The Captain's Concubine: Love, Honor, and Violence in Renaissance Tuscany

The Captain's Concubine: Love, Honor, and Violence in Renaissance Tuscany

by Donald Weinstein (Author)

Synopsis

On March 21, 1578, Holy Thursday, cavalier Fabrizio Bracciolini charged that he had been ambushed, slashed, stoned, and left bleeding in a Pistoia street by fellow cavalier Mariotto Cellesi and four accomplices. In The Captain's Concubine: Love, Honor, and Violence in Renaissance Tuscany, Donald Weinstein studies the lengthy investigation of the incident, bares the motives of the actors, and follows the ensuing trial. Weinstein examines the roles of the patricians, merchants, shopkeepers, weavers, priests, and prostitutes who served as audience, bit players, and chorus in this Renaissance street-theater drama. When Fabrizio is revealed to be the lover of Chiara, the concubine of Mariotto's father, questioning moves away from the street fight itself to the right of the defendants to take revenge for violated family honor: accuser becomes accused, and a simple case of assault turns into a community's discussion of its most tenacious values. Lurching from comedy to tragedy and neglected even by local chroniclers, the Holy Thursday incident involved issues of honor, family, religion, gender relations, and power familiar to social historians of late medieval and early modern Europe. For the Medici ruler of the Grand Duchy of Tuscany, the Holy Thursday affair presented a dilemma: bound to regard duels and street fights as threats to an all too fragile public order and a challenge to his sovereignty, Francesco I nevertheless respected and fostered the aristocratic code of honor, family loyalty, and chivalric valor to which the Cellesi appealed. How these contradictions were accommodated is a crucial part of the story Weinstein tells.

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 240
Publisher: Johns Hopkins University Press
Published: 26 Oct 2000

ISBN 10: 0801864755
ISBN 13: 9780801864759
Book Overview: I cannot recall when I have read a book that has given me more pleasure and satisfaction than The Captain's Concubine. The quality of Weinstein's work is the equal of other prominent practitioners of Italian microhistory: Ginsburg, Povolo, Grendi, and Muir. Weinstein develops the story with consummate skill and a good novelist's talent for drama and suspense. This is the work of a master historian at the height of his narrative and analytical powers. -- Gene BruckerUniversity of CaliforniaBerkeley, author of Giovanni and Lusanna and Renaissance Florence

Media Reviews
Weinstein succeeds not only in telling a memorable story, but also in illuminating core values and beliefs that usually remain opaque both to historians and to contemporaries... This splendid book tells us much about the practical interpretations of honor in Renaissance Tuscany. -- Christopher Carlsmith * Sixteenth Century Journal *
His story of merchants, priests, and prostitutes is told with a narrative vivacity that is exceptional in scholarly historical writing. * Virginia Quarterly Review *
A book that forces the reader to think. -- Samuel K. Cohn, Jr. * American Historical Review *
This skillfully developed micro-history, presented as a lively drama, is a pleasure to read. -- Joanne M. Ferraro * Journal of Social History *
A well-told tale that analyzes how sixteenth-century Tuscans defined chivalry, honor, and loyalty. -- Michelle Mirandon * Comitatus *
A highly entertaining, well-written, easily-digestible narrative... a book that is not easy to put down. -- Trevor Dean * English Historical Review *
Author Bio
Donald Weinstein is a professor emeritus of history at the University of Arizona. He is the author of several books of medieval and Renaissance history, including Savonarola and Florence: Prophecy and Patriotism in the Renaissance.