Skip to main content

Renaissance Rome

Format
EBook (short form)
Pages
29
ID
B00XVP7ZN6

In the fifteenth century, Rome was reborn - not spiritually, for Renaissance popes were not men of the spirit, but physically, artistically,
and politically. St. Peter's, the Vatican, the churches, the tombs, the squares, the palaces and gardens of Rome, which enchant the eye and
delight the heart, encouraged the pursuit of beauty that the stern moralities of the Counter Reformation could not stop. For more than
200 years, the splendor of Rome became the pride of the papacy. The pilgrims, supplicants, and merchants returned to the city, as did the
financial lifeblood of Rome - the papal tax that was harvested from Europe's peasantry. And so the Roman soil was fertilized again, for
without wealth, no rebirth was possible.
Here, in a short-form book from eminent British historian Sir J. H. Plumb, is the story of Renaissance Rome.

We hope you enjoy our work.

Please support this magazine of trusted historical writing, now in its 75th year, and the volunteers that sustain it with a donation to American Heritage.

Donate