Here is the most important autobiography from Renaissance
Italy and one of the most spirited and colorful from any time or
place, in a translation widely recognized as the most faithful to
the energy and spirit of the original.
Benvenuto Cellini was both a beloved artist in sixteenth-century
Florence and a passionate and temperamental man of action who was
capable of brawling, theft, and murder. He counted popes,
cardinals, kings, and dukes among his patrons and was the adoring
friend of—as he described them—the “divine” Michelangelo and the
“marvelous” Titian, but was as well known for his violent feuds. At
age twenty-seven he helped defend the Castel Sant’Angelo in Rome,
and his account of his imprisonment there (under a mad castellan
who thought he was a bat), his escape, recapture, and confinement
in “a cell of tarantulas and venomous worms” is an adventure equal
to any other in fact or fiction. But it is only one in a long life
lived on a grand scale.
Cellini’s autobiography is not merely the record of an
extraordinary life but also a dramatic and evocativeaccount of
daily life in Renaissance Italy, from its lowest taverns to its
highest royal courts.
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