The renaissance in the fields : family memoirs of a fifteenth-century Tuscan peasant

Bibliographic Information

The renaissance in the fields : family memoirs of a fifteenth-century Tuscan peasant

Duccio Balestracci ; translated by Paolo Squatriti and Betsy Merideth ; with an introduction by Edward Muir

Pennsylvania State University Press, 1999

  • : pbk

Other Title

La zappa e la retorica : memorie familiari di un contadino toscano del Quattrocento

Available at  / 15 libraries

Search this Book/Journal

Note

Translation of: La zappa e la retorica : memorie familiari di un contadino toscano del Quattrocento

Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

In the early 1980s, Duccio Balestracci discovered in a Sienese archive two account books kept from 1450 to 1502 by a Tuscan peasant named Benedetto del Massarizia. Benedetto knew how to read but not how to write. Infected by the urban habit of detailed personal record keeping, he asked various of his literate acquaintances to put into writing the details of his daily affairs. The resulting account books offer an unparalleled glimpse into the economic and social world of late medieval peasants. In Renaissance in the Fields, Balestracci uses these account books and a host of supporting archival records to explore the lives of Benedetto and his family over the course of the fifteenth century. In Benedetto we see how country people could organize land and capital and protect themselves, at least a little, from rapacious landlords and urban administrators. By capturing the changing realities of life in the countryside, Renaissance in the Fields offers the best introduction to how the peasant economy really worked, and to how most people actually lived during the Italian Renaissance.

by "Nielsen BookData"

Details

Page Top