Entertaining and hugely diverse views of the city of lagoons. The
best-loved and most visited of Italian cities is vividly brought to life
in the letters, diaries, and memoirs of travelers from past centuries
and by the Florentines themselves. The extracts chosen by Harold Acton
and Edward Chaney are as rich as the city itself in their variety and
brilliance--here is Boccaccio on the Black Death; Vasari on the building
of Giotto's Campanile; an eyewitness account of the installation of
Michelangelo's David; the death of Elizabeth Barrett Browning at the
Casa Guidi; D.H. Lawrence and Dylan Thomas on twentieth-century
Florentine society; and much more. This concise and lucid history of
Florence from its early days, through its zenith as a prosperous city
state that, under the Medici family, gave birth to the Renaissance, up
to the Arno's devastating flood in 1966, is accompanied by maps,
engravings, and useful notes.