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The Autobiography of Benvenuto Cellini

Page 59

by Benvenuto Cellini


  Medici, Giovanni de’ (Giovannino dalle Bande Nere), 10, 14, 59, 85

  Medici, Cardinal Giulio de’ see Clement VII, Pope

  Medici, Cardinal Ippolito de’: driven from Florence, 73; and BC’s fight with Benedetto, 119; invites BC back to Rome, 122, 124–5; and BC’s killing of Pompeo, 129–30; orders illuminated Book of Offices, 162

  Medici, Lorenzino de’, 142–4, 158, 160

  Medici, Lorenzo de’, 7, 327

  Medici, Ottaviano de’, 142, 155, 157, 388

  Medici, Pallone de’, 60

  Medici, Piero de’, 7–8; tomb, 120

  Medusa (bronze head), 320, 325–6, 329, 336, 343–6, 351

  Melfi see Amalfi

  Miccieri, ‘Gatta’, 279

  Miccieri, Paolo, 279–81, 287–9, 292

  Michelagnolo di Bernardino di Michele, 47–51, 55

  Michelangelo Buonarroti: moves to Venice, 18; Torrigiano injures, 18; admires topaz head, 43; hears Pulci sing, 54; visits BC in Florence, 73; recommends BC to Ginori, 74; statues in Florence, 315, 330; praised with sonnets, 339; Cosimo de’ Medici invites to Florence, 353–4, 356; praises BC’s bust of Altoviti, 353–4; BC visits in Rome, 354–5; David statue, 370; and BC’s Perseus, 378; marble transferred to Bandinelli, 383–4; BC praises, 385

  Michele (jeweller), 79–80

  Michelozzi, Bernardo di Michelozzo, Bishop of Forli, 129

  Mirandola, Count Galeotto della, 308, 311

  Mirandola, Pico della see Pico della Mirandola, Giovanni

  Modena, 245

  Monaldo, Alessandro, 215, 218

  Monte Aguto, Niccolò da, 134, 155, 157–8

  Monte Cassino: Piero de’ Medici’s tomb in, 120, 123

  Monte Ruosi, 240

  Montevarchi, Francesco Catani da, 156, 394

  Montorsoli see Servi, Fra Giovanni Agnolo de’

  Morani, Aurelio see Ascolano, Aurelio

  Morluc, Jean de, 189, 194, 228

  Moro, Raffaello del: BC works with in Rome, 76, 83; daughter, 83–5; praises RK’s setting of jewel for Paul III, 165

  Moschino (Francesco di Simone Mosca), 388

  Naples, 120–3

  Narcissus (BC; statue), 342–3

  Nardi, Jacopo, 134–5

  Nardini, Michele di Francesco, 195

  Narducci, Benvegnato, 57–8

  Nassaro (Nazaro), Mattio del, 280, 288

  Navarre, King of see Henri II d’Albert

  Nazaro see Nassaro

  Nepi and Castro, Jerolima, Duchess of, 212–13

  Nepi and Castro, Pier Luigi Farnese, Duke of (later Duke of Parma and Piacenza): threatens BC, 131–2, 145; orders BC’s arrest, 133; and BC’s arrest by Paul III, 184–5, 189; testifies to BC’s audacity, 206–8; and Paul III’s request for death of BC, 219; and BC’s confinement, 225; and BC’s release, 229; BC foresees fate of, 230; BC meets on return from France, 312–13

  Neptune (BC; statue), 382–6, 388–90, 393–5, 399–401

  Nero, Francesco del, 94–5

  Nesle, le Petit (château): BC occupies, 256–8, 274–5; BC made lord of castle, 267–8; BC evicts German workman from, 275, 277; craftsmen in, 275; supposed haunting, 301

  Neufville, Nicolas de (’Villurois’), 257–8, 304

  Niccolò d’Asti (Mantua goldsmith), 71

  Nobili, Antonio de’, 376–7

  Norcia, Francesco da see Fusconi, Francesco

  Norcia, Umbria, 116

  Nugent, Thomas, xvi

  Nymph (BC; Fontainebleau statue), xv

  Orange, Philibert de Chalons, Prince of, 68

  Orbec, Vicomte d’, 258, 262

  Orsino, Cardinal Franciotto, 68–9

  Orsino, Gerolamo, 183

  Orsino, Paolo di Giordano, lord of Bracciano, 183

  Paccalli, Giuliano, 354

  Padua, 172–3

  Pagno, Zanobi di, 329

  Pagolo see Galeotti, Pietro Paolo Pallavicino, Fr, 191–3

  Palombara, 120

  Pantasilea (courtesan), 47, 50, 53–9

  Parigi, Antonio (BC’s adopted son), xiii

  Parigi, Domenico, xiii

  Parigi, Dorotea (BC’s model), xiii

  Parigi, Piera di Salvadore (BC’s wife), xiii

  Paris: BC in, 178, 255–6; fortified against Charles V, 301–2; see also Fontainebleau; France

  Parma and Piacenza, Duke of see Nepi and Castro, Duke of

  Particino, Antonio, 361

  Pascucci, Girolamo (BC’s Perugian assistant), 171, 183–4

  Pasqualino d’Ancona, 361

  Paul III, Pope (earlier Cardinal Alessandro Farnese): BC serves, 130; near-injury in siege of Rome, 64–5; BC makes dies and coins for, 130–1; elected Pope, 130; grants BC safe conduct after murder of Pompeo, 130, 142–3; BC makes gold plate for, 147; BC visits on return to Rome, 147; pardons BC, 147; exchanges gifts with Emperor Charles V, 161–4; BC sets diamond in ring for, 164, 166–7; Giovenale arouses hostility towards BC in, 167–8; BC leaves service, 171; orders BC’s arrest and imprisonment for theft of jewels, 184–5, 187, 189–90, 194; and Acanio’s attack on goldsmiths, 195; and BC’s escape from Castel Sant’Angelo, 203–4, 206–8; imprisonment and escape, 204–5; confines BC (1539), 209–12, 228; agrees to free BC, 213; orders BC’s death, 219–20; castellan seeks BC’s release from, 223–4; releases BC from prison, 228–9; settles dispute with Ercole II d’Este, 245

  Paulino (BC’s apprentice), 30, 35, 37, 41, 45

  Pavia, Bishop of see Rossi, Giovan Girolamo de’

  Pecci, Pierantonio, 124

  Pedignone see Giovanni (called Pedignone)

  Penni, Gianfrancesco see Fattore, il

  Penni, Giulio Romano see Romano, Giulio

  Perseus (BC; statue), 314–15, 317, 319–20, 322, 328–30, 333–5, 337, 343–6, 351–2, 360, 363–4, 366–71, 374–9, 397

  Petrucci, Porzia, xi, 28–32, 38

  Philip II, King of Naples, then of Spain, 337

  Pico della Mirandola, Giovanni, 268

  Pier Luigi see Nepi and Castro, Duke of

  Piero (Pierino; fife-player), 12–14

  Pietro Paolo of Monterotondo see Galeotti, Pietro Paolo

  Pilli, Raffaello de’, 343, 394

  Piloto, Giovanni di Baldassare, 64, 128

  Pisa, 15–16, 401–2

  Pitigliano, Count of, 268

  plague: in Rome, 41, 43–7; BC contracts, 45–6; in Florence, 70, 72–3

  Plon, Eugène, xvi

  Poggini, Domenico and Gian Paolo (brothers), 321, 324, 330, 332–3

  Polverino, Jacopo, 377

  Pompeo (jeweller) see Capitaneis, Pompeo de’

  Pontormo, Jacopo da, 369

  Pope-Hennessy, Sir John, xvi

  Prato Magno, 373

  Prato, Tommaso da see Cortese, Tommaso

  Pretino da Lucca, 141

  Primaticcio, Francesco (’Il Bologna’), 276–7, 284–9, 292, 298, 307

  Pucci, Pandolfo, 203

  Pucci, Roberto (later Cardinal), 100, 203

  Pulci, Luigi, xi, 53–9

  Quistello, Alfonso, 377, 395

  Raffaello, Niccolò di (’Tribolo’), 133–40

  Raphael: BC copies Jupiter, 29; Rosso belittles, 178

  Rastelli, Giacomo, 84

  Ravenna, Cardinal of see Accolti, Benedetto

  Recalcati, Ambrogio, 130, 147

  Reformation, viii

  Ricci, Federigo de’, 395, 397

  Ricciarelli, Daniele (of Volterra), 401

  Riccio, Pier Francesco, 316–19, 326–7, 351–2, 355–6

  Ridolfi, Cardinal Niccolò, 38

  Rienzo da Ceri see Ceri, Lorenzo da

  Rigogli, Giovanni, 46, 72

  Romano, Giulio (Penni), 47–51, 71

  Rome: BC runs away to work in, 19–20, 22; BC escapes to, 27; plague in, 41, 43–7; siege and sack of (1527), 59–69, 186; BC returns to, 76, 123–4, 144, 157; flood, 97; BC flees from, 120; BC returns to from France, 182–3

  Romolo (Roman innkeeper), 256

  Romolo, Vincenzi
o, 113–15

  Roscoe, Thomas, xvi

  Rosegli, Mariano, 391

  Rossi, Giovan Girolamo de’, Bishop of Pavia: imprisoned in Castel Sant’Angelo, 227; in Paris, 274; and BC’s departure from Paris, 308–9

  Rossi, Paolo L., x & n, xiin, xiii, xix Rosso, il (Giovanbattista di Jacopo): friendship with BC, 39; BC visits, 46; in Paris, 178–9; and il Bologna, 276; paintings, 298

  Rotelli, Lautizio, 40, 237

  Ruberta (BC’s servant), 290

  Rucellai, Luigi, 129

  Saint Paul, François de Bourbon, Comte de, 306

  Salamanca, Francesco di Cabrera, Bishop of, 27, 32–3, 35–8

  Salimbene, Francesco, 19–20, 22

  Saliti, Bernardo, 247

  salt-cellars: made for Francis I, ix, 260–2, 264, 291–2, 303–4; model for Cardinal d’Este, 237–8, 261

  Salviati, Alamanno, 376

  Salviati, Cardinal Giovanni: gives work to BC, 38; bullies BC over papal chalice, 100–2; recommends Tobbia to Clement VII, 104–5; in Ferrara, 250

  Salviati, Jacopo, 9, 59, 64–5, 76–8

  Salviati, Piero d’Alamanno d’Averardo, 381

  Sandrino (Bronzino’s apprentice), 369

  San Francesco della Vernia, 372–3

  Sanga, Giambattista, 85

  San Gallo, Antonio da, the Younger (Antonio di Bartolomeo Cordinai), 178–9

  San Gallo, Francesco da (known as Margolla), 361

  San Marino, Antonio da, 22

  Sansovino, Jacopo del (or Tatti), 133, 137–8, 327

  Santa Croce, Antonio, 61–2, 68

  Santa Fiore, Cardinal of see Sforza, Ascanio

  Santa Maria, Bagno di see Baths of Santa Maria

  Santa Maria del Fiore, Florence, 380

  Santi (Santo di Cola), 27

  Santini, Giovanni Battista, 392

  Santiquattro, Antonio Pucci, Cardinal, 193

  Sardella, Giovanni, 393

  Savello, Giovanbatista, 120

  Savonarola, Girolamo, viii, 24, 191

  Sbarri, Manno, 155

  Sbietta see Anterigoli, Pier Maria d’

  Scheggia, Raffaello, 397–9

  Sciorina, Jacopo dello see Barca, Jacopino della

  Scorzone see Gianna

  Sebastiano (Luciani) del Piombo (Bastiano Veneziano), 84, 97, 99

  Serristori, near Monte Lupo, 346

  Serristori, Averardo, 352, 354, 395

  Servi, Fra Giovanni Agnolo de’ (Montorsoli), 371

  Sestile (?Sestino), 372

  Settignano, Antonio di Giovanni da (Solosmeo), 120, 123

  Sforza, Signor (son of Bosio, Count of Santa Fiore), 168

  Sforza, Ascanio, Cardinal of Santa Fiore, 206–8, 384

  Sforzani, Cherubino, 240, 242–4

  Sguazzella (or Chiazzella), Andrea, 179

  Siena: BC visits, 11, 19–20, 27, 240; BC kills postmaster in, 241–2; BC flees, 243; war with Florence (1552), 361; Duke Cosimo enters, 394

  Soderini, Francesco, 157–8, 160

  Soderini, Piero, 8

  Sogliani, Giovanbatista, 23

  Solosmeo, Antonio see Settignano, Antonio di Giovanni da

  Spain: struggle for control of Italy, viii

  Staggia, 243–4

  Strozzi, Frate Alesso, 26–7

  Strozzi, Cattivanza Bernardo, 86

  Strozzi, Filippo: and Cavalierino, 67; Busbacca carries for, 174

  Strozzi, Leone, Prior of Capua, 289, 328

  Strozzi, Piero, Marshal of France: takes out French naturalization, 267; BC makes objects for, 268; in war against English, 307; in assault on Florence, 363; and undefended pass to Poppi, 373

  Stufa, Pandolfo di Luigi della, 379

  Stufa, Prinzivalle della, 24

  Sugherello (perfumer), 183

  Symonds, John Addington, xv–xvi

  Tacca, Giovan Francesco della, 207

  Tacca, Giovanpietro della, 32

  Tagliacozzo, 236

  Targhetta, Emiliano, 165–6

  Tassi, Raffaello (BC’s brother-inlaw), 313

  Tasso, Battista di Marco del, 19–21, 317, 361

  Tatti, Jacopo del see Sansovino, Jacopo del

  Tè, near Mantua, 71

  Tedaldi, Lionardo, 308, 310–11

  Titian (Tiziano Vecellio), 327

  Tobbia (Milanese goldsmith): Clement VII commissions work

  from, 104–5, 112; and BC’s papal chalice, 107–8, 111; Pompeo falsely reports BC’s murder of, 119–20

  Tommaso d’Antonio (il Fagiuolo), 107

  Torelli, Lelio, 380

  Torrigiano, Piero, 17–18

  Tournon, François de, 239

  Tribolo see Raffaello, Niccolò di

  Trotti, Alfonso de’, 248–50

  Ubertino, Antonio (Bachiacca), 325

  Ubertino, Francesco (Bachiacca), 47, 55–7

  Ugolino, Antonio, 225, 227–9

  Ugolino, Giorgio (castellan): guards BC in Castel Sant’Angelo, 190–8; periodic delusions, 195–6, 199, 203; and BC’s escape, 204; and BC’s later confinement, 213–14, 217; Paul III requests killing of BC, 219; declines to kill BC, 220; attempts to secure BC’s release, 223–5; and BC’s spiritual experiences, 223; BC writes sonnet to, 224; death, 225, 227

  Ugolino, Pier, 225

  Urbino (Francesco di Bernardino d’Amadore), 354–6

  Urbino, Francesco Maria della Rovere, Duke of, 63

  Urbino, Gian di, 67

  Urbino, Guidobaldo della Rovere, Duke of, 374

  Valenti, Benedetto (da Cagli; judge), 108–9, 186, 212

  Vallombrosa, 372

  Valois, House of, viii

  Valori, Bartolomeo (Baccio), 99–100

  Varchi, Benedetto: BC sends Life to, 27; sonnet on BC’s reported death, 149, 151

  Varchi, Giovan Battista (’Grassuccio’), 27

  Vasari, Giorgio (Giorgietto), 155–7, 388

  Vasona, Girolamo Schio, Bishop of, 94, 99

  Vasto (Guasto), Alfonso d’Avalos, Marchese del, 166–7

  Venice, 133–4, 136–7, 327–8

  Vergerio, Giovanni, 84

  Verrocchio, Andrea del, 369

  Vicchio, 389–91

  Vicorati, Francesco da, 3

  Villa (Cardinal of Ferrara’s page), 302

  Villafranca, Pietro Alvarez di Toledo, Marquis of (Viceroy of Naples), 122

  Villani, Giovanni, 2, 214

  Villebon, Jean d’Estouteville, Seigneur de (later Chevalier de S. Michel; Francis I’s Provost), 256–7

  Villurois, Monsignor di see Neufville, Nicolas de Vinci, Leonardo da, 18, 255

  Viterbo, 239–40

  Vitruvius, 4

  Volterra, Daniele of see Ricciarelli, Daniele

  Vulcan (BC; model), 256, 258

  Wallenstadt, 173–4

  Zürich, 177–8

  * For the full and convincing demonstration of the contrived character of the Life see the revealing paper by Paolo L. Rossi, ‘Sprezzatura, patronage and fate; Benvenuto Cellini and the world of words’ in Vasari’s Florence: Artists and Literati at the Medicean Court ed. P. Jacks (Cambridge, 1998 pp. 55–69). Rossi argues that the famous manuscript of the Life in the Laurenziana in Florence is a fine copy, possibly completed ready for the printer.

  *The crime of sodomy in Cellini’s time usually referred to sexual intercourse between males though it could stand for a range of sexual practices contrary to Roman Catholic teaching on sex and procreation. The modern term ‘homosexuality’ was not in use. Cellini’s lust for young men and his bisexuality are clear from several revealing passages in the Life, though understandably –penalties could be horrific –he reacted scathingly, sometimes hilariously, against the accusations of sodomy which he did report.

  He was convicted for sodomy in Florence in 1523 and 1557 and unsuccessfully prosecuted for sodomy with a woman, Caterina, in France in 1543.

  Before 1557 Cellini hadbeen livingwith his ragazzo, Ferrando di Giovanni da Montepulciano, for several years. He had made a will somewhat in his favour but, w
hen Ferrando deserted him in the summer of 1556, cut out any legacy to him. The charge against Cellini followed in February 1557, possibly through the efforts of members of the court to curb his excesses. For the general context of Cellini’s sexual life, see Rossi’s ‘The writer and the man. Real crimes and mitigating circumstances: il caso Cellini’ in Crime, Society and the Law in Renaissance Italy, eds Trevor Dean and K. J. P. Lowe (Cambridge, 1994).

  *See The ‘Vita’ of Benvenuto Cellini: Literary Tradition and Genre by Dino Sigismondo Cervigni (Ravenna, 1979).

  * For important reassessments see in particular the Conference reports Benvenuto Cellini Artista e Scrittore (Accademia Nazionale dei Lincei, 1972).

  In his assessment of Cellini’s artistic achievements, Pope-Hennessy singles out his marble Crucifix as intended to embody ‘the technical sophistication, the humanity, and the imaginative sweep of the Renaissance at its height’ and in its ‘truly Michelangelesque’ technique as ‘the supreme marble sculpture of its time’.

  *Surely Michelangelo.

 

 

 


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