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Anna R. Sheldon - The Medici Balls. Seven Little Journeys Is Tuscany

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Books about Special Interest Travel discuss travel and tourism that is out of the ordinary because it has unusual characteristics such as education, or physical attributes that could include medicinal purposes. An example is The handy pocket-guide to health & health-restoring places.

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The Medici Balls SEVEN LITTLE JOURNEYS IN TUSCANY ANNA R SHELDON M MOYCA - photo 1
[]
The Medici Balls
SEVEN LITTLE JOURNEYS
IN TUSCANY
ANNA R. SHELDON
M. MOYCA NEWELL
OVER ONE HUNDRED ILLUSTRATIONS
CHARTERHOUSE PRESS
NEW YORK
1904
COPYRIGHT, 1904, BY
M. M. NEWELL

ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

SCHLUETER
PRINTING
COMPANY
NEW YORK

To
Frances Cecilia Newell
WE DEDICATE THIS BOOK

PREFATORY NOTE
W HY the Medici family assumed the well-known device of red balls on a field of gold, is one of the vexed questions of heraldic history. Some hold that as the saints, Cosmo and Damian, who appear so often in the votive pictures of the Medici, were also patron saints of medicine and surgery, and because the name of the family signifies physicians, the balls may suggest pills (palle). Others think that a cluster of balls, formerly the sign of money-lenders, was adopted as a device by Giovanni de' Medici, founder of the greater branch of the illustrious house, who as a banker attained great wealth and influence. As the Medici identified themselves with the trading interests and government of Florence, and were connected with several noble Florentine families, their coat of arms became familiar throughout all that extensive territory subject to Florence in the fifteenth century. With its varied number of balls, or quartered with other arms, as charged with the royal lily of France, or surmounted by the keys of St. Peter and a pontiff's tiara, it greets the traveller at every turn, not only on palaces and city gates, but on illuminated manuscripts and choir books, on the covers of medival ledgers, and terra-cotta wine jars.
Thus the title of "Medici Balls" has been given to the following record of seven little journeys in Tuscany by the authors, who in all their travels, even in lanes and modest farm-houses, have found themselves under the gis of the powerful banker-princes of Florence. The shield, bearing seven red balls on a field of gold, represents the arms of Piero de' Medici, and the period when Medicean supremacy was at its height; in the sequence of balls employed by the various members of the family, it serves to connect the eight balls displayed on the arms of Cosimo, Pater Patri, the munificent financier, with the six balls of Lorenzo the Magnificent, in whom the glory and renown of the family culminated.

CONTENTS
PAGE

LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
Lorenzo de' Medici. Photogravure
From "Procession of the Magi," Riccardi Palace, Florence.
By Benozzo Gozzoli.
Frontispiece
PAGE
Della Robbia Frieze
Badia a Settimo
Straw Plaiters, Mugnone Valley
A Loggia, Piero a Sieve
Palazzo Pubblico, Scarperia
The Main Street, Scarperia
Madonna and Child, Chapel of the Sacred Girdle, Duomo, Prato.
By Giovanni Pisano
Ancient Campanile della Pieve, Borgo San Lorenzo
Torraccia Romanelli, Borgo San Lorenzo
A Farm-house, Mugello
Ponte d'Elsa, Mugello
Hill of Vespignano, Mugello
Round Tower of Vespignano, Mugello
Joachim Returning to the Sheepfold, Arena Chapel, Padua.
By Giotto
From the Walls of Scarperia
A Country Road, Scarperia
Detail of Bronze Grille. Chapel of the Sacred Girdle, Prato
Portrait of Bianca Cappello, Uffizi, Florence.
By Alessandro Allori
Coats of Arms of the Ubaldini and Vichio
The Procession of the Magi, Riccardi Palace, Florence.
By Benozzo Gozzoli
Ornamental Band, Della Robbia
The Campanile, Prato. By Giovanni Pisano
Detail, Procession of the Magi, Riccardi Palace, Florence.
By Benozzo Gozzoli
Arcades "Where Hang the Copper and Woolen Goods," Prato
The Fortress, Prato
The Cathedral of Prato
Garden Belonging to Lorenzo's Favorite Villa, Poggio a Caiano
Erroneously entitled in the book as "Villa of Petraia."
External Pulpit, Cathedral, Prato. By Donatello
Madonna and Child, with Saints, Lunette Over Central Door,
Duomo, Prato. By Andrea Della Robbia
Lucrezia Tornabuoni, Wife of Lorenzo Il Magnifico. Wearing the
Marsyas Jewel of the Medici. By Botticelli
Coat of Arms of Prato
Detail of Frieze. S. Maria Delle Carceri, Prato.
By Andrea Della Robbia
The Piazza, Greve, Chianti
Ponte Falciano, Chianti
Ponte Capello, River Greve
Vitigliano, Chianti
Old Watch-Tower, Chianti
Panzano from a Distance, Chianti
S. Leolino a Flacciano, Pieve di Panzano, Chianti
A Villa in Panzano, Chianti
Old Wine Jar, Chianti
A Peasant of Chianti
The Stately Cypress
A Country Road, Chianti
Piazza, Impruneta
A Street, Impruneta
Predella to Tabernacle, Chapel of the Holy Cross, Impruneta.
By Luca della Robbia
Adoring Angels, Impruneta. By Luca della Robbia
Coat of Arms, Courtyard, Palazzo Cenami, Lucca
Della Robbia Ornament
Apse End and Campanile, San Andrea, Serravalle
The Rocca of Castruccio, Serravalle
Olive Trees
Iron Lantern, Palazzo Baroni, Lucca
Monument of General Bartolommeo Colleoni, Venice.
By A. Verrocchio
Moat of Castle Sarzanella, Sarzana
Monument of General Gattamelata, Padua.
By Donatello
Statue of John Hawkwood, Cathedral, Florence.
By Paolo Uccello
Madonna and Child, with Two Saints, Castelfranco.
By Giorgione
Portrait of a Young Florentine, Royal Gallery, Berlin.
By Botticelli
Stemma of Serravalle
Medici Shield, Ospedale del Ceppo, Pistoja. Della Robbia
Viale dell'Arcadia, Pistoja
Shield of Pistoja, Supported by Bears
Piazza del Duomo, Pistoja
Coat of Arms, Pistoja. By Verrocchio
Bronze Candelabra, Duomo, Pistoja
Head of Filippo Tedici, Pistoja
Campanile, from Via Ripa del Sale, Pistoja
Loggia, Ospedale del Ceppo, Pistoja
Coat of Arms of Hospital, Pistoja. Della Robbia
Healing the Sick, Detail of Frieze, Ospedale del Ceppo, Pistoja.
By Giovanni della Robbia
Via Abbi Pazienza
Coronation of the Virgin, Ospedale del Ceppo, Pistoja.
By Benedetto Buglione
Adoration of the Magi, S. Andrea, Pistoja
Monument of Cardinal Forteguerra, S. Cecilia, Rome.
By Mino da Fiesole
Virgin and Child, with Saints, Cathedral, Lucca.
By Fra Bartolommeo
Bastions of San Colombo, Lucca
Old City Wall and Moat, Lucca
Tomb of Ilaria del Carretto, Cathedral, Lucca.
By Jacopo della Quercia
On the Ramparts, Lucca
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