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Domestic space and identity: artisans, shopkeepers and traders in sixteenth-century Siena
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 November 2010
Abstract:
Historians of early modern Italy have traditionally viewed the city's public spaces, such as streets, quarters, taverns and marketplaces, as the chief locations in which claims to identity were launched into the broader urban community. Recent studies on the domestic interior, however, have shown that the distinction between ‘public’ and ‘private’ in the fifteenth- and sixteenth-century urban space was much more complex. In this period, private urban houses became sites for an increasing range of social acitvities that varied from informal evening gatherings to large wedding banquets. Focusing on this ‘public’ dimension of the private urban house, this article explores how the middling classes of artisans and shopkeepers used the domestic space to construct identities and to facilitate social relations in sixteenth-century Siena. The aim is to show that in providing a setting for differing forms of economic and social activity, the urban home together with its objects and furnishings may have provided an increasingly important physical location for craftsmen, shop-owners and traders to negotaite individual and collective identities within the broader communities of the city.
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- Research Article
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- Urban History , Volume 37 , Special Issue 3: Locating communities in the early modern Italian city , December 2010 , pp. 372 - 385
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- Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2010
References
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13 CDP, 733, no. 273 (1549), 6r–v.
14 Ibid., 6r–v.
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16 CDP 699, no. 18 (1537), 1v: Due tazzoni di cristallo dorati. The same inventory also includes two salettieri di cristallo (2r).
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19 CDP, 733, no. 240, 4v.
20 Ibid.
21 CDP 733, no. 273: 6v; CDP, 746, no. 457, 2r.
22 For credenze, see, for example, V. Taylor, ‘Banquet plate and Renaissance culture: a day in the life’, in Olson, Reilly and Shepherd (eds.), The Biography of the Object, 623, and Grieco, ‘Meals’, 249–50.
23 CDP, 725, no. 70 (1547), 1r–v.
24 CDP 706, no. 120 (1542), 2r: Uno bancho ad uso di credentia.
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28 For this point, see Cohen and Cohen, ‘The social meanings of the cinquecento Roman house’, 62.
29 The significance of family name and political position in Sienese society in the period are discussed, for example, in Isaacs, ‘Popolo e monti’, 49–69; Ascheri, M., ’Siena nel primo quattrocento: un sistema politico tra storia e storiografia’, in Ascheri, M. and Ciampoli, D. (eds.), Siena ed il suo territorio nel rinascimento (Siena, 1986), 1–55, especially 33–40Google Scholar. On the increased use of surnames in Siena, see also Cohn, S., Death and Property in Siena, 1205–1800 (Baltimore, 1988), 146–58Google Scholar.
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31 For the Sienese Lira and the economic level artisans, see Hohti, P., ‘The inn-keeper's goods: the use and acquisition of household property in sixteenth-century Siena’, in O'Malley, M. and Welch, E. (eds.), The Material Renaissance (Manchester, 2007), 242–59Google Scholar; and Hohti, P., ‘Artisans, pawn-broking, and the circulation of material goods in sixteenth-century Siena’, in Ascheri, M., Mazzoni, G. and Nevola, F. (eds.), Siena nel rinascimento: l'ultimo secolo della repubblica, II. Arte, architettura e cultura, Acts of the International Conference, Siena (28–30 Sep. 2003 and 16–18 Sep. 2004) (Siena, 2009), 271–81Google Scholar. For the origins and general character of the Sienese Lira, see also L. Banchi, ‘La lira, la tavola delle possessioni e le preste nella Repubblica di Siena, Archivio storico italaino, series 2, 7, 2 (1868), 53–88; Catoni, G. and Piccini, G., ‘Famiglie e redditi nella Lira senese del 1453’, in Comba, R., Piccini, G. and Pinto, G. (eds.), Strutture familiari, epidemie, migrazioni nell'Italia medievale (Naples, 1984), 291–304Google Scholar.
32 For the furnishings of his shop, see CDP 733, no. 240, 1r–2r.
33 CDP, 746, no. 457, 5r–8v.
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35 CDP 692, no. 3 (1535), 1r.
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38 CDP 725, no. 70, 1r: una spalliera di tela dipenta con sue arme cioe con arme di detto Girolamo di braccia 6 in circa; CDP, 733, no. 240, 4v: uno spechio quadro con armatura dorato and uno tondo da riscappata con arme inverniciato; CDP 746, no. 457, 2r: arme dorate della sua casa. Their cases were not unique: see also, for example, CDP 725, no. 142 (1548), 1v: Una tela con larme di cristofano e di fratia da tener sopra la credentia.
39 Revealed by both fiscal sources and baptismal records. ASS, Lira, 112 (1509), 37v, and ASS, Biccherna, 1134, 24v.
40 Cristoforo Messibugo, a high official at the Este court, for example, recommended that silver ewers and basins should be placed at the most important tables, while bronze and other cheaper wares could be used for the rest. Liefkes, ‘Tableware’, 255. For the ways in which hierarchies were expressed in social situations, see Ajmar-Wollheim, ‘Sociability’, 208–9. Hierarchies were also expressed by the diversity of food, see Grieco, ‘Food and social classes’, in Flandrin and Montanari (eds.), Food: A Culinary History, 307.
41 For normative texts devoted specifically to good manners, see D. Romagnoli, ‘“Mind your manners”: etiquette at the table’, in Flandrin and Montanari (eds.), Food: A Culinary History, 330–8. Popular versions in the vernacular, based on manuals of conduct, may also have been circulated in the sixteenth century. See Bell, R., How to Do It: Guides to Good Living for Renaissance Italians (Chicago and London, 1999)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
42 Corazzini (ed.), Ricordanze di Bartolomeo Masi, 245–56. The flute-player Paulo also had a table with plinths to be ‘raised up and down’, possibly according to the importance and the rank of the person who was seated on such a chair. See CDP 722, no. 4 (1546), 1r.
43 Brenda Preyer, for example, shows that colleagues were often invited at home for meals. See Preyer, ‘Planning for visitors at Florentine palaces’, 371. For the meaning of personal relations and social networks in the Renaissance period, see, for example, Weissman, ‘Reconstructing Renaissance sociology’, 39–46. The importance of credit relations in the early modern period is discussed by Muldrew, C. in The Economy of Obligation: The Culture of Credit and Social Relations in Early Modern England (Basingstoke, 1998)CrossRefGoogle Scholar. For the links between identity and social networks in Renaissance Italy, see Romano, Patricians and Popolani.
44 According to his inventory, he was married to Mona Calidonia . . . figlia di Agniolo Berti; see CDP 725, no. 70, 1r. For the Berti family and their connections to political factions, see Ilari, Maria (ed.), Famiglie, località, istituzioni di Siena e del suo territorio: indice di armi e di fonti documentarie dell'Archivio di stato di Siena (Siena, 2002), 45Google Scholar.
45 Dennis Romano discusses how Venetian servants used luxury goods to create social ties. See Romano, , ‘Aspects of patronage in fifteenth- and sixteenth-century Venice’, Renaissance Quarterly, 46 (1993), 712–33CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
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