Benvenuto Cellini was a celebrated Renaissance sculptor and goldsmith -
a passionate craftsman who was admired and resented by the most powerful
political and artistic personalities in sixteenth-century Florence, Rome
and Paris. He was also a murderer and a braggart, a shameless adventurer
who at different times experienced both papal persecution and
imprisonment, and the adulation of the royal court. Inn-keepers and
prostitutes, kings and cardinals, artists and soldiers rub shoulders in
the pages of his notorious autobiography: a vivid portrait of the
manners and morals of both the rulers of the day and of their subjects.
Written with supreme powers of invective and an irrepressible sense of
humour, this is an unrivalled glimpse into the palaces and prisons of
the Italy of Michelangelo and the Medici.
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