This book is the ideal companion to discover the ancient heart of
Florence through the eyes of an exceptional witness: Marco di Bartolomeo
Rustici (1392/93-1457), goldsmith and humanist, author of an
extraordinary Codex that takes his name. In the Codex, Rustici describes
and depicts religious and secular elements of the historic center of
Florence around 1450. At the time, the city's medieval urban fabric was
being enriched with grandiose Renaissance monuments designed by Filippo
Brunelleschi and other famous architects and commissioned by the
institutions in power. Rustici's unique and personal journey will take
you to the great Christian temples, such as the Baptistery and the
Duomo, but also to the ancient and smaller churches that disappeared
with urban renewal projects in the city of the 19th century. Rustici's
accurate watercolor drawings are shown here alongside their contemporary
correspondents in today's Florence. It is an astonishing sequence of
similarities and differences that encapsulate the most intimate identity
of Florence: a city that holds on tenaciously to its own memory, one
that keeps changing while remaining true to itself.