Murder in Renaissance Italy
Herausgeber: Dean, Trevor; Lowe, K. J. P.
Murder in Renaissance Italy
Herausgeber: Dean, Trevor; Lowe, K. J. P.
- Broschiertes Buch
- Merkliste
- Auf die Merkliste
- Bewerten Bewerten
- Teilen
- Produkt teilen
- Produkterinnerung
- Produkterinnerung
This invaluable collection explores the many faces of murder and its cultural presences across the Italian peninsula in the Renaissance.
Andere Kunden interessierten sich auch für
Christine ShawReason and Experience in Renaissance Italy110,99 €
Flora CassenMarking the Jews in Renaissance Italy39,99 €
Jr. Samuel K. CohnParadoxes of Inequality in Renaissance Italy22,99 €
Robert ManiuraArt and Miracle in Renaissance Tuscany108,99 €
Peter Fane-SaundersPliny the Elder and the Emergence of Renaissance Architecture183,99 €
Surekha DaviesRenaissance Ethnography and the Invention of the Human34,99 €
Colin RoseA Renaissance of Violence42,99 €-
-
-
This invaluable collection explores the many faces of murder and its cultural presences across the Italian peninsula in the Renaissance.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 326
- Erscheinungstermin: 26. März 2020
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 18mm
- Gewicht: 474g
- ISBN-13: 9781316501962
- ISBN-10: 1316501965
- Artikelnr.: 59330432
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 326
- Erscheinungstermin: 26. März 2020
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 18mm
- Gewicht: 474g
- ISBN-13: 9781316501962
- ISBN-10: 1316501965
- Artikelnr.: 59330432
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
Introducing Renaissance killers Trevor Dean and K. J. P. Lowe; Part I.
Domestic Murder: 1. The first murder: the representation of Cain and Abel
in Bologna, Florence and Bergamo Scott Nethersole; 2. Knives and poisons:
stereotypes of male vendetta and female perfidy in late Medieval Sicily,
1293-1460 Henri Bresc; 3. A daughter-killing digested, and accepted (Sabine
district of Rome, 1563 to 1566) Thomas V. Cohen; Part II: Ordinary Murder:
4. Eight varieties of homicide: Bologna in the 1340s and 1440s Trevor Dean;
5. Homicide in a culture of hatred: Bologna, 1352-1420 Sarah Rubin
Blanshei; Part III. Sensational Murder: 6. Truths and lies of a renaissance
murder: Duke Alessandro de' Medici's death between history, narrative and
memory Stefano Dall'Aglio; 7. 'O Facinus Inauditum' (O horrendous crime):
anthropophagy in Renaissance Milan Silvio Leydi; 8. Murder ballads:
singing, hearing, writing and reading about murder in Renaissance Italy
Rosa Salzberg and Massimo Rospocher; Part IV. Unclassifiable Murder: 9.
Redrawing the line between murder and suicide in Renaissance Italy K. J. P.
Lowe; 10. Violent conflicts and murder involving Jews in Renaissance Italy
Anna Esposito; 11. Poison and poisoning in Renaissance Italy Alessandro
Pastore; Part V. Professional Murder: 12. Mass murder in sacks during the
Italian wars, 1494-1559 Stephen Bowd; 13. Legal homicide: the death penalty
in the Italian Renaissance Enrica Guerra; 14. Butchers as murderers in
Renaissance Italy C. D. Dickerson, III.
Domestic Murder: 1. The first murder: the representation of Cain and Abel
in Bologna, Florence and Bergamo Scott Nethersole; 2. Knives and poisons:
stereotypes of male vendetta and female perfidy in late Medieval Sicily,
1293-1460 Henri Bresc; 3. A daughter-killing digested, and accepted (Sabine
district of Rome, 1563 to 1566) Thomas V. Cohen; Part II: Ordinary Murder:
4. Eight varieties of homicide: Bologna in the 1340s and 1440s Trevor Dean;
5. Homicide in a culture of hatred: Bologna, 1352-1420 Sarah Rubin
Blanshei; Part III. Sensational Murder: 6. Truths and lies of a renaissance
murder: Duke Alessandro de' Medici's death between history, narrative and
memory Stefano Dall'Aglio; 7. 'O Facinus Inauditum' (O horrendous crime):
anthropophagy in Renaissance Milan Silvio Leydi; 8. Murder ballads:
singing, hearing, writing and reading about murder in Renaissance Italy
Rosa Salzberg and Massimo Rospocher; Part IV. Unclassifiable Murder: 9.
Redrawing the line between murder and suicide in Renaissance Italy K. J. P.
Lowe; 10. Violent conflicts and murder involving Jews in Renaissance Italy
Anna Esposito; 11. Poison and poisoning in Renaissance Italy Alessandro
Pastore; Part V. Professional Murder: 12. Mass murder in sacks during the
Italian wars, 1494-1559 Stephen Bowd; 13. Legal homicide: the death penalty
in the Italian Renaissance Enrica Guerra; 14. Butchers as murderers in
Renaissance Italy C. D. Dickerson, III.
Introducing Renaissance killers Trevor Dean and K. J. P. Lowe; Part I.
Domestic Murder: 1. The first murder: the representation of Cain and Abel
in Bologna, Florence and Bergamo Scott Nethersole; 2. Knives and poisons:
stereotypes of male vendetta and female perfidy in late Medieval Sicily,
1293-1460 Henri Bresc; 3. A daughter-killing digested, and accepted (Sabine
district of Rome, 1563 to 1566) Thomas V. Cohen; Part II: Ordinary Murder:
4. Eight varieties of homicide: Bologna in the 1340s and 1440s Trevor Dean;
5. Homicide in a culture of hatred: Bologna, 1352-1420 Sarah Rubin
Blanshei; Part III. Sensational Murder: 6. Truths and lies of a renaissance
murder: Duke Alessandro de' Medici's death between history, narrative and
memory Stefano Dall'Aglio; 7. 'O Facinus Inauditum' (O horrendous crime):
anthropophagy in Renaissance Milan Silvio Leydi; 8. Murder ballads:
singing, hearing, writing and reading about murder in Renaissance Italy
Rosa Salzberg and Massimo Rospocher; Part IV. Unclassifiable Murder: 9.
Redrawing the line between murder and suicide in Renaissance Italy K. J. P.
Lowe; 10. Violent conflicts and murder involving Jews in Renaissance Italy
Anna Esposito; 11. Poison and poisoning in Renaissance Italy Alessandro
Pastore; Part V. Professional Murder: 12. Mass murder in sacks during the
Italian wars, 1494-1559 Stephen Bowd; 13. Legal homicide: the death penalty
in the Italian Renaissance Enrica Guerra; 14. Butchers as murderers in
Renaissance Italy C. D. Dickerson, III.
Domestic Murder: 1. The first murder: the representation of Cain and Abel
in Bologna, Florence and Bergamo Scott Nethersole; 2. Knives and poisons:
stereotypes of male vendetta and female perfidy in late Medieval Sicily,
1293-1460 Henri Bresc; 3. A daughter-killing digested, and accepted (Sabine
district of Rome, 1563 to 1566) Thomas V. Cohen; Part II: Ordinary Murder:
4. Eight varieties of homicide: Bologna in the 1340s and 1440s Trevor Dean;
5. Homicide in a culture of hatred: Bologna, 1352-1420 Sarah Rubin
Blanshei; Part III. Sensational Murder: 6. Truths and lies of a renaissance
murder: Duke Alessandro de' Medici's death between history, narrative and
memory Stefano Dall'Aglio; 7. 'O Facinus Inauditum' (O horrendous crime):
anthropophagy in Renaissance Milan Silvio Leydi; 8. Murder ballads:
singing, hearing, writing and reading about murder in Renaissance Italy
Rosa Salzberg and Massimo Rospocher; Part IV. Unclassifiable Murder: 9.
Redrawing the line between murder and suicide in Renaissance Italy K. J. P.
Lowe; 10. Violent conflicts and murder involving Jews in Renaissance Italy
Anna Esposito; 11. Poison and poisoning in Renaissance Italy Alessandro
Pastore; Part V. Professional Murder: 12. Mass murder in sacks during the
Italian wars, 1494-1559 Stephen Bowd; 13. Legal homicide: the death penalty
in the Italian Renaissance Enrica Guerra; 14. Butchers as murderers in
Renaissance Italy C. D. Dickerson, III.







