You are on page 1of 3

680 R EN AI S S A N C E QU A RT E R L Y V O L U M E L XV I I I , N O .

Donne del Rinascimento a Roma e dintorni. Anna Esposito, ed.


RR inedita 55. Rome: Roma nel Rinascimento, 2013. 198 pp. þ 8 color pls. €20.

This slim volume, based on a lecture series in Rome at the Fondazione Marco Besso in
2011–12, brings together essays on women in and around Renaissance Rome. Topics are
diverse, but can be divided roughly into three groups representing varying approaches to
early modern women’s history. A pair of archivally based essays demonstrate women’s
active participation in the city’s economic life. Elena di Maggio mines Marco Antonio
Altieri’s unpublished 1525 account of the Roman confraternity of the Savior for
information about the confraternity’s numerous female patrons, while Ivana Ait
uncovers numerous women active in business, particularly moneylending, investing,
and working in hotels and inns that served the growing pilgrimage trade.
A second group of essays studies women as subjects in painting or literature. Paolo
Procaccioli continues his studies on Pietro Aretino with an enjoyable take on the
humanist’s lambasting of Rome through the words of two courtesans, characters in
a satirical work of 1534, written after Aretino had to flee Rome for publishing
pornography. The courtesans’ discourse portrays Rome as the Whore of Babylon, as
they both represent and discuss the city’s reputation as coda mundi. Anna Cavallaro
explores a late fifteenth-century fresco cycle at the Orsini family castle in Bracciano
representing Orsini ladies at play, hunting, dancing, and making music. Cavallaro
examines in detail the frescoes’ dating, techniques, and unresolved questions of
authorship, linking the work’s curiously anachronistic subject and style, which echoes
late Gothic representations of courtly life, to themes treated in noble residences of
Northern Italy. The focus here is on the Roman baronial nobility’s well-known slowness
to adopt the humanistic trends prevalent at other Central and Northern Italian princely
courts by the middle of the fifteenth century, rather than on women per se.
A third topic might be called instruction. Anna Esposito opens the volume with an
examination of city statutes and case law in Rome and Lazio to conclude that women’s
reputations were defined as largely sexual in legal settings. Francesca Niutta turns to the
world of early print, identifying works printed explicitly for women in the fifteenth
century and noting they primarily treat religious themes. Finally, in the concluding essay,
Esposito asks in what areas women could realize their wishes and direct their lives, adding
an innovative exploration of women’s sentiments as revealed in letters to their husbands.
Many questions remain implicit: how did the women’s experience in Rome differ
from other, more extensively studied Italian cities like Florence or Venice? How were
Roman women involved with the intense religiosity of this era? Did proximity to the
REVIEWS 681

wifeless papal court and cardinalate households affect women significantly? Given these
silences, one feels the lack of a substantial introduction or conclusion that would pull the
parts together into a whole. Nonetheless, these solidly researched studies offer useful
tesserae in the mosaic of women’s experience in Rome.

 E BAERNSTEIN, Miami University


P. RENE
Copyright of Renaissance Quarterly is the property of University of Chicago Press and its
content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the
copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email
articles for individual use.

You might also like