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EVALUATING CHANGE AND CONTINUITY IN THE ORGANISATION, DISTRIBUTION AND USE OF POWER POLITICS IN RENAISSANCE FLORENCE

Politics in Renaissance Florence

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Politics in Renaissance Florence. Evaluating change and continuity in the organisation, distribution and use of power. Where to Begin?. By the end of the C13th virtually all the independent communal governments on the Italian peninsula have been replaced by signores (rule by a lord) - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Politics in Renaissance Florence

E V A L U A T I N G C H A N G E A N D C O N T I N U I T Y I N T H E O R G A N I S A T I O N , D I S T R I B U T I O N A N D U S E O F P O W E R

POLITICS IN RENAISSANCE FLORENCE

Page 2: Politics in Renaissance Florence
Page 3: Politics in Renaissance Florence

WHERE TO BEGIN?

• By the end of the C13th virtually all the independent communal governments on the Italian peninsula have been replaced by signores (rule by a lord)

Florence’s Republic is not typical. It is a unique exception!

Page 4: Politics in Renaissance Florence

“In Florence men naturally love equality and are therefore very unwilling to accept and recognise others as their superiors. We are by temperament full of strong passions and restlessness, and it is this which is the cause of discord and disunity among the ruling elite. Through their desire to dominate each other, they pull this person here and that one there… The fact that others dislike anyone being superior to themselves ensures that whenever this happens, these men are destroyed.”

Dialogue on the government of Florence Francesco Guicciardini

A COMPLEX STORY

Page 5: Politics in Renaissance Florence

UNDERSTANDING POWER

From the study design:• Political institutions in Florence• Changes and continuities in the organisation, distribution and use of power in Renaissance Florence from 1293 to 1513• Focus on Medicean Florence from 1434 to

1494• Views of the Florentine political system

expressed by contemporary writers and historians such as Bruni and Machiavelli

Page 6: Politics in Renaissance Florence

4 PHASES OF POLITICAL DEVELOPMENT

• Ordinances of Justice1293 – 1382 – Guild government• Ciompi Revolt1382 – 1434 – Merchant Oligarchy• Exile and return of Cosimo De Medici1434 – 1494 – Medicean dominance• The French invasion and the overthrow of

Medici rule1494 – 1513 – Radical republic• Return of the Medici (with Spanish support) –

Dukes of Florence (end of the Republic)

Page 7: Politics in Renaissance Florence

KEY - UNDERSTANDING THE CHANGING NATURE OF REPUBLICANISM

• Knowing how something is put together is worth a thousand facts about it

• The Florentine Republic means different things to different people at different times!

Using knowledge to make judgements

Page 9: Politics in Renaissance Florence

THINK ROMEO & JULIET!

Page 10: Politics in Renaissance Florence

NEED FOR STRONG, ACTIVE AND INTRUSIVE GOVERNMENT

• Turbulent and violence-prone society

• Belief that government should establish order and regulation

• Not a community that trusted its members to live in peace and harmony without coercion

Page 11: Politics in Renaissance Florence

SECONDO POPOLO (C13TH)

• Use of guild militias to take public control of streets and squares

• An extensive building program creating new spaces that defined and represented new Republican ideals of participation, liberty and justice. Including the building of the Palazzo della Signoria

• The Ordinances of Justice

Page 12: Politics in Renaissance Florence

PALAZZO DELLA SIGNORIA & PIAZZA

Page 13: Politics in Renaissance Florence

ORDINANCES OF JUSTICE - 1293

1292 - Priorate of Guilds

1293 – Draft of the Ordinances of Justice

Two main functions – 1.To exclude and isolate the

magnates2.To give the 21 official

guilds of the city complete control over the political process of the Republic

Page 14: Politics in Renaissance Florence

LEONARDI BRUNI

• As Chancellor of the city he praised Florence as the NEW ROME• His tomb in the Church of

Santa Croce was a masterpiece carved in marble• Bruni is represented a

lying in state in the toga of a Roman Senator

Page 15: Politics in Renaissance Florence

• “Those citizens with too great a power of numbers and of force at their command” (=MAGNATES) were excluded from holding public office while “mechanics and members of the lowest class” were not allowed any role in the state (=LABOURING CLASSES). “Thus avoiding the extremes, the city look[ed] to the mean, or rather to the best and the wealthy but not overpowerful”(=CITIZENS/POPOLO who belonged to GUILDS)

• Leonardo Bruni (1404) “In praise of Florence”

BRUNI

Page 16: Politics in Renaissance Florence

GUILD REPUBLIC WAS NOT A DEMOCRACY

Mass in the middle were politically active citizens

• Artisans• Shopkeepers

• Merchants • Cloth manufacturers• Bankers• Professionals

From lesser guilds

From greater guilds

Page 17: Politics in Renaissance Florence

PARTICIPATION

• More than 1000 citizens each year participated in the political process directly by being elected to office• More than 1000 citizens each year

assembled as members of the legislative councils• Guild members also participated in politics

through• Guild administration• Neighbourhood committees• Confraternities and assemblies linked to

local parishes

Page 18: Politics in Renaissance Florence

GUILD REPUBLICANISM

• Guild members wanted a political voice

• That is, decisions and policies formulated by citizens (=guild members) chosen to represent the whole community (=guilds)

Page 19: Politics in Renaissance Florence

REPUBLICAN VALUES“Now first of all, great care is taken so that justice is held most sacred in the city, for without justice there can be no city, nor would Florence be even worthy to be called a city. Next there is provision for liberty, without which this great people would not even consider that life was worth living. These two principles are joined (almost as a stamp or goal) to all the institutions and statutes that the Florentine government has created”

– Bruni (1404) Panegyric “In praise of Florence”

Page 20: Politics in Renaissance Florence

POWER STRUGGLES BETWEEN SOCIAL GROUPS

Ottimati – elite families

Popolo - guilds

Popolo minuto – labouring classes

Page 21: Politics in Renaissance Florence

THE CIOMPI REVOLT & THE REPUBLIC (1378)

“The most striking characteristic of these rebels was their innate conservatism, their respect for tradition, their adherence to the old forms and rituals. Perhaps it would be more accurate to say that , like every other group in Florentine society, the popolo minute accepted the economic system….Neither in the petitions, nor presumably among the Ciompi themselves was there an articulated demand for the destruction of the regime and the establishment of a new egalitarian order. Illustrative of lower-class conservatism was the Ciompi’s acceptance of the constitutional structures under which it had been suppressed and exploited for a century”

- Brucker

Page 22: Politics in Renaissance Florence

OTTIMATI – DIFFERENT VIEW OF REPUBLICANISM

• Emergence of elite families who attempted to dominate the city (Merchant oligarchy)• Resented elements of the popolo after the

Ciompi Revolt and limited their involvement in the political process• New avenues to power – personal and family patronage networks• Period of bitter rivalries and factional quarrels that destabilised Florence• Period of successive crises – drained wealth,

civil unrest, divided leadership and factionalism

Page 23: Politics in Renaissance Florence

THE MEDICI (1434)

• One family come to dominate the city• Party/faction of family connections,

friends and neighbourhood loyalties• Governed Florence indirectly for 60 years• Ordinary Florentines viewed the Medici as

defenders of the city’s Republican values

Page 24: Politics in Renaissance Florence

MEDICI ATTITUDE TOWARDS THE REPUBLIC

• Concentration of power in the hands of the patriarchs of the Medici family• Political skill• Vast wealth• Powerful patronage network• Ruthless destruction of enemies (exile &

exclusion)

BUT preserved Republican institutions Najemy – By 1471, the Republic had already become an “empty shell”

Page 25: Politics in Renaissance Florence

UNDERSTAND HOW THE MEDICI CHANGED THE REPUBLIC

• Maintained but manipulated formal institutions• Use of informal means to consolidate power• Strategies• Use of Balie (commissions with emergency powers)• Manipulation of the accopiatori (committee who

managed the electoral process)• Excluded rivals from electoral lists• Replaced independent and foreign magistrates and

judges with loyal supporters• Used tax system to destroy enemies and reward friends• Used treason laws to extinguish criticism of the Medici

family

Page 26: Politics in Renaissance Florence

PATRONAGE

• Petitioners appealed to Lorenzo for support and favours• Jobs/positions• Tax exemptions• Criminal sentences• Arranging

marriages• Business

opportunities

Page 27: Politics in Renaissance Florence

CHALLENGES TO MEDICI RULE

• Florentine elites never wholly accepted Medici rule and resented domination• In every generation, there

was a significant challenge to power (Pazzi conspiracy being the most important)

1479 drawing by Leonardo da Vinci of hanged Pazzi conspirator Bernardo di Bandino Baroncelli

Page 28: Politics in Renaissance Florence

LORENZO DE MEDICI

“Prince in everything but name” – Pope Pius II

Overtly controlled the Republic through – • Manipulation of

Republican institutions• Control of the major

guilds• Interference in the

Church and confraternities

Page 29: Politics in Renaissance Florence

RESTORATION OF THE REPUBLIC (1494)• Foreign invasion & Medici rule collapses• Opportunity to restore “liberty, freedom and good government”• Restoration of institutions and

structures the Medici dismantled• New Great Council (25% of

adult male population eligible for a seat)• Most democratic form of

Republicanism for 100 years

Page 30: Politics in Renaissance Florence

SAVONAROLA

• Firebrand monk who pursued a program of moral and religious reform

• Powerful political voice of the new Republic

• Bizarre and grizzly end!

Page 31: Politics in Renaissance Florence

DISORDER, CHAOS & COLLAPSE

• New Republican government ineffective• Government

undermined on every side• Climate of anxiety• Weaknesses of the

system ruthlessly exposed (writings of Machiavelli)

Page 32: Politics in Renaissance Florence

“A PARADISE INHABITED BY DEVILS.”AGNOLO ACCIAIUOLI

Page 33: Politics in Renaissance Florence

GOOD LUCK FOR THE REST OF YOUR STUDY!