Lucrezia Borgia : Life, Love, and Death in Renaissance Italy
معرفی کتاب «Lucrezia Borgia : Life, Love, and Death in Renaissance Italy» نوشتهٔ Bradford, Sarah، منتشرشده توسط نشر Penguin Publishing Group در سال 2005. این کتاب در فرمت epub، زبان انگلیسی ارائه شده است.
the Very Name Lucrezia Borgia Conjures Up Everything That Was Sinister And Corrupt About The Renaissanceincest, Political Assassination, Papal Sexual Abuse, Poisonous Intrigue, Unscrupulous Power Grabs. Yet, As Bestselling Biographer Sarah Bradford Reveals In This Breathtaking New Portrait, The Truth Is Far More Fascinating Than The Myth. Neither A Vicious Monster Nor A Seductive Pawn, Lucrezia Borgia Was A Shrewd, Determined Woman Who Used Her Beauty And Intelligence To Secure A Key Role In The Political Struggles Of Her Day.
Drawing From A Trove Of Contemporary Documents And Fascinating Firsthand Accounts, Bradford Brings To Life The Art, The Pageantry, And The Dangerous Politics Of The Renaissance World Lucrezia Borgia Helped To Create.
the New Yorker
historians Who Have Attempted To Rescue Lucrezia Borgia From Her Legend As A Poisoner Who Slept With Both Her Father, Pope Alexander Vi, And Her Brother, Cesare Borgia, Have Mostly Described Her As A Pawn. Indeed, Before She Was Twenty-one She Was Twice Married Off To Men Who Were Disposed Of Once Their Political Usefulness Expired. (the First Had To Declare Himself Impotent And Grant Her A Divorce; The Second Was Strangled In His Bed.) Bradford Sees Lucrezia Neither As A Helpless Victim Nor A Femme Fatale But As A Resourceful Individual—an Able Administrator, A Genuinely Religious Woman, And The Equal In Political Skill, If Not In Brutality, Of Her Notorious Male Relatives. When The Family Of Her Third Husband Balked At Alliance With A Woman Described As The “greatest Whore There Ever Was In Rome,” She Used All Her Craft And Charm To Win Them Over—by, Among Other Things, Making Her Pious Prospective Father-in-law A Gift Of Several Nuns.
A sympathetic portrait of the infamous Renaissance woman discusses her origins as the illegitimate child of Pope Alexander VI, forced first marriage at the age of thirteen, increasing power over the course of two subsequent marriages, and shrewd choices in the face of the era's political struggles Discusses the infamous Renaissance woman's origins as the illegitimate child of Pope Alexander VI, forced first marriage at the age of thirteen, increasing power during two subsequent marriages, and role in the era's political struggles. At the time of Lucrezia Borgia's birth in 1480, Italy was famously a geographical expression rather than a country, a peninsula divided into independent states bound by the weakest sense of common nationality.