 2015
Dewey Decimal Classification
282.092
Summary
"Brought to Florence at the instance of Lorenzo de' Medici to become lector to the Dominican community at San Marco, Girolamo Savonarola would ultimately be responsible for the events that convulsed the city in the 1490s and led to the overthrow of the Medici themselves. Savonarola's apocalyptic sermons, preached from the pulpits of San Marco and the Duomo, predicted dire consequences for a sinful Florence, a scourging, if the Florentines did not mend their ways and form themselves into a commonwealth for God. Fully in the ascendant by 1495, Savonarola increasingly used his platform in Florence to urge a renewal of the entire Church, a renovatio ecclesiae that implicated the papacy as a particular impediment to reform. He was accused of heresy and eventually excommunicated by the Borgia pope, Alexander VI, on 13 May 1497. Savonarola refused to acknowledge the validity of the excommunication and defended himself against the charges. But he was soon arrested by the Florentine Signoria--the city's highest magistracy--at the pope's behest. He was then brought to trial for falsely claiming to have seen visions and uttered prophecies, for religious error, and sedition. In a few days it was all over. Girolamo Savonarola was hanged and burned, together with two of his Dominican disciples from San Marco, in Florence's Piazza della Signoria on 23 May 1498, still professing adherence to the Church. Girolamo Savonarola's self-defense, like his visionary teaching, was preached from the pulpits of Florence, but was also carried on through a series of writings. The works presented in this volume were all written by the friar during the dramatic months leading up to his death, as he ever more desperately defended his actions to those who were ranged against him"--Provided by publisher.
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references (pages 399-401) and indexes.
Added Author
Series
I Tatti Renaissance library ; 68.
Record Appears in
Table of Contents
Letter to Alexander VI, July 31, 1495
Letter to Alexander VI, September 29, 1495
Apology for the Brothers of the Congregation of San Marco
Letter to Alexander VI, May 20, 1497
Letter against the sentence of excommunication, June 1497
Letter to Alexander VI, October 13, 1497
Letter to Alexander VI, March 13, 1498
Letter to Alexander VI, March 13, 1498 (unsent version)
Dialogue on the truth of prophecy.
Letter to Alexander VI, September 29, 1495
Apology for the Brothers of the Congregation of San Marco
Letter to Alexander VI, May 20, 1497
Letter against the sentence of excommunication, June 1497
Letter to Alexander VI, October 13, 1497
Letter to Alexander VI, March 13, 1498
Letter to Alexander VI, March 13, 1498 (unsent version)
Dialogue on the truth of prophecy.