116 34 96MB
English Pages [248] Year 1985
PICTURES AND PUNISHMENT
BLANK PAGE
PICTURES AND PUNISHMENT Art and Criminal Prosecution during the Florentine Renaissance SAMUEL Y. EDGERTON, JR.
Cornell University Press, Ithaca and London
Copyright © 1985 by Cornell University All rights reserved. Except for brief quotations in a review, this book,
or parts thereof, must not be reproduced in any form without permission in writing from the publisher. For information, address Cornell University Press, 124 Roberts Place, Ithaca, New York 14850. First published 1985 by Cornell University Press. Published in the United Kingdom by Cornell University Press Ltd., London.
International Standard Book Number 0-8014-1705-8 Library of Congress Catalog Card Number 84-45144 Printed in the United States of America _ Librarians: Library of Congress cataloging information
appears on the last page of the book The paper in this book is acid-free and meets the guidelines
for permanence and durability of the Committee on Production Guidelines for Book Longevity of the Council on Library Resources.
to Frederick Hartt, who opened my eyes to the fascinating interplay of art and politics in Renaissance Florence
BLANK PAGE
Contents
| Illustrations 9 Preface 13 1 Icons of Justice 21 2 Effigies of Shame: The Trecento 59
3 Effigies of Shame: 91 The Quattrocento and Cinquecento
4 Images of Public Execution 126
5 Pictures of Redemption 165 Postface 2.2.2 7
APPENDIX A
“Debtors Should Be Painted in Public Places”’ 2.27 APPENDIX B
Book of the Executed in Florence: 1420-1574 231
Index 239
8 Contents
a Illustrations
1. Giotto, Last Judgment, c. 1306 24
2. Fra Angelico, Last Judgment, c. 1440 25
3. Detail from Giotto, Last Judgment 28
late fourteenth century 31
4. Nicolé di Giacomo da Bologna, miniature from Gratian’s Decretals,
5. Judges’ bench, Palazzo Pretorio, Pistoia, 1507 34
fifteenth century 35
6. Pedro Berruguete, Saint Dominic Presiding over an Auto-da-fé, late
7. Ambrogio Lorenzetti, Allegory of Good Government, 1337/39 36 8. Unknown Trecento artist, Fall of the Duke of Athens, c. 1360 A2
9. Botticelli, Crucifixion, c. 1495 44
10. Bargello, Florence, mid-thirteenth century 46 11. Unknown Cinquecento artist, Sacrilege at Santa Maria de’Ricci: Rinaldeschi Throws Horsedung at the Virgin’s Image, early
sixteenth century , 48
12. Sacrilege at Santa Maria de’Ricci: Rinaldeschi’s Arrest A9 13. Sacrilege at Santa Maria de’Ricci: Rinaldeschi’s Trial 53
14. Sacrilege at Santa Maria de’Ricci: Rinaldeschi’s Last Prayers 54
15. The Magdalene Chapel, Bargello, Florence 56 16. Sacrilege at Santa Maria de’Ricci: Rinaldeschi’s Execution 57
9
17. Taddeo di Bartolo, Scenes of Hell, late fourteenth century 67
have been painted 72
18. Localities in northern Italy where pitture infamanti are known to
19. Ambrogio Lorenzetti, Allegory of Bad Government, 1337/39 79 20. Andrea del Castagno, sinopia drawing of an angel, c. 1447 102
1530 115
hanging, 1479 LO7
21. Leonardo da Vinci, drawing of Bernardo di Bandino Baroncelli
22. Andrea del Sarto, drawing of a nude youth hanging upside down,
23. Andrea del Sarto, drawing of a man hanging upside down, 1530 116 24. Andrea del Sarto, drawing of a man hanging upside down, 1530 117 25. Andrea del Sarto, drawing of a man hanging upside down, 1530 118 26. Andrea del Sarto, drawing of a man hanging upside down, 1530 120 27. Andrea del Sarto, drawing of two men hanging upside down, 1530 I21
28. Giotto, Iusticia, c. 1306 | 127
1337/39 130
29. Detail from Ambrogio Lorenzetti, Good Government in the Country,
30. Unknown German artist, Martyrdom of Saint Barbara, c. 1520 133
Savonarola, c. 1500 137 32. Detail from Map with a Chain, c. 1480 140 31. Unknown Cinquecento artist, Execution of Fra Girolamo
33. Annibale Caracci, A Hanging, c. 1599 143 34. Detail from Paolo Uccello, Miracle of the Host, 1468 147
century 151
35. Pisanello, Saint George and the Princess, c. 1435 149 36. Giovanni di Paolo, Beheading of John the Baptist, early fifteenth
37. Andrea Mantegna, Martyrdom of Saint James, c. 1455 153 38. Ciriaco d’Ancona (?), Execution Scene, mid-fifteenth century 154
sixteenth century 156
1543 59
39. Gian Francesco Maineri, Head of John the Baptist in a Basin, early
4oa. Initial “L”’ from Andreas Vesalius, De humani corporis fabrica, 1543 158 4ob. Initial ‘‘O” from Andreas Vesalius, De humani corporis fabrica,
4ta. Alessandro Allori, Skeleton, 1570 161 4b. Alessandro Allori, Skeleton, 1570 162 42. Alessandro Allori (?), The Risen Christ, late sixteenth century 163
LO Illustrations
43. Unknown artist, tavoletta showing Christ Carrying the Cross on one
side and a Crucifixion on the other 166, 167
44. Unknown artist, tavoletta showing a Scene of Hell on one side and a
Crucifixion on the other 168, 169 45. Unknown artist, tavoletta showing a Lamentation on one side and a Crucifixion on the other 170, I7I
Baptist 174
46. Unknown artist, tavoletta showing the Beheading of Saint John the
47. San Giovanni Decollato brother holding a tavoletta 175
48. Woodcut from Savonarola, Predica dell’arte del ben morire, 1496 177 49. Francesco Maffei, Miracles of Saint Nicholas of Tolentino, 1656 181 50. Unknown Ferrarese artist, tavoletta showing the Torture of Saint
Euphemia, late sixteenth century 186 51x. Unknown Ferrarese artist, tavoletta showing the Torture of Saint Hadrian (2), late sixteenth century 187 52. Unknown Duecento artist, Christ Mounting the Cross and the Death
of Saint Clair, Jate thirteenth century 189
53. Giacomo Jaquerio, Crucifixion, c. 1440 I91
54. Fra Angelico, Lamentation, c. 1440 193
55. lacopino del Conte, Deposition, c. 1551 195 56. Benozzo Gozzoli, Deposition, c. 1465 2.00 57a. Michelangelo, Last Judgment, 1536/41 204 57b. Detail from Michelangelo, Last Judgment 205
58. Michelangelo, Pieta, 1548/55 208
anatomica, 1559 212
59. Unknown Venetian artist, frontispiece for Realdo Colombo’s De re
corpo humano, 1560 218 61. Andrea Mantegna, Dead Christ, c. 1470 224
60. Gaspar Becerra, écorché figure from Juan de Valverde’s Anatomia del
Illustrations II
BLANK PAGE
Preface
This book investigates the relationship between the well-known artistic achievement of Renaissance Florence and its less well-known and less wellregarded institution of criminal justice. Absurd as such a connection may sound, I will provide ample evidence to suggest that between the thirteenth and seventeenth centuries practitioners of both art and the law—painters, sculptors, architects, lawyers, judges, and police—could not have pursued their respective disciplines as they did without mutual interaction. I also hope that my evidence of such symbiotic cooperation will deepen our insights into the Renaissance phenomenon as a whole. Historians during the
past several decades have been busy reassessing the “‘modernity” of the Italian | Renaissance, arguing whether the period really severed itself from the Middle Ages, as Jacob Burckhardt believed, or whether, as some recent scholar is said to
have concluded, ‘it was the most medieval idea that the Middle Ages ever invented.” The truth of course is that the Renaissance belongs to both the past and the present; it is a two-faced Janus looking back on the Middle Ages with the raised eyebrow of a skeptical Machiavelli and at the same time forward to the oncoming modern age with the apocalyptic foreboding of a Savonarola. Florentine criminal justice, we will quickly learn, remained throughout the Renaissance pretty much as Savonarola would have it—uncompromising, harsh, and eschatologically anchored to the proposition that just as the sinner’s immortal soul will suffer forever in hell, so his living body must be punished on earth.
13
Florentine painting, however, was no longer so medieval. The new art-sciences of chiaroscuro and linear perspective were changing not only the way people looked at pictures but the way they thought about the world. This revolutionary Florentine art in the service of an anachronistic system of criminal law often, though quite unintentionally, contradicted the very concepts on which the old law was based. In the long run, I believe, the revolutionary realism of Florentine
art, as it spread through all of Europe during the Renaissance, helped raise people’s consciousness concerning the inhuman brutality of legalized torture and
public execution. By comparing the plight of the poor criminal on the scaffold with vividly realistic portrayals of martyred saints and Jesus’ suffering, Christians slowly became aware of their own inhumanity in practice. From the sixteenth through the eighteenth century, art prodded the Christian conscience concerning the paradox of capital punishment, just as during the nineteenth century in France, academic painting (still following in the Florentine tradition) helped to make people aware of the miserable life of peasants and laborers, thus provoking the bourgeoisie to think of democratic reform. Perhaps it was no coincidence that the first modern state to abolish capital punishment (in 1786) was the Grand Duchy of Tuscany, that is, Florence, the birthplace of Renaissance art. In my chapter titles, I use four different words to express as many different purposes of Florentine art in the service of criminal justice between the thirteenth and seventeenth centuries. By the term “‘image,” in Chapter 4 especially, I mean simply “‘visual representation” in the broadest sense, in pictures, statues, the mind’s eye, or even live pageants. In Chapter 4, we will examine the varied imagery devised by the communal authorities to make capital punishment un-
derstandable and acceptable to the public. As Lynn White, Jr., has said, “To know the subliminal mind of a society, one must study the sources of its liturgies for inflicting death.”’1 We shall also note the traditions—and ambitions—that artists drew upon as they often related the ubiquitous imagery of public execution to their own popular painting of holy martyrdoms and the Passion of Jesus Christ.
My book more properly begins, however, with an explanation of a specialized form of imagery, the “‘icon,” referring to those artificial images in which the subject matter is arranged in standard compositions already familiar to the
viewer, to whom an expected, didactic message is then communicated. Icons must be located in such prepared settings as churches or law courts where the audience will be able to recognize by association the picture’s meaning. In Chapter 1, we will observe how the rulers of the urban communes during the 1. Lynn White, Jr., ““The Legacy of the Middle Ages in the American Wild West,” Speculum, 40
(1965), 199.
14 Preface
Middle Ages used the iconic arrangement of the Last Judgment, as described in scripture and depicted by artists, to lend legitimation and moral support to the secular dispensation of law and order. Here, even the seating of the local judges resembles that of Jesus and his apostles, the criminal defendants appearing at the judges’ left, just as Jesus consigns sinful souls to hell at his sinister side. Chapters 2 and 3 are concerned with “‘effigies,”’ particularly a peculiar art
form known as the pittura infamante and instituted in North Italy during the thirteenth century. This uniquely Italian genre of vicarious image-punishment was neither an offshoot of primitive voodoo nor an expression of the later Roman-law practice of executio in effigie. Rather, the Italian “‘defaming picture” was an officially sanctioned insulting portrait of a guilty citizen in contempt of court and out of reach of the local constabulary. The culprit’s effigy was painted in an appropriate public setting so that all the townsfolk could witness his humiliation, pressuring him, if he was still a man of honor, to give himself up and repent. Many famous Florentine artists, including Andrea del Castagno and Sandro Botticelli, participated in this popular defaming art, which flourished in Florence between the thirteenth and sixteenth centuries. In fact, the
story of the rise and demise of the pittura infamante serves as a convenient barometer for measuring both the slow evolution of medieval communal law and the growing awareness of aesthetic beauty in a work of art no matter how “ugly” the subject matter. Finally, in Chapter 5, I speak of pictures in a more humane service: painted devotional images to encourage the condemned criminal’s redemption. No matter how ‘“‘cruel and unusual’’ were the sentences of the medieval law courts, the Christian religion, ever present as amicus rei at the culprit’s side, always held out
the possibility of salvation—not in this life of course but in the next. Here indeed is why capital punishment was still tolerated in the Christian Renaissance. Without this belief it has become so unsettling to our agnostic ethics today. During more spiritual times, capital punishment was never understood as an irrevocable sentence, annihilating a human life, perhaps an innocent human
life, forever. Rather, the executioner was thought of as remanding the condemned man’s case to a higher “‘appeals court” in heaven, where God, not the
secular judge, determined the fate of his immortal soul. The more the condemned was tortured on his way to release from this life, the more penance he was privileged to offer up for possible redemption. Capital punishment was clearly sanctioned by the Christian church,2 and legal execution remained the single occasion when a Christian was privileged to know the exact moment of his death. The condemned criminal thus had a special advantage over all other 2. See The “Summa Theologica” of Saint Thomas Aquinas, literally translated by the Fathers of the English Dominican Province (London, 1918), pt. 2, second part, QQ 42-79 (Q. 64), art. 3.
Preface 15
living mortals. He could make his confession, take his last communion, and prepare his soul, confident that he would be in a state of grace right up to the very end. Moreover, if the condemned were really innocent of the crime for which he was about to lose his life, his soul, if it had no other stain upon it, must enter immediately into everlasting glory. Such a case of mistaken execution, which so horrifies us today, would, in the pure Christian logic of the Middle Ages, have been considered the highest form of justice. Also in Chapters 4 and 5, we shall see how another venerable institution, the medical profession, began to take advantage of the peculiar attachment of art to criminal prosecution. In fact, perhaps the most important by-product of
this now three-cornered relationship was the illustrated and printed anatomy treatise, such as Andreas Vesalius’s classic De humani corporis fabrica, published in 1543. This magnificent book, a landmark in the history of science, was possible only because artists of the time were sufficiently skilled in anatomy, a subject they learned from dissecting the bodies of executed criminals. As I shall also argue in Chapter 5, this cooperation among artists, medical doctors, and
the criminal justice system worked ultimately to the benefit of all humanity. What historical irony! Without the cadavers that the inhumane executioners supplied to Vesalius and his artists, for example, William Harvey might never have prepared himself for his stupendous discovery, the circulation of the blood: the physiological revelation that revolutionized medical science and allowed mankind a new faith in miraculous salvation from the vicissitudes of this life.
My own research on the present project began in 1970 when I received a grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities to study Renaissance artistic depictions of the holy martyrs for evidence of contemporary modes of capital punishment. I was greatly assisted in my research by the staff of the Harvard University Library of International Law and by the Harvard University Center for Italian Renaissance Studies (the Villa I Tatti) in Florence, where I was
invited as a fellow in 1971-1972. In 1977 the American Council of Learned Societies awarded me a generous grant to continue my researches into this and related matters. I was able to travel to Rome during the summer of that year and to examine the records of the Archconfraternity of San Giovanni Decollato and also to study in Florence the archives of the Compagnia di Santa Maria della Croce al Tempio. I was especially aided in my Roman itinerary by Henry A. Millon, then director of the American Academy, and General Goffredo Puccetti, president of the Archconfraternity of San Giovanni Decollato. During my stays in Florence and
Rome, I was similarly much helped by the scholars and librarians of the Kunsthistorisches Institut, the Biblioteca Nazionale, and the Biblioteca Hertziana. My findings during this phase of the project were published in an
16 Preface
article entitled ‘“‘A Little-Known ‘Purpose of Art’ in the Italian Renaissance,” Art History, 2 (1979), 45—61, and another, “Icons of Justice,” Past and Present, 89
(1980), 23-38. Elements of these articles are included in Chapters 5 and 1, respectively, in the present book. Also in 1977, Gherado Ortalli contacted me concerning his own extensive researches in pitture infamanti, the same subject I had been studying since 1970. His book was nearly ready for publication, so we agreed to exchange manuscripts at that time. This communication has been kindly acknowledged by Professor Ortalli in his preface. His book, La pittura infamante: “. . . pingatur in Palatio” (Rome, 1979), while paralleling my own independent work on the Florentine phenomenon, is a much wider-ranging study of defaming pictures all over Italy and has helped me not only by its wealth of additional material but in allowing my concentration on the more selective art historical ramifications of the matter. I have also been much helped by Richard Trexler, Creighton Gilbert, Anthony Molho, and Hellmut Wohl, whose ideas, generously shared, are everywhere in this book. To Daniel Snodderly and to Carol Betsch of the Cornell University Press I owe a very special debt. Without their enthusiasm as well as professional competence, my work might never have been published. Finally, I would like to thank the following individuals and institutions: James S. Ackerman, Robert Baldwin, Sarah R. Blanshei, Lodovico Borgo, Kathleen Weil-Garris Brandt, Gino Corti, Richard Egdahl, David Friedman, Walter
Gibson, Werner Gundersheimer, Marcia Brown Hall, Julius Held, George Hersey, Paul Kaplan, Minott Kerr, Herbert Keutner, Frederic Lane, Lars Olaf Larssen, Patricia Leach, Daniel Lesnick, Fred Licht, Robert Lopez, Wolfgang Lotz, Michelle Metraux, Ulrich Middledorf, Charles Mitchell, Lucia Monaci Moran and the Gabinetto disegni e stampi degli Uffizi, Alessandro Parronchi, Franklin Robinson, Charles Rosenberg, Lionel Rothkrug, Guido Ruggiero, Thomas Settle, Jill Steinberg, James Ross Sweeney, Robert Volz and the Chapin Rare Book Library at Williams College, Jean S$. Weisz, and Richard J. Wolfe and
the Francis A. Countway Library of Medicine at Harvard University. All these
have made important contributions to my ideas in this volume. During the many, many years it took to gather this material together, others have also helped and encouraged me. If I have omitted their names, I beg forgiveness, hoping this age to be more merciful to me than the Renaissance was to those poor sinners who inspired the art described in this book. SAMUEL Y. EDGERTON, JR.
Williamstown, Mass.
Preface 17
BLANK PAGE
PICTURES AND PUNISHMENT
BLANK PAGE
CHAPTER 1
Icons of Justice
A remarkable quality of the waning Middle Ages, observed Johan Huizinga, was the propensity to convert every philosophical concept into a pictorial image.1 Perhaps never before or since the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries in Western Europe has the realization of abstract ideas been so dependent upon the sense of sight. This visualizing actually intensified throughout the Middle Ages in direct proportion to the general atrophying of scientific thought after the demise of Greco-Roman civilization. Indeed, even the ars nova of Jan
Van Eyck in fifteenth-century Flanders was less a break with this medieval tradition than its culmination. It was as if Jan’s miraculous oil technique finally made it possible for the human eye to perceive Saint Augustine’s conceptual formae. Contemporary viewers of Jan’s Ghent Altarpiece were suddenly confronted with a completely plausible image of the mystic Terrestrial Paradise, where they could physically sense God’s primal light, breathe in his heavenly atmosphere, and touch the Font of the Four Rivers in which our First Parents bathed.
Similar “‘miracles of painting’? had of course already been achieved by Italian artists; by Giotto and his contemporaries at Assisi in the early Trecento and by Masaccio in Florence during the early Quattrocento. In Florence, as 1. Johan Huizinga, The Waning of the Middle Ages (first Dutch ed., Leiden, 1919; first English ed., Leiden, 1924). See esp. chaps. 1 and 19.
21
nowhere else, citizens appreciated how God, though reserving his scriptural blessings for those who believed but did not see, was nonetheless tolerant of graven images, the more lifelike, the better. The Florentine sculptor Verrocchio
cast a bronze statue of Christ and Saint Thomas in the early 1480s for the Mercanzia niche on the main street facade of Orsanmichele, showing Jesus exposing his sacred wound, even shaping his garment around it with his hands so that the doubting saint could see and touch the wound as if it were an artifact framed like a picture. Florentines came more and more to demand like Saint Thomas the empirical evidence of their visual and tactile senses. Such obsession with seeing and touching sacred images also served secular political purposes in the waning Middle Ages. During the four-century evolution in northern Italy, in which agrarian feudalism gradually gave way to urban capitalism, the ancient concept of civitas underwent a special metamorphosis in the imaginations of those persons seeking security and prosperity in commerce. They needed, and thus invented, spiritual affirmation that their urban way of life was just as God-anointed as the old feudal vision of society. These nuovi ricchi urban patricians sought scriptural sanctions for the evolving style of their new status. They wished to convince the other social classes that their existence and even leadership enjoyed God’s favor more than that of the old barons, and that republican government promised the truest form of New Jerusalem on earth. Thus were artists frequently called upon to mirror God’s Paradise by depicting images in public places intended to encourage respect for the communal laws and customs. Not only by means of pictures, but through the organization of public demonstrations, tableaux vivants, did the civic leadership attempt to underscore and legitimize its power. Indeed, even the public punishment of criminals took on the stylized form of a morality play, a visual allegory in which the community could see that anyone daring to insult the government’s temporal authority risked eternal damnation as well as earthly chastisement. During the late Middle Ages, the fundamental iconic image for representing the concept of law and justice was the Last Judgment. Eschatological visions haunted and obsessed medieval Christians, and no image more impressed itself on the popular mind than that of Jesus in Glory, calling all mankind before his throne and in one final act condemning sinners to hell and raising the saved to
heaven. The primary source for this awesome vision is found in Scripture, particularly the Gospel according to Matthew: When the Son of Man shall come in his glory, and all the holy angels with him, then shall he sit upon the throne of his glory: And before him shall be gathered all nations: and he shall separate them from one another, as the shepherd divideth his sheep from the goats: And he shall set the sheep on his right hand, but the goats on his left: Then shall the King say unto them
22 Pictures and Punishment
on his right hand, Come ye blessed of my Father, inherit the kingdom prepared for you from the foundation of the world. . . . Then shall he say to them on the left hand, Depart from me ye cursed, into everlasting fire prepared for the devil and his angels. . . .2 During the early Middle Ages, the iconography of the Last Judgment in painting
and sculpture tended to emphasize the apocalyptic end of the world and the Second Coming. By the twelfth century, however, the arrangement of the scene was changed so that depicted Last Judgments were likened to courts of law with Jesus as judge and mankind as defendant. In the course of the next four centuries, such juridical Last Judgment iconography became uniform and iconic. It often lent itself to local political interpretation, if one wanted to make it appear that Jesus was in favor of one local secular interest over another. Craig Harbeson has recently demonstrated how sixteenth-century Protestants and Catholics each invoked the same Last Judgment imagery against one another. Such political adjustments of the Last Judgment composition also suited the
ruling-class art patrons of Italian republican towns in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries. We may compare two painted Last Judgments: Giotto’s giant version for the entrance wall of the Arena Chapel in Padua, c. 1306 (fig. 1) and Fra Angelico’s (or one of his close follower’s)4 smaller altar panel of the subject for the Florentine church of Santa Maria degli Angeli (and now in the Museo San Marco, Florence) of c. 1440 (fig. 2). In both pictures Jesus dominates. He
sits in glory, enthroned in the upper axial center of each composition. Equal rows of apostles and saints are seated to either side of the Saviour, and at his feet angels trumpet toward the dead below, who arise from their tombs and divide
off to the left and right. At the right hand of Jesus the judge, the saved souls ascend into heaven; at his left, the damned tumble into hell. In Giotto’s painting, Jesus is the largest in size of all the figures, and the Virgin Mary is the largest among all those blessed saints entering paradise below and at Jesus’ right.5 In Fra Angelico’s panel, the Virgin Mary, also enlarged, sits in an even more ennobled position. She is the chief intercessor for all mankind at
the Last Judgment throne. Opposite her in equally exalted position but to the Saviour’s left sits Saint John the Baptist, second only to Jesus’ mother in divine 2. Matt. 25:31-46. A much more apocalyptic account of the Last Judgment is described in Rev. 4 and 20. 3. Craig Harbison, The Last Judgment in Sixteenth-Century Northern Europe: A Study in the Relation between Art and the Reformation (New York, 1976). 4. Concerning the argument of Fra Angelico’s authorship of the San Marco Last Judgment, see John Pope-Hennessy, Fra Angelico (New York, 1974), pp. 192-193. 5. See Dorothy C. Shorr, “‘The Role of the Virgin in Giotto’s Last Judgment,” Art Bulletin, 38 (1956), 207—214; republished in James Stubblebine, ed., Giotto: The Arena Chapel Frescoes (New York, 1969), pp. 169-182.
Icons of Justice 23
:- SSEeee esaSaSEee eeee eehh— =oes oo #&3&»»— Se SNS = RABE Peee ee ee ee ee Seee SSa. Shee SS Ss fi =CoS SSeS Ses SE ee Es eS, RCNP ee Sad ; SPeee Se —— —.ENTE|. aya8 teoo Seeee
FEREO SRLSLE DER IELS ee PSTRATER BE DCSE TR Ie ARIST
BgAbael SoHE Sg Eo eR eae ESeee,eSTERR SSE SS SRPSE ES SeeSS=ESSERE SS PeeSe=Tae eee SSS SS SeTRUE oe eeEE. SS APRA RR PEER IEIN EEL ECES . fig Satay (OUD eaeLtd PEE bis ceeie ea SSStae: SEEaeQRS Ren eae pet Seas aeSeiiaoSSS ESP SoyRidge SB ise pede Sees BORE SeeoP naeSSSSSE FESR 2 PSR, Rts Sor Rae Sis Te WeSS oS Ta eeeThi SS SASS PR SRESSS SSS ars Se ee: eee SES = SSSER Se S75 SSSSER SSG A ee SNE Pe RN Eg Re Je eS ae Been ER UR 2
zs UR RUSS BSS yt oes 2 RGR RE ett gh elle: MOM asa 2 SRP 2 eee OS ee tee anche AY = aes Ge a ee Se ———- SSS, Se SS ee Bae ea EP SEP UOC ERG tars Se yp erty at ees emanate;
" (MEAP SURAT oe Cat SSeS OR ee SET ee Seen cot le SS er SS SS SS SS ee ESS. . ern SEL: Pa eS Sea oe So Riis. Lo, SSS ~=—r—™—e—s—eseseseee wr bse TEER LEE Se OSes ee SSE BSSnSa =oSpee aaaanaes a Seo— Se ee ep Sieg gS sini Reeemera aSSSeS ae SSeiSe SaaS Fa, ES SS SS SS SSSLS SoS ae TS gin SSE ee P18 Te ER 1 Fee ReePE OEot)esSe Tag, ~ ees SETS =: Shas S: SS TepeasSee SS: A Re PORTE, SRO So Ree Se seri aee Se RATES Ga SUES Bs ee ee eter eeEY ie eS fo SSS TESae SE BS Ss BEEP eee ee SSS eeibe Large Eugiereer Ears PRE Fig=ukeee & ee ee ioSSeS es ee See. ne $2 $88SSS PERSESS Se EgSSS= SRS S SES HESSEN SSSe SoeSS ee RGSS SOs i ee Saye SSS SSS SS SSS i ee SSSSS SS eeeeSee ed ee
Cee a eee eee Bo Se eit SE Ee SS a eS — Siss SSeS ae .Gass SSS SSS SS, SSeS Be ee SSeS iSSS {oo SSS Pos SSS SS SS #SSS; a Ae,Hae SOSeee aes kB J Seay aeeee eeeSe SSS —SeS =SS SSS SS SSS. ERSBSS SEE JE SS Ss Sie, SeBS sss aJeSSS SS SSeS Ef ESSs oe =Seae oe eee SSS ie {@ 22S oe aSc. eksae. SESSS See
» iNT SS ee: Ef =r Sia ogRAS SS ee AaANIL : No fF SSE SS hl SSS =arfe. 7SSRP uae eSs GE — SSS SSS 5SS) JSS SESS eeSSE ee So SAS oe ESS ESS SS SSS SSS SSS. SSS SeeSRSee Foe Se ee Re eS SES See eee ogSSS SS OOSSFASS agoeee ee Feat we fa SSR ee Spy eeeSSS wedse FeSS af oe aie soEade SS aePole See PRR SS Sue SS =SRS Se Bice SS SSE [SSSSaaea3 woge SREbeye: MF rw {z= = SSS SS af: 2 ea Se eeeats eeSEs SEee geeee Tn = eaePci aaa Ree, SS ae SASS sss SSS eaa BS Be Sasi) pie is-—,rr—C—O SsoT=SSS |.F-Sts iéseee aS See ee ee ees pice arse eSrreee rrr eS BART SS) SS & A? |SSS rr—r—..——“(CiC‘COCO See SS SS eee SSS Sages Rate VkESS ae tee i.SSaR SSSA’ BAS LEeee Ts). Bes SSS SSS SS SSS ae LS= SSSR Ss eee BSS Sea SESS SeeSe SSSS ioe SO ere SERRE Geen St SS eee SSS SS SSS ESy Bae: ay SSS Pie "EEE SSS Saas a aees eee Tess SSa ae | ee SSISS SSeS Sh Srl yo UR Dy CRT re ae= See ay? Fad i ae: = SSS: == SSS SS SSS SS SSS i See SS. > ES RS inernis SSS (pee eS e wiares Gs SSeS aa SS: See “ESSE RRS SSS SSH SSS poe tata BRA Ire Hoe te eat tab: AD ais at Soy area
ae ce so PO aeEe ER —ae=Se Sea aeeeee eS ee.....=§ (eee ..AS-_|= = AS fig sad SS SsSS Se SSeeeS SSS ee SS aSSeS Ay VARS Bali’ Bei EES ae go eeaeooRSeSSSS SSE 2S SSSeSe ABE Bo«ieee SocpeSese | SSS PSY eee SoS NNsks 218s: CYwy 2 eSSS SSSPe LEP SS SESSESE: eS SS RSSee SSS eee 8 og eo eSae = |Se 7) Say Pas
vet Bees [FES se "> SS oe SSS a eg eo = RSS SS =. = SSS SSS Pegs 25 = oe a5 SS See “BUSES SS SS a Se SSSR ps ; 2 oS ESSE BE Bees 3) SRR — ‘Sr Bees SSS) eS = ays 5 Gee See eS SESE PS SL So eee ee Se ee Pee eS SSS ae SE SS [SS a a \RGS RS SRS SS TN St es
AeA awe OFF | Seeman aoe St Be oe a wee 22. FE Se fo te Se SSS Sa ae eS Sas | SSS Se LSS ee ee BER SREES 0° > eae a aa HESS SARS GS eee See | *} SSS SER SSS ra ioe &Pe SA SENSE FS SSS . Sas wae SSS SA =& SsP SSG iene ee Re = Seed JeSE SSS : foes 27552. oaSoft pears seseee PES eSé.Bk a SSeS Ses SES SJ
4 =.a” aaa pS ae 3S = eer Ses SS SSS SSeS Ron i=eT ees SSS ie2a oeRey >SSS PS tS Syeee ear Sed Resim eee es i Swe ee SSS Se SSS SSS Ss 23 : SS id . se Sey 3 + = poi et RE De 5 enact SS S| Ree SSS ot SSS S SS See a4 ,=e ee eee : eee eS Ree ee ee See PONY PRES SS ae ee aesss =SgtSeSS ey ear SR RAR er ee iS SF SRR: Sena sea Se , ee ee eeako) aeea haeSR ee A a Ss) aes Feeee: Bae ee$B Sehe: ape SS aS peo be: pies =yeSoe RS Ses ee aSS -¢? ees
a=SSee EaPaes ere ee aeee ee i aaee oPee Co Sh GO org eo ; PS, Se ee ee Se SN eee ee
L, WSS oie Ss RF eS SSeS SS Se ee eR le SSSR RRS ae 9 SS es SSieawen ch) Se eae 2 OSi Bee RSS any Soe Be[— eS ea. / Ss Sa Agee geo a aoe 8a=a
mM of ee mel ee > my yee TY ee er = fe 2 Sy ee ee ee e) SS Gee SPE Se SS SS SS ee Sie Eee oewor ham oo ae ee SS FO Fees Peat Sue S680 . Be. a ee See oS SS = rae ar i:SS eas eS kh ie TSS | ee . Ber ett eee i> 4 ot ee re mr.5) Ss ee ge Se ee ps eee 6D ee 0ha og ES og > ae Oe eSaade ee Ss PEERS aSee ESges ES :PSS 2SekBS se eee a eee gs S23 5S ee oaSoi: eeaeSe SS" SRS SS Soa Paees eee HRS Seae eens, ee eae SS ae SSS Sear Are Soe ee Tes | Sea :PP elie Bae SSS5 SENG 2eee eesa35 See aSoe epeen ee erage SSE
>.|)SS eR eee aSS Seeau Ge Ln Sees Sar eeea Sy WY8 Re«ee fae ek So lee merge Ss ge 3egPe oats. Se as tS. Ee SSS egPe SS" FS SSE AR|Sa eee ea SS i4eer fSeRe aySes ES =e Fee SSSopgee RE stem PR ee
: SS Se) MG 28 cRge Be ee ees SS eS eS ge Se es Se See oe
2 a ee iu SS eRe Stee = ie SS Sgt Ae: pees SS SS..7egSee SSws Sea a aeeeaeSeLoS oeeS SS§=2=SSS”, Se UE SSS epee Ss A
is Ss Sa SA se cee Re. VER re Dison =), eS eS 0 Bee RRL Ret ea ay TRS hese hk
2 3S8 oo | eae = SSS SS ee ee SS = Base. | SSS es PEE AL.
F SSS so Se ge ee SS = 2S a ee ee Sy SoS ES gs epee
B83 SST SARS veee Fees eeSSS eetSE 8h i. SS SSSSS : SSRRS . woth eos paraeikere PE SsSS : :SSF oo SSRah Seg AaSee ee > SSS es ee Ss aa fe) TA Sees See oe A Se. re SeweerSeSadoo aSaks) ERS epee heen eeeee8 = =ro Sgeaine Navies SSS Pe eee SSS ES re, hoe eS aS oeskh Sap arSse SSR We SAE 2h ig ? SSE aaneae SSSeee SESS SRS Sea Tee Sa eePR eeSSS SRSSE Ries wet ayeTee ey asthe oes” SSoe eee SERS aS PISS Ce eee SE LS 15 , qe ae SS RR Sa ae SSeS ae Sa Reed eS = Sees SSS Se eee SOS eee NT RS eaters Ss == Eee Ss Sas =e eS SRT OA aeas Set S,SaaS Seu ae SSS SSEE SSS SSS Se ee ete aes eae eeseee REESE SSS SSssSSS SS SSS SSS Pro ch ae
Se ae oe Aa SS ee eee .
influence.® Saint John is missing in Giotto’s Padua painting, but it was significant that Fra Angelicc remembered him in his Florentine Last Judgment. While Saint John the Baptist or the Evangelist were traditionally represented in Last Judgments by artists all over Christendom, the Baptist, after all, was patron saint of Florence and very special to its citizens. Florentines enjoyed being reminded that they had their own advocate at the ear of Christ. One of the most lavishly celebrated feasts of the Florentine calendar was (and still is) June 24, the Baptist’s Day, when the saint and the populace pledge anew their mutual trust and promise to serve one another faithfully for the coming year. Also at the Saviour’s favored right, below the blessed souls at the bottom of the composition, Giotto painted a conspicuous figure of his living patron, Enrico Scrovegni, on his knees before another image of the Virgin and awarding her a model of the Arena Chapel.7 It was well known that Enrico inherited his wealth from an unscrupulous father, Reginaldo, whom Dante disdainfully named as a
sinner in the seventh circle of his Inferno.8 Enrico may have hoped that by building this chapel and dedicating it to the Virgin, he could win his father’s redemption. Thus he might have bade Giotto paint this scene as a pictorial prayer to Mary, that she intercede in favor of his family at the Final Reckoning. In Fra Angelico’s Last Judgment, also at Jesus’ favored right, the blessed souls approach heaven through a delightful flowering meadow. Heaven itself, in the upper corner, is conceived as a walled city, entered through a turreted gate. This little detail of heaven looks exactly like a typical Tuscan town of the Quattrocento; indeed, much like Florence itself. Fra Angelico often depicted Jerusalem
or paradise as a contemporary Tuscan townscape in his paintings; a homely detail that he surely knew would attract his viewers and instill in them patriotic associations. On jesus’ lower left in both Giotto’s and Fra Angelico’s paintings, as well as in all such Last Judgments, are images of the various tortures of the damned. We note that some of the women being pushed into the pit in Fra Angelico’s version
have long blond tresses not braided or tucked modestly under a veil. Such vainglorious hairstyling aroused the wrath of many conservative preachers, such 6. For a general synopsis of the changing iconography of Last Judgment imagery, see Philippe Aries, The Hour of Our Death (New York, 1981; originally published as L’>bomme devant la mort
[Paris, 1977]), pp. 99-112, 184-185, 257-258, and passim. See also Theodore Herbert Feder, Rogier van der Weyden and the Altarpiece of the “‘Last Judgment” at Beaune (University Microfilms, Ann Arbor, Mich., 1975), pp. 133-134. Another revealing study about the use of the Last Judgment in support of secular law and order already in the twelfth century has been undertaken by Willibald Sauerlander: “Omnes perversi sic sunt in tartara mersi, Skulptur als Bildpredigt; Das Weltgerichtstympanon von Sainte-Foy in Conques,” Jahrbuch der Akademie der Wissenschaften in
Gottingen, 1979, Pp. 34-47. 7. See Ursula Schlegel, ‘““On the Picture Program of the Arena Chapel,” Zeitschrift fiir Kunstgeschichte 20 (1957), 125-146; republished in Stubblebine, Giotto, pp. 185—186. 8. Stubblebine, Giotto, pp. 108-109.
2.6 Pictures and Punishment
as Fra Angelico’s Dominican superior Fra Antonino Pierozzi, prior of San Marco, archbishop of Florence, and later canonized as Saint Antonine.? The Church, of course, entertained a long tradition of fire-and-brimstone sermonizing against the vanities of earthly existence. Vivid descriptions of the devil’s punishments,
like the well-published Vision of Tundale, could always be drawn upon for hellish images intended to strike terror in the hearts of the living sinful.1° Artists as well as sermonizers quickly worked up a repertory of tortures. Hell itself was
often represented as a system of dark caverns or cut-away niches looking not unlike the dank jail cells of the old podesta’s palace in Certaldo, which survives to this day. In each of hell’s caverns, demons perform specialized horrors upon the damned who are usually without clothes, wearing only a headpiece of some sort which alludes to their earthly sin. Trecento artists took pains to show these sinners as naked and not nude—the distinction being that the former is a condition of embarassment while the latter, as perfected by artists in the following centuries, became a condition of pictorial beauty. Artists of the Middle Ages, especially those living in such urban communities as Florence and Siena, would frequently have seen living wrongdoers stripped naked in public, as a form of punishment prescribed by the local law courts. Some acts of obscene humiliation often accompanied these sentences in real life, which Giotto and Fra Angelico
also reflected. In Giotto’s fresco (detail, fig. 3), two sinners in hell are shown hanging upside down, a man by a rope attached to his penis and a woman by a hook in her vagina. In the lowest lefthand corner (from Jesus’ point of view), both painters have depicted the devil as a hairy monster stuffing human bodies into his mouth. Florentines were practically born in the presence of this terrible but traditional representation since it also stared down at every newly christened child of the city from the mosaic ceiling of the twelfth century Baptistery. Fra Angelico even painted his Satan biting a bloody sinner in half, but the good friar did spare his viewers one disgusting detail that Giotto and other earlier painters frequently included: a depiction of Satan squatting to defecate the squirming bodies of devoured sinners from his anus (see fig. 23). We turn now from subject matter to ponder the psychological meaning of the formal composition of the Last Judgment itself. What associations would people of those times have made with the symmetrical and hierarchical arrangement of the picture? Formal compositions in the visual arts have always fascinated the 9. Concerning St. Antonine’s unhappiness about female vainglory, see his Summa moralis or collected sermons, originally inscribed in the 1440s and 1450s and published in the eighteenth century. A facsimile edition of the latter is available from Graz, 1959; see vol. 2, tit. 4, cap. §, cols. 590 f. under “De praesumtione.” Fra Giovanni Domenici, St. Antonine’s Dominican mentor, also wrote a much shorter tract in which he also worried about the vanity of women: D. Salvi, ed., Regola del governo di cura familiare (Florence, 1860). to. See Pasquale Villari, Antiche leggende e tradizioni che illustrano La Divina Commedia (Pisa, 1865), pp. 3-51.
Icons of Justice 2.7
tt ee — : ee Sa SF Sf ecneth eth Bev nsf tress easter
=R5 SS ae SS BRAN SESE ae ee ee SSS SSS ED Seen Site Malia, Et See ec RE eRe Ee St Yh Se ee See Ss ee SS SOS ES ES SS RN FSS Se eC
re | eee ee let ee ee
Se:Leone peg 2SteeSS SS See SeeeSee SREB eeSSS SocaRS Ba LURE ee P Fy FENTSB See a ere Se nate SSSeee SS: aSS Ps a:: HES i. OO EEE ears bySS SSSSS Se SS REEus 7 "eS io 2 pe Bet A PR RS PST SB Si aed GRP ER SERFS BS FSS SSS Spt. OME VERS SSP EOE SO nd Soong RS SE SS 2S SSS SS “8 :
et hoo ES RS RSS oan geRe 2Se eeEES ee SR ag SESS tOARS aoseee eeneeeee eeAre ee BsASS Se Sa yk ERR oa PAE a ieee Ree SSGES eee ARSE) ee: EES SSS SSS SSS a z :Se E s : : By Sec Seep SSS Uae iby BRS UTC nSSE osSe BSHoc) — Tyo Ry cS CERES es DRE OR EAR Beebe oS ESS eet LSS = Se = Sait SAT SJR Sis SRT Re a SS Se ee SS 8 7 SST USS oe SSS * PEE eb * : Danny SRS SSS SS Sa a Ba : : : SSS ee ee ee SS EE ete ee ames obs lo SSS See 8 SSS SSS odes Los
SSS SSSAS SS SSS EEE aSS ip = te Se pi gb Sa =S se “URE Oo ea ei iS SSNS SS SSS SS SS See ae Se SSSeeSSS eeUh de 7\ aera OE)SS BSSSRSeRS 2 :SS EOE SORES a SSST SaSR SSSeSSR SS Seige SSS See RR | So i a E oe
ee ee SS a SE EE TEEPE SESS EAP od 2 SSS SS eS ee eS Pipes SS SS Se £) :
SSS SSS eS SS SS SSS SSS SS Se eee: Stee = SS9 Lia DE AS et eae ge SEES FESS SOS SS SS SS SS SNARE R SSS Sot ns is SS Sas Sere fae SEN gS ponne wae. Se Pen er ARON Ree So SSS 5 See ee we SED bax Ss SRS SS eee fog tRAS : PUB Hes! 3 inthe RI Ree aS a ee tee Editon es cuit na Bo GEG aa 2 a SSS ct a SEL TES ze
See EE SS SER Soh a TRE SSeS wae SP“See sa eno ee eras Ee eee! esSOREN SS eeeEEeeUEeee! SSS SSeS SSeSeee SERS OCSTeg Eo eSeas fee FE SSoi Eras etyPes aS =fk apieSs sates oesRES eee aeLd oS Se "SoG nS a SS ae aA
Fee eee ve? SSFS SSS SSS SSS SSSea See Vin Re ee ne 7 >5Saas :Dope f)SHEE cogs: PA GPE bbe) 22 a ae ByROI SEE aap SE Be SE eee BREN: | eee Pee SeiFSS aee RaQ PUee ES SS =SS = aS SSRS SS BR ESSSe =;ios: 6]EERE See aanUNSURE wtp aa ger S=Pek SSfe SScee ae i? +.SES 3S 2B, "SES PROT eATITrwe Site Rae pet ” ree fue 4s Ss Se SSeS 2ABA ee ESS ag: ee: Se es Sates 3 Se ESS 188 ee ——— SSS ee Le SS Bid bt aes Set ah BY Un koe 2ERP =F SASL we SPORE Ripe Rees pS SE LE ReSeye PhS SRE SSeS =eee iSe FE PS2.3 eeseee oo Sit.) SSS Eo DP oe Spa aun [Pg SSS 3RES 5 SUR. eSEREMEE ees SRS pee | OSE SEES 8
Bag. RESS Saala SSS SSS SZSa oSSo EELEE! SSSRSatta See a Oe ey ee RySSS Pee ORB Se RSetSRS oe SsRS ercee | SSS Rue 2SUNS Se ee Fg as SESkeS >) gl 87Sf ESSE eSSS* See . Ses 2 $ SERS oSee: elas OSRS : ee a | oe A Eye SSS SS SSS EE SS Sh SS eee SSS See & : Rie a 3 Sas | ee SS ee i Sn Ra eS eS cet cis an pate Sig 0olUi SeSee SSS ee RT Pao Sais SSEA eae PES eeeSteRe 2 eS SES Bese EE OES a Oe eeey SEnr zy:7 pe aCSR WEDS esse SSS RS3) 2EES RSS ES Sk {SSS SARE ES SS. Oa Bese tefue PLEA geen edne Re oe Up Le SSeS OS a SAS re. 3ES i ee SS SnRS .=TS 5re=RS Sis Seae EE &Sa Beers S 8a ih Mote aE feRIOR OV Se ae SS EOE Bye PSS :RE se SS SSSSs Sh. 1 SRSiSe ERSSS eevee Sree 0 SSE: 2s ey CH ACTER RRana ROE SSSee, hs 2BR ES pifig] “go D2 Bee SRA ASE URES SRE Sh Seg Be 8 = SM =e F.C SSR a tae or oe Sareea SSE! S S “SSS rc eee See Sa = SS kes |SSS SeSS SSS HPS. SeeeSSS aSF +BSS ‘ Bee eS PageSS SM SSStas 2SS es| ee AS GS Se ey eS ESRat i See ee eee eeSgigtied oe ee ES AS EE bo Ree eS eePRMD See Seor€ sos : s Mo gh Re ieSSS eg eS z= 3oS Eee arte 2 RAS SSS SS es eee SieCOE RR peesSSS PTsSs SESae Tl, ees
SSS ee ee ee ee a: eeae oreee eS:3aeReHE = SSS Sea Sere : aS Sa oSSee Ne ae re SSS Ee, 2 Se Ss SSS ) Sas Se Se Se SS ee ss e See ergy Se SES ee eRe ee ES Fo ES Se : ae Set Sarasa Se te ake oe Q SSS SSS SS Se 5 5 SS : ASUS : SRE SS ae a : SR See ee I eS : B‘ :
SS ee : a SS SS eee Se a
SSS SS SSS SS SePees Serer = Se ae SS RE SSS RRS = Sa. Se A Pre aSSS 5 SSS ao ee : meeeSS SSS Fl?SSS A Se SSSSSES SS PS eS Se RS ULE aa: =SSS. SSS eS Sees ES 1 Eeay SSSSS Sd 3. iy ee SS aeag . SSS eee eSree oleate
2p Bie Se See Pe AeSeSS3 See {Se , .Se Pee2SRS ee SSESSSSS SE eSSS ot Steg ; hae SSS Se 2 oo .it =e aaaCe AST agee a ee ee Ba te HES SoeRee aS ao Rn5.nee ee Sacer SsSE . SSS Sa "PRR : Beeseos to Sh SeSoS i: SSE FiSee aS SeeaSseSi Sea ee tele = DS. See SS Se SS Se : 5 Sr BSS Ss Sh Sess SSS Shee SS & OSS SES Sia a aera ee = SS iS eee Synlwna bu io? pis vos 2S oS See e pas SS Soe eee P SBS SS SESE Oenetbeans ae rg 74 a Eos a SS a SS EP eS res 1SSN ST ees : aS ame)ny Be Soe .SS aes eee SSS)rr 1 SSeS aysuc2 ris SREEES SARSSee NESa eS CSS. Bes ficFASS SR eS oo SS . Ses SS :PR = JUSS SSS 5 SS eee Beeeeeeawares: > vt
SS ee : SS ig Bes a ee ee See SS , = eee eee Pgs SS SS Se ie E on
Se ee ee ee ee ClCti(‘é‘a ee Saas ee. ee -
= FSS SS ne gs oS ee oS SSS Seaae SERS BE Se “Ese Te ——3 SSSese SSeS = 2 8 eee, Coe reece ak coe eee. ETE ee ee aad Bll eg TES SSSR SS ns RE Ses St vig ESS ne eae SS Sree ra OS 7 ES ESS ed ) ORI LASS SS RD SRT QCD pe NRT .
SB PRR oS PRS =SS SSSS =ee Bese. gE ls2)aS eee rhs Sem osSSSR oSSSQSS RSS eS SSS ene Sie : >SSE SS2AS SS DS BSS eeee SS SES mm re=Ss eS Bees 2EAD =SS : oy. SSSR SS eR Se EE 00 SSS SeATO ee cere we SSS ee ne aseSSEA SS Se =.Se2, SSS a =-ES 2a. SSeS Sea re 72 ae ess SSS SERS leSSS OL oe Gees =a IRETUE, Cot SF SSS ae ‘SSeS eas HS . Sau cae ESS SNS Sg Sse eSeeeee aiS eereCn aSS eeee rex2eas
LSSS—S— a.ESSSS Se SS eSmee SS SS SE+2) Bees >easMr DSS es gM Lee oh esOeee eSeeeeRe, RR i*eeee ee ‘ SSS : See oSMieke Mate 8 °SSS SoSE SS See cess Saas See pede OTE SSS Sg DR oP RS SSS SS ee [SSS teers er BAS Bese 75!SS Shy SSpe Sone heeeS SSS BS EESSS EESee eesLOT oo ee SS eae Se hie SSEE SSS SS ee Sree eee -Sa SS Ses Se SateSS - CoS) 3SS SESS 3SSS MES he oe,FE eeeBaye ro Bs Seid eS oo Seee Se ed Ra Sen ee oe Ss = SS ee EBS Se eres = S 2 SSeS ae Se eee ee. SSE ie een ACen ee © Sees SESS : Fae AR eee aged i ee SS See ss SSS SS SSS See SS Sr — : : ES = Be Bees | Ta Te be EE ie ee Se SS SS Se es -IESe zBees. SSS LeeaSRR are eee SS =SSS RE SE ES as he eeRS SS eaPeSeee aSSS SRS! SSeee SS Se ford ee peewee 0AyErg Sa Sees Se SS oe eSa Sse. Fe35SeSSS Sap ncSSS +SSS SRR Ss See eee es:iG3Se BSa 1SSS Sa ERS: SRome ree Ne RSSS RE EES oy aeeeeSere 7. 2
es eee Sour Eye °,:Sg2BeSS aS Snes Se ae .SSS eS eee eeee SSS ees SPE ey=SS : ea we PnFOS EE 1 RS eSSs SS Soaetee aS: ae aReeSseeSo a| utd eefeoar ftee 33S SSS 8 Sa oe : tebiven ARSS fee SESE SSS Sees - := Se SSS SF aa nate Fy ee eee eee= > SS eee Ee
=SSS“er SSS assSSSS See SeRESSON Se. aeASRS RA AA Oo, See es og See eg eS See See OR SeeRe See are Sy SeyeyPears : &.PS. SY LSS {eee SSS SS ees ie iSa a : :SSS = 35. a ee oktRe | Seeeee Se EER 7 i eae i Se Se Se BU PSRs eg
: eS ES OSSe SS Be 2eae ee pe eS RS Beees fo oe asRRS’ : toeeas GERBER +NERS aFIaOE LP UR RAS SSS 2cBe SSeeSC SR ER2OES CEES EEE Se are. ee 3es :Ce Ss eeSe *See ae woARs SSS Sees See APN Be ne eS ; Sa eeRS 2 SS *:SSR Bee 2ee aSos : a7an Gy lL. VIE + FSS SSSR op SSE See eepeo eeeSSS sy eee SeSE See2SSS ee SSSee . L S227 : |BP i en SSS PS BARES IME Spt SoSoe Sa
ASAE See eee eeaSora eS3ae S220 1.SESE 7 ZS 3!) Sas .22 2: Q Ps BoP LS. 2.) SSS SSSRS LeSSSRSES Rede! Ue Dy FR aan eR nee Sr ee agh eg ie0SS ee SSS: AS SRS, -Sa a ”oe . SS an Eel my -ien wool alz Tats ow. og >)SS FS ag SRS =EEE fongh Ua eR os oT BS. SS eySS NS SaaS rides lewf ofa : PReeees eee SS. SS: RSS aT SEre dB Re BSBA eSre CSE 0SS OF yt “sSSS So SE SSS See RF p. oe Pepe gEDS io 1, FESS SSS SS PS eA 2S22 SSee Sn . SSS eet eee SS 2S SSS See Sa welt RP REwd eoTSR SSRS eeSSS ReSES OeaRRS i |ot
ee OA A es PES po SEES - SS oo SSS enSos fo =. Es oySei ee Seemed ot? JAN 8 SS ARO See 7 aesLs Rese TTgee CR Re fea! SS 5 SE aySSSSS Pana,RAR : Sa : # wou. y aad os eS SAE a ee eeeoP Seie, eee So Sa esbet PB gees Bee eevo SERRE BE SSR oe: ,sog SS Poet SESS Se ET OT re 3een See RoE oe ESAS is ReSc BET E me See ee : eS % ‘oo : an : ves .U8 | BS 2RSeeSEE LS| RH Sek SS fo eS ee AER Egeee EAM
—— Poe meee ae ee re ae, BHAT he ET eee Eo ReyaAA SAE PS Se FS SreeSg Sears 07SgrCRS ie: yr SRS REPE SS ea EE :Gee A nee ae ae abe Pee SPR DSSoogee oo .Lak RRSeDp Sg Ee SS eeeMES Se Se Soy REE BR ys ho Pet ee SRSRRES SSS a SS ee fey jn ET HERS Lana. ge RRS eee ee oe LORS Boe ea See Ss . 7d UNE LAER ADS SS Se SS a Ba re Saraeercaeae 1 SEERA Ss RR ete i SSeS SS . 2S “5 Se ee ee G5 Sees fe! hE We ne EM eS PSS SRT Ce. See Re SS SR Ne SSSR oe ae :
ml geUE 2.TS flee. aCL Sige ESS SSE SeeSe eeeaSSS (RUD, SSSS Se.Nees 3S ee ee 2 aPST ee See Se fo ATR SSS See ee eae z Boe SRaftiwe EF as aerate: SeELSE RSS SREeCLAS See LE eaeSESS SeeSSS =) SS Eee —aS PeBeEee agegs ed 2eeeS aans : aMees cae CEFR RE EseACER LS Se SS 2S ioeSe Sees iSet SSPE RSS Sy Sa Renee Sa), SRR ESS on SSRSS SS ORES SSSee Se Be eeUS SSS RERSS SSSSSS Lo SSSisae See* SR SRP SS PA SSSSeSea oe SS ot SRE: US RES SSee ay aan ae
BeAGE Lets lois.vee . } 23SeS RSSeat Pageee eA oe RES ESS See =e2Nig) SSSSS SS SS SS SSS Jee RS ee SOS) ESSs. PRESS SESS Gah: Pe Sarae SES ‘ Po ae SS agSee SSS SS SSS aS aeae eae ie SeARSE ee a“ Me Ee: See Se SSS SSS 0. 2. eee SS SS oo Se eee SS = "a ond RSS RES SIP eR a “S: ES Qe aDy .' =RAS = SS2S SeLSS ss Ss ies: aaSSS aS _puse oe SS Sa ESE, . ekRo < SS Sees UR TTS See sts eSBee eet Qo aeS62 SSS SsSSSSS SSS See sie eS Se SS: eee Fee eae RefaBae, RS :
toe foaled: es 2) See 2S Sa. eee ee Se Se eee Se, PE Pe ? Sa ee BoE. Ps, =a a =: & “uso GS See RS Se ee eae : Beige Ri, SSS =. SSE So On Se Se eS Seee SeeeSS eee ee Bee eeaa.:: BIS eS ee SSS Rae ee eee oe. EES cee 1a BREN SSSR fe ee SeS 2ee Oa fal) SSeSLoee SS SSS ee ee ae Se. ee SS SS :SES Be gS SS Seo ee Be OP SRE nse2 SS Sas Si pes! SSSSe Ek.ASS See eS =SS Re Bik i RE ee SS SSS. A Re aiBee SE SSSSe. 1eee 2 SSS eR Se een
ME 8 2eelo SSS eeeoS.SS eeTSS 2 See Sea eSeeSe Rett ie eS Se es SS are ae geo SSS SS RS SS Se :eS EPSSS SS Sa RAEeeSSee Soe=aepa eeSs eee Pe eh ee 8 ESee: i
FEE Lh wi hl. 1, Sh SSeS Se See Bee SSS ee SSN RSS ris) [A eS SS Ee See Ey pe : aoa BS LL at FREE SESE ae SSE ES EA EY FL SES eae : :
ee es SS eee SSF 2 SE SS Se eee — ee Se ae eS ers
BOP SE Tan rt * = SSS aS ee ees SSF | Se ASRS es ae 2 2 oS S.. t 2 SSS : SSS SRR SSS See SSS SR CS ee ERE SSSR SS Sg ep Renae
co 3) ) SSeS SSS SS SS SS Se. SES ee a a ae SSS = SS Se SS ee i NS ee ESS SSS ee SE SESS OS SSS Ses SESS SOE PO SE SSS 3 fee: oy Soi SSS Se SSS BRE EE SS eS SSeS ES eae Be De ERIS eT a Re eee: . ess RSS SE ES SESS oS SER Sake Gs fe Sh FS LS ae BSA Sete 7.iFSe Se SEE LaF Eeee EeSSS Se lg oo SSS me RS otSg ee ed,1eens 2SS Sse. fp eySees SS SS SSS SSSR. SSSSSS Sea Beone SePBR BE2oo. SR ey SES eee SS :RSS SSS: nny eeFEEe SepS S|SSS aeScSs SF eS$5FAS SSR SS SSS eeetl: SSeSiti SE Se atiVSE aR ae Boe, is ole Ss aS 2EP See “on as aseis Pe atit ORS }) ccSS. 7 SSS ESSE SR
pe aSS=Seieeeaes GeeS5= "- SSSe 22SeeSS BSS See Se Se ey SSSSSS a SS eS BakSSeS. SS SS SSS Se See ge SeeS SEsBoe ge : SEs ho See SS SS a3 2 Pipe A re a RR [Ss flo) TSS SSeS See > eS SS BS SSS ee . Don = SSeS SSS SSS ES S35 SSS SO a Pe ee a eS fo eS ar oF BEER SES SSSR E
Reo Se 2 SSeS SSNS Eee eaEEE SES 6 SSS Se eae aASSEE otceePeete eee SS SS SS seSaeJSS Gaee SSS ee nee f SS a ee Se ° a: Se. SS: EE PR SS Bees SE Se Ee ee SSSR See Sa aeeeae SE SSrare SSS |SESS ESESE Se SESe OBE poses LEIA (FES URE | TRESS 8 i Se eeeeSSS SSS Seee SS ee SS SR ae SiG SSRN SSS Shh EETS QPeS Pa Pos ae Se Pees 2Ry EP Sooreee | SSSR eeSS a ee = SS eee Se eS ee Ree See Ss: Bay SS Pen A Se A en Mee SPR = [Sg eh RE SN. 23 2 SSSR LSE RSE Se Se . “USS SS SSS ee a ae Sa ets SARE § ‘ Sees s
La SS SS ae aaSS2|,EOE SSS SS Se SS Fo SRS Ss =aaeg8S 2SR2ees Se ee | Be ESSE FS ag Se VE ~= fo Eee Be soi2SE |BS SSS BSP ESS) SS eS Se= ot SSS SESS 2S Sea SSS ER RO 8 Sa gisJsae RSS ees Fo Sess SSSSS SS SSS es eS SS SSS TEESAS 2eee WEE > SSSR SS SRS 2=RESUS 7 AAS ae ee ae nse Salli 2SSees Sees pigaie aye eeePS See Saeee ee ) [See ae PRE aee er2 eae Sa Be eaeSee ig Jeee aa- co =tans =eeeSes oe ose ee EA pesee beet See en |Pees iis spines Sapna RS FSSS aaMRD Sue eee Aas. Ee Rese Pei greg ace prdh eeePSS SteeSFERERS SS Se eee = tts eeRe eae = SeRpe DIME AGS ERFacet REECE ES eeu eR asaein ae etna HU SER Reve ES SD Sek cerons eeepieee ess eS Saas ne aaiii ABET eee EASELS AE SSSAS SN ERT JSS eeot eS Ae SS apmeyg STS ae Se PPMRS De RR Pa SSE eS esoe ee SSS ee Soret Ss eySs Mise een eeeesSoe gee as SSeS Se eeeseas Se JHAS BE eo etSees yd en aSeee easSees i aE Y ae CRE Se ERR ee BIS ee ees gh Pe EAE eeE+ = See
[RCA eeSeSeSEES es 2eeSSSaSe SSTeBee eee OR MECH ee Pp ee RSS SSSSS Se OL SSeS Syee tasSer SS. See ay aeeens BapeRe etreCe eeeeereee Syeee RESSoy a eeSepa ee ee ee SeeCER ee SoeRS ees, a . plied pases eel
figs aeae era eS WAS SS a ae See ee eee SES eeaEURE alee eee eeSE Se eS ee acne a SE idRUBS SEES Bas ee eee eae SSS 2 ——S—— Se 7)Saeeaeaaaae Se SSSR SESS ieee eee Se aan ESS Rens np Sse eeHS Pa5ESSE Se ee 72_=8aSe Peete ice RRRSee eSge eee SSS Se Pe SS ee SS: ieeS “RS RRAee SEeee pie aerate es Seetb| eni See 1Pa SR SSE ee Noe ee ERNE Gone See eee atats ee aehg ae igig'h fhBans) 4setae Bo FE Be SRS ShSe eeSSS eeee SS SS eS See Polisi se SLE SSS Se SSS GSE eee seen Rese Be EO 2eS8romper Ag AS BERR ee 4Eth SAPS Sees. SSSR ee SS Re2Se cee IareSE Sa SSS. SEUSS Ee Seg 2a. SEE SSeS a. RBM EEA, 8SG ges =SSE Fee RS fos ASHI Seco He SS RARE Ss eae Serine Se : aS, a : aeee a He sE tee aes eoSes Sp RRS ASSES a Ss RRS eS Seager: Soe= Pane coe ee agiee co a epee Se EUS RESE Seine a= 5SSS "ee 5 oe s ql we Vacs SUS PeaLeas pe eS [SSS SSS siSaeyass Pd asaSSS oe Se SS rca SS eee osSa sary SeROC Se eeaSe
aSsFS Se ee Ss Se ree cesses eee es ee ae SSeS ee eeSee | ee oe eed Pee eae ceee SS 2B ae eR SS essings Bearers foaeR Se Sage Fae as eee oe osereBes Se esSee Bos. eee] ee ——— SS SO eSSe ae ea ee Se oe SRS US Sy Rae. ae BSS SS RSSS es Bihege crest Age ISS Se ee SS Soe eM ERS: UE RSS ES Sess 8 idae Pe eS Sa Se ee eS SRe ee ee eee eee Rs Sees ee ee RUS SS ne? Eee Spee setae ahs ees ES iE Rgraageiet Suen See eee SS See A eeeok 3 =See Betis ESE Re ssiieae EAE SS ee SS = See SSS SSS eee canaries SESRESS SUSE Te eR eee pepe: Se oS aS eG i2r Sree eS Sa — SSS Se ————— SEES SS A Sse Ser eee Pe TE Pep ee ER LE ear eae Paeae eee Se RRA RERE SAS event aspera Sr REST Toe SS SR aFAS Shag cee ARS Se | SSSR eae Se SSS SS SSS SS ee FREES GES ASS Sb o, Seee ass SARE RTS Seek een Tee SS SSNS oa Se eS Sun Set GREE SS Beebe Te = = = SS Rist ISU eee Re SS SSS SS SSS SSS ee RE $5) E ERS Re ee SSeS eee ES eee SEES ee = : eeyek So = SSS Seaeeed See eee, aLeeeSRE 2 ERE eSeeRe oe ORR So SRS ee *RSSoe SEee|ee, Soe ee ees SSS Sad Rosa Sa SRE eth) 2 Se ee eee eR RSG Ge See RSS See ae ER oe 9 eS eee ARTES = Suc ewndee
Po fo ee eee ee Se eS ee . . Se igh eS Se ee : SSS eeapee PS a ee SS SS eS SSS Se Se SSS ae oo S Fo SS =. SS ae eee a eee See see (ee ee eS Le Se Stee eee eS ee ees SSsce. ; a= eeee fe a= ee ee aee SERS SSS Ss 2S So LS SSS Tol fae SS SeSS SS Le. SSS. BS SS oe a SSS OF oo SSSe Pepe SSS see : SS SE ee es eeee ee ee SS SS Se ee:j eT: :——= oe fo SSS SS eS SS SSS Seee oped — a a ee ee ee fy OSES SS eee fl Sie eS SSS = SSS SSS SSS SS ee ee CoE Doi oY | Ret ea RS SS oe — Fe a a
S205 Sor SS ReSSeS SSSee SSS a SeIEESS ERR es ee Sees oe LS SSS SERA HindeS a iyee Seas ee eee ES eS SS =, a eaSSS ea . ee . SS: Se SASo RT
Sos SS Se eeESSe EESTI NE =eptosses eesena ce Se ee = sf z SE"a eS ee =SS a Serer ES PS SORE ENE Raa eae RS =Sie tates, 2 Bae A=i Se Hafay fay FUSES Se 3: es Bes ~~ SSeS ea we Seeeaoe : Pitts ES SES ae eee Pemerae.s Ss Reda, SA eaees 7 ee a Sa ea) SOS SE os oe i See
Zoo, SS SRReg 235s 2Be ESS=SSS a SESS SS2SSE wae RE ESET poet SSS>)FoSSS SS Sater > =3See 2 Sees aires 3S are aS a )8 Rae SeeksiPRS PerSRS BR eTSESS te ie 2 eS tg : SESS eee csSS =< SS Seg SSS. ee2ST: SSS Ses ee Sipe EES SP SfSree OEP =Searl : es SSS| YS Se gses 2SS "22SS SSB =4 SSS SSS S28) SSS wo gL SPSS Seer a Bee TeS| a EERE Reta FSane Se. LS ‘ Caf ee ba | =51ESS iz. See SSeS Ter ogee SP ee )a SS asGe I arSe SSeS Soe eeeSEsoe pede BS Bswet SaSS SVS ss .)S SSS SRS SSS SSSES SSS SSS. pSSS SS SSS Se eeSSSA rere 2.2pice 2 a para ytSES tf 2 hy EN aay gs cigae ee.Ao OO ia Sos gas peehert cegt ReMarte Zener es eS Se Seen
onSSSe Veg Oe, SSeS a SE ier) Pty >):eeSt= eee ae “iPoe ae See See SSS SSS SSEee SS SSeS Sos $iSe SS eo ae Sic Bee le reSee = EE S22 reepenne ys Bas Fe eee eT Paes ne eee is &SS SS oS SeSfBe reeSage Sek SSS. (So aSSTFee aecoaeB7afoes Lae oe ae See See See Sep oe ee SSS SS eee SSS ee TPS Rk SSS SS EES ES SS ae a a ee ees, Pa a pee Taper eee i BES eo Se Pe ae: Wee ee i SSR ee See t BSS S Sn SSS BO RS Si SSS See5S etm Se [oy & TES hs ee S35 Be.eee ee oSUSE Cate cee go FSSgSSS = PSS: ae PUES ae SeeneSSS SSS Sewee Sp aSian ee ae S Fe eeePya Ba? He BORO SSS SoaSS. ey SASS See =s =Seat SSPe Sea eee7]eeoni ig SS: SEES SES] ar =. 2: Seto ELses poo LS SSS Be": a sso BS So ek ea ee #3! Ss Sse a Sea °F s Sah SASS #eise 7 SaaS ae Sees ray at aay ae EE SS Sus pete ys ute eee 3 = 3 2 IS SSS
= : So SSUES. eB -SSs Se SS FFE at See Se 2 EES eS ARES Sees Sep See arale: Soc eS Soe See ee Ae we Bot PANE gE a a ei oes i= i eS
RSS gEeer? SS : ASS Benes SS SESS pag eS So SS See ge SeSHS hut SE SSio : See iig fePRS BeeS. =3ee i 3S a;7 pee SeSe aaey ee SS SSHe Sa Lae 7 SS=SSae aria SeeSoe Ss eee sei io BRE aS:iRoe Peed SAS ize, SS BE Ss SSFS ad ae. $s Sa “ ipaSS Sueees ae REE cape neaED isos i mE 2E a Sass ees _ aRS —S SSSSss gg Sigs ae eS Qe ee” Bae Sea: ate SS~ Sy BS a Bee sae Ber - 5 eS eeSS aeosioee boltvives MgRBE in ae i See Pees See ig. SS Ses eS ORE PSS oe Ae fees Fa ES SS et gece Ley cae eS LS. egies SS See ; See Siem s a Se eae Seen Be gene b SS ee Sees = oes ae Ses SESS Ss ZzGad |. RSS SS eeSe = Saae 3 FS;Sk Ee aed Sao ee i Saee. SS a.Gee SSeS sre ess See FS Be ES 2 eg np E ASE SS se SeearSe eS Sea © 1 BSR Bae tbree Ne aa A ae Se # :: SSS aizis SoS eS eee iSe Gee Ree =Sb: gees GSAS ae2ac Sires Ber ieie ease Soe SES Seas oS sc ESS e x ites , nee aS |ee Beer oh BERG eS 4 4 ig $3 ss5 SF ita SSS SSS SSS SSS Gig Wen gePapa 2S Es Se ESane 3 BS, eS .) Pee See ee,~.., 7s ee ft ae a Ss : PBR SePRs bP 0: SS eS ae es PSPS StSSSs88 SSSiss SS SS Se TAR Se SS = Sees Sei See RRS SigSerres as SS petSSeS say Se iERRS Papier! FS Se aLa a tee ae ae eee i ee 2nae pee Se Oye SSS: PE PCE RIEL
tz eS Ss Ses SES Se SS SRE SS ee 2 ae ae SS PS SES 3 Se SSS ES Sa pee A is at oe Aa Se 7a Meas 2 8 eg ee a S49 2B: Eel 2S ESS iZ S PSS SS ESR oT SSS SoS SST SSR eee Bas. 2 eS OS Se eee oy See A 3 SS Spee eS IS Fe ee ® aR oa UPS aS Pe lS ee ES BS Re ory 2 SSS a: Sug bee anes
HeSSE SSeSe Zoe Na Po Ree Sese ie Se = eeSo . ae2a BEOy is seeee an 2 ees SSS See Se Syme Wn Re : SS A ¢ Syee ei ates ae Se Faneeeoes ee eee SEs Psy
bs oe Se ee PEE eet aR aOPiS an vee ee lee | oF “Syren aER 1a ee SS Si SS Ss aS SS SSS BEES PSRPA LSeho go) an ase EA eee2gre aLe eseSS 2g. Gees SRE SS ae sSS Sas Eemi SS eepePR eee SSSbee RSees SeaeBREET TehRohe. BACT Teag. SRS OEERoirESS ae eS Ss SESS See ee sy ELE ea aeTEE PSs sf SSE SSrESS RSeee{SESS RES 2 SSS - Ss iffFaas SSSSBees eSES| ae foeSsRe CESS fad TaeSY SSS BSS “RS SSSES Le PRE LESS RS CPS SeenSSS SS {Se ee ee SSS SMEG OR 2 eae SS So3:pes SSSSSS op See iS SSS S Sa—— ibe TSSg pakee TeeaaS BP Sy ee ReeSSR SS
SER. t - oP aae MiB OSES TRS =—— Ss SF Re Bet SSS +SS ee ao SUE FeSS SoS SSS SsSas =sae Soe eS SP 2.sibs Sted i ON se ee ‘gS. -SREAS ER SSeS SSSRS PSs Esse oss Ss SSS =Se =4SSS SS RS TB Pepe SASS SRS RS Sees SSS SS *Ene ge RS ART SSSR AEG, PER SSS eee :=. SSS SSS SSeS =SSS SSS ee Peg Si giaae, EDS Ret +PRS SESEF Sg ES SERIA: SESS SSS =sSs= f+SRE TE Seay aaa ran 2S teres. SS STRESSES 3 eee oS SSS SSS SSS aOTE Re tg eea PSE” ee So SS Sasae SSS SSS SSS PSS SSR Bakee, ge,tee es wen See SRS ESS Ses SR {SS SS ae SS =3SSeS SS SSS SS BBE Ea -Sesseaeie’ Ss 1SEER Ses Pea 3. Py Sere 7 ....sdidscss at Oa shedee) OE FE Se Se Se eS SSS E ey eg .o* SSS Sie), ee Rese ack ena Pee eg ba 2 HGS SASS 2 SS Ses eS See Wea iis aoh ong | SSS SSeS an...s JS SSS SSS SSS -—. CS # -.3FY oy fe sees rs ee ree Sb ae Re St.) URE SSPE Rede SS SS:SSFee ES tes ¥fR SSS ee) SST ASS A$e FeEEE GES SRE aRSEA SRA She SShSs =SSS 2SSSS SSS SSS ae pepetet 7 BRS 8 32.SSS aa— SS Se SSS UES ASR ERS SEES Se au~AUD iat a Be OYeSSSeS ASS = Doe be SPS eee
Pan : —s =u... SS See 2 aS SSF a ee SS SS SS BF eae ee ee |
pea+aie a=eeSS SSS ee|. =.a:4 Bie a ee eeOS wii SE fs — Ss"—S SSSWS SS SS SSSS == ae eeeoy ———— OORER a. ve ———— SSS sk! 2 eS 2gee Fee we = SSS 2S SSeSA Rg tas crn oe ee AeTE, SSoe, RRMeg floes, eSB oetans 2 8eSPtaseeeleee Pa gS glee Lees = SSS See ES SS ee SSS Sas SS baionts St hee gue ake ORE ea pee ot Se Scape eT te” SESS ee ee4Sus SSSR SSS SS, SS Fr igs Se EEE SPNE getdate 2Setied fees oR gE SOR ge. Re .: = ae ASS toSer geee H,f0 SERS SS —s —— eSSs Se eee keaegtSS LLL SS fo eeeae Mee Renae naES csPs sien. : +Rwoe SER Be Pone RSE eSa JIS ne oe Se SS5 Bae ENTE pee INEAS “LS By, Pagecer Tage - 7ve SSwePes oe Ot FERS
Geee SSE SSS SSS Sess SS . 5 Peel eo cna Th Pe Sg a as a rr EES eh Lo a soe - So BB oes
ee eee - Cou
ae >iS«SSS SS SSS enSRS SOR A SEES be ant ,UE Sy5:aS sultans 2gen Bee ge NRE ne Be .age Boe Pe Mg ee a Beas: Ss =- *SS oad oage yceeate Py wdgh sods Bedhseee BRASS L-egSOS. LR. ote ez. Sage .BEI qt : eae fle 1b 2oo OR eh sees ee SSS APR rhage SRO ayfdaS .aSP jRETR *.se 3 Skaereh aea ee 7) fee RL etot) ee ctsisae OE A =SSS =SSS ==“RS nsSS eeSe eeAEB - a oFota! Pees zBee Be ESS webet Vie SSSR. re fafen Res re SS SRESSE Seee Tne asOT nefgg sdSak Seng isyign Ge RS ‘ AEE — — RE (SP altg Ses Ss ns Soak Hes Saag eerePg Ree oeg aeRS feSb. Neha oeSin Ee a eae Mee >a. We SSeS: Sa OR. gpk ahe ~Siecs == Soy ESERSST ap ten en SeSs. meciag feRe 8 ee Foe Ra cB Sehgal go OO, Ose Rl Re es Baty og Bea “DAES eg Oe SS eh bea ether taper Frees Bees aed =F were, pert yee ete SST BS RS oe te te eed a eA Seite Tt oo ScreeA ee : SSR OS SSeS Se eer eeSaat: Ss 2 Fete beBA BSR Re .ee bret: + SESS wey Marte Fe,ees, my fieas 2P FD “eS BP eS aae a eae ee PB ieSPREE eSSS JiSi3, eRe See BSS
naniidge Has, See S O —— ass. Photo: fe Art Mus ) useum. eumf rlCambri SS. O icelliCrucifixion, TUCITIXION, C.Fogg om {ArGift Sof the gFogg 9. Botticelli, M Harvard University, O c. 1495, Friends Art M .
building, the Bargello, then called the Palazzo del Podesta, the main police headquarters of Florence. We recognize it only by its distinctive tower, which rises just to the viewer’s left of the Palazzo Vecchio. This tower was known as La Montanina; all Florentines of that time were quite familiar with its lugubrious bells that tolled the announcement of any impending public execution.
This Bargello, or “home of the jailer,”’ is now the innocuous national sculpture museum of Italy.32 But from the mid-thirteenth century when it was built until the sixteenth century, it was the home of the podesta, literally ““‘power,”’ the chief police magistrate of the city.33 In this building were housed both criminal
and civil law courts, torture chambers, and jail cells for condemned criminals awaiting execution. There was also a chapel where the condemned could rest his last night in spiritual preparation. Unfortunately, the interior of the Bargello (as we shall continue to call it for convenience’ sake) has been completely altered. The exterior nevertheless remains much the same (fig. 10). Cold and fortresslike, its gray-brown walls are relieved only by a few gothic windows. There are no attractive decorations anywhere on its four facades. Only the circular red cross
on a white field, insignia of the popolo of Florence, is still visible over the massive entrance portal on the Via Ghibellina. So plain indeed is the Bargello that the distinguished architectural historian Wolfgang Braunfels has written, “(The Bargello] is in no way a monument to civil authority.’’34 But Braunfels’s remark clearly ignored certain sights and sounds once vividly associated with the Bargello and which are now long forgotten. The very austerity of the building’s facades was in fact aptly symbolic of its purpose. What indeed must a poor culprit have thought about the Bargello’s “civil authority” as he was being dragged manacled through the great gate by the podesta’s birri (“cops’’) ?
Let us therefore follow a true case history, of an actual culprit prosecuted in 32. For histories of the Bargello in both form and function, see G. B. Uccelli, IJ Palazzo del Podesta (Florence, 1865); Luigi Passerini, Curiosita storico-artistiche fiorentine (Florence, 1866); Janet Ross, Florentine Palaces and Their Stories (London, 1905), pp. 208-234; Walter Paatz, “Zur Baugeschichte der Palazzo del Podesta in Firenze,” Mitteilungen des Kunsthistorischen Institutes in
Florenz, 3 (1931), 287-321; and Wolgang Braunfels, Mittelalterliche Stadtbaukunst in der Toskana (Berlin, 1953), pp. 189-193. 33. Concerning the nature of the podesta’s office and his “family,” and also the other police magistrates in Florence, see Stefano Fioretti, Illustrazione storico artistico della gran Sala del Consiglio detta dei Cinquecento in Palazzo Vecchio (Florence, 1860), p. 8. In the sixteenth century, the headquarters of the Captain of Justice, known as the bargiello or “‘jailer,’’ was moved to the Palace of the Podesta. The designation of that office became more and more associated with the building, and so it has been called ever since. 34. Braunfels, Stadtbaukunst, p. 190: “Im Gegensatz zum Palazzo Vecchio ist noch der Bargello ein solcher nach innen gerichteter Bau. Zu keinem Zeitpunkt bildete er ein stadtebauliches Problem. Er fiigt sich gleich den Privatpalasten organisch den bestehenden Strassenziige ein. Er wirkt keineswegs als ein Monument der Staatsmacht.”’
Icons of Justice AS
i
44 i
fe aa ey Fee ==. PSL
my BeSs8 ——
ese ihear SePep eeSS eeSS SS=SeSeay SS aeee te Soret ees Rayo SSeS
See Sere ee So Se SaeeRoe CesSey aeaoe SSS gya SS hy oe eee ae =e See eee Suey Se Re ae if
= Weert LS Speers ae aenSSeo Sr eg SSeS Soe se eed BRE oS Rea SA eS Tie ees eS Re oS
See a Re 5 : Sp Ss a SRE x
Sere oer ee a SESS EE SES REavd a SS pees Renks9 pee ere ES Eger soe tee oe ES nd
Se NS ee See ea a Recess pee eae
pSee PaSSSee Ps REE ESS eee
Sees SAR gem Sree ey SSeS ees BSS sSees re 2 Se tease Sigg pS5 :: Sea hae SSE SER Spee weesens Sa ses. SF ae Hanere esa 32: eg Soy ae
SS Se = pat mebsteyaee pee TSS See eS Te
Foe eS SSE epee eet ee esESS fai AY =See Seee aPros moe See Pale Ss ee 3 Pasa i Se hea aria SEES SS Rae Ses Soe See 3 sty — SBE Pees Cee oe Saag sa pee BS,eSaet ke ‘gSeen... Soe i:i
SSS es ee esa Pageant BCPA eee SEY & SS pSSe Rteii:i Sas Oe ees es“LSS SSE fe SSeS 8aFas aos 35 SS SS SS eee aees eS fite, Sas SES se SS fss 2S Seed oe SSeS Sgn Ss ete Se ee SH BESS Sugg =pS =See ea Sig ;fi Sas ee aera SSeS See See eee Baan Se: VES = eS SS IS eS ae SSS | oe SS ee Syaioa Biers fei SS Ae 2a Seas Shore Ree 8 SS Boh SS ae gin, Ss RS AR bE ess oe eg Sa a oS SS Ssieji oes Soe HAS ie eS eee Sen ee: See Au i Sea SSeS ES Se SS Ss ErSa igg! SE Wee SeRegs Bees eee eee » See a eaeee SeyeSFR iy ae PSR SSS eeSPER tg pieRe SALE ASS 2 ee Peston, Sed.SESS Pee oa Re ,
SSSBRAS ee eeCA 2s aSee ee eee os ge SRR RENS nSOE at SSeS ss eae See eS ss gh toi. SSS aes SayBee eee iee PSE Seed? Sera Soe "Ghose SApn ee aaeSSS ee ateBY eS Reg sah SSeS. RyS3e3.< a = eee Ot ee eeos eae et oS oe ae... eee eeeia=sR Se eee RE See, BeeSeg 2S2S eae! SS
Sse ae WERE ea 3 BLee OES a ae Ogee OR Rc: aes ndSo ee ER se Joi Dees,See SSL SSE RR Se Shy ee E Soar SS]eee SSeS SSS eee VES eeETHee pat aera NyeeieSSfee aes Sees aegdetateeeeee gee
ee fo ee Bo os Sele pace ee SRR code Hess Ree SS
SSS REE ee PE se‘St Ae eg 2SE4~.eee Sees eegts ET Saaeen SSS SS SPA et!py Miedo ees Re peRRPeet ee tay aa ets oeSoRa gee PRae oR retea Sr ts FF S Sa eee SSeS Lae oy akeA Oe PRE RES eae hhaSP Shr ~ Sem 77BS SigeES =aom BERRY “ages pdr Se E eR: SRY, aaees oF “Abbeys sSay eeseast Sey x BSss ee Sesa itSSR emery eee Sylgcee RB esgee Aaes BA Bee HES = eee pee ereea 2PSS eS Sad SERa es So fi Sl aetSSoS eee SasWho (GOR LPS pS Se gedES BS:
SS ae ee es Psi RScg oe Si Ee ims a ere fee ee ae ae wet Rees he nh Sa ee Seer
pee A Beary oe oP Be wees Mere etre RS ec ciaree oan: ae aed eee fe ae peg Bere ae pet Biot oS wh. ES Re eS Sh ees Oe SE SSS aapeapestee a: Secenee Be neti aSEY aoyinit mtg sSeay Se. Set yy een -tsBBR waves ae ido ha eee Ee. RES SS ieee aes ogHeese eS SSS RT plane Sige: fiExe Tato SeCe: ee bimeates anit ee eee pan |iesPa St ee h Sete aS, a pee care i pune aRFBath a el aieSSS d 11REA See oe Ot pkey aSR eee Feies “eer. peat en pia his ks So tae Bas Seseee eR SSS Sh. eeSNE MaceYee CREESeo SEReo, See homer aeSSS oT SR tye ckgOA See Te oo aeee Scorareey Phi a Ro ae pea Sara.AS See Be get see ee ee SAS Tae oes a Petry PRE Re se SEIS yee ame Day eS ae Cr Seer a ee Seen Popes ae Bie Be Pout 5 Set See oe Sy
[SS eee “StopRe fey, BeeHERE BPR REE ReLS WHEE SHeegey 2 See Be aegis aEer EES: eSa5 tg aesnes i RRO MereBev {RMB peck gigre Sn Sud PSS SoS gs Poo) ee Pete Pea SER eS Se DLSLE beers ee.Sees BigrEee Se Sere ratSepeeny Bee | es anepyPretaRees: re BG EgggSSEES See sae Rapier ShSkPA eS
SSS Aes eRe Gabe i SRS SA RE SNe: Se ha SRA Ee Mops SEED deo TRE ES? Se es ee Seay: ee Se ae a ee ee REARS
Seeaes i oes a pastes EE RSE AR PRES Ss SEE gSSoo, et hs.igaeSS) S SE SIR segSeBa Teepe RR oh foe: BiG eI Pegi haareal SEE. Sega iET SsJBee SR een? | Paes | Poe P< eeian TeLaeee SSeS se Seni we iyaS +ese eg pene sihgtipeP ia PER ETT 2s Se eSoi, BSA ae Tage ree PCa Spee “ae Bad Ege: SRE, hie: Se SER ER SomOE SESEwa eee eS eb aWEY, peat ROA RRASy Ss RS aaeBe ieeee BSS RR Ele EEO seFORE Ba SR, eae eee Suis Plies aS aeh fae oSSee Sos Bes eee SPECS 6, SSR SS GE ES Sarasa as.eg Bish ue yeSa wewe StBEARS. Saag shSs et oie}! See ba RT gaeae BRS ieee eS pasta thSEAS, eae! ReSree. di eyes Alas Pit RSS Se as Be 22 SESS Peas SOP TEE ae eeSRS aSEe ee BS RB Ska Rae ata te oe fears eee EOIN 7ect Pa eee eas Se a i Saree RR EP TL HEUER igs 6 OEPSE ee Tae SEERC ped eensieee Ba AL TERE IE Sue 7See a rae aacME et abttige oon gS SSS SS Syde agefe Set ok Ese rad eo ee yap ED BEee GEctke Bneg ot a ae pias Sa ae THES bie et ST RSH ER. Bia THEE, Es RARE te Rat heRia ied heeTe Sie Bie Beever Aeeaey. Sc ==eS Specs da SeTg Pa es age se haces aig a bs Saari CRESS Bet on Rey Bes eee Egle et gS ReeBg lcs BR UPd ASRS Seaeeeae ie ee de uPG08: De yas sti Raia Ce aaae REBEL yi sisaps eS gi EES TSESee ae ee pReky Sure Beeyriche s: Borer SansBea Au pe
SSeS eeHERS Peo 8as|)OSLER eee RR Sh SieBH TEI RE! isygeeest Bele As Se TRE SEE ee Soe ahaa Speieey ==Sane Reet eas, Bee? Sees FEO ogae aaan es Bee Mee oe oe ERE ESE ot weg Hs SR eee =. eee SSeSeae es eee eri eae EASaE S38 Se Seger mE oss TES. SES SRpees cei COMES Rego tel SA Eaea SN RRBES See Ek tySo 2 aeee abiagaasr tren. Fig t pesoer? Ee. Se |ate SS eee Cosh eeBEE SasEASES Se BREE PRES AEE opal) SES ee eae ©RRA Cease Al Bee eeSPOR Sepsis pam Ege
0SSeae Sen pee ee eee eee aeaeetude ache Rue SE kragg ee ieGertee aan ee eePES pal Sn Ae Ge aes TEE saa RE *aan eeSECA ee oe es eres eu eSSy = Papas ween Bas.de ar eS a ea a TRB age oe Seay Be a A ARSE Re BPP Saye og, Btn Ee BO SEAR igie 8b7 ge Ree Free Teen aa ty cul ee ahSe ae nee Re Paa eee. Dee i Sesion ee ee ER Ee Gee Sra See Sao RS PG Sree siesta sine Ba ee LEE coSat Sidam SBE Rint“hag 3 par Ses a aes: it ScrABR eg Le isSd gg age ERS hyDeh SRA SS gots, = Saree Bree
Sao ap eeeee ae Bip SueSS, Paes aE et SEEPS RGEC all Pe eeaBen NAieE =ee, Sea, SPR MsgrGe’ OeTR So SPs ge ee 3 Legh ae NEOn ee RN ee SSR ieaSoh weiss: Bi Seae apse SS ce HS RR ee ese pate)ESSRS pa gh 2 ET Ve ere ee Taisen serena Cargo 2 Renee ae Sy ee os EGR ieeeeek mifiyy Sat sini DBUGLE PES Eo eeOP Boe State ee Pre LE ee peae CBee aah SER See Sere ee ee =a URE IS aSah whey GRE Pcce ne ae oe Sn SES geo == B paar SSS SSS =—S eeSSS : SSS SS aon ;rE: ann ESer0 Ye Se ee eS Se SS SSS SS SS Se SS :) See SSS ee :
_SS : Ss SSee ;ESS — SS SS SSPcbie gee SE SSSSS2s 6 See SSS =UR “SSoee Ss eo SSS SS SS SS SS SS Ss SSSSRES eSSSSeeeBSS, SS SS _SES ° J += = : :SSS ES SSS Ee SSS PES PERE SS SS SS ee =BG SSS ESSE Eee =: 4 . . SSeS SSS ESEE SEES 8 SSS SSSS SSSSS SSS SS 2s SSS SSS SSeS SSSSeS Ss SSS SS ae Saas aaaS SS=- SSS fos A eS SSS ee Bes, Bhs oh Ss SS RRS SSeS SS SS SSS ee ge =e ss ~ = : | Se op Je SSS, PRE o SEES, ag) Ua SE BAS TGR NSS eer :: SSS Se SRST a ae SSR EE Ee ess : E Eee * . pros
— oe 0 ——— ee ee SS SS eens pee ee eee ae fips : cee, : : SF et A SSSe rl Y = a FF SS ee EUS BSS re ee oe ee Saget lala - : RE REARS" OED go & er “ . oo‘ 8—eeeeeeSSS ee SHEERS Sy SE ERE gSBEERS See EES SEIS Waa Tedeagige SR ee eS ERS —— wtSSR : ~ He : LSBs. oy — SS eee a HS RSSeSaeSeSee Boe EEE gE=SaaeES REE hha : Hoh : Ee
= Eg ies g 0 A as bee Sl a ie Se ee ee SSS SSS SS RBS ESE is SS SSE SS ee Soo Se ee oe . | . | eo . : SS Se ee ee SoS aera eS SSS EEE Lo) SERS SSeS Se — SS Se ee aS AP cee ines fet BER Bagi BNA AoE SORBET ay Sa SAAS EES ESSE BEE ns : SF &
SSS ee SHESSE GC SSSEST 0 Wh eee eg SSS | BOGE RL ASS SSS Ss SPSS Se RS ee CRS SSRN RR SEE doh ages Mig UE ERE SP UER hice ; ”“
SSeS EO LP0SS eS ge Seaeeeeoef :#; :: Ts = aw Se ee ee 7 Ss. Ss SSS =. oSS225 ee “SSF iS RS Se ee SSUES 0g = Se Se Eee ee 28. 2S ee oo : ep Bee ow
eee ees SP Sas . lo, SSS SSS SSS Boy aR SSS ee Sa SSS oS SSS (ESS EO Ge Me eae eee Nee Beh SL Bs Be reer : | = 7 SRS poy Ses oieh eReeih Paden ete BS (Bieta es TUDE Sa Se Re SS SSSR SE LEER UES SAG Se a eS SSS See SSS nS Se SS RSSCS Coe SS SSS ae a : | i :
See es TS Te we . ao i. eS ae aeen Srey Eyed RS ge SE Se SS Se SS Re aera (SES ge ee ee SE gs : =: a] oo | aneae = See SeoS SeSe eeeSSFeSSS Sg Te ts.3! UsBNeGEoR See Se SS 2eeSS abSS = ae SSeS SSS agpBOE SSS $ ee5 ee Seg eS 1p fees SEES SSS 2S SSS SSS SSS SSS Se SSaee SS Shes SSS SSS Se SS SER HskFe S= SSS eS SSS ae SS.SSS Ss SSS BS ge SS ES SS SSS SS SSeS ESSSS SSSSSS SS Bisea : 7 cee ia heb? PARES OL RS SSSLSS SS. SSSSSSSS adeeeRE EA ShSSS SSSSSSS SS SE SSS EE ee Las . : ond ~=
= POO eee rae as — =—sees=-. i—rw~——C“Ci‘C‘“ eee OE | . ......... =—. eeSp: SS EeSRcecal
| ......§| ee . SUS So sos GSS SS oo oe Beas | . A
= ee ee ee ee ee So SSS ee ee eee ae ce a ed Se = SS SS SS Sy ‘ ae a SS ee eee ee BEES SESS SRS ESS eS es ro oa wy uid E PRL nBee Evid fs Say 38
a= ee egies age SES eS ae BOO La SEE oes pana SURE RES SRS oe Ee Se Se Ete “2 e8e PE he Phe SA EE erp Rosner BEE ERE SS 7 ae bel 2 : 2g SER RRS wi S.. r= a . oe eal
ee — eee SSeS ge : 1 SEER ae 2B Se ee eee fe EERE eh) SRA Ghai OS, AUER ee Bey) ASRESES ined ey: i ee “s. =
Se a.eeae : Ch. creeaePS edaeee a ee :ie3 ,“al SSS eeeareas SSF 5 tad =S Se Le SSS SSF SS SS SSS SS : eee POTS So = eee RES Br neh 8 Eee a ee 7 A SEER oa eR ae aan Se ee 7 &
| = aa Ss SS. = Ro PES=ay ho os gst fe CURL MEL Me ks Hh En BR _ a Sah ces 2SS SSS — .—§|iSS = eS 3 =rtpSos SS: ERB SSS OY eeWAG DEERE TSO USE ee CUD US BeOSB Pe Eo oe eee =e eS
SSS SS SSS a 2 SPGne. gs) foe eee Bie = = Se Neat i LER RE eS eed gS SE Re a Bee “ Pe = Sie
; oo Fee SS SS SS SSS Seg Ssape = a See ae: Pt = REESE UE SRR A NS Rs Sg EEL RGRRAE 8. sy ae B a cca 4 )
: oe SS SSS SSS SSS SSS SSS SS [SSS SSS SS SS a — SS SSS SSS SSS Se ee, Se ee ee gL ee eee ERR Pe SSS SSS SSS SSS SES SE SS SSS SS SSeS fo SSS SS SS SSS Se Seeds SSS SSS SSS SS See ESS YY ;
Christ have mercy on my soul.” The real subject of this panel, however, is not the hanging of Rinaldeschi but rather his redemption. In the very center of the scene, the artist represented a cosmic battle between angels and devils for the possession of Rinaldeschi’s soul. The angels, as we see, successfully beat off the demons with their swords. They hold aloft a tiny, naked, praying figure. It is Rinaldeschi’s spirit, at last reprieved because of his sincere contrition and terrible penance.
58 Pictures and Punishment
CHAPTER 2
Effigies of Shame:
The Trecento
Seven beautiful figure drawings in red and black chalk, usually attributed to the early Cinquecento Florentine painter Andrea del Sarto, still exist today in the Gabinetto di disegni of the Uffizi Gallery and the Duke of Devonshire Collection, Chatsworth. They are on five separate sheets; obviously studies for a painting of a common subject since all show a young male. One drawing shows him nude, the rest in contemporary military garb, hanging upside down by one foot (figs. 22—-27).! What strange and undignified poses! It almost seems that Vasari’s “perfect painter” had abandoned the rules of Alberti and was instead here designing images for tarot cards. What are we to make of these handsome sketches of such unusual iconography? The fact is that these are preparatory studies for pitture infamanti, officially commissioned effigies of shame or more properly “‘defaming portraits” of indi-
vidual enemies of Florence. They are, furthermore, the only extant pictorial evidence anywhere of what was once a rather thriving genre not only in Florence
but in other North Italian cities such as Bologna, Siena, Milan, Parma, and Rome. Moreover, the commissioning of pitture infamanti provided one of the earliest models for state patronage of the arts at the dawn of the Renaissance. Why did this art flourish only in northern Italy, and why did it go out of fashion 1. These drawings have all been published and discussed by John Shearman, Andrea del Sarto (Oxford, 1965), 1:161—1623 2, 320—321, 324, and 340—341. See also S. J. Freedberg, Andrea del
Sarto (Cambridge, Mass., 1963), catalogue raisonné, pp. 196-198.
59
so suddenly in the sixteenth century, leaving us with only these drawings as examples of its once fearsome potency as an instrument of official state punishment? Before studying the drawings further in their own historical period (see
Chapter 3), we shall attempt to set them in the larger cultural context of the medieval Italian city-state under revived Roman law during the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries. In early Florence, the pittura infamante had much to do with the bitter struggle between Guelphs and Ghibellines, and perhaps because of that heroic memory, the defaming art held out longer there than in any other Italian community. The legitimacy of the pittura infamante is rooted in the ancient Roman-law doctrines of fama and infamia. “‘Quid sit fama?’”’ So began a major section of Tractatus de maleficiis, an important early commentary on criminal law as
defined in the Justinian Codes by one Albertus Gandinus, judge in the podestarial court of Florence in 1288 and again in 1310.2 “Fame,” the author wrote (following exactly the words of the third-century Callistratus in the Digesta of the Codex iuris civilis), “is truly the status of dignity without stain, according to the established customs and laws, undiminished in any way.’’3 In other words, fama, as a concept in the law of urban communes like Florence, had to do with a person’s good name, his or her honor, trustworthiness, and reputation among peers and neighbors. Before any citizen of the commune could
present a case in the civil courts, he had first to establish his fama. On this depended the credibility of his testimony. If, on the other hand, it should be found that the litigant suffered an infamous reputation, then he could be subject
to torture, on the grounds that his testimony was not believable. In the sixteenth century, a man branded “infamous” should be assumed a coward and not to be trusted.5 To the ancients like Callistratus, fama was understood as a matter of earthly renown only. To the early Christians, however, one’s reputation in this world 2. Hermann Kantorowicz, ed., Albertus Gandinus und das Strafrecht der Scholastik (Berlin/Leipzig, 1926), 2:51—56; Gandinus’s Tractatus is here published in Latin without translation; see also H. Kantorowicz, “Leben und Schriften des Albertus Gandinus,” Zeitschrift der SavignyStiftung fiir Rechtsgeschichte, 57, Romanische Abteilung, 44 (1924), 224-358. Gandinus was born
near Crema about 1245, studied law at Padua and Bologna and served as judge and podesta in Lucca (1281), Bologna (1284, 1289, and 1294), Perugia (1286), Florence (1288 and 1310), Siena (1298), and Fermo (1305). He died in 1310. 3. ““Equidem fama est inlese dignitatis status, moribus ac legibus comprobatus, et in nullo diminutus.”’ See Kantorowicz, Albertus Gandinus, 2:51. Gandinus’s definition here is derived from
Callistratus’s commentary in the Digesta, lib. 50, tit. 13, 5, 1. See also Theodor Mommsen, ed., Digesta Iustiniani Augusti (Berlin, 1870), 2:930.
4. Kantorowicz, Albertus Gandinus, 2:75 ff.; see also Piero Fiorelli, La tortura giudiziaria (Giuffre, 1953), 1:265. 5. See Frederick Robertson Bryson, The Point of Honor in Sixteenth-Century Italy: An Aspect in the Life of a Gentleman (New York, 1935), p. 37; also Mariano d’Amclio, ed., Nuovo digesto italiano (Turbin, 1938), 6:s.v. “‘infamia,”’ 1054—1055.
60 Pictures and Punishment
was vainglory. The true Christian must have contempt for the honors of such worldly fame. He should seek instead his fama in the realm of heaven. Real fame, that is, Christian glory, can be awarded only by God. That any Christian, no matter how humble his origins or evil his sins, could attain eternal fama
through good works and penance was one of the great appeals of the new religion over classical paganism. During the Middle Ages, however, both the pagan and Christian ideas of fama blended, especially in the chivalric code. The knights of King Arthur and the paladins of Charlemagne pursued the Holy Grail equally for earthly honor and the glory of God. This blending also served the new urbanism of Italy during the twelfth, thirteenth, and fourteenth centuries. The growing communes, many
like Florence, were filling up with merchants asserting their right to carry on commerce in spite of assaults by the privileged magnati. These merchants very much needed a tradition of fama which they could promote and support with as much vigor as the feudal barons defended their own honor. The leaders of this new burgher class thus sought to equate Christian salvation with selfless public service to their commune. All individual desires must be subordinated to the common good. Thomas Aquinas, by no coincidence an Italian, wrote in his thirteenth-century Summa theologica that it was natural for man to seek fame and honor, but he should not yearn only for earthly renown.7 Since the qualities that earn earthly fame are not intrinsic but come as gifts from God, it does not behoove the individual to take full credit. Rather, he must thank God for his fama and above all receive his wordly praise with humility. The good citizen should avoid the sin of pride, so often associated with the haughty hereditary barons. At the same time, the new urban merchant rulers suffered their own intrinsic class sins, that of avarice and vainglory.8 By the early Trecento, a specific statute of Florence forbade any government official from placing his arms on the facades of public buildings or displaying them publicly beside images of Christ, the Virgin Mary, the patron saints, the Holy Church, the emperor, the king of France, or the commune and people of Florence.? Civic monuments to an individual’s fama could only be erected by others, preferably after the honored was deceased. 6. I am grateful to Professor Georg Nicolaus Knauer of the University of Pennsylvania for allowing me to read his unpublished article “Uber den Nachraum bei den Griechen und R6mern.”
7. For a discussion of Aquinas’s attitude on fame and glory, see Curtis Brown Watson, Shakespeare and the Renaissance Concept of Honor (Princeton, 1960), pp. 34-37 and passim. 8. See Lester K. Little, ‘Pride Goes before Avarice: Social Change and the Vices in Latin Christendom,” American Historical Review, 76 (1971), 16—50. 9. Statuti di Firenze, rubric 109, lib. 3, June 20, 1329, published in Giovanni Gaye, Carteggio inedito d’artisti dei secoli 14, 15, 16 (Florence, 1839), 1:473; Luigi Passerini, Curiosita storicoartistiche fiorentine (Florence, 1866), pp. 15—16; and Walter Paatz, ““Zur Baugeschichte der Palazzo del Podesta in Florenz,” Mitteilungen des Kunsthistorischen Institutes in Florenz, 3 (1931), 319.
Effigies of Shame: The Trecento 61
It may be fair to state that the rise of the art of portraiture in medieval Italy owes much to this increasing legal attention to fama.10 One might also surmise that interest in classical Roman models—that is, sources for portraiture in ancient Roman sculpture—only wheited burgher temptation for vainglory. In any case, the public display of portraits of celebrities was a matter of no casual significance in the urban communities of the late Duecento and Trecento. In 1310, for instance, the Florentines offered their highest compliment to the visit-
ing Robert, king of Naples, by painting a full-length portrait of him on the facade of the headquarters building of the Guelph party.11 Not only was the portrait itself important in this sense, but where it was displayed. The “‘setting”’ of such honorific art, as Richard Trexler has noted, communicated to the view-
ing public more than the representation itself that here was a subject to be honored. 12 In the instance of King Robert’s portrait in 1310, the Guelph party building symbolized the political attitude of the Florentine government, oppos-
ing the power of the German emperor Henry VII, who was attempting to reinstall Ghibelline rule in Italy. The Florentines, in vain as it turned out, were seeking to enlist the French king of Naples in their struggle against the emperor. More often, of course, the church building served as the appropriate setting for portraits of fama. When the English condottiere Sir John Hawkwood (better known to his Florentine soldiers as Giovanni Acuto) died of old age in 1394, the commune decided to erect a monument “‘per fama,” as one chronicler noted, to the old warrior who had performed such good services to Florence.13 This monument was finally completed in 1435 by Paolo Uccello in the form of the huge fresco still extant in the interior of the Florentine Duomo. What the artist attempted to capture in this portrait was an image of dignity and great reserve. The old soldier is shown in armor astride his war horse, but neither rears up as in the turmoil of battle. Rather, Hawkwood is depicted reining his horse to a parade walk. He is a veritable icon of self-control, a symbol of nature tamed and the triumph of virtuous reason over unrestrained passion.1!4 to. On the development of the portrait in Italy, see Emil Schaeffer, Das Florentiner Bildnis (Munich, 1904); Harald Keller, ““Die Entstehung des Bildnisses am Ende des Hochmittelalters,”
Romisches Jahrbuch fiir Kunstgeschichte 3 (1939), 229-356; and Rab Hatfield, “Four Renaissance Portraits,’ Art Bulletin, 47 (1965), 315-335. 11. Davidsohn, Storia di Firenze 3:537. 12. Richard C. Trexler, ‘Ritual Behavior in Renaissance Florence: The Setting,” Medievalia et Humanistica, n.s. 4 (1973), 125-144. 13. Giovanni di Pagolo Morelli, Ricordi, ed. Vittore Branca (Florence, 1956), p. 316 (originally written between 1371 and 1421). 14. See Eve Borsook, “‘L’ ‘Hawkwood’ d’Uccello et la ‘Vie de Fabius Maximus’ de Plutarque,”’ Revue de l'art, 55 (1983), 44—52. In the same year in which Uccello painted his equestrian portrait of Hawkwood, the Florentine humanist Leon Battista Alberti finished the Latin and Italian editions of his treatise on painting, De pictura, the first Renaissance discussion of what we today would call
aesthetics. Alberti’s advice to the painter to invest his figures with dignitas and “pleasing and graceful movements” seems to have been taken by Uccello. Alberti urged painters especially to
62 Pictures and Punishment
From the last decades of the Duecento, through the Trecento and Quattrocento, Florentines watched artists become ever more able to adorn their pictures with convincing attributes of fama, not only in portraits of the living but even in the imagined likenesses of saints and ancient heroes. The people saw these representations as agreeable mixtures of the individual and the ideal, and they yearned to have themselves so portrayed. To have one’s likeness painted or carved, especially in proximity to one’s tomb, meant that all the virtues of the deceased would be preserved and enshrined for posterity. This desire may have reached its obsessive peak toward the end of the fifteenth century in the production of wax votive portrait statues. The sculptor Verrocchio and his assistants apparently earned a fortune in this enterprise. The Florentine church of Santissima Annunziata became so filled with these wax figures, some even dressed in the original clothes of the subjects, that they had to be hung from the ceiling and stacked against the walls.15 There is no need to argue further that the momentum gained by the new “realistic” art of Quattrocento Florence derived from the conviction that this style mirrored the virtue and fame, indeed the heroic Roman heritage, of the
Florentine people. This is particularly clear in the sculptures of Donatello, Ghiberti, and Nanni di Banco at Orsanmichele, the paintings of Masaccio and Masolino in the Brancacci Chapel, and the writings about painting, sculpture, and architecture by Leon Battista Alberti, all of which stress the didactic tmpor-
tance of the arts in providing models of nobility and honor for the viewing public.16 If this be so, how could Renaissance art in the same breath also be argued as serving to degrade and punish transgressors of these esteemed social values? How did the evolving “‘realism”’ of late Duecento, Trecento, and Quattrocento painting and sculpture lend itself to a judicial system still trying to relate the punishments for crime in this world to the eternal damnation of the sinful soul in the next? Just as Roman law, having been adapted to the local needs of the Italian communes, carefully spelled out the doctrine of fama, so also did it specify avoid “movements that are too violent” and representations of figures “that throw their limbs about a great deal’ because by doing so, artists ‘“‘cast aside all dignity in painting and copy the movements of actors.” The writer, of course, was presenting a theory of art which would have painting teach moral values. His concept of compositione in pictures had to do with the representation of forms which would induce a feeling of nobility and moral uplift and at the same time play down any appeal to the baser emotions or “‘extravagant artistic temperament.” See Cecil Grayson,
ed., Leon Battista Alberti ““On Painting’ and “On Sculpture’ (London, 1972), pp. 84-85. 15. Aby Warburg, “Bildniskunst und florentinisches Biirgertum,”’ Gesammelte Schriften (Lich-
tenstein, 1969), pp. 89-126 (originally published in Leipzig, 1902); also Julius von Schlosser, “Geschichte der Portratbildnerei in Wachs,” Jahrbuch der kunsthistorischen Sammlungen des allerhochsten Kaiserhauses, 29 (1910/11), 171-258. 16. See, for instance, Frederick Hartt, ““Art and Freedom in Quattrocento Florence,” in Lucy Freeman Sandler, ed., Essays in Memory of Karl Lehmann (New York, 1965), pp. 114-131.
Effigies of Shame: The Trecento 6 3
infamia. Two kinds of infamy were recognized: de jure and de facto. Infamia de jure must be imposed by a court as specific sentence for a crime. It was often
related to the banishment and confiscation of the goods of an individual punished for crimes ranging from treason to nonpayment of debts.17 The legally
defamed culprit was forbidden to hold any public office or participate in any way in the affairs of the commune. Since infamia de jure was a decreed penalty, it could also be rescinded by the same judicial authority. Far more insidious then was infamia de facto. This meant loss of one’s good name for reasons beyond the victim’s capacity to correct, that is, from gossip and innuendo, local prejudices and neighborhood taboos. Certain persons were infamous de facto auto-
matically, by virtue of their religion, occupation, or status of birth: Jews, Mohammedans, prostitutes, actors, and executioners, for instance. So were the sons and daughters of those defamed de jure. A stain of infamy of either kind could destroy a family for generations by making it impossible to negotiate advantageous marriages and favorable business opportunities. 18 Most Italian city-states kept a ‘Book of Malefactors’’ in which were inscribed the names of all citizens infamous de jure. These would be read before the legislative sessions each year in order to ensure that the defamed would not slip back and reclaim their privileges.19 In Florence, this book was known as the 17. On infamia in Roman law, see Paul Krueger and Rudolph Schoell, eds. (with Theodor Mommsen), Codex iuris civilis (Berlin, 1892), lib. 2, tit. 11; Mommsen, Digesta, 1:pp. 81-86 (lib.
3, tit. 2); Antonio Pertile, Storia del diritto italiano 2d ed. (Rome/Naples/Milan, 1902), 5:359 (hereafter cited as Pertile, Storia del diritto); and Paullys Real-Encyclopddie der classischen Altertumwissenschaft (Stuttgart, 1916), 9: cols. 1537 ff. Concerning the application of infamia to the punishment of banishment, see Nello di San Gimignano, Tractatus de bannitis (Pescia, 1486), pt. 1,
fols. 32r-33v; Hans Planitz, “Der Schuldbann in Italien,” Zeitschrift der Savigny-Stiftung fiir Rechtsgeschichte, 65, Germanische Abteilung, 52 (1932), 134-259. 18. Concerning the lingering code of medieval honor still present among peoples of the Mediterranean world, see Jean G. Péristany, ed., Honour and Shame: The Values of Mediterranean Society (Chicago, 1966). See also John Kennedy Campbell, Honour, Family and Patronage: A Study of Institutions and Moral Values in a Greek Mountain Community (Oxford, 1964), for a remarkable observation of how the simple folk of a remote Greek village, untouched by the mores of the twentieth century, remain beholden to the old taboos of infamia just as if they lived in Trecento Florence; for example: “Each family faces the total community in a condition of dependence. The position it is able to occupy in public life, the quality of the marriage aliances it establishes, depend entirely on its social prestige, that is, they depend on the favourable response of enemies; or more accurately, on the inability of enemies effectively to denigrate a family’s reputation. Prestige and ‘name’ concern [the community] in every context of public action. ‘Better to lose your eye than your name,’ runs a common proverb. . . . Since the downfall of one family validates
and in some sense improves the status of other families, men attempt by every means of allusive gossip and criticism of conduct to deny each other their pretensions to honour. . . . The subtlety of gossip and ridicule as sanctions is that since they do not generally operate in his presence, they offer a man no excuse to do violent response. He may respond to the insult of an individual, but not to the laughter of the community which he senses but seldom hears” (pp. 270-272, 315). Concerning a relevant issue of honor and the taboos associated with its violation in early Renaissance Florence,
storiche, 10 (1980), 287-310.
see Thomas Kuehn, “Honor and Conflict in a Fifteenth-Century Florentine Family,” Ricerche 19. Davidsohn, Storia di Firenze, 4.1:588—589; Pertile, Storia del diritto, 5:346.
64 Pictures and Punishment
Libro dei maleabiati. It had wooden covers decorated with the emblems of each of the four quarters of the city, and any magistrate sentencing a person to infamy had to report the name and circumstances to the keeper of the book within three days.20
Also related to infamy de facto and de jure were punishments of diminutio capitis, that is, punishments resulting in public humiliation for offences against the communal morality. This form of punishment meant that the culprit would be visibly shamed before his peers, often stripped naked and tied by an iron collar (called in Italian Ja gogna from vergogna or “‘shame’’) to a post in the middle of a busy market square. The place where this pillory once stood in Florence can still
be traced in the present Mercato Nuovo.21 The culprit would also be mitriato, that is, forced to wear a mitra or a foolscap of paper on which were inscribed his misdeeds,22 and to shout ‘‘Cedo bonis!” (I give up my possessions!).23 Sometimes the culprit would be driven through the streets and whipped, and sometimes he would be made to bear something symbolic of the crime.24 For instance, a man who pimped for his wife had to wear a two-horned cap;25 a butcher accused of cheating by short-weight must wear a pair of scales around his neck; a shrew 20. Joseph Kohler and G. degli Azzi, Das florentiner Strafrecht des 14. Jahrhunderts (Mannheim/Leipzig, 1910), pp. 198-199. 21. Pertile, Storia del diritto, 6: pt. 2, 386—387. In Padua there is still to be seen the pietra del vitupero where culprits were forced to stand humiliated before the public. See also Jacob Dopler, Theatri poenarum, suppliciorum et executionum criminalium, oder Schauplatzes der Leibes- und Lebenstrafen (Sondershausen, 1693), 1:738 (hereafter cited as Dopler, Theatri poenarum). 22. The origin of the mitra is discussed in Dépler, Theatri poenarum, 1:797—798; also p. 1135, where the author recounts how, in 1415, John Hus was led to the stake capped by a paper mitra bearing pictures of demons and the word haeresiarcha. This image of Hus is remarkably similar to that of condemned heretics painted by Pedro Berruguete (see fig. 6, above). In DuCange’s Glossarium madiae et infimae Latinatis (§: s.v. “‘mitra’’) is the following excerpt from the fourteenthcentury statutes of Mantua: ‘‘Falsum comittens qualibet vice in falsitate deprehensus et condemnatus aliquo ex casibus suprascriptis, si praesens fuerit, mitretur cum mitra papiri, in qua sit scriptum nomen et praenomen ipsius mitrati, et cognomen et agnomen, et causa qua sit mitratus, et per totam civitatem Mantuae ducatur per loca publica dictae civitatis et demum cum dicta mitra ad berlinam ponatur, in qua per totam diem resideat... .” 23. Pertile, Storia del diritto, 6: pt. 2, 386—387; also Dépler, Theatri poenarum, 1; 738; and Wolfgang Briickner, Bildnis und Brauch: Studien zur Bildnisfunktion der Effigies (Berlin, 1966), p. 286. During the late Middle Ages, hats were especially important in various punishments by humiliation. Convicted defrauders would be forced to wear a cap of special color so that people would everafter be forewarned of their character. Jews had to wear black, gray, or yellow caps. In antiquity, slaves were distinguished by wearing no hats at all. On the other hand, a red or brown hat distinguished a person of respect. It is interesting that hats denoting rank or office are often the only items of clothing allowed by medieval and Renaissance artists to sinners in hell. 24. Pertile, Storia del diritto, 5:346 ff.; also Georg Dahm, Das Strafrecht Italiens im ausgehenden Mittelalter: Untersuchung tiber die Beziehung zwischen Theorie und Praxis im Strafrecht des Spatmittelalters, namentlich in 14. Jahrhunderts, Beitrage zur Geschichte der deutschen Strafrechtspflege, no. 3 (Berlin/Leipzig, 1931), 305-307. 25. Pertile, Storia del diritto, 5:346.
Effigies of Shame: The Trecento 65
would have a stone tied around her neck.26 These kinds of penalties remained popular in village societies even until recent times. (One thinks of Hester Prynne forced to wear her scarlet “‘A”’ for having committed adultery in Puritan Boston, Massachusetts.) Yet another form of ignominious punishment was to associate the culprit in a ludicrous way with an inferior beast. For example, he or she might be made to ride backward on an ass holding its tail like the reins of a horse.27 This image, suggesting a “world turned upside down,” was intended to degrade its victim by reversing the traditional shibboleth of the equestrian hero. Infamous persons
might also be forced to kiss the posterior of a pig.28 In fourteenth-century Florence, as the Guelphs fought to gain the upper hand from the Ghibelline magnati and their allies, punishments of ignominy were especially popular. In 1303, for instance, a Florentine judge condemned for having Ghibelline sympathies was made to dress as a peasant and then be dragged to his execution by a donkey.29 Obviously, punishments of this sort should in principle be more effective against upper-class transgressors than persons with little ‘“‘name’’ to
lose.30 /
Trecento Italians, even as they mocked their errant neighbors shivering at the pillory in the public square, naked except for a ridiculous mitra, were also aware that every sinner in hell, which one day might include themselves, could expect just such humiliation for all eternity. In 1304 the Florentine chronicler Antonio Pucci described an actual theatrical spectacle of hell performed in the city by zealous youths, actors dressed in black as devils with animallike fangs, pitching forkfuls of manure at human souls represented by inflated cow bladders.31 This event was staged on a barge in the Arno. So many people attended that the Ponte Carraia, the wooden bridge from which they were watching, collapsed into the river resulting in much injury and death. The chronicler did not relate these tableau-vivant images to contemporary communal punishments, but there is certainly much circumstantial evidence, including Dante’s own vision of the netherworld, which indicates a popular belief that a distinct parallel existed between temporal and eternal vindictive justice. Certainly painters of the period borrowed from local images of public chastisement for their own representations of the inferno in the Last Judgment. Taddeo di Bartolo frescoed an especially ribald assortment of such punishments in his scenes of hell in the 26. Ibid., 343 27. Ruth Mellinkoff, ‘““Riding Backwards: Theme of Humiliation and Symbol of Evil,” Viator,
4 (1973), 193-177. 28. Pertile, Storia del diritto, 5:341. 29. Davidsohn, Storia di Firenze, 3:341. 30. Pertile, Storia del diritto, §:343, 420. 31. Antonio Pucci, Centiloquio, in Delizie degli eruditi toscani (Florence, 1785), 4: canto 31; also Villani, Cronica, bk. 8, chap. 70.
66 Pictures and Punishment
a2SPe ena pe so SS eeeSaeepeoe pe NG ee eat pe Set See eerre eee ee ORE ee {SR SRS RS, SSeeees aSEi es ee ee ae 7Se 3 Me =fa go Se eee eaeee ae ee LS BiSe henee aEas a segee BLE i St Ess aoeee Bn aoe oe beree ae t) Ere aanes Soe ereae Pa ESSee e reee oN Sy ee YP _eee eee ieee aE ee ee RN eS eee :‘aoe :_:3ge + oo ar ere iealee ee, Ee2eepSSR fee RO oSSead RhUS Re BCE Podpg Puy ee ae : ee fea SAT aeee gage ee Pe cael UP i RRtrESS it, aeeee Mey Rit. 2s HEE SS Se, Ri REE: eae uiSee hie eee: peeRN RE ogSe jayee ee eee Tie: SAE MOTE, SEESEE eh a4 “) poAR) Be SER Besa Pes eg .. Le Ce a ae a ee ee es) * ee Bg Ae '] hee ee eee wood ¥ ie ee Go Ss eee Pog ie ghee es Se fo = Se, Pe ew ee ee eee ; Paya fF a S| ee Se a es ue Sa ae 2. te ee SNR eR Bee. a ee a ie oe cola ae erat oa a YL a 0. SPSS Se SS SSS ee eee cit Aaa S SSeS ES aaa ee ey aera e AS SP Coe ar ee Riley SEER gree Tac SA eae S, ER mE Seo A SRL oa ce ee ESS CCS EMER 22 UES oan TES SUSE AER SR See Se RS RS Tee A ONY i # de Fey ag PRiSge SSSR & a Rae ee ee ca Re Rae pS eee Sa nage ao ae SSSR ag ses Sa a2 yee Se ae Se cS ig a ear ea ae PES BS pt SS NES Fy Rae ame a 1) ee eo go By eee 2 aaa ey a oe ae ea SOROS ES AEN
poe F Sepa fs aS a fo Po gl a a a fo ees 7 i re ay a aSeaPg Ce Ll =... .geeeSAss a,Aga a©,Ee oe aa ae |Se a ae :od 3,sr Se ge ee es ee Se ee ee a ls a as & gee eeBe$2) Ss oe co geet see Se ee a ee ee ee SS Be a ee a Ee ee :a ; pe-ai eae es ee oyA See ee ee ee SEC gS Rc ec aa eae ae RR a a ea ea. me, ee Ss SE Ae eo: 2 See Sane) ae Sc ne. — ee RP ee NN A Pe
; Pete _ Pe co gee SS Se eeSe eee oeee foeeegoto. See 5, ee ae elas hte ine BEBE Co. ees .:ek ;aaook BARS RRR | giee eeeS See Ss Ge Siete Seeas 2Oe Se eS Le acBue ee ee pe eeRS oe GTN ae Cdve eee{eee ae e £2 Ge Ge ee oe, Pay Sh Bee cea ee d CPO ee PPSlee ee ee eeeePeee aeeR oe Sc Ee eeseeeee ECSee Rr oe Re yo a eee a eeeg ae bBo a SC ee pee eo ee BS ans art fo By A SURES ae fs ee See ee ee ee Ge Ne ee, Bo 1). eee ae oo ce i ro e. a eo ee 3 2... : oe eee Ee aS 2h Sgr eee Be ae 7-4 aoe & a Age pa. Deep ga op en Beg Ree eee oF Be ee eee232 eeeeeeSee feasee ee eeSoEe ee ee ee eeaeS ae NN ie, aoe eee ae eetBs ao a es fat foe ee en eo eS ee io: a EN ee ee i Be ee wi EY ee 2085S oS ae re ae oo Ee ose ee Se a es Se Pa Ss pose 42 Ne ee BSR rk ae : , 32 eee ee ee eee eee See eee ge Sees ee RSE SG Ra age ce Cee eee Se ee ek Sy RR i eS ee eee OS, Ae cree |. oo i ae SS: 2 ee See ars ce Rr eee Eee See ee ae ee oe ee ee es eee eS = SE Gn, RARBG OE ge Se ee,” ee RR Ns” Ses es ee. (ees eee ceea erg ks PEE eeSg! ae 2ARIES geS CARE re ESESS + AS § -oo a ee BRR : eSsefioiRE 5h.gyi i SP aesaeSe Soseaerewees SS ae = ae grueS Jie Ci See ae Sa Bis :gates TEES yee Sage ck ERs ee mS
i. .| SESE SLoes oeoePee ORS UGS 2c Se SeaWES J ee: SS eeSbg RSWek ae at ee 2 RE Reeeetseeey SBS es PS = a. Cn as, sin ee Magne ree| Ree roaig, 2SJR SSSRSP Sy SsSS es pre ee SRE Sif, CAPRA meen is RRR ae Higyig oypeeeretces] PEERS SY SSeSER SS Se eesAOR ee BORE OS SSeS pe eee Se ee we a SHES 2S SS 9-2 aeSaSeSa SS SSR SSS eAeene acees: pete hEioe on FREE ees :8aes ES | HyRS SSSSRS ES See ed SS .SSS eeSS RE ea BAS hs, ESEsMetee op Rae Spe Tp Shogo Pree a 3iSPRIS HosBee SSPE pee pS SSR RE Lee ee ee See RRRES ce VASESSE RPS Se eSgePPSSSS SG ico: See aa Pees os SES: TS ggg ese, ee ee SeeGS ee Sees
i ooLh a SSS. sts 28s a Ree ee Sa Sage 0 SsASSee ee Saha = aefcaeSee &,SSS ax 6SST # oeSS SeSSS eS oo PS See Sais SS SS SS ge ey le ee poe ee gee SUES RRa eRSoe ae See Se SSS. ee ee ee “Se SoS
==ooSS SSS SSS eee Soe SS SeSars ee SSS eS eae Spee Seka Se SE CASS SR SSSSeSERRE SSeS SoS RSSSSa 8 ue ae A= ee2=Ou SseOe SSeS See SS AS REPS: Ea Loc Fe Se yg SSE ET 2 = 1 Rn SSEr RS eee Se SSfee aS SSaeSS SSSee Se SSSe oeSSS SayeS SS Gee Se eee eS Se SeSe ae SS poleRR QSRER ha RS Se OS Sette Ss| Ss SSS SS SSS SS RS =e == ee 3SSS eeSsee oe ee eeaea RESMER sayy eaeREkesSSS Soe gs ao2RESTS aSSSE SeESF eS
* a 7 a Ses SS Se eR SRG Oe pe SS Ss SSE SS ease age Sere Rete tee es oes ee = es a—. SSne ee Es == Jog ass Se SS SSeS SSs AeSREY one ds!UST Py iesat, SHES VERE CUS AerSSS AI Cant RESEES “BESS SARSSS SLATES SSA ESS aS PATS SE Pf 9ee-_ Sr[Ss yeSSS TEATS SESE Pir Pe SE RES, JERS) Ss aSSR Se Se SSS SoSePSS. TS SSS SSE SS RS SSSS sseeSSS SS egret Sg epsMuerte, hy pOcE ERR Re SRS, SRUsp ASSE fe gah SMS oeSNe oseSSS SSS eeseeoeeeees 5 oeeS
oF ae —SSS = a |. foley e JenSSS E Se A Suis Shame SREBSSEST SRSeS ee AgRUN. Ps aga nL soy astap iow!BUSSES Ts PRS RSS ASSESS SS SS SS SS SSS SSS SSS SS eS Se SEGeeae aASS ee oo OS SS SS SS SS ee Seee ee ee DESERET UME A fe SS ge ee 2_ESAP SSS SSS eS SSS SSS So SSS SESS eS ee ene aeere Pet YF a8eee SEAe FREES SeSSSS :eo Sees SSS SSS SSS SSS es SSS SSS SSS SSS Se ateee eesPSs eeeee ee ee eee ne BOER Sed eS See So Se Se SS eee SSE leUae ee ere ae OE 0oe1Seo ee iSSoe =So eeSSS ee PCE Gila hy UR Dadi oy JS oST aS OS SSS SSS a 2S SSS Ses SSS SES = SES SS ESS oe ee Se Se eee Eee sg ro wo e.,rrrmrrrrs—“‘“CSC oe
ee - . — = = ee ee Su eces AR eA ee Eee ee oe _. _.
ee SS Se et oe oe ee wo eS So ee | 12 SS SSS ISS SSS Se ee was eee eS ee ate er st cc ay oo 2 Se Pe SSS I SSS SSS SSS SS ie ESEGE Fg : ihe = SS oe SS ee ee ee ESS SEES Se SS eS © eS SS =e SS eae ERE ee MoE a! REIS! [USS Set: SERS oS eee 2 RSE or, Sse SS SSH SASCSS SS ARE Se See RSSS SeESs SSS SS SS Se {So ge SSeS Se eS
BRR OY.SSFaSSaySSS SSSeee SSS RSS EEa.SE eaters : wet DER e aSe oogee 33 SS ne SS eS ae Sees Cs=SS a a™/ aa SAS Re Dey RsSES a HA © ae Be eS OR) oo) US 3G Sye SS aS SS eS SSge SSeS SaaS See —:SF
. SESS SS SSS Se Bsr CR SAEs a SA ; ah Pr Lee eS Se eS. See Be as eke aS oS 3 ee See eS SSeS
SS SSS RSS SSS ASS SeeSee RS OP SES SP : noo a ee oaRRSS Se Ps EE eS ocSees 88 SSea] eee ae 3° SSS SSSoes SSS Vee Ago) eePEELS Es &aS . Pees SeSADR SeesSaaS a. eoRIaESeeSTeeSee, eeSESS AE ESS OSSeRHST RAR an REY TSE | SSS See Ses Se eS PARE AP CAGES Ses BST i ae er ee Peers | gh RG FRR ESR RS aE BSE 2 Ree SS SENS Shs Dew BG GEo SEY AE SS SSS SASS Ag Se Base TAS
: oe | = oS Ss Sees eo es ee : oe ao “ OE Ba ene sg re SEE a PRR BES Be ke aE pace eee he cei SE a SST ees SARE SOS S .
= ee Ge ee ee fo ee -_
SSS Se SS See ShSS 28 SeS5 SL8 aSA ed RSS eek Tea Pal AT 2 sky Sb kee “aH heed ry se pSCUE RY Sete I Seetsgeass We oo Bank,Cals pare! wine Ae a SSE : ons eS.Ses S825 MES SS ra HaSSSR? See e SSS = |RoaSsaes ee+=oSr EeFaiare te pans an ees SOSES eSwoes pags Sas 32 =gee SSS ao eeeky SEEETDSRESSS SEGA JS SSS See Se SBS Gees eySua Se RI a ee eSBerner ore : i Sr a—
as a oe ee ee ah ee oS eo ARR ES rn aan ee ee ee ee fe ee Qo ENE © s
=oo. Bi ooORa BE EES EeSSaeSSS REfe eR Ee a =EER JBte Sg Ei 8ag SSDPaR 4pe > oe Ce eee s eS est Aig Ree Sei Bee no tetSa ngiyee fas ee _ 2 cae nae . Hos ea SESS SSS = ea ee eee eoWey ee eyFRRee ee ee oe ee. HoSe ee ee aSSE ae ee eee eect Tee eer ey a a — oe [eo ESS os PeRees eae Sic ees ee SESS SSS Se Bee Soe ee RS ae we BORE me RE Bes SALE ” : de Puig: € Hehe eS te Ae es EES S. SS Pe SEES SSS SES 7S RSS Bg nay pe Watt eA oy ORES eee a FE eee ee $iSiee. Chet LAR fee Ps sO as yeas Bart ack, Se EF : oe . LoS
Pe = SeSSER REEES SRE EGSse Soe USERS BS WaeR gees SESE AT Resee S42egSsrecs Gees Severn Sxgyi looS: Be « e: BE sa fl aan vssosPSOE SESS SSS SSSee SeSeas Se 2ESAS SLRSSee Seay PALES SERA See Sia! WEES 4 " pr EEBE ohoeSok gadagARES Fs fa gS = Dh Ce Wiebe SR ES Scat
20. del Castagno lad Oto }nN : 5Andrea pia drawing ofArtistici ansant angel, c.ai1447 "binett . tie 47, Apollonia Florence. oto O della Artistici ’"° oF d> C.nioprintendenza eBeni ot°SI 5l orence. S ifPh ee
member of his family ever challenged the city again. It could hardly have escaped Florentines during the decades of the 1440s, ’50s, and ’6os that the great styles of Florentine painting, of Giotto through his disciple ““Giottino,” and of Masaccio (“Giotto reborn’’) through his disciple Castagno, had patriotically served the city by humbling its arrogant enemies. Gino Masi transcribed another revealing Latin document from the Archivio di Stato of Florence, which I have reproduced and partially translated in Appen-
dix A. Masi published it without comment and with an erroneous date that confused later scholars. The document is a long provvisione or record of a deliberation in the Florentine signory from the year 1465, in which the priors of the city lament the fact that the old statute concerning the painting of defaming pictures of debtors is no longer being properly obeyed. They are particularly worried that pitture infamanti are not being displayed “openly and publicly” as the original law demanded. The signory goes on to assure itself that the statute had been passed “‘for the best of reasons, because certainly more people abstain from said bankruptcies for fear that they may be painted than for any other reason.”” However, the priors complain, wrongdoers at the present time are either not being painted at all, or their effigies are hidden in obscure locations where the public cannot see them. The deliberators then conclude by reaffirming the old law and ordering that defaulters have their defaming portraits painted also on the public facades of their private houses. The signory seems thus to admit that the traditional settings for these pictures, the Bargello and the Captain’s Palace, are no longer adequate. Gherardo Ortalli has interpreted this document as indicating how pitture infamanti were going out of fashion in the late Quattrocento.28 I would argue
instead that the signory’s concern in 1465 may have had more to do with popular artistic reaction to Andrea del Castagno’s famous defaming pictures of the Albizzi traitors that already filled a large space on the Bargello walls. We remember, after all, that the Palace of the Podesta in that year still exhibited from its street facades not only the eight grand effigies of the Albizzi but also ‘“Giottino’s” much heralded pitture infamanti of the duke of Athens and his gang. Moreover, these same walls may still in 1465 have shown some or all of the eleven defaming portraits painted of condottiere renegades in 1425. In any case, the Bargello by mid-century had become a veritable art as well as rogues’ gallery. One can even imagine the podesta conducting guided tours of his palace, showing off not only the city’s notorious traitors but paintings by some of its most famous artists. As Vasari recorded, people who “‘understood about painting” appreciated these frescoes for their naturalism and skillful poses. Indeed, the priors’ lament in 1465 may have been forced by podestarial reluctance to 28. Ortalli, La pittura infamante, pp. 74-75.
Effigies of Shame: The Quattrocento and Cinquecento 103
add pitture infamanti indiscriminately, especially if painted by inferior artists. _ The provvisione in the Archivio di Stato thus seems to acknowledge a new standard in the art of defaming portraits. These pictures were being judged by the populace as much for their artistic quality as for their intended official insult. Good art, the signory should have understood, was driving the bad from the Bargello walls. The last documented pittura infamante series painted in Florence during the
fifteenth century was displayed on the Palace of the Captain of the People, behind the Palazzo Vecchio, and by an artist every bit the equal of Andrea del Castagno. These portraits were of the notorious Pazzi traitors, the very defaming pictures that Vasari confused with those by “‘Andrea of the Hanged Men.”
For some reason the first art historian overlooked a statement in one of his regular sources, the Anonimo Magliabecchiano, which says that the painter was none other than Sandro Botticelli. Vasari’s confusion is understandable. We too can appreciate how Lorenzo de’ Medici must have been so impressed by the ability of Florentine artists like Andrea del Castagno, with their marvelous foreshortening
and chiaroscuro effects, to render such naturalistic likenesses as those of the Albizzi conspirators that he decided to go the earlier painter one better. First, Lorenzo ordered his enemies to be hanged in fact, and then he bade his artist, Botticelli, to copy their dangling bodies in fresco. Lorenzo may even have invented a new style of capital punishment to suit this occasion, which in turn inspired Botticelli’s art and even that of Leonardo da Vinci, as we shall see. After Cosimo d’Medici died in 1464, followed by the death of his heir Piero in 1469, the reins of the state passed to the hands of twenty-year-old Lorenzo, Piero’s oldest son. Several wealthy families of the city suspected that Medici
power had weakened, and they moved to test the young leader. The most unscrupulous and ambitious of these families was the Pazzi, whose assets included a close tie with the papacy in Rome. Both Pazzi and papal antagonism to the Medici reached a crisis eight years later when Lorenzo refused to acknowledge Pope Sixtus IV’s appointed archbishop to neighboring Pisa, Francesco Salviati. After much wrangling, the Pazzi entered into a pact with Salviati, and with the pope’s blessing they plotted to depose the Medici in a murderous coup, to take place on Sunday, April 26, 1478. After a dramatic confrontation in the Duomo of Florence, even as Archbishop Salviati attended High Mass with the Medici, Lorenzo’s brother Giuliano was stabbed to death, Lorenzo himself was slightly wounded, and Francesco de’Pazzi, one of the conspirators, painfully cut as he slashed away at Giuliano. But with failure to kill Lorenzo, the coup collapsed. Lorenzo quickly gained the upper hand. After resisting an assault on the Palazzo Vecchio, pro-Medici adherents rounded up most of the Pazzi conspirators including Archbishop Salviati. Lorenzo, enraged over the murder of his
104 Pictures and Punishment
brother, exacted a brutal revenge. During that same Sunday afternoon and for days and weeks following, dozens of the Pazzi and their allies, anyone with the slightest connection or suspicion of connection to the plot, were hanged by the neck from the windows of the Palazzo Vecchio and adjacent Palace of the Captain of the People. One of these victims was Archbishop Salviati, hanged from a window dressed in his official episcopal robes. Even though most of the conspirators had been captured and executed, Lorenzo decided on a further act of vengeance, to have them painted as pitture infamanti. This was an unprecedented action. Almost all pitture infamanti in Florence were of criminals still alive and away from the city in contempt of court. Lorenzo hired as his artist the painter most often associated with his reign, Sandro Botticelli. Still extant is the payment voucher for this commission: “Item ... [the otto della custodia] deliberated and paid Sandro Botticelli for his
work in painting the traitors; forty large florins.”29 The best record of what these frescoes contained, however, comes from the sixteenth-century Anonimo Magliabecchiano: [Botticelli] painted in 1478 on the facade where once was the jail above the
Doghana, Messer Jacopo, Francesco, and Renato de’Pazzi, and Messer Francesco Salviati, archbishop of Pisa, and the two Jacopo Salviatis; the one the brother and the other a kin of the aforesaid Messer Francesco, and Bernardo Bandini, all hanged by the neck, and Napoleone Francese hung by one foot, because they were involved in the plot against Giuliano and Lorenzo de’Medici; for which Lorenzo then composed epitaphs at the feet
of each... .3°
Aside from the remarkable fact that Botticelli was the painter, we learn also that the commission was completed within three months of the initial crime; that it was painted on the Palace of the Captain of the People (the original bargiello or ‘house of the jailer’) just behind the Palazzo Vecchio on the Via de’Gondi and
above the Dogana (torn down in 1495 and replaced by Il Cronaca’s Sala del 29. Milanesi, “Di Andrea del Castagno,” 5, n. 1: “Item servatis etc. deliberaverunt et stautiaverunt Sandro Botticelli pro eius labore in pingendo proditores flor. quadraginta largos.”’ 30. All known documents concerning Botticelli’s relationship to the Pazzi pitture infamanti are published in Herbert Horne, Alessandro Filipepi Commonly Called Sandro Botticelli, Painter of Florence (London, 1948). See also Ronald Lightbown, Sandro Botticelli, Life and Work (Berkeley, 1978), 1:47-49. The Anonimo Magliabecchiano document was also published in Cornelius Fabriczy, Il codice dell’Anonimo Gaddiano (Florence, 1895), pp. 71-72: “‘Dipinse nel 1478 nella facciata dove gia era il bargiello sopra la doghana, Messer Jacopo, Franco. et Rinato de Pazzi, et Messer Franco. Salviati archiveschovo di Pisa, et dui Jacopi Salviati, luno fratello et altro affine di detto Messer Franco., et Bernardo Bandini, impicchati per la gola, et Napoleone Franzesi impicchato per uno pie, che sitronorono nella congiura contro a Giuliano et Lorenzo de Medici, alli quali Lorenzo poi fece ai piedi li epitaffi, et infra l’altri a Bernardo Bandino che in questo modo diceva: ‘Son Bernardo Bandini un nuovo Giuda/Traditore micidiale in chiesa io fui/Ribello per aspettare morte pill cruda.’”
Effigies of Shame: The Quattrocento and Cinquecento 1O5
Cinquecento); and that for the first time in our history we have public depictions of culprits not just humiliated but dead. The Anonimo Magliabecchiano tells us that eight figures were painted, seven hanging by the neck and one by the foot. The seven whom Botticelli showed in such attitudes of death were the actual ones hanged from the windows of the
palace in the aftermath of the conspiracy. The lone conspirator described as hanging by his foot was Napoleone Francese, the only person in the plot who was never caught. As to the full measure of Lorenzo’s obsession to bring all the
conspirators to justice, the Anonimo’s account left out one absorbing detail. Perhaps the conspirator most reviled by Lorenzo was Bernardo di Bandino Baroncelli, one of the two assailants who had knifed his brother Giuliano (the other being Francesco de’Pazzi). In the confusion of the first days after the assassination, Bernardo, along with Napoleone Francese, managed to slip out of Florence. In the following year Bernardo was discovered in Constantinople, and Lorenzo spared no effort to have him extradited. He even persuaded the Muslim sultan to arrest Bernardo and send him back to Florence. At last, on December 29, 1479, Lorenzo had the pleasure of watching his brother’s murderer strangle at the end of a rope from the window of the Captain’s Palace, a ‘‘cruel death”
just as he promised this ‘new Judas” in the poem he had Botticelli inscribe under the original pittura infamante (see note 30 above). As an additional humiliation, Lorenzo ordered that Bernardo be hanged dressed as a pagan Turk. Before Bernardo’s capture, he too, along with Napoleone Francese, should
have been depicted as hanging by one foot in Botticelli’s pittura infamante according to the traditional manner of defaming criminals in contumaciam. After Bernardo’s capture, Botticelli—or someone else—must have then been ordered to correct the painting as finally described by the Anonimo. While there
is no clear evidence that Botticelli himself did not repaint Bernardo’s figure properly hanging by the neck, we do have a drawing now in the Musée Bonnat in Bayonne, France, by Leonardo da Vinci, which shows Bernardo (fig. 21) as described by the Anonimo.31 This is a picture clearly ritratto di naturale. Not only that, but the artist made written notes at the side in his inimitable reversed script that listed the colors of the victim’s bizarre garments, as if in preparation for a painting. Leonardo, it seems, was hoping to receive the commission himself for updating Botticelli’s defaming portrait gallery. However, there is no reason to believe that he was in any way responsible for the final version. 31. Leonardo’s handwriting accompanying the drawing of Bernardino is transcribed as follows: “‘berettino di tani, farsetto di raso nero, cioppa nera foderata, giubba turchina foderata di ghola de gholpe, el chollare della giubba soppannato di velluto appicci, lato nero e rosso, Bernardino di Bandino Baroncigli, chalce neri.” In the Libro dei giustiziati of the Confraternity of Santa Maria della Croce al Tempio (see Appendix B below), Bernardo’s execution is listed as no. 435 (1479): “Bernardo di Gio, di Bandino Baroncelli impiccato 28. dicembre pel caso di Lorenzo de Medici il quale Lorenzo fece veniva infine di Turchia legato con catene e vestito come Turco fu impiccato alle finestre e sepolto.”
106 Pictures and Punishment
- ie Saprer ce ar Mine tay Tee
iwi SATAY ora | |
miexieh sie Bonus adguerp | | . wayRA , yf i one * A rsa i.wg ara,ain a cade Ars E a: PRON NE craneragid |
aa; /
JY aK chrowau Bwy poi Ay
aw A — wd 2 Rs a o od Fs ager my * eh, % a Spee cad
a Wi ae
: = E . 4 . . ge ; < i iE RE : oe 4 - -
Ba TT BE Mp &i? § 4a) me 4
fg I re Ee!aan Ry : nee 4A i TINS a Pg a Qi 29 Bas 4 RO
po i pp > gOWsAR & TRUS 8
een A BS z 8 EL aE FANE
21. Leonardo da Vinci, drawing 2 “SO |
of Bernardo di Bandino Baroncelli ,| hanging, 1479, Musée Bonnat, ; O38 Bayonne. Photo: Musée Bonnat. | : ~ .
| ee™ | aN! @ | \;
107
When Botticelli received the commission in the first place, he was no naive beginner as Andrea del Castagno had been. He was already a mature artist of thirty-four in 1478. Indeed, he had already exhibited special skills as a master of gory subject matter in his c. 1470 Judith and Holophernes panels now in the Uffizi. In spite of the graceful, ethereal style (to our modern eyes) of his later Primavera, Botticelli was regarded in his own time as a “virile” painter, and Lorenzo de’Medici apparently had no qualms about the artist’s ability to represent hanged men.32 Lorenzo de’Medici was not cast in the same bourgeois mold as his grandfather Cosimo. His own notion of fama was more like that of the arch-aristocrat Giangaleazzo Visconti. His pittura infamante instructions to Botticelli had no precedent in the history of the Florentine republic. Perhaps he sensed that the old defaming practice, especially after having been converted to “art” by Andrea del Castagno, had gone soft. In any case, Lorenzo was so moved to personal revenge that he instituted a completely new level of cruelty to the traditional modes of punishment. The execution itself of the Pazzi conspirators, by means of hanging from the windows of the Captains’s Palace, was unprecedented. According to contemporary sources, more than eighty persons were so hanged during the first few days of Lorenzo’s rage. The records of the Florentine Compagnia di Santa Maria della Croce al Tempio, the lay confraternity responsible for comforting
criminals on the way to execution, state that Lorenzo did not even allow his victims the customary last rites before their summary deaths.33 We are left finally to conclude that Botticelli painted effigies of these hanging victims not so much for public edification but so Lorenzo, personally, could relish the images of his enemies suffering.
Whatever the Florentines in the street thought of this display of princely retaliation, we do have record of one interesting response from Pope Sixtus IV in Rome, who, at the moment Botticelli was engaged in the painting, declared war on Lorenzo and imposed an interdict on Florence. Sixtus was especially incensed about the treatment of his nephew and his private secretary caught in the plot, and of the ignominious, shameful execution of Archbishop Salviati of Pisa.34 32. Michael Baxandall, Painting and Experience in Fifteenth-Century Italy (London, 1972), p. 2.6.
33. See Chapter 4, note 30 below. 34. Agnolo Poliziano, Lorenzo’s poet-in-residence, wrote a vicious Latin epigram about Francesco Salviati, describing how the archbishop was hanged out the window wearing his mitra— the badge simultaneously of his bishop’s office and of his shame (published in Giovanni Adimari, ed., Angeli Politiani V.Cl. Conjurationis Pactianae 1478 Commentarium [Naples, 1769], pp. 51— 52): “Quid tam furta doles, laqueus cum gestiat? Heu, heu! Salviatum eripuit celsa fenestra
meum./Salviatus Mitrae sceleratus honore superbit./Et quemquam coelo credimus esse Deum? /Scilicet haec scelera, hoc artes meruere nefandae?/ At laqueo en pendet. Estis io superi./Et laqueum, et gestans rutilum fortuna galerum,/Utrum, inquit, mavis, accipe Salviate. /Respondit: sat Mitra caput decet. Ipsa quid inde/Conveniat collo tu quoque caeca vides.”
108 Pictures and Punishment
This latter was an intolerable stain on the Church, made worse by the archbishop’s pittura infamante. Of the twenty-four conditions that the pope proposed to Lorenzo in order for peace to be restored, number two on his list was that the painted effigy of the archbishop be erased. In 1480 peace was reestablished, and, in accordance with the treaty, Archbishop Salviati’s scurrilous portrait—but not those of the other conspirators—was dutifully ““depainted.”’35 Pope Sixtus apparently harbored no grudge against the painter of these insults to his Church, for in the very year of the treaty he hired Botticelli among others to come to Rome and decorate his new Sistine Chapel. While Pope Sixtus IV was much concerned that art should serve politics (the Sistine Chapel commission was intended to propagandize in favor of the Petrine succession), he apparently did not worry about the politics of his individual artists. In 1494, after the Medici family had been driven from power by an aroused populace (who finally realized that Lorenzo, recently deceased in 1492, had all but destroyed the city’s ancient republican tradition), all remaining pitture infamanti of Medici enemies were erased. If, as Cambi and Nardi claimed (see note 20 above), the defaming portraits of the Albizzi clan were among those “‘cancelled”,—meaning they were still on the Bargello walls until this late date—then we do have evidence that the old insulting art had lost much of its bite by the end of the Quattrocento. In fact, the Albizzi family was back in favor in Florence by 1486, and one of its female members, in spite of her relatives’ continuing painted humiliation, was recruited into marriage with the Tornabuoni, close allies of the
Medici. |
Nonetheless, after 1494 the people were happy to destroy any pictorial symbol of Medici domination. Even the wax funereal images of the family in Santissima Annunziata were systematically defiled.36 Oddly enough, only the crumbling Trecento pitture infamanti of the duke of Athens and his henchmen were allowed to remain on the cleansed Bargello facades. Even though the Medici had taken advantage of these ancient political pictures to contrast their own benev-
olent rule, Florentines in 1494 reversed the association. Walter of Brienne’s defaming portrait was recharged once again as an effigy of Florence’s shame, ever reminding the people of their weakness before the blandishments of tyranny.37 35. Published in Sigismondo dei Conti da Foligno, Le storie de’suoi tempi dal 1475 al 1510 (Rome, 1883), 1:388: “Item cum per eosdem oratores oblatum fuerit quod pictura, et imagines illorum deleantur de ipsorum Florentinorum palatio, ad quod per eamdem Sanctitatem responsum est: illud esse debitum, et quod sit honori suo consulere, propterea placet Suae Sanctitati ut cum effectu id faciant.’’ Concerning other documentation of the erasing of Salviati’s defaming portrait in response to the treaty, see Lightbown, Botticelli, 2:215. 36. For more on such Florentine iconoclasm, see Richard C. Trexler, Public Life in Renaissance Florence (New York, 1980), pp. 118-128. 37. One reason why the duke of Athens’s defaming portrait was not erased with all other pitture infamanti in 1494 was that the Medici overthrow was equated with the duke’s own
Effigies of Shame: The Quattrocento and Cinquecento LO9
With the demise of the Medici, the city did enjoy a few more years of republican renovatio. Traditional—but unfortunately by now anachronistic— institutions were restored as Florence tried to relive its sentimental past, ignoring certain harsher realities of the changing world. It is ironic that just as Savonarola was enjoining the city to trust in the religious fundamentalism of the Middle Ages, Machiavelli was trying, in vain, to awaken his fellow citizens from their political naiveté. On the other side, however, even in exile the Medici were not
asleep. They managed to rebuild their power around Cardinal Giovanni, Lorenzo’s second son, who led the family triumphantly back to Florence in 1512. In the following year, Cardinal Giovanni was elected Pope Leo X, and the once-proud republic on the Arno was reduced to the ignominy of a papal state. But suddenly, when the second Medici pope, Clement VII, was diverted from his suzerainty over Florence by the sack of Rome in 1527, Florentines jubilantly declared their republican independence once again. From 1527 until 1530, the
Tuscan commune lived in giddy conviction that if its citizens really purified themselves as Savonarola once admonished, then angels would miraculously appear and protect Florence from all harm. Jesus was thereupon proclaimed King of the City. The painting of the Madonna of Impruneta, that thirteenthcentury miracle-working icon to which Florentines traditionally prayed for rain,
was brought into the city proper, an unheard of—and unlucky—precedent. Dress styles even reverted to a less modish, more spartan taste. Thus was launched the “Last Florentine Republic,”’ so movingly detailed by Cecil Roth.38
For two years Pope Clement VII tolerated this insurrection against Medici authority. Finally, in 1529, he decided to end the nuisance. He borrowed a Spanish army from his new ally, the Holy Roman emperor, and dispatched it to lay siege to his native city. What treachery! A Florence-born pope attacking his own people with foreign mercenaries! “Papa Clemente, il papa che mente” (Pope Clement, the pope who lies!), the people chanted.39 During the first summer and autumn, the Florentine forces did earn some heady successes. Michelangelo lent his own mighty abilities to the city’s inflated cause by redesigning the fortifications on the south. His recently sculpted David, now grown more gigantic than the unseen Goliath, was an obvious republican reference that must have abetted everyone’s superiority complex. So sure of themselves were the people that they arrogantly played soccer in open view of the Spanish gunners.49 One bold youth unfurled a large banner with the pope’s downfall; Walter of Brienne’s scurrilous Trecento portrait thus became a timely monument to the infamy of the Medici; see Ronald M. Steinberg, Fra Girolamo Savonarola, Florentine Art, and Renaissance Historiography (Athens, Ohio, 1977), pp. 103-106. 38. Cecil Roth, The Last Florentine Republic (London, 1925).
39. Ibid., p. 208. 40. Ibid., p. 201.
IIo Pictures and Punishment
insignia in plain sight of the enemy, and then exposed himself before it.41 One Vettorio di Buonaccorso Ghiberti, descendant of the famous Lorenzo, painted a private pittura infamante of sorts on the door of one of Florence’s militia headquarters, showing the pope on a gallows’ ladder.42 But such bravado could hardly last. As winter arrived, the harsher realities of military siege began to be felt in the city. Shortages of food and fuel wore away the thin patriotism of many citizens. Defections increased. Even Michelangelo went into hiding in order to escape Medici-paid assassins who had filtered into Florence.43 The signory began to publish lists of punishments for all persons suspected of waffling in their allegiance. As a last-ditch weapon with which to shame the inconstant, the government revived the pittura infamante punishment, unused in Florence since the Pazzi conspiracy. The signory was still dependent on mercenaries to bolster the city’s sagging defenses. As usual, these condottieri could only be relied upon when weather was good, victory easy, and reward high. As prospects for Florence’s ultimate triumph looked increasingly gloomy, the condottieri were less enthusiastic. On February 2, 1529, three of these captains, Cecco and Jacopantonio Orsini and Giovanni da Sessa, sent to guard peasants gathering firewood outside the walls, suddenly slipped away to join the enemy, taking all their troops and even, it was alleged, the army’s payroll.44 A few days later, three other members of prominent Florentine families also decided to abandon the cause.45 The signory reacted immediately. Three sets of defaming effigies were to be set up. One of these commissions was awarded to a certain Sandro di Lorenzo the ‘“‘sculptor’’ to make rag dummies of the defecting condottieri. These were to
be hung, each by the foot, on the hill of San Miniato and faced toward the Giramonte, the bastion the three captains allegedly intended to betray. Each also was to be labeled with ‘“‘epitaphs’’ attached to head and feet.46 This is a rare 41. Ibid., p. 208. 42. Benedetto Varchi, Storia fiorentina (originally written in Florence, c. 1565); see the Milan, 1845, edition, 1:492: “[Ghiberti] dipinse nella facciata della principal camera della casa (del signor Giovanni, il gonfalone lion d’oro), papa Clemente in abito pontificale e col regno in testa, in sulla scala delle forche, al quale fra Niccolé della Magna a guisa di giustiziere dava la spinta, lacopo Salviati a uso di battuto gli teneva la tavoluccia innanzi agli occhi, e l’imperadore a sedere con una
spada ignuda in mano, che in sulla punta aveva scritto queste parole: Amice, ad quid venisti? laccenava. Dispiacevano queste tali troppo licenziose e malvage scicchezze a’ pitt prudenti, ma eglino non ardivano, non che correggerle, biasimarle.”’ 43. The interesting story of Michelangelo’s hiding in Florence in 1530 is given in Alessandro Parronchi, “Michelangelo al tempo dei lavori di San Lorenzo in una ‘ricordanza’ del Fiogiovanni,” Paragone, 175 (1964), 13-22. 44. Varchi, Storia fiorentina, 2:19~—20. The allegation that the three captains stole the payroll is not made by Varchi but by Vasari; see’ Vasari-Milanesi, 5:53, and 6:63. 45. Luigi Passerini, Curiosita storico-artistiche fiorentine (Florence, 1866), p. 30, n. I. 46. Varchi, Storia fiorentina, 2:20: “ed essi contraffatti di cenci furono impiccatti per un pié sul puntone dell’orto di San Miniato, colla faccia volta verso Giramonte, con due scritte a lettere
Effigies of Shame: The Quattrocento and Cinquecento TI.
instance of official defaming “‘sculpture,”’ yet it indicates that some people still believed that the more “‘in-the-round”’ the effigy, the more efficacious the in-
sult.47 The other two sets of pitture infamanti were more traditional, to be painted on the facades of prominent public buildings. The three citizen traitors were to be displayed on the Bargello, and the three captains, already defamed
with hanging dummies, were to be painted either on the Mercanzia or the Condotta. Both of these painted pittura infamante commissions may have been awarded to Andrea del Sarto, the most distinguished artist after Michelangelo then living in Florence. Andrea was an outspoken patriot and devoted his life and honor to the Commune cause. Still, as Vasari described, the painter was reluctant to take on this job: During the siege of Florence, there had fled with the pay some captains of the city. Andrea was requested to paint on the facade of the Palazzo del Podesta and in the Piazza [Signoria] not only the said captains but also some citizens who had fled and were made rebels. He said he would do them, but he didn’t wish to acquire, as Andrea del Castagno, the nickname “of the Hanged Men.” So he let it be known that one of his garzone, called Bernardo del Buda, was doing them. He made a large turret that he entered
and left only at night; he would paint those figures in a manner that appeared as if they were alive and natural. The soldiers who were painted in the Piazza, on the facade of the old Mercanzia near the Condotta, have
been covered with white for many years so they cannot be seen; and similarly the citizens, which he finished by his hand on the Palazzo del Podesta, were destroyed.*® grandicelle per ciascuno, una da pié, nella quale era scritto il nome e cognome di esso, e una da capo la quale diceva: PER FUGGITIVO, LADRO E TRADITORE.” John Shearman, Andrea del Sarto (Oxford,
1965), 2:402, has published the pay voucher for the above: “‘1o febbraio, 1529 . . . Spese—lire 46, cioé lire 34.15 a Sandro di Lorenzo scultor per haver formati di paglo li 3 capitani si partirno con le compagnie et andaronsene nel campo del nimici con putatoni drento oltre allo suo fatico li vestimenti et mascheroni conperati per formaveli su, lire 8.16 a Giovanni d’Antonfrancesco dipintor per 6 epitaffi messi dappie et dacapo alli prefati 3 capitani formati come disopra et lire 2 soldi 9 a duo persone per le quali si feciono apichar a bastioni.”” Shearman lists this document under the modern
dating system, that is, 1530 rather than 1529 Florentine style. 47. Concerning the medieval belief that three-dimensional effigies might have greater “‘magical” power than two-dimensional pictures, see Ortalli, La pittura infamante, pp. 122-123. 48. Vita of Andrea del Sarto in Vasari-Milanesi, 5:53—54: “Erano, per l’assedio di Firenze, fuggitisi con le paghe alcuni capitani della citta; onde essendo richiesto Andrea di dipingere nella facciata del palazzo del Potesta ed in piazza non solo detti capitani, ma ancora alcuni cittadini fuggiti e fatti ribelli, disse che gli farebbe; ma per non si acquistare, come Andrea del Castagno, il cognome deg]l’Impiccati, diede nome di fargli a un suo garzone, chiamato Bernardo del Buda. Ma fatta una turata grande, dove egli stesso entrava e usciva di notte, condusse quelle figure di maniera, che parevano coloro stessi vivi e naturali. I soldati che furono dipinti in piazza, nella facciata della Mercatanzia vecchia vicino alla Condotta, furono gia sono molt’anni coperti di bianco, perché non si vedesseno; e similmente i cittadini, che egli fini tutti di sua mano nel palazzo del Potesta, furono guasti.” The ““Mercatanzia’’ mentioned by Vasari was the building, still standing along the eastern flank of the Piazza Signoria just to the rear and north of the Palazzo Vecchio by the Via de’Gondi (today the Conzorzio Agrario of Tuscany), which once was the government headquarters of guild
I1I2 Pictures and Punishment
A payment voucher made out to Bernardo del Buda for painting the three captains still exists, proving a Vasari anecdote for once correct.49 However, this voucher does not mention the three private citizens depicted on the Bargello; neither does another account of the same story by the sixteenth-century historian Benedetto Varchi,5° nor indeed does yet another anecdote by Vasari himself
wherein he mentions how the sculptor-architect Il Tribolo made three wax figures in-the-round so Andrea del Sarto could use them as models for the
hanging captains.51 ,
The set of defaming portraits of the three citizen defectors on the Bargello are mentioned in a number of documents,52 but none save Vasari gives the name of the artist. Varchi, however, best describes the pictures: administration. This Mercanzia, as it is better known, was contiguous with the Condotta, the government office of mercenary military affairs. According to another pay voucher published by Shearman (Andrea del Sarto, 2:402), the three captains were frescoed on the Condotta and not the Mercanzia. Similarly, the payment voucher to Bernardo del Buda (see note 49 below) also specifies the Condotta. Since the Condotta, not the Mercanzia, was one of the traditional settings for pitture infamanti, especially of turncoat condottieri, it seems that Vasari as well as Varchi erred (see note 50 below) and should have identified Andrea del Sarto’s paintings with this building.
49. Ibid., 54, n. 1; found and published by Milanesi: “E deono dare addi iiti aprile scudi diciotto d’oro di sole per loro, a Bernardo di Girolamo dipintore per aver dipinto per traditori tre capitani alla Chondotta per commissione de nostri signori X, cioé Lucha Giovanni da Sessa, Jachopantonio Orsino e Ceccho Orsino.” 50. Varchi, Storia fiorentina, 2: p. 20: “‘e oltra questo furono fatti dipingere nella facciata della Mercatanzia vicino alla Condotta, dove si vede ancora il bianco e lo scancellato, in nome da Bernardo del Buda discepolo d’Andrea del Sarto, ma in fatto da esso Andrea, il quale non si voleva acquistare né nimista di persona, né soprannome di dipintore d’impiccati, e furono dipinti cosi vivi | e naturali, che chiunque gli aveva pure una sola volta veduti, gli riconosceva subitamente. 51. Vita of Il Tribolo in Vasari-Milanesi, 6:63: ‘‘e per Andrea del Sarto suo amicissimo (Tribolo fece) tre figure di cera tonde, delle quali esso Andrea si servi nel dipigner in fresco e ritrarre di naturale in piazza presso alla Condotta tre capitani, che si erano fuggiti con le paghe, appiccati per un piede.”’
52. Three of these documents are given below as published in Passerini, Curiositd, p. 30, n. I: “13 februarii 1529... Alessandro Corsini seguita al male: egli é ribelle, e ribelle si faccia: e perché e sia exemplo a tutti gli altri, perché e’non ha casa da stracciare, giudico che fra quindici di sia dipinto per traditore al palagio del Potesta, accio gli altri imparino da lui. “3 marzo, 1529... El nome di Dio repetito. giudico che a Taddeo Guiducci sia dato bando di ribelle colla confiscatione dei beni sua secondo la legge, e perché e’non ha casa in Firenze che sia sua, per non se gli poter stracciare, sia dipinto al palagio del Potesta. allato a Alessandro Corsini nel modo che sta decto Alexandro.” “To marzo, 1529... Sopra la querela di Pierfranceco Ridolfi, di che oggi si tracta, io giudico che come inimico capitalissimo della sua citta et inimico di questa santissima liberta come sempre
fu, pertanto lo giudico in pena et bando di rubello con tutte le prohibitioni dei ribelli come permettono le vostre legge, et di pitt che e’sia dipinto al palazzo del Potesta impiccato per uno pié allato a Taddeo Guiducci infra 15 di come traditore della Patria col bleve del suo nome appié a lectere grosse.”’ Uccelli, Palazzo del Podesta, p. 174, adds an interesting detail: a reprisal by Corsini and some of his friends against the scaffolding and painting materials set up before the Bargello for frescoing the pitture infamanti. ““Addi 24 febbraio, 1529 in la sera di Berlinghaccio essendo al Palago del Potesta 1.° palco fatto per dipingnervi, Alexandro di Gherardo Corsini passo di quivi a hore sei, Philippo di Ser Lorenzo Cioli, Agnolo di Francesco Allegri e Piero... . Ser Franceschi
attacharono fuocho a una tela che era a detto palcho; di che arse la tela et una parte del
palcho....”
Effigies of Shame: The Quattrocento and Cinquecento 113
On Easter morning it was discovered that three citizens were painted on the Palazzo del Podesta: Alessandro di Gherardo Corsini in a long coat and cappuccio, Taddeo di Francesco Guiducci, blind in one eye and dressed in the same clothing, and Pierfrancesco di Giorgio Ridolfi hung by one foot. Each had inscriptions with his name and the name of his family at the bottom, and these words in large letters: FOR THE TRAITOR TO HIS COUNTRY.>3
In this commission, only one of the figures seems to have been painted upside down. The other two were shown standing upright and dressed in derogatory
costumes, that is, deliberately archaized in the manner of Trecento pitture infamanti. It was for one or both of these sets of defaming portraits during 1529-1530 that Andrea del Sarto prepared the seven figure drawings with which we opened our discussion in Chapter 2 (figs. 22-27). Not only are these drawings the sole
evidence we have concerning the last painting commissions of the doomed Florentine republic, but they also manage to give us some indication of why the defaming art altogether went out of fashion. John Shearman in his monograph on Andrea del Sarto has suggested a grouping of the drawings that will help us
understand how the painter thought about these frescoes that, according to Vasari, caused him such embarassment.54 It is an intriguing aesthetic question:
just how could Andrea, this quintessential master of the High Renaissance, create beautiful art from a commission that was supposed to bring insult and humiliation upon its subjects? Figures 22 and 23 seem to have been the earliest preparatory studies. The former shows a hanging nude; the latter shows the figure in the same pose but clothed. We also know that the sculptor-architect Tribolo, close friend of Andrea del Sarto, made wax models of the hanging captains in order that the painter might better realize their unusual postures di naturale. The use of wax figurines as anatomical guides was becoming widespread among artists by the sixteenth century.55 In any case, figure 22 is a careful anatomical study clearly dependent on a model. Both it and the clothed version are depicted as lighted
from the left side, a common Renaissance studio practice, as Shearman has pointed out.5¢é 53. Warchi, Storia fiorentina, 2:39: ““La mattina della pasqua di Resurresso si scoprirono tre cittadini dipinti nella facciata del palagio del potesta: Alessandro di Gherardo Corsini in mantello e cappuccio, Taddeo di Francesco Guiducci, cieco da un occhio nel medesimo abito, e Pierfrancesco di Giorgio Ridolfi impiccato per un pié, ognuno de’quali aveva scritto a pié il nome e casato suo in un breve, il quale diceva a lettere da speziali: PER TRADITORE DELLA PATRIA.”
54. Shearman, Andrea del Sarto, 1:161—162. 55. Laurie Fusco, ““The Use of Sculptural Models by Painters in Fifteenth-Century Italy,” Art Bulletin, 64 (1982), 175-195. 56. Shearman, Andrea del Sarto, 1:162.
II4 Pictures and Punishment
ee ee ee rr aee oea
et i
| eee a ac ae gc ate ol aaa PS Pye
Pat eV esoo:aa eeon beASee 7se ae of i Wise 7:EES. *ye fas ee ae De neCAE ae eo eeEa.aan‘ ‘;:
: * aa fale ee BIR RAS OAS Bp . eR ES Ee ee wept NPE
: on : whee te : ne ee Pee: ere eee, | . :
BESS : a8 oe ae
Faafag eePigg oe . BSE . ce Be CR ai & RI iS cece? ssBiaisensinciegset oga a, ee!. Ree 2 i" yon : foe me ig 7 oa PRR ag Ree#ited, f BE EP aReeeRei aeraech. HBSS aes BRS RE . :ne eA:PPE
: : : y gets Nee
Bove hoesae Ea gaaee Pie aeee Sh IA ee te ea ede :: =ee ee BS BM Be ee ee ee eee Jmy RENE ae, :
i.) oe Poe pT Qe ae :
He 1HE ee . wes “ weghanee . Beayohr ee ee are we Ce ‘ . : a eee CEE Sa Eo gsee BE CREE oo eee ee eee het aoe ep eenee ee ee ee : : ae :oeee tives Ragin
goo oe he a oe eee Lao A RES bow. Oped veo ‘ .
ee ee ee ee eee ee i : oe
i and : ee Poe ee oe ae wee Bags “ora : Bee oP s ae ue i Bae woke . e
oe te en ee [eee ee : ee gs ao ge eee eee ee Se Eee | : BES hoc ARERSE RUE ar alaber es Ee oy Aeereene : es e e 2 hae : ; eg) RET Es OEE :ps eens eee ee ie eeogy eeTEES BeSg cae bthreBo heeaeoe ee coh nals etek we. : :
ge egeye CRATES a Po aces 4 DEMOS Bape ep pee ae Pa Ce ee 2 gee ES oo Be ieee
SER eeeee Pore :ira nok = ee eee. oe se Or ae re ee re eeey a aee: basRein Jas : ea 7 hEO SER ty BEES ba weg ot es aa Ee RAPT OS ESOS Pog, SRE ES cat ee Bo i ead ee eS cghag h Bae pel EES Be : ‘ BE SEGRE? oh die, aH 5 poe E fa RE pg BER Ba bes Su ae Sh A De Bie 58 feo:
Series ee eee Vere ec eae ee eee Be eS RR ey og ga ae mo ees
pene eer te oes ee ae ee Uae | ae eee gee ge oS oe a Oe a ae aeeg eeOrne oo aey eeeee os a i erree ED a Es aaae co et iarro ‘ager Tete eeee er ac eeee - aeee eR
eee ee i ee 2 ee
L i ee ee ea eeBS ee ee STRANDS. gEPO a teeeeeeee eemeee ca elRG eee,Poa okaeae ea. ae :
BEE, mage, ee ee ee Se os oe i er a er ee. a “ ays, Ege ey ee SR eR eae Baise ae Seed Pe Lg SS a ae em 8S 0 EE RR Ee
Boe” a . Poe fseS Pee oe RaPeeope :: ::me Pepe eeRR hoes os SeSa Pie EO 2 RE 8 Pe ee deesaeON BS EGS ON AMEN ISA Te Se Ra SCF a ae oe PES bo ey EO UE ONE ase oe Aeget Ss Se Chee aaERE US Ree Ege BS aS ER:zt,TE vies Ee EEEE BP Be Sas SAEE Seoa es Sacer RR NR ae a = FRere SS TSee a ee aites: RRR ee eS gOS we . BES TE Pets ie ssaepe ae Peer Meets shoe: fonEe EEBERR CEE Se
BERRIES AS .SSE aePee ees eeeeees eee ee Rake er eeseo ; :DER : Hed oe ne igs: ene : Do ga ee ee eeeeee See ese BARE 8eye, Loe oo eeBite ees oo aeTR a RE By LE Mee Blea Mere ee CERES EERE EEN ies} : Ba POETS go EO sii eOe Be MT uBree ee eeoer i . a: BRIS 2 :ren BeesBSS eae gE ae es Brg i cog aaRE 7 . ey pV:RB the Ograe ae igen 2" a aaoe‘ER eae eeeADA YoSes eceeae Es Hike SERRE ti ee oa z:; :chp SES BBR ONES ee 8BD ABS, nos Teh :if.ah Bees fi Je EERE beeps |tii! BR” a asRE Be ae ee BSE se) ORE Poehie eeEs: preg: Ps OEE gages Be‘ ee ceeeres : ES Sages : pee? Se ee eeea,tea BS2oaPETRA . ; cera :BR Ge BER es os Re (USES ES 28 ae By DTEL saaGASPS Reo CEE PSASe ts Se GES CBSpi SRa eee pe ae eeeaeee i ee
EERE RSSce ES.en ae ;ooaera ehSERA Sopaa Loe nnee es LE ee pe : : PEELS hae Bun:aa GES ; sek Agee nSaDO EE S BPE ape ce=oe ehos aywe Rape ee a ee eeeeee ee coe pyge okByae CHAD oes neESS “UE coy ae fr, ai 5 cee eg ES” : See ES eGeeeeESOS re ae Se a eee ae HOSS ipaeleen Te Cea meeee? ooeae eee ae oeSeaagiaeee
SEA eee a ERE REECE en SES giles sa SRE OE Ee EEE BPE. EY CES SBgE woe JL DEERE Sr fees A SEP mae Logs ds by f pega eS ws oS EE a
PP BES * i ee . ENP TOBe SE GE > er ee 7 CER Sa : eee a vs DE EE ae ee ‘yeti aes ee ay a oe eh PE Ses Be wpe Lee ce SS Aeee SUA SRA BP ee Bee ee Se oe cages: oe haga! oe es ER fo ee ie eee “ee aS eee es oe Peeo: eee OES me RL Plaga RAS ine REED eee Bass se,: SA REE Pel. wg Pe ae igbeer meagan PRE SENBRR ORR! Bcc) ge ores ee” Pl a eee adLee San 2Oe oa ee Bic RRR aeEE. GE AR EE ESS) as wih Og BASP aRana ee SiH ee Bg ghi See NaS ae‘eta eeasses Be eect BeeWhee gh fia 2 WHEE Hue ea ee oe CPS ELaEseee OBES en ces eee : OES oo "3fee AUR BA TE eeia ee aera BE Pee eee oo) 2rere ped caer:HEE het eg we SeaSees REBees RRamen ES eee a. ee HE LpHEEE ooabek TER SAS nee ofwd spleen ee fFeee meme RASPY eR aapee eae OR aaa es Eg
re ee ee — PRS ag ee ae ae . | bgt hata BERR S or eee a oe ee ESSE ee eee oe ee Pe eee
SES eh! AE ee ee EE soe! 1,teRE ESS oo. re isha eeRaU eee eeLe.) ee ABRE: Ee AO ag fobs Pe cee ae athe eet ee eed ands URS ESE oe Rae Ee : .ee rire gitom A ee isuEas ek EEL Dopp Ge EARS ens [Caeek a eke eaeae SEs :eee : : See spite eateaa ee RL ia 0Ao cob - ok ~ EME SMS :ect sy Eeas un le fis ee, eeaR e PR eee : SUB A Mie SERB ie See 28Sloat Bee et pie ceWER BRESASS pea Tt geAA eaPe fey aPERLE eeA geEngh pebee eSPa HESS et: igee, Acaine! ; #(BESS Lon SaiteS esas eePity” £ tg SRE PE EE ohees HEROES ep DBRT Pr Pelle EE gee Pa ikl JOS ghee ES See gatas waite tdEERE DES arenas EPS ag San SSerneigce SRE) BARE echo ee es0 FE eeNEE eeBUSS ee eeARE iE on es Eg: PR ch eeae BEE Paes oe : ee eee Bo ge a . an UAE 28 Soc Be EEE oe ane Le peas pe Bs oe BP EG Bee EIS aon nage OAS Pgh : SE HAY Js, 2 ene " i OP ee wees nak oan ear = ee poke Sehsiiituineate cette’ “end Stig Be eee ee ee ee ee Eee ER Pk ee Bye Se ORME oc ee enced Chien Sn ena BAP: PEELE SS oO Shes Pee epee ae as Ee READ SRE a TPS Loe EE |
wes ie ee 9 O ela. Meer
Bon Ray SEES Hab 2 TSSer GH REESE el tay. ad EERE. Tt ARE iis Saeiaaaen
Florence. ,grafico drawing of aai ‘Galleri neria OMT sa e. oto: .Pman han .down : Gabinetto Foto ing upside ella Sopri » 1§30 i Beni Artistici 1Zi printendenza degli Uffizi .
rtistici e Storici, Fl
nce.
Peer _
Be RRR DR TR a ae TOTES ee tes . sein wa apa) 4 HRS Pageat Ree ee Cees Sy SS eee 3 a et AT ST RS .
oe. ie eee eee RR OS a SMSSNS E En Enehags (anigseS SERRE os ee eer Re RSeee BE yoko abdce ee LOOSE BR Ue nh ln See oebihihc sf actaSERS hat dea Eogg BPRS eee Sana eS ighergeee eenen Rneeao ee ee eee eeVEeeSeba SESE GS AGU eeaeeeeeeee eae : Nae
Beda hE eeeeeeae eee PLU iiacp ainda ReheeSTOR be SEER Sn EEE ee ag ee ee ei a. SERRE ep by canRey eet deer EE aaAis PDSep Be Ube dhe Sah eee .eek ee gee fd pareeines gee. "3 ee ee WEL, AUSLe as Et re aES ES eS perce ah choIeSESE S eAURSA) Se SAREE a hg SheME Eg BE LPDeen Ehsaan BI: deena el eee eee BBB Jos eee eee EU EER ee ie eee ee BYU bike cre ie ee ee ee ee eee es reer eee LOSE Bo SE ae Sy has eta ES Os ee ee
fetig ee es Pa ee ee gee A, oe ae le ere a ere ae See a eee ee tag EAL oh ee mee ee ee ae CEO ESSS AS BEES Sa Lego Eee . WE hlis EBS DE See “gegeo E age Bee Mg % el? ae ABS SP SEE SS SE ee Bo ah TERS Bo Le Sas) HEA cae ath BR Bg 4 wes Mohn os ASRS REF oUBy hs Ag ee Bos: ESS ‘ : . BO EE Ree oR Sa Ba 2 & Eeefap es (OL ae eeSee ae wey wt Be MBE. OSS fy aSaga Bol neeOS Sea De Washi yak ORE Ron nied ERR SEB . CeO Splat PLES aah ee Boo. RRR eB ETE an Pap TEs aEerA ae eS opGes ooseig# sg2 Re RES eRgioaatne DONE OERP WE he AIEEE 2 Teea BBA BLS geEES nNbisOUTER a een ee ee aa .bist 7 :PEPUB
i Be cg Hees Bie ach a8 ee ee eee ae Suk BRL) Res SBE Payee Sai SR oe, Bigsby, SHRME gti ge Sab es ae eer ce Oe er eee : oa ae ao DRneOce TE: ;
Bi SO gs eo Bogen bs 2k Sue 2 See Pee ee ee eee Be SBOE Ee GAL Sa ae DP oe ai shar VER Ge haan satis “Be ae ee : aL ae ere z E fp a oi esis ec eee eee ana SRE SERB Rs Agee Jo ER Gee aa sh BABE ah OE ae ae SER ee a Rea a cts wes LN! ESB . ee ea eee eee these BT ahah SA gard SS eee
ae Bay Eg ane fee Rag a SHR SE ae ee ae ee he ee RS Se SUGAR UA eS fe oi! sgh iEans RA kae PE wee : fe PBB wo Men uh pee sfegee s WEE PY 7 SUES Cy SES EEG EBT! A 2 feng Pile SE ENS ooES oe Pee ee = GREE GES ee Pgh eee pees ae Borear SORE a ES gs eh EDS Sone kr aah MeO sha praia fee aoe Bo ERE OS ys SE See ge Boe ” ca os TNE acres ae
psa wagsBe AONB Soeeed SRSA SEEee cdseae ERAS Se es ene a AukLege ea ates Eye Sees eae eae Rebs! Sis : ns -:“ ORO . o wy eeEB Se Bae Pe Pit niu «ee: . Se emege EO eS eee eeRRS eeeTeaeSES ee3SeeSheeSRE eeGePOA Ugh SBaeES BUs aeeefade re at: yh a nn
pe ie Eeoeee Mag ee Fe eeTeeaeSENeegotseeBAC oeUEee eeGRR2 eee fey : eg ee =ee sksaa”= i eo a ae EEA SE BAS EO EUR Saphg hs EGE PeasDASE a ll Sh Bcd ORE pe . a ENEibaa Sha Sa gas Soper aes
ee BE es, ee Se ee eee een ee ee ee ee eee |
Boobies BEES OS SSS ER | HIRES Ae A Pag ete eee ite ORE a Se Se eae PE 80 Be BSE gE Pe sys bidioey aan srs aa DUPE igi Fs Seg ie We t wo . Bis VERE SOS ae a a 7 fee PE ah Be Beni eh a 3 oF
Bos poe ee ee ee See eee See ee ane ny eee EOE EEO Be ete ee : TSE “: eer ee ae eee ag ee eee eee fa HEE ly Eeees es ee ee ee ee aee Ey URREE Beeee oe ee Ss SSS Se pe) RR (oer SSS SSS 2 pee AS SSS ee Pd RR aoe Pee Sees==jae SSsere 2 sie ne eS gis FES Ses PSReee SSeeSPS RP RSRSC see eS ee ee, MER Se | SSS ES ES Bee SSS SEES 228SL SASS AGEN Sune
x 3.) ESLS RSs SSSSS Beasseeeneceae a aSSS SS SS peePw? OS §RSGe ge ES SSSe SRSS eeaPS eh, Pe PeeSSS aS SS SS RSE Se eeaks va E SSS eet OD pet SSL< Se EB BF SS Fe Se i SSSSU SeSe SSeS eS as ee,oe SSeS eS fe Seeee: HeoES SSE - . : zSS == Beers : : s Bat Gees ee SS Le |)SeeeFoeee Soy BE: SESS 5 SSSsSSUS ESSs SSesSSS See arte Gis eaters, eee ee eS SS SS ee Ee SeeCSS SeeSS oe.DS SSS SSSSS SSRN a By Rar SeesSee Seca a ee (7 |SSS SSS SRSees SeSS | SRS Sons) ERE SSS See SRS ee EESS eS
pues SSS cos Ee rae SSSBe SsJoe SSSeee SLSo ieee . ‘ee ce SsSS Sear SSSS Se See Ge eS Seas* ee VASES SSS: eSeS eSeS SSeeSSeee SSS reeSpee phyGeers SS SensSSMeee See ‘eee ee 33S ae: eS ee
SSS eSeSPEPE eS. ee: 2SeSSS SSS 9Se >Shlees SSS SS ae ke SS SS a SSS Sco ee SS SESRS Ske 2iS SSS SSS aE SSSe SSS SR SSS ESS SSS SSeS ee 22 SSSSE 2 HE EY SSS 2Hass SSS CSS SSS SS LL SSS =: See 25 SSS eeES SS aSRS ee 38 LS eS PSS Ss SoS{coo Sk A8.5 eeeSSS SS SaaS SS SSSSSS Ee SS ; RPS SSS SSS SS SSSSSS SS SaSS BRSS Sa ee JSS SSE se
eee2 ee enR= eeeJESS ee. 2SSSS Fi ee SSS2.SSS ah OSS SSoe BeSSSR jos Se es ! SS ESS SeSS SSSSS SS SSS SSS35 Se errs SSS SSeS SSS SSS = Ee Se eeOS ee SSS ERE RE ESS wg" SERS Se SS ee SS SSS SS SS SS ieee as =a = SSS SS SSS SS a ee: See i eS oe Se eS
ee eS = 2 SSS SSS SS SSS SSS SSS SS SSS eS SS oS gigs = SSS SS RS SS A ae a fe TS ee ee
ee eee i -SSe SSSPSSSSSeSSSSS SSSEEeS FSSeeSSS SSS SSG RoSSSS SS US Se8 i BES RN So: SS 3 See SSSSS SSSSS SSSSS SE PSE SSSS SS SSN F GS PS SS ee a ee Sc: SPREE hy PSS
ae eee SSS SS ae SS Se Se SSS beg 3S SSS SSS 13 tS eee SS SSS oe S | ee Sees of Ss SeBe SSS eae eeeeee a fs SSS S LANES Sos See See :SSS ES Se SSS SSeScS HEE so.SS PS HESSSS pes. Se SER eSee ee ae = fae ESSSS SSSR SSS—— meee
Bae eS Le SS SS ae SS Se ee ee i US SS See 5 See 8 Be SSS ee Bee i: :“UES Past ES SUAS RES SS Bess URS »ol32RIS SSRS SSS AE ORT SS SSS SE SS=: See SSS Sess SS Be: | SSSRy oS: SSS Pate Pl SS SSS Se SeSSS Sees ESSE. 12s. =z CEASE s 35.eat (SESS SSS SSS See SS SS 2SSS eS BSS) PSR SOUEE Bes SSS = ie SO. GES Of} SS SSPAPE ees (SSS. Puig SS SS aeSS ee SS SsSee LS ER iFE Se2SEee SSSSSSeS Soho sera
aS SAPs SS SSSSiS SSSSS Se J SSS = SSeS SSSree LSSSSS : LEfas Ss =. SesSSS. = See SeAA SRG SSSR SSSS ee Sa SS SA aeeos, eeefo OnESR ES Pe =a VEER wo ES 7{SERS SSSSESS SR Se SSeeSe. See SS Ee SU ee PER eS EL ee) eR SeSSS SSS See SS as SESS ORE UE PES SsSSS. SS eeSes. eee oSBS RS NS ere SSSSS Seeee eee Ss.CH SS(2SSSe SS2 SS SSeS SSSSS SSS SSS SSS SS NE SeSee SSeeSeeee Ss SSS SSE Ee RSS SS ee SSS SSS ee SSS SS SSS: pees a == SSS. See Say © See Se
BS eS SSee fo) EERE SS aSaeee SS SSS SS SaSeSSR SE SefeSS SS Reee SSSes SS SSS SeoeA Se eeee eS EEE ES 2ee SSS SS See SS Bo Sey Sess RSS ae oe Se SSS See BES SOE ES SSS 7G eSSS SS aesSees SSS SS SSS ic 22 SE Seee -Se SS. eS SefF Se SS eeeee eesSt SeLSS SS SeS33 SS BSS SS ee a SSS eePE eee — Sas SSeS SS:SSS aSS. asSe SiR eee See ee
See Seeae?ee So See SS [SS ee ee eenSSS eS reiS aeSePSSSS SSS Sa eS ON BESSSS SS mas Fad ny EEE:2 ROCESS) EGA nS oa aaSeer ES SS | Se i Sa SPREE DE Wh CE SS eS eeBee Se SS ee Pe SeSS SS SSS eS
betes 2.0 s Les Suse eee ASS Ee a I aR aS i an = SSS SS SSS Se oS Se SSeS SS ee oe Se SS ee SSS Seas ogSSBSee oe Se eeES |ey eee oe ee EE eS eeSS SSeS SS _i SRS See SS eeSS See Ja eySSS : Ses. SSeS SSS SS SeSe aee Rss SS SSes fy Bee ees SS eS = See. OSee [PS eee ek Se Se Se) Se ea ee SS Sees aS SS SS CPSLae SSS eSSSS Se SSSS ee aTie ee aSee ae oeRS SPE RERS SeeUSES” bee 8 Sey Re 22 CE Speena eeees oRSoo eeSe SSeS eS 2BESS So SSS SSS SS BYSEE aS SS Sy.oFSo 3aeSS SS RR Se NES, 2 ATS SS SS SSSS eee SS SSERS SSeS ae SEES WUE LS Ss Se eres anteet PannIN ge aSS RI EBT ESP ONan subacmena adic MERE icerttat ec alpine ee RS, See SS eS aes eS SSE 3D ESgeGS SS SSnipped SSS eeeo =5 Tes SSS SpRTO ES BS eS apie ce Spe atetitr SS See ane nF eT eeSe ftRTOS Se SRR Se aSCIOS SSS ESS 22 SS SRS SSE Poet ESeenSSS ES Eee ee eee RSE eSREN ee ee ee SS eeSSS Se Se ee | eeROTI eeOLE eee Se SS 2Sse Se eS See SSS EEE |Se oe Se ee eS eee Be: Ss eS Se ee a! BSS SSeS Se ee 3 SS a reSS) ot RSBRR Pas eySS Peege SgSe ea PS PBSSe SSaSeeS a Se ee Se EE SSS SS SSSee ee, SSS :[SSS SSeS =
oS SSS ae S/S 28 la. 1 See SS See ee ee SSS SS See a eS Se SR OSS A St eee ae SSS SS eS eS Se SE ce eeeeteS SSet:Lat.) Seer SSUES SS |Eee eee SoSee ee Se SS ee ee See aSeeS—S ee ae Tee: eS ee Se Revo Sea See eS See Seaee 5 eee: SER aeSSS ee 7aIeSs eS ESSE Te SSE SR: eSSee SS LSS RB SS Sefe APRS SSS SRS RSS ee SSS BSBRS SS: a ee SSS Saere aSe aos Say SS SSS SS ee SS iS. SSeS eS! ee SSS PeeST:eee SS ieSSS SeReieSSS ee SS ee SSeeSeSe SS SS
ES SS SSS SEE SSS : ESS ioLSS a) EARS Faee TResPee SSeS See RNSS aS SSS SiaSSS ES ge eS SSS 2 oe 2geiee foisSee Sees Seen: seme =SSS SSSS SS eS es ELS SS SSS See, RS LR RES 5 =5TS ReSRS SS gheSSee eS SEE ES eeSeWE as SSF FESaePes ee ge SS SSS SSES SS fe aSoS = SSeS SYSRe TAS © See oR. SSS , ae See. SSS SS SeeBO eee Sey SSS Sa Se Say gee LEE eee ekSee ee 7RES See =ee SSS SSSS See bp Se eS ee ReeDURE: = SS SSS See eeeeee ORS WO, CeeS ae es SeeSere {SSCS ASSS eo eS RES SSS SSS SS SS eeSe eyeS ees SSS BSSRS esUSSR SSSR SSS $05) SHS TERR So Sg SARE SSE og ees SRS SRSaey SS SS Se TSS 2 RS RRS SUS OSS SSS Ssr.5 2S! es 2 eee Sso (eeeSe ee | as See eS SS See SeSeSS SS. ey SS Rs DS See Seen = OS 2 SS PA RSS! SSeS Se >SRS! aaSoS ee = Se SS
SSeS ec a—ee eyBSN Se eS Se SSS SS 1a SSS eS SSSee SSS eS eee Re ae ee) Se| SS Ses See, Se See Se: aSSS oS =SSeS SSS SSS Shes ties Lee SS Ra SSeS SOS RSS SS ae = Ses Se a eee |= SSS > ee Pe, SE Se ee SS SSS ee Sa 8 See SS Se _ SSS SSeS So Se ee SS Se
RES Se SSS SS SSS ey aS SSS er coe Bee Se RS Ee SSS are SS pig SS SIS eS SE RS RES SE SS SRE SET NO EESGSN ES SS ESS Se ee eg ae ESSSSeS SSSSeeee SSESST SS SSE SRS totAe erCR Seeeeeai Preise ee TSS SeetSe SEES REE SERS (TTR SanSSPee ES
SS SS SSeS Eyl) SSeS SSRe SSa SSS Se eoASE BPAY Seerate eSTEL ed Ee SeSe SEES OR Seeee SSSeSSSS Se Ss SSS Se us Se eS TS Sas eSSo3) ae SS SaSe ENS Segos coSS MRSS SES hn SUNS aS eg Se ER RSS Ree ee SORE EaSSS Se Set RSS SSS =gee SeSS SSS SSSSS SESSA ERPRR TS$5 eSSSS ee Has SE SE ES Se A Se eS SS SURE LESSEE eSSRS Raaeee ra Jaina PRR SoSS ees ceeSa Skanes ogate Seocep a aeeeARS wang Ser a Ss=ee SesSSS
RR es ee a ea a oe . . O: u Cc. 130 rena ape ud.
[SSS SSSOeSSnES coe eee eetSSS SSSESS ie ReeAensUSS glee SSS fagiSSS ee naepee haus aSSS bp abt. SSS ~ aSSS aanSStee So SSS ee Pe eeRSSe RSSSS See ES ee eee SS SSS a FRR oa soe Seeeae 7SSSSS SR SSS SEES SRE Se Sh eS SECSSeyi SER anton SESE SEE SSRSSS TE ee Se Tak SS SSS eaSSS ee SS SS SSSaIEe 2S 7 SSS Sees eee 7 Ret FRR Re Re oe RR Ve RRSSSR So gk NE es eS eSre SS SSSSSS SSSSS SS SSgSSeg Ll SSS ee
HS SS SSeS Se Se es ee ee ee Se ee ee ee ee ee ee SSeS. a SS RASS EE SS sa SSS ee ey PSS, Sean ss S SS SS SS = Bee SE a SS et A SSS a SSS SSS SSS SSS SS SS Se a eee a ey a So oS Sa SASS eeSSSS tho pan 7hGASSES LaneSS SRSA = pa or)ees aausegees2SSeS: a SSS SF Pipes se eS SSSe eS SSS as Easeree = Sue SS evuige:“Sag S iS Ree eS Se RSPe SSSRee SS SS ig ise sagy 3358mc SSeS see
8 6 SS go SR SSeS Be a Ta epee fee SSS es =
SSS SE aR Sea See SS RS SS Se Se SSPE BS FEES SS at PS SS 8 Sy PS SE SSS PS Pe SSE = EEE SS, SPS TR? SSS SS Yas SS FSS SS are ESS ks af SS SESS | ee Se SSS SSS ee SS
I C1 6 A Ch l Pad a Phot : Alinaripel, rt Res 28.GiGiotto, lusticia, c. 1306, Orce —_
e
What we have here, as in the even more ‘developed detail by Ambrogio Lorenzetti in his c. 1338 Allegory of Good Government in Siena (fig. 7), is a personification of “Distributive Justice,’ who, according to Saint Thomas Aquinas, “gives to each what his rank deserves . . . good and bad, honor and shame.’’! In Giotto’s charming representation of this abstract concept, Iusticia rewards the
good with a crown and punishes the bad by “removing” the crown, that is, decapitating the wrongdoer. In Ambrogio’s more complex Siena variant, Commutative Justice does all the rewarding, while Distributive Justice alone does the punishing. Close examination of this detail in the Palazzo Pubblico fresco shows
Distributive Justice in the pan in the right hand of Justitia, simultaneously beheading one person who kneels before her and ripping a crown from the head of another. Ambrogio emphasized this latter action by painting tension lines in the cloth bonnet that holds the crown around the victim’s chin; Distributive Justice
tries to pull it loose in what appears to be an awkward divestiture ceremony.? Both victims of Distributive Justice’s retribution in Ambrogio’s fresco have swords that indicate they are members of the upper, perhaps magnate, class. Implicit in this painting, therefore, is the message that beheading, as a form of legal punishment, symbolizes the taking away of rank, that is, the crown. Only members of the upper classes could wear the ‘‘crown” in the first place. When 1. The “Summa Theologica” of Saint Thomas Aquinas, literally translated by the Fathers of the English Dominican Province (London, 1918), pt. 1, QQ 1-26 (Q. 21), p. 298. For a more detailed analysis of the iconography of Giotto’s Iusticia, see Jonathan B. Riess, ‘Justice and the Common Good in Giotto’s Arena Chapel Frescoes,” Arte cristiana, 42, no. 701 (1984), 69—81. 2. I believe the reason Ambrogio reversed the “good” and ‘‘bad” side of Iustitia in his Siena Allegory once again had to do with composition. By placing the rewarding action of Commutative Justice in Iustitia’s left hand, he included the two figures receiving money and arms among the other benefits of Siena to the proper right of Buon Comune. Had the artist not done this, the two malefactors, whom Distributive Justice decapitates and decrowns, would have appeared incongruously at Good Government’s right hand. For further detailed study, see Edna Southard, The Frescoes in Siena’s Palazzo Pubblico, 1289-1539: Studies in Imagery and Relations to Other Communal Palaces in Tuscany (New York, 1979); also Selma Pfeiffenberger, The Iconology of Giotto’s Virtues and Vices at Padua (University Microfilms, Ann Arbor, Mich., 1966), pp. V24— V37. In another recent and especially perceptive article, Robert Smith (‘“‘Giotto: Artistic Realism, Political Realism,” Journal of Medieval History, 4 [1978], 267—284), has pointed out that Giotto’s Arena Chapel Iusticia is seated upon a pointed-arch, gothic-style throne, while her counterpart vice, Iniusticia, painted directly opposite on the other side of the chapel nave (and thus to the left of Jesus
in the entrance-wall Last Judgment), is enthroned before a cracked and crumbling Romanesque gate with battlements. Iusticia’s more ‘““modern”’ gothic setting, according to Smith, represents the
new Guelph order of communal republicanism supported by the pope, while Iniusticia, whom Giotto depicted as a devilish-looking man, symbolizes the old rejected Ghibelline rule of the barons.
Indeed, the crenelated wall before which he sits is reminiscent of the fortified palaces of the Ghibelline lords. If this analogy is correct, then it is the first example I know of where an earlier and later architectural style are not only contrasted by a painter but given iconographical meaning: the
earlier style symbolizing that which is bad and passé, while the newer indicating the good and progressive. That late medieval painters were prone to make such connections, at least by 1325, has
been shown by Panofsky; see his Early Netherlandish Painting (Cambridge, Mass., 1958), 1: 135-137.
128 Pictures and Punishment
they failed in their duties, their peers performed poena capitis upon them, “punishment of the head’’—capital punishment. Because of this picturesque symbolism, kings, queens, and nobles accused of treason were generally beheaded. Vespasiano da Bisticci, the genteel Florentine
bibliophile, recorded in his Quattrocento Vite de’uomini illustri with some bemusement how his former friend the Englishman John Tiptoft, the duke of Worcester, was executed for treason in 1470. The aristocratic Tiptoft asked ‘‘to die as kings had died,” noted Vespasiano, and the scaffold was thereupon covered with tapestries, carpets, and ornaments. Tiptoft then bade the headsman take off his head with three strokes “in honor of the Holy Trinity.”’3 On the other hand, hanging by the neck was the punishment reserved for vulgar disturbers of the public peace. Let us turn again to Ambrogio Lorenzetti’s fresco, this time to another detail from Good Government in the Country (fig. 29). Here we observe again a female personification, Securitas, flying above the city gate of Siena looking out toward the surrounding countryside. Security, as
distinct from Justice, represents the right of common citizens to enjoy their livelihoods within the commune free from harm by criminal foreigners. She holds an inscribed scroll in one hand and in her other, a miniature gallows from which
hangs a blindfolded man, his coat blowing in the wind. If Justice within the commune promises to behead anyone who violates her public trust, then Security without the city gate will hang any criminal who dares to threaten the peace of Siena’s indigenous population. This message is proclaimed on her banner: Without fear, let each man freely walk, And working let everyone sow, While such a commune This lady will keep under her rule
, Because she has removed all power from the guilty.4 This concept of Securitas passed unchanged from the medieval city republics of Italy to the ‘‘law and order”’ of the American ‘““Wild West,” as Lynn White, Jr.,
has wonderfully documented. Hanging thus became the traditional punishment for hostile outsiders who would disturb the fragile peace of frontier civilization.5 Such emphasis on the visual imagery of capital punishment, however, goes all 3. See Myron Gilmore, ed., Vespasiano: Renaissances, Princes, Popes, and Prelates; the Vespasiano Memoirs, Lives of Illustrious Men of the Fifteenth Century (New York, 1963), pp. 337—
338 William M. Bowsky, A Medieval Italian Commune: Siena under the Nine, 1287-1355 (Berkeley, 1981), p. 290 5. Lynn White, Jr., “The Legacy of the Middle Ages in the American Wild West,” Speculum, 40 (1965), I9I—201.
Images of Public Execution 129
eSfeeseee SSSS re Be Re See e NEE oeee
ees en ee Pi as OR SRS Se Pogo
. : > Jer Ure ste BONDS is of 4 wy are aan: " a fotos sae pa Geis CHTE Ee i ‘ % Re EL PEE FESS S ST }s . =< . Fa_eeeewie on Loa 7 fey*waa ef "3 7:sit ae B,eae * i at. ‘a ie, 2 ae: ieee OEE SES S58=SSS SS Aes La? .,3s “& aae >Se :FS ES oo Se : uF ::eS oe ee27op Se fos SSS SSS =z a0} ee ot :: Tad eS OO Se aae 2Psii::2SR Mig E 7fe .a Ss =ns sos - Sh. SS Se“4. oh eRe :im i :fea a.ge ::coe >SSS: .Sas ;STS — SSSee wo SyaSS : 2: ws .-bee, :ot.,oe .gee SS SSS SS USS 285 a . .== So SS zem -=. eeHHPEES : ;wee ~ae aS weeds Pe /sSS : ee. J0Fa : esse. SY eSee See, : pee 478 fe Se eg a - ——s BF eS y Be Pegs asks a aeesi en eecae ag. .ress f :oF a re ee os=ees
. Ri#2(esis EE aie . _ Saaee RR RES = SSae(SE, ea eS = SS ot ame _y 2ekipesge” ea Sed ea 2gee SSS "spos =SSSS See Sseae ~— :F ER xSEE . =-SSS = SSS ec Sra SoSSS Sw Rg xoF= 3 SSS| SS 2588.20 wei E uss: Peeps _ SESREesSees Ss SS LSS ae eee = SSS SSSeaaSeeee seeeesSsSpee eeAa pee gees analtSee foal SSeS =ss Sg SS 4 = ‘2. phy ETRE SEARRE Bs. , . See SALE 2S SSS : HERES SS sao oo eee RR. sees | Mae ge Veet oh ag SEER es uF Sy het SSS SS SS SSeS = E: oo SSS SSE SSE ote ws —S SSR SSS SSS Series * fae ket ed, A ee = ee pesca a eae SSS = Bice | . 7. Bee pes ia, re ere = Ss ae = SSS [S83
: pegs eS SS : SSS SSS S= SS SS ae eS se Se > Ss 2 Se oy my aes - See Ser 5 bank: Bee eS = BS = sS SS SSS RES Se 3 : re ecg ee = See gS ES oh. : ee oR SE $0: SS = Se SS
a | ae foo Se wee 7 EEE SS er i aa —— ae as —— +
on = " 7 : 3 SS Sa fas AS SS SSSA NS: 2 . * NEE SS Joh ESS HS =k (Se : LOM wi OS = = oe ie = = an ee SSS eS
SS - Pog € S: Gone ES Saas: Se oe feeds ee SLES ROE hag SIS EPS SESS Se eS “2 3E 24 ALL ES SSS Se SSeS SSS SES: LS. SSeS SAS or EUR a, eR
Be Sse ee : oe ae ssSSEALES oS 7.Sa an534eenhBe =GSwe Fo PR es Boe leeEmeaeaeee aoptoRl oe ee oey . SSS * : 7Ss: SeSpee — =.eSSS ars nS faeds es SSS ee SSS hySABRE i SS waliheet Beers eh yt . : 2 See San SS “SS SSaae See fh oesSS wie, SSRE SS es SSS 7 RS Psa Aeaee-RES > Seen
5 Ss : Sy Sse SSS i 1S Saad Res i z s s CE SS [SSeS _ ue , 2 fhe ee See = 5
Sse. Ss a LESS “ Sg BE SSS: ESS See 2S = SES Lh . ° roe Se z ‘ fos ESE SS = SSS MBER &. > SSS Say AS = we Va” yee acon ae
= oa SSSSs . & a SES SSS eS a - : . : = SS . . ve A ae Wass SSS SSS Se ce ee ET Bae SSS) _— “ aS 2 SSS SS See Se SSS oy : : 7 - SSS oe AR Gg. Ou rg : ae Re eo Sen. 7, 2 SSS aie ra oy dts a_LS SeSs BS -- EES 7SSS # s xe LS Ss ao= aetaes ::- *i. .-.a“Saas eS SS Fs Ss RAS OBE oe SARE TNgee TeasOye =asS an oe cee She — SSS Cola wont . SS ae Eg AS So Ts SSS oe AOS Pra4 - Bo .t= 2 Se =Ss . ae vot .-tas »- :.: 7S Soni) RSS BR ee - {Sane Ss SSS ee Bhat :aS ard +: SSS a eS eee RS ae£23: ced 2Se‘So SSe heeareas WSs 4% ieee LS
S SS - SS = eeSSeS eS SS: SSeS i 3-2Seay 2 Se 3 SeOS esSo SSeeRee SSF =r SL 7 { = Saaee o -: a Sead T a, wohl =e CU ea eees: ae SSSR SSS eR anrenane NNT be aa SSS Boe z . oo eS eS “Sea . 7 : soe : : : ve ett te Oo Se ee SSS ys | aa Ss Se _ SSS S SES Pa - " mais
tl ne
eSeR! SSeS Se aRSS se ae =SS SSS ae SCS Ho HS SSS SERS SeeSS| Tae lage Se oy fy| ° Eee a: SEF a7SS iai2 Sse: Se .i:ES .eae fe: aa =See Ses ———s Ronee ae es . SS an Sees Sg := + .aS :oat 27 Fae al SS 0Le RES Sr Ee SSSBo, eS =e eS epacianiia gee Se at. ::::cote oS SSS pes 2h, eS SSeS BRT BS aSSS SSS: iSS SSS ee te -.Se «SSS 3ery =a Sa =" RES SS == = SSS nie r pte | BBE OSS See ais eS pene is Sess = es =e site SSS a nes ae 3S: 3S . Se.oe ess Sa. . ee 2VS : Saree SS: SS SSS SSeS SSS" = es eae SSces ea E eee =deSa SS DOA SESS SSS Sie =) SSS :*# {Sete EY SEES, BS =SobtPe SS Bow Seg oe > Sse SS SSeS. ES S203) SSS” —SS ss" SSS : =ae .: .=eeeseee . 4gee SES 2S SS 2=eT SSS
=f
= SSS Pa gga SSR” Sa . eee = Se Sg RR ae . SS SSE an Se, SR a. BS Ss Sumy
Saad SSS—: a. .=ei:. a: 225 we .SS SSSES See SS. . ——S re ey SES* pe SS Se SSS aan .5ps#33 == ; = gt BSS SaS *: ao =F6ge pee ee :See 2 :2ese Re edSee SS. PS. =Sts= Se[Saree SSS 2—— SeeeSS = = SS ee ee Bis an Se ge ye : a : us. : aww = Sees eee Su |Page ees get ae ea Sa : . : ale oo : 7 ge TESS eee 4 SSS SS weaw se a? “7 2 Sie : : SSeS, ne : 2 eS SS eS peaSkee - : . Toa LsSeeEAS _teSS— SS stSsSS Laan Ea aTURN : . : wel ees=a SaEo CSS .: See SERRE Eee DS, = a Be : SF.SSS aes
= Se Seas cot . fste SS =SSS Beech AeSSS SSS
the way back to pagan antiquity. Edgar Wind reminds us of how sacral was public execution of criminals in antique times and how the ancient executioners made use of cosmic symbols, such as the wheel signifying the sun, or the cross representing the coordinates of the omphalos, the “navel of the universe,” or the quartering of the victim’s body and posting each part toward a cardinal direc-
tion. The condemned criminal was thus offered as sacrifice to the gods.¢ In antiquity, in both Latin and Germanic Europe, capital punishment was performed always out of doors so all the gods could see. Public execution in the Christian era may not have been considered quite so sacral as in pagan times, yet the Christian criminal was still seen as affronting God’s laws just as surely as he had abused the civil codes. His punishment was determined not only for societal revenge or even as a deterrent to others, but as an act of penance for the salvation of his own sin-stained soul.7 Therefore, if the condemned entered into his physical suffering on the scaffold with dignity and decorum, appearing brave but penitent like a stoic Christian martyr, then God might be impressed enough to grant redemption in the hereafter. With similar logic, the secular authorities felt a responsibility in the sight of God to show that law and order in the community was ever in harmony with the divine master plan. People believed that harm would surely befall any community in which the citizenry tolerated something “unnatural.” They lived in dread that some fool might single-handedly jeopardize them all through a stupid act of sacrilege, and no crime, as poor Rinaldeschi discovered, drew such violent reaction as that of blaspheming a sacred icon.
Official public punishment was often meted out less for its own obvious 6. Edgar Wind, “The Criminal God,” Journal of the Warburg Institute, 1 (1937/38), 243—245. See also Theodor Mommsen, Romisches Strafrecht (Leipzig, 1899), and Karl von Amira, Die germanischen Todesstrafen: Untersuchung zur Rechts- und Religionsgeschichte, Abhandlung der Bayrischen Akademie der Wissenschaften; Philosophische, philologische, und historische Klasse, 31, vol. 3 (Munich, 1922), 198—235. Friedrich Nietzsche, in his On the Geneology of Morals, second essay, section 6, points out with devastating insight the innate human enjoyment at seeing cruelty inflicted; indeed, its close association with festivals among primitive peoples and its outright “deification”’ in higher cultures: “It is not long since princely weddings and public pageants of the more magnificent kind were unthinkable without executions, torturings, or perhaps an auto-da-fé, and no noble household was without creatures upon whom one could heedlessly vent one’s malice and cruel jokes.”’ Sir James Frazer has also devoted an entire volume of his classic study, The Golden Bough, to this phenomenon (vol. 9, The Scapegoat [London, 1913], esp. chap. 8 on the festival of Saturnalia). 7. This very thought was expressed by Bartolomeo d’Angelo in his Ricordo del ben morire (Brescia, 1589), pp. 364-365: ‘“‘A quelli che dicono che ’| suo delitto non meritava tanto, a’ quali si
respondera che egli é vero, ma che Dio vuole cosi per darli purgatorio in questa vita presente d’alcuni altri suoi peccati et che ancora Christo e tanti martiri morirono innocentemente.’”’ See also Alberto Tenenti, I/ senso della morte nel Rinascimento (Milan, 1957), pp. 347 and 368; and further
in Georg Dahm, Das Strafrecht Italiens im ausgehenden Mittelalter: Untersuchung tber die Beziehung zwischen Theorie und Praxis im Strafrecht des Spdtmittelalters, namentlich in 14. Jabrbunderts, Beitrage zur Geschichte der deutschen Strafrechtspflege, no. 3 (Berlin/Leipzig, 1931), 287.
Images of Public Execution 131
cruelty than for the symbolic image it engendered in the minds of both the condemned and the observing populace. Careful hierarchies of punishments thus evolved which fit either the social station of the culprit or the nature of the crime. Not only should they express revenge for the result of the crime (an eye for an eye), but they were expected also to mirror the actual criminal act. For example, a blasphemer might have his tongue cut out, a fugitive his foot cut off,
or a forger lose his writing hand.8 Dante applied this doctine in a famous passage in the Inferno. In Canto 28, the poet and Virgil encounter Bertrand de
, Born, condemned to remain forever decapitated. In life, Bertrand fomented dissent between King Henry II of England and his son. Thus Bertrand must suffer this torture because separating father and son is like cutting the head from the body. “‘You see in me this retaliation [contrappasso],”’ Dante has Bertrand
woefully complain. ,
There was also another visual aspect of decapitation which made it especially significant to Christians. Except in insular England and a few other unsophisti- © cated places, the usual procedure in continental beheading was not for the victim to place his or her head on a block (where it would be cut off by a headsman swinging a cleaverlike axe in the manner of splitting wood), but rather to assume a posture as if kneeling in prayer. The headsman would then strike the victim’s neck upright and from behind, swinging a long, heavy sword in the manner of a baseball bat. Such an image of the condemned, actually appearing to be implor-
ing for divine mercy at the moment of the fatal blow was poignant in the extreme. Artists in particular were moved by it, and hundreds of pictures were painted in late medieval and Renaissance Europe of Christian saints being martyred in this way. Indeed, the image of the martyr, preferably a young female, kneeling in fervent prayer while a cruel male executioner prepares to let loose his terrible sword, was one of the most moving in all of Christian art. Its peculiar power owed to the very basic human elements revealed in utter simplicity, good and evil personified as if in cosmic combat. We may appreciate just how compelling this potent theme was to a contemporary audience in a German chiaroscuro drawing of c. 1520, showing the Martyrdom of Saint Barbara (fig. 30). In this picture, a beatific and obviously innocent young maiden prays resolutely and stoically while behind her a diabolic headsman, garbed as a Turk, prepares to strike. In actuality during the Renaissance, the public office of executioner was often 8. Dahm, Strafrecht Italiens, 284 ff; also Heinrich Kaspers, Wilhelm Schmidt-Thomé, and Hans Geriz, Vom Sachsenspiegel zum Code Napoléon (Vienna/Cologne), 1961, pp. 110 ff. In 1344/45, the captain of the people in Florence condemned a man to have his foot cut off for having kicked with muddy shoes the image of the marzocco, the Florentine symbol; see Davidsohn, Storia di Firenze 4.1:579. In 1441 the painter Pisanello was sentenced in absentia to have his tongue cut out for having insulted the government of Venice (sentence later rescinded); see Raffaello Brenzoni,
Pisanello, pittore (1395 circa—ottobre 1455) (Florence, 1952), pp. 51-52.
132 Pictures and Punishment
Se ee Ee ee ee
ig SS eee SS Se ee ae eee SS ACRE EP Se pe GSS RS
SS ee SS SES SEE SUE ee eee See ee Ce ae
Cc 2.ee =. i & 7) =ee #+32*=*=7= >. ee ee& &3}3x2... ee eee cee ge ee ee | Ee ED Eee Sere Wome r ese, . fess: Re SY eRe PeORE aeee Og LgRP aT ia Be PSEE Bra,We Pe BeEge Ree el ee Se]aed SESSie BFed shatBE SSeS Sergm ERA pat boeG OS Ee tn a BeRe Rs Fo Re Boy PSE te Ee, *. OSES an :val : rie oe: ee
a oS ee — Sk 54 ney ve a ese RESES: aes Be oe oy SEE LSE EA e S eS SResg o aS Sree ea RI: fe eR OAS BT Re ON gg NR * wee og wet ~, lg (URS BSSSSS See St i a Re ge oe on) SERS es 2 ae SRN SS og US ee oe oe ak = Pe MR eee ae i gE Verges gh Bg PPE go SS i Se
fe Bs cage eo Sig eee RR Bs ee ae gk i gee pi) ASS RD pied Paes, BSR ge RRO S.
aeBios. ae i ASS Se ee ee O20 eS EES FRRSSS See SR py teed PEIere R eg FoR RE {TS seer ge feo PSS eesSs os Sires ® 333-3 ES 8eas Sopa RRusaf pay Bayh Sesee epee UREEER RRS paseeSee Tay SERRS Se Ree A RO GsSeBSA =, aSe. eeeee eaeGEE Seek See"PSR. eerasUEFoe BRECOB) CREGash Sg 0UES sg tes ea tee es
abe eR Side 2 EES RS SM ee ee AES ee RR Dic Se ee ee fee eee AGES Rp PRES, BP le p oe Sa Pee an os
BSE FEES Soe Ee ee fe pe SS ee es fay VE a eae Se Be ig gie 8 2 PES SESS ON RS See 22 icity’ SSR ED Pe ge RE & eee eae BES UCR BAD 3 ERNE oe BP nS RR oes Seay ua 7ees ar eS Sg ee . WS fe EP ee, SS eR PR Faeraetoli BPies ge OR PE es The>pei by oil 2See eee eet See ORE ree SSBESE aaa onea ER neta 8 poe Be ede TSS SS Se, eee ee > ajee DA yee, RRPEegvoiIRE eee Eh aneSSpnSoke) eeeSpee aesi sete CEES 4 Fool SeeATlee SR SEI” GEES
eee pe ee ee ee hes el 2 oe eee re ee er ee ee
oo ee a ee ae ee Bou nie, Se oe UE oo a PN ge SE See Saw Be Meas eee est ee gg BR See ag eis Ce Pee pee dhs SSE ee eee ae £ Pe 8 oe ee Pugs SO ETEe ee ee eRe Bi Sk ei AREER es a Foe a Sige ys PR ae A,
moe ON [GRE SAE oe ee ee es iets? Me ES Aaseeeeee eePe ee Pe Se ae fas £ Ee 2k ws Sh foe eee she a ee RA oe eeRS oo)pRB eee Pap oo | Raa os RooePsSE ad ne ws
Se nae tos Vayes2SsSeF ie. dy Ay!Mee 2 ae Serene aeSUE 2 4 SI BEBE setae Seer gePei PRR BeRS SESeg ee ae Sages ce =SeS, gene ge, ee ae SESE E "per Se ees a Paes Seeseers eee eee er ee er ae ee LS ee Se SE ee Re aSerene he DietaerBo rer 2oe SPee LEEen POSE oe aR
ees Cee ee ae ee eee ee See es eS eg Pak gore fy Sys BERS er SS Be ee eR Re es a Be oe “ ge St ee eee eee
eee oo ome penen ey OPER Fl pee Peee NO eas = | ee eae soee ee i ee ha = eee as ee cee sure Hi = of So oe (on. Saree, Pee ee Seee eee BcReeeFP eee Bo URE SRR i eee ae = of —ee oe BN esee eaa ee rd =r,:t—~iC‘ le Pgi ‘:;si‘CSCSssCiaSS Seee SeSee ae ee eeepoiEee ee ee
aS ga Aa‘SeER imeTRE SUA Soe FeSeaes SSSeBoa BR ft GSEee SS soe? SeBee ee §eeape Sores aera SERRE ed geEb egyTSE 1alse RRM ae eeprs Eeee ee peo fe Zs ERS ER ae fe BE ge Sei Foe aPo eeRe oe eefe a 2eS SERE TST) AE yg os fetes dei willy Jig.) a aeoeeae gooy Te.adRRS SURE TRAE Se ee Soct RSC oR PyesBAS UIEaece opine aee eScyeR eeeRN Pe ASi .gE edRee. Eee ae Pe ee
er ee ee ee Se ee Cee ee iso eee q 2h ee oe 82 i RS eae IRAE ge ca te Py ES PRS RE ROE ee Eee : OD PREPS SS ie gg 8 ae ees Bere, em. Pig é ee ee eee ee es et ee ee ae |. See eo ee “ee Ph UL 3 SSS Se SS eee Se gp ER SESS SR ga OA a Set SE TE ie, eee ee eee ae ae
ere i Peg fe aE ES we Sega. pe SF RG 8 Be BE SS ee SS s (8 VE BEERS 2S Ss SRS Ape EE pes ees TE BR pa NS 7 a) BOR SUES eRe eS See SS
hs ee eee er nae EE oS Pa Ree ea eS i 2° Sh) RS aS ee See © Ss Se ee oe fori tats BAR AS ag Rt de ph ee Sea ce eee eS ee SRE eg SS eS SSR Se See ES ES Oe RR Pegi. ERE “SORES (SS SSS Sere Ss SRoee Poy ee a PEs, ER HAE SoS 2 pe RSS yo Pee SegeeSe BEY eSBEE MeEIEe 0) bag URE ERS ie“SS eesST eeRRS a aBe SS Cee en SopLeo SfSereTS PeeeS SE,Sor Se bSee SeSere oe Soa SEESR SSSSeS ae eee aeee Sa ad ins See es. lsBSS gS ea So eet Se ggern | ipa a Seeee iene oonJee? OEE TREE ee eRBo PD eay AUN kge, eee SES SeSESE eee! SE SS lL BERR SERRE SSDS
SPSS REE us RSE aeeeas 5Ae ee iSs eeOo ee og atng mii eseDoty SESS Ste ee EEEES SRESSE! ELLE: ee eee . eee Soe Foie 2)Seke REESE UIipih, | OUP ESSE SRS SS SEEe SS ekee S0eDS AySS OESe eeeegee Se ES EEE URRY GO PERL ee PEP. SS[SU eS as eoSeSgr eee 4
Take 66 eee ee ee ee ee eT AR Ree RSs Seeper e eR
es eePs SSFE rrBRRASeaee egeeSeefs ‘Sie eee SN 4PS peepeeee Re Re) ee F ae pe eS Pe a ee
7." 2 S7 eee eS RSS SSE Sy 3p, SEE Ae Seca eS ae Carats ee EEE ot USES URS EE. AS. eR Se BAe FSS isk AT Tes SR ae Sar eet ope Eg oe eee eee re. ot See ee ee ONE Ih Ry SRR HESCREES Oy SSR eae eS BR SRS Sle ny tier a SS Re ug Ok a Ree ee ea
Senne SO ee ie te ere eee See Be er SO i ge ree af Se Se a Ray SRS oo er ee ila? s Say Pgs eS
We ee ee ee ey a CE le oy Se, Seee ee Oe eeae eS ee ee
Seer re ee Gres TEES SRE BP aE og po RE eR EgeCr 2S ee SS ee Faces he igSee ieeeFR EE age SULEPS ESBSCo ERPBs SSSE ya)2eS RSeo a eeSPB gel thEN SeyAg US SESS wi PPE Pr a EST at Ee eee ‘ Bem ws Se ee Ne ye a = is a ae aan Aye Se eS SSS, RES tiie oe oe 8 ge
sWw e 3 brid Ea a0 se ON go Pe esse eo te REE ARE SERS PRE SS ENS LS SES See eae SSRIS Pe ee See ee a
aan JRAPER SSP: | ue. GASSER Se esis ae ee Spe See | ESSE oats f GS GREASE os ge a AP Ee ees SERED SSIP EEE 2A NTS re aA
30. 5
peg) ee Ska OS SE SSS SS Se Bis eee Riese. se SR SS SSS ES SSS SE Uy ieee
...
Unknown German artist, Martyrdom of Saint Barbara, c. 1520, Fogg Art Museum, Cambridge, Mass. Photo: Courtesy of the Fogg Art Museum, Harvard University, Gift of Robert Lehman.
filled by persons of just such exotic appearance. He was frequently recruited from the swarthy races, from among Neapolitans, Sicilians, and possibly Africans, his dark complexion making his presence on the scaffold all the more devilish.? In Renaissance Italy, the executioner was often dubbed il manigoldo, a word that derives from the German for “‘red beet,”’ a plant that bleeds when the flower is ripped from its root.1° In Florence he served a six-month term, being appointed by the podesta or captain of the people. Apparently, he lived in the Bargello along with the podesta and the rest of his official famiglia.11
In spite of his status as officer of the law, the public executioner in late medieval and Renaissance times did not enjoy normal social acceptance. In spite of his relatively high salary, he often lived the life of an outcast. According to law, he was automatically infamous and thus denied certain rights of citizenship. In some European communities, he was forced to live in a special house outside the city walls. Symbolically, he was regarded as the vicar of the devil, counterpart to the judge, who was the vicar of Christ. The executioner’s ambiguous role
in the community was rationalized much the same way as the relationship between God and Satan. Omnipotent God can be done with Lucifer whenever he wishes, but he needs the prince of darkness. As long as man has free will, God will employ the devil to keep him tested. Similarly, the public executioner was tolerated as a necessary evil in this world.12
He was also expected to play his vicarious devil’s role to the letter. His physical appearance was anything but reticent. He was given to gaudy feathered hats, skin-tight britches with prominent codpieces, and he often stripped bare to
the waist to perform his functions. On the scaffold, as the executioner confronted his kneeling victim, a fascinating iconic image was presented to the observing populace. Whatever the crimes of the about-to-be beheaded, the 9. In Florence, the executioner’s assistants were often referred to as scalabrini, i.e., “Calabrese’”’; see Davidsohn, Storia di Firenze, 4.1:605. The Libro dei giustiziati or “Book of the Executed”’ of the Confraternity of Santa Maria della Croce al Tempio in Florence (see below and Appendix B) has a notation (under execution no. 1133, in the year 1541) that the city’s own onetime executioner was himself condemned to death. His native town is given as ‘““Bronto,” probably Bronte in Sicily: “Giovanni Battista alias Bitorso di Martino da Bronto fu boia da Firenze poco fa. 9 dicembre impiccato e sepolto al Tempio.”
10. Dopler, Theatri poenarum, 1:530. _ rz. Davidsohn, Storia di Firenze, 4.1:605—606. 12. Albrecht Keller, ed., A Hangman’s Diary: Being the Journal of Master Franz Schmidt, Public Executioner of Nuremberg, 1573-1617 (London, 1928); Gerald D. Robbins, ‘“The Executioner: His Place in English Society,” British Journal of Sociology, 1§ (1964), 234-253; Finn Hornum, ‘““The Executioner: His Role and Status in Scandinavian Society,” in Marcello Truzzi, ed., Sociology and Everyday Life (Englewood Cliffs, N.J., 1968), pp. 125-137; Helmut Schumann, Der Scharfrichter: Seine Gestalt, seine Funktion (Allgau, 1964); A. Ademollo, Le annotazioni di Maestro Tito, carnefice romano (Citta di Castello, 1886); Franz Heinemann, Der Richter und die Rechtsgelehrten: Justiz in friiheren Zeiten (Leipzig, 1900; reprinted in facsimile, 1969); and Barbara Levy, Legacy of Death (Englewood Cliffs, N.J., 1973).
134 Pictures and Punishment
Christian viewer saw not only the performance of temporal justice but a symbolic drama, a rehearsal of the eternal battle between the angels of God and the demons of Satan. At this moment, the viewer imagined the executioner as a
demon, and the kneeling victim, if not an angel, at least as a pitiable soul struggling for salvation.13 We must never forget this fundamental Christian faith in the possibility of redemption, even for the perpetrator of the most heinous crimes. If the criminal accepted his punishment with obvious courage, if he looked pious and repentant, the assembled audience might feel sympathetic
and help him with their forgiving prayers to win a favorable Last Judgment. In Florence and Siena only three forms of execution were commonly practiced: beheading, hanging, and burning. After the fourteenth century under the increasing influence of Roman law, beheading was reserved, theoretically at least, for malefactors in high office. Hanging remained a punishment designed for criminals of lower status or for crimes of particular repugnance.!4 Burning was rare and tended to be the sentence for extreme heresy or repeated sodomy. The terrible ‘“wheel,’”? common in northern Europe, fortunately found litile popularity in Tuscany.15 Of all these forms, burning, even though little prac13. Sometimes spectator support for the victim on the scaffold grew so vehement that the executioner was actually attacked. Luca Landucci, the Florentine diarist, recorded that on March
29, 1503, the people turned on the headsman when he botched the execution of a young man whose brave demeanor won their sympathy. When it was whispered that this same executioner had put Fra Girolamo Savonarola to death a few years before (see below), the mob then stoned him to
death. See Luca Landucci, A Florentine Diary from 1450 to 1516: Continued by an Anonymous Writer till 1542, trans. Alice de Rosen Jervis (New York, 1927), pp. 130-131. The same event is documented in the Libro dei giustiziati of the Compagnia di Santa Maria della Croce al Tempio (see below in this chapter and in Appendix B) under execution no. 651 (1503). Not only was the executioner assaulted, but apparently the brothers of Santa Maria della Croce al Tempio, comforters to the condemned victim, also were put in grave danger: “Girolamo di Sandro de Bartolo di Berti fonderaio fiorentini decapitato per la corte del Capitano 29. Marzo per havere fatto ammazzato per invidia Andrea Banderaio e sepolto a S. Maria Novella quando costui fu tagliato il capo il boia lo fece stentare e per tale compassione il popolo ammazzo con sassi il boia detto e fu in
gran pericolo la Compagnia e paura.”’
14. Dahm, Strafrecht Italiens, p. 301; also Pertile, Storia del diritto, 5, 273; also Davidsohn, Storia di Firenze, 4.1:610. The notion of hierarchies of criminal punishment goes back to ancient Rome; see Edward Gibbon, The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire (London,
1788), 4: chap. 44. The following entry from an anonymous diary of the fourteenth century underscores again how Florentines regarded beheading viz-a-viz hanging and burning: (Alessandro
Gherardi, ed., “‘Diario d’anonimo fiorentino dall’anno 1358 al 1389,” in Documenti di storia italiana... per le provincie di Toscana, dell’Umbria, e delle Marche (Florence, 1876], 6:405): “Oggi, a’di xviiii di novembre, 1379, messere Cante di messer Jacopo de’Gabriegli d’Aggobio mando a tagliare il capo a Nicolé chiamato Gozzo ... come ruffiano di donne, e uomo di mala condizione e fama. Doveva essere arso. Onde domand6o grazia, si gli fecie mozzare il capo. E co’lui ando a prendere ouella grazia un giovane da Radda, ch’aveva tolti danari e altre cose, onde doveva essere impiccato. Ebbe la grazia col Gozzo insieme, e amendere furono dicollati.”’ 15. This device was commonly employed north of the Alps (its origin is Germanic) as a means
of punishing lower-class criminals who had committed especially evil crimes. The condemned would first be spread-eagled on the ground with his wrists and ankles bound to stakes. The executioner would then smash his arms and legs with a heavy iron mace. Next, the victim would be
Images of Public Execution 135
ticed, must have been the most spectacular, creating a frightful, indelible image in the memories of all its witnesses.16 Everyone today who visits the Convent of San Marco in Florence is attracted
immediately by a poignant pair of paintings, hardly great works of art to be sure, but visually gripping nonetheless. They show the Execution of Fra Girolamo Savonarola, and were painted by some unknown artist shortly after the turn of the sixteenth century. The artist in fact may well have witnessed the actual event, which took place in the Piazza Signoria on May 23, 1498.17 Figure untied from the stakes and retied to a large wagon wheel, his broken limbs sometimes twisted around the rim. Man and wheel would then be hoisted onto a pole and left in the open air until the victim’s flesh rotted and his bones fell through the spokes. Pieter Bruegel the Elder frequently recorded this grim image of the wheel as a background detail in his often ironic art. Robert Campin, in his painting The Bad Thief, now in the Stadelsches Kunstinstitut in Frankfurt, depicted both legs of the thief with compound fractures. The artist apparently took as his model some poor victim actually broken on the wheel in the artist’s own community (see Robert Herrlinger, “Zur Frage der ersten, anatomisch richtigen Darstellung des menschlichen K6rpers in der Malerei,”’ Centaurus, 2 [1953], 283-288). On the other hand, Jacques Callot, in his engraving The Wheel from his “Large Miseries of War” series, c. 1633 (see Daniel Ternois, Jacques Callot [Paris, 1962], p. 199) has depicted the punishment incorrectly. The artist showed the victim having his limbs smashed while already tied to the wheel, an impossible feat since it would have resulted in the wheel being smashed too. Moreover, the popular imagery of St. Catherine of Alexandria being tortured by a wheel also had nothing to do with the execution form as practiced in, medieval Europe. St. Catherine’s wheel was rimmed with teeth which would gouge the saint as it rotated. The wheel as archetypal sun symbol is of course a common metaphor in classical mythology. Zeus also used the wheel to punish Ixion, who had raped Hera. The insolent mortal, father (by Hera) of the Centaur race, was strapped to a blazing wheel and forced to roll through Hades forever; see Erwin Roos, “Das Rad als Folter- und Hinrichtungswerkzeug in Altertum,” Opuscula Archaeologica, Proceedings of the Swedish Institute in Rome (Lund, 1952), 2:87—104. Another especially brutal form of capital punishment not practiced in Florence but common in northern Europe after the fourteenth century was “drawing and quartering.” The victim, usually an arch-traitor, would be dragged to the place of execution and there horses were tied to each of his arms and feet. The horses would then be driven in opposite directions, literally pulling the condemned apart limb from limb. A Flemish follower of Hugo van der Goes painted a rare image of this torture in his Martyrdom of St. Hyppolytus, now in the Boston Museum of Fine Arts (see Julius Held, “Observations on the Boston Triptych of St. Hyppolytus,” in Josua Bryn et al., Album amicorum, J. G. Van Gelder [The Hague, 1971], pp. 177-185). 16. Concerning the methods of burning as practiced in medieval Florence, see Davidsohn, Storia di Firenze, 4.1:606—607; also idem, Forschungen zur Geschichte von Florenz (Berlin, 1900), 2:319; and Giuseppe Rondoni, “I ‘giustiziati? a Firenze (del secolo 15 al secolo 18),”’ Archivio storico italiano, 28 (1901), 222—225. For a particularly grisly printed image of burned victims, represented in characteristic post-mortem ‘‘chicken poses” by Lucas Cranach the Younger, see F. Holstein, German Engravings, Etchings, and Woodcuts, c. 1400-1700 (Amsterdam, 1954), 6:131. 17. For a vivid, eyewitness account of Savonarola’s execution and its aftermath, see Landucci, Florentine Diary, pp. 130-131. See also Alfredo Lensi, I] Palazzo Vecchio (Milan/Rome, 1929), pp. 86—94. In the Libro dei giustiziati of the Confraternity of Santa Maria della Croce al Tempio, whose brothers are depicted as comforting three condemned frati, appears the following, under execution nos. 594, 595, and 596 (1498): “‘Frate Geronomo Savonerola [sic] da Ferrara /Frate Domenico di [word left out] da Pescia/Frate Silvestro Marutti da Firenze/questi tre frati di S. Domenico osservanti di convento di S. Marco di Firenze furono in prima degradati con [illegible word] gli ordini in su la ringhiera della Palazzo de Signoria a di 23 Maggio per commissione e mandato del Papa Alessandro 6. ed poi immediatamente per sentenza de Signori gl’otto impiccati a un palo in su la piazza di Signoria et arsi e ridotti in cenere frettamente furono gettati in Arno.”
136 Pictures and Punishment
poe ’ SS Peeees = SS Se er SS aco ee a 7 cag Spe i aa
Eee SSS “cect eta See = wea Saaee ok ~eeSSeS an .“3Pe a a3 cae: :== SESE Pe aN SE — PEASES =“See Ss atBST SS SS SS SS —S— SS aEEE ~=.3Pode ; ES Seer er oR eR Pen oei ME SUSESS Sess Sse SSS Se aes eeyh ane ae . paveni bet SS eeSEES eS ae SSeS SSS i SS Se SSe_ ae SS apes oT ESS Be ante : . ss .a.a,ae pipet PA. eye RES ee SS S89 Sse SySe aaee ae RENEE SS HESS Epspay ee :eee noe SSS SSSao). ae ee——S ee -eg ==~BS a.S37 SS ed eS3 wha MESES a et ceBeon eg iEpee es Lotak wees fee PES
SSeS SSS Je SEaeSead eoSS eeTs tee eOs SS SST =ca gee ae te ree EeES eeatee S ss 7S Za Ree ARSE 2 ey eee . SS ve TE we "i m a : + Se SE SaS Rew oY RE Sess PSS: SS eee NE se a ee SSS SS SR Sage aie ee a ae ee ae 3 SSS RS Se ae => ea Fs uh cs Se Rete. =a ae} Seas FE=SeSee ae He aeTeg = SSSB SSee Teg —2are aS.SSS = SS=Bus Bey! are aSe 2 ee ee 2ee :Se opeSe: 2: ee woe ie}2We £825 ery ae HESS Se ie Se SSE : ESSE TSaS SSS SS Aas oats SS eeRE / aoe : ‘A cee ee =eS = —_ Se eessS SSS SESS > stceSSS eeLS hae ae soele=e at et Seu SSS: gee PEE Te: PEuey BPRS Me BFS SSS Sa eee wi Ree ie ASE Ea ate SO ? See ee oes eS vg nan Beet eS SSS oe w sR TE (ks a ee Ae SEE OE Ss. Se com ee id Je Ss eee MES SS. ewes RE SSE “aS, ; re sete: a ST OS a : : Pome Fei Se ee a282 ss
8 = 2 oe qe \ea ee oe eee ee ae ~ See < aS ee a Pek — ener cs Bae :See =i PFE == : “ ee Bee SS gee Rope at geel ae.Ry, 1 ed . eee i age See erEPsge SUB td ee eseaS Poet ofSSS.B) Los Se Be OT PIS: ee es pea SEES} So ee Se SS see Eee SE. EERE ee He LET {Fee : : : ie WS es ge ESS Se ES SS
SS Sa 2 Sa UREESS§ . RY BE&. Sachse SAREE ee SS = Was e SS PSSSSSs é hoo nS eee * ~ Fae BSSwt eS4Sass Skit =Bie TAS“Ry ge aSoa PeSS . ta :areer, SESS SESS. CSRS apSSR aprotic: eesSt cSa
ES : perce ees se SSO ms‘LS to. oeaaes RES Soese Se:.fe, 2 PEE pncB eeSSS Se ESSBS oe :~.Loot keyes ERagPare gS gwee 2SES RS ee Bg cee oe i:HERE DAOSE ag EY Se eS S [w) Se TS7 Go. :aa2hRL :ted Lo Fos. Bey 28zoe (ey a Se he 3* ieee : RRA . :REPEL ASRSA iB SRE SpaAS
SSS Be Se St 7 : eels ™ woe é # SSS: ar or eS a By ly se a : ~ eM, ~ 7 oe x ee a s
Ses. = SS : , ay = SS, SS 8S SS a FT ny = zy & . By = io BR Rs eS ESS PESSSSS: ets FS : . roa LSE LE “i eS Sse BSS SS ge SB ; ae eae . . ‘ ety Ss . z : Tea e ae ee pss Sea SSSesBee OeFass ge oe iS SS oS taoe Se gs =. :ae: ee : Bat : .Sa . _ttae eae = SSS : 2asta :=asd . a 2S 2 age SSSo meee : seer Se ae Sy.Pee oo ee iS aSS
ESS SsSee ; We Lae2sBoon _ Fe oe eSsine eee 2SE : : Seok: .:::SP areoaseSESS Se a as oakBP Se SE eesBS SSeS SASS Bore — . . SOUR : * = 2 SSS . : et APa GEES ae ee ie aes &=
SS eee i “ cee Ce . ce . = Se ES SESSS wo . J o J: TESS . Pt: aie Sees eee Eee See Re Sa 2S eR aed aooee SeeeeSS a RS ESR seit aJee :OES wee STR AR Sganes ai neta oS See an= SS SSS Sas ee teset 5.eS wfSS SS oSpe>of : . wt Sen, aPRS te bani Vere epee 225 SSS AE Ss sSeSe =areLome — aR Pf OT eneae ENE, ass :SSS Ss il_— EE:oe :ah Sr SA, ae Sis See tt RSS SS ss eeSe iSamets =SS: & ee ante hie eke SSeS . +ePe tee EET aaie eS == SS ase : Rags a fF ae eS ge RE ry SSSS ES aaeSS as = =a=y5:ares : Be ies*FEN cg a|TL PSS f= SPS SSSS = gle Se ..=lates foe ilseee Pot a aeSgt See FSFRE See ME meen. ag oo MaSee ONT LeSS
SSSs9 : sss seE Ss : ; - : + x Sass : z as =e =
SSS. Se Tuna Peas . SRS: i ESS eS ee ee. RR Belaes ‘ :Sse exis =: eeSe.ee SS eee 2 Ste eS SS = : =esee J Se ae SeNSS aemons co renRe fag ape Sa: 2.ES ee pie eeeee 5 Pg 2ears Sop SSS SSS 7 eseee . eo z. “- Fy 3. 7SSS SERS eS geen See Ses :eT SS see o. = pee ASR oe SS aSSs a es- SS SSSSa AP) SSS = fone TE ed ange FESSSS Sees SS Se tS ees Ba yg eae ees FF: So ERE eS ee SS ee ee Soe ee Se = SSS re Lois obSe She ee eeEo “See ae Bd: eC sie —SSS = SSS aSSERS Se pedeSoSke Seng SUSE Se SEE eS Ss paras >. Bp ay SOME Fae & EE . Polis . - ts=. ; =e Sh }. eo ERRS nS.Ss SSS SRS oT:Sieger aS phSE7SSS Fs =a SS SS ae Bitiee Paid ARR Saas aa oSEe Oe aoe Bee oF fa Ua esi, =S= SS Ss Sa Fa : ffs wot aE . & ee ee : — = aes = Sane SSS 3 pi RES Be SBP acy ES a 2 Ses SE SS SS == aa Seg 0G popeg etehte wip Ma BeSSS 7 SeSeES ie.ae5oe: . beceoll = ES 2 | ane: SS . Bey ase eed ae >Re atsere! SS SS SSS 0 earn o Dh . Se tom Be, peice SSS SS a wie SERRE, 7” eo pe, *SSS eS eS —— Soe : ee wo ue og co iil: cea Lao. ee a: -. ee eee 3aSS SS
SSS eas eee i 2Bor eee.ae a on . =SSS Sess.ae= Seg Rees S FLLoi . : ne eeEeeae aryoh: = are ~ RES osSH z eeLe eeear « ane F a SS Ss 23g eas tes Jooh. De, SSS isSs Te US 243 Ses: a SSS =1h a ee PBen lt:oS F oon Se oe : 2S5ER SoceS =SS SS Soe Sees oe Se SS ee2S Cay SSE ceBge eee ae 2 “HSS a:ae gee gS 52So Pere “ge esesae SSeS SS SS aS Sao eS = ae aoe * a soll ST Sead E : BS ES Ss oo ee fas se er Rie: ——— SS ke eS SS peo : Poot moo Se es a Seas a : UALS ge SSS: SES 2 oe See 2 PBS =, Sas 5 a = ee ss [2 SSS. 2 eS SS tSSS: ae Sts ok SSS: ws, . BearaLoe r id ~ eae ? x = 2 “Se Bee SsSee : FSSScS SS SHeos geaS=k aefn BERL eas Brg J SS) ‘3. Pn PEa aeSSS = :. Loch “ToS =
°
eS Ae 2S ee =. —— 4 ages 88g es So aaa . as a : . aS: aS RS as > SS hee SLIT oi: See ae oS ee oe wy lS eee Ss a ae oe SST al ro ee Ee eS 2) — 2S Se Sey =— eS. gee - we ces nee “ Se Sy SSS: sae- :eS2 =a ae aiSRE sd _— a SS
SSS aS SeSeeC oe ee £2 ee: ae ”a dani, a SF ESR Se a Se = ‘WUE : aR ee Wa. SS aeSSS SSSSoe as SSS: SaEES, Se a Be Beee e PSS: fork : =eee 5 i OP =e iege=oe = 2=". & Ea RSS Boe 2 eo Se = Se ee be: BREA SA EE) ey oS SS Se SSs! eS Re a SRE 2 aes _ 3 SRS ee SSSA. SE Oy nica aS Ss
SSS Ee SSS a SSeS See ae as 2, Pet iad ye SSS SSS Sg a BPSRS SEES SSS ees Re. BE Se 5 fat ees = SSS SSS a SSS 2 neh SSSeeEeSSeS SS Se ° eRRA B ns ageeee eg(ERT fe COggES ToeTe ges ae ee SSS SS SS pee SSS SSS Bree eee eeytaErere : Lon a. =oe 2Sif5:liaee SoFF ee See SSeSLtSees ode4gets = SS ReES. eS see geSee = MR PES Sees 23S SSS eee SUSY SS SSS! seatiae SSRREE oon ES Lo * ac" SS SESS ae pee AR See eS See Sees Sess en ce eS SE 7S & ‘ ss si Bo FESS
SS HES Ss eed ees eS OE as : : £:SS SAREE . sss 2 = ee a aeSe #eees Set2. 2 TTSe ee Bau SSS oecSEe FRE UE Ba es = oe aleSeeeaFee = aSS RaeEgan TS oH , =: FSS SS ES ° SSS RSS aes LS SS ee eae 3SES HE weno : Saasgee BRS gen i BEE Rass = ag Lgeekse 2S SESE .SS 7So=SePs Re vette ra ; : he aehae SSSSyaS SSse2 eSSs Ep SY SPAR eb SESS ese eae aSe kage RS 3oo San Reh ae Pesca a se TS = SSS seer SR eoTe SS DEBS “3 ae= ail 7SASSS GSgs S|2ieee 5nd =aes See Steae te ae SS ESSS Ss.0esSee SePAeSE SeSuge SS 2SSP Pe SSeS Toh aeetey RScapes Sek eae _— Se SSS SS SS2=. Lae 2SSe RE wwBo Seea OS ae Ree SS eee FESS SSS 2 Se ore inh pee Sekad : ae oes BSS SESS SS SO SS Re ce ossSi, see ey gel! ee ae 7 EP STS28 i BESS aca eeeeeBg Wu PEs SSse aes3 mm: Pr SSSSS RESee See Se age eSSs = +SSS to CESS ae ca YS - "ESS = SSSee ytt ae - gprs agSeSeaes ESS SSS eee, PLE SSeS ssSse YaSee ee{SS SSS So SSS SF eS 2ieee rr itFo=Ses reeee State tt SE =3Re ae OOP 6&
i) sss :23eae SS=..." SEG oeSee SSaj.SSS or ae eee +. een — = SSS Ss geSSS) BE le ed SH Es aie : aoe See BS SSS SSee Se et aBSS 3 2eeascaret SpSee Ree Se PFaeSe eS Rese ae See A ages . eee wigs Ee Es): fio: RS ESS SS 2S SS SeSSss5 SeSa Ss2s SeSe sae i at =ee Se agees Xft eile yps EEEy SEE (etl eSoR oT ONE BSS YD SS ee ae See 2Seeat SS Sed gp = aSe oe. Hs SESS ttoF Sa Be. 2a SSS *Rf SSS Fae Se aepes eg 3leap PS se Rae =oS FSS SS Sa eee on Ss Se SS SS SSeS SSS SS Ss SSS 5 pee BE SSS ae “ 2S ae S : Se Ree 7 FS at ee cot PO 0 Se Se ES SSS eos Se es OP See Se es ——— es SSS ae eS F = BSE ee = ao Sey oe eg ESS SS =a a, ee ee ee Se eS ee SSS Ss SS = ee ey Press 6 SS Seen ee ee ae ees oa ys See = ne =e
SSS Sees a.Seoo: ae ne - aes 1a Rene >Saeee aeesee>SS |eeeSe ae eeota SS esOe S| a = SSS ACES s oS ee[SS SSS : SS SE qe — ee aSS eee = pSaecop ae7.arr -Sa eesasnner apemmraie: igen See Rie" = oO aeee; SS. / 2 ote Sa ee SSS Bet SS ese oS MSY Sees . Ree eS SS ee ee SSS SS SSS Se alae 73 08 SSS oS 3 ees =e Lf J s+ =a — wy DF Apt Ee Se ES
SSS Se Sad SS Se * gt Seer ee ee SSR Sy SLES Se ge SS {OS SSS: a SF eeS SS SE Sa ae * ‘nine pat Fu =: . SSR sly See esp FSS SER an : Oo oS Sivetr os, “ESS =SSS ae ee aSg ES See See Bees me beet: Ba SSES a om)
Ss essSSS SS tae ag FS eee ou ER Si SSS SS see ee = eee. ae. ae: {i ee 7 ee ESS 1o) = 22 eee SS ES esos eee pee Se Os ate ee eS aa Sr Se Pe oS See 2 ees 5s : Ree pee PEt Hy Pep Spy uesePs hn 4 i. TR BSS ———S =a :Se FESS Hgeggees SEanni EESty; 2eee Seep ES ms oe ee SeRenee ae SS1.eSGs=2S eaeSPS Bf egaig Sn 8 eee ig. ae SEM Re: | 1g Seer y wal LS7 OE Re cota SS SSS SSS 2ee asePowe Ce aeis: eee ig PEE ARRAS ARS oe >woe =ER RS :BS ae SS eeese: a8BM Ses Ba eet ene aepetOy SSeS = SSS SSS eeeeioehe° eeDae a -ES> eS-gwee See EMG oe
ie te on Sy a yg Saas Be eae SESwh Ges BEees Ss "CR rel Deeg Sea: £ . rr IPery EAT EE AES Sos SSeS Sees oSot SSeS SoS SRSA Roa” eeSe a§eitSPS ~ aSg eeee | Se SSS SSi= mat SS ae oe ee re ee SDR GESE RE 9 aaa os SS SSS SS Se ar Ste ey CS co ze = BEE, 4 O19 foes ese ee a oe Perr rl Sa, SS See < eee [Se ee SES = See Bes FO SSS7,Fo|SSS eeeicgieee SESE BREST fe Be :hE SE a! .TOTS So Sa SSS SHee ae, ee, =e. ; PA er 2- ay ES ss Ses. at:eae ec Hae PER Tye weeEE wb oavs % Qe Sats Sep eee_ SSeaatereeree SSStae Sessa esasEy oe, - ‘aon oR OO SSS BRU teeTENE SP EeABS TSAWhe Cewag, . LER Eh AS Wn HS SS Sie feria2 Se a..ee SeRi ee SS. oe we MSA . i?ee GSae Re SS aREaeeee SSS eeoeee : eer wee . Bok reA 1Ede ost nc sehseos SSESeeee peeneessS > eee | SR aaSs deen: ESS BE Ss SsS= SRE SUE ee SSS: “fe sigh pe 5 1 eater 7 mn 3 iiaw, SEEESS PR seceener reas 2 SS Ca we : . a, =i : SOAS, Se SSS
Se SS Pe BER — So = [Gs eee eee Poe SSE oe . .stSfOg oome eS oe > Pte 9 MEETS SS — eeeee oeBS yt eae — SS. a “ene —— BOP .Se«NS eea SR FSSS aren ES ae ees 2S nereenncenenabig S55 1 ELA .: :aoe : ht. 3sscmaeaes ee2realate reeRS SS3SERAS eS zSSS SS SSS F aeSees 2S AS eS So See See Ree TEESE aaPee ReeEe, Re S: ae foo 77h 3S SSS
SSS. |oe ES|ee 32.2 Sees ST aes - Bes BBS ogae Se See i EE ag “Th cae ne* ee Sees ~ 2wo FE De Peers Sa RSSSei [SSS SARS SS esSe tea cas See FS :doa Fis iets ieogBOSS yy ae 1, eS eS Secs }oyea es JJkt RES OS Be oS +.SES SS :SS See SEae se ee ee Se: :~Fm inc CUP aURS ee ees: ae SS: sae TT ESBS ReSo |Se SS SSS PSR ea eS SS we phe :FE Phe iSe SeSet. aea: SP rs eea&SS Yop gt SRS Pees SS oe SS eee aNE ee “nage .=poe AE ttneae er aeee ee iyae ee ee “Sess ee
= QO
St SSS HSae eS SEE Sage 22fees SPR peg PEREREREA | WES 0 Pe Lobe nar . .c cae: ot SSee — 3 ho eR Ets irg witpace te . SaaS 2F SR ets sg i TS Sees SS Se SS (Fa) SsaSoS SeSSSSSSSS ees UD £2 gkAPose ee Gee Mths. eePRE aoeFikgtuae a!SEES SS SSS Sg eoAR (SS LAE ee = =AN eeee 2s SeeeRS int 23 aoeRS ssPed oS SS SeSRS SY:sophie RE SSS eeBER ESSE SS aes an cB) Ss aooe 2S PELE SSS SSRn aSSSESSE SE SS ReEe SESeco: CHELSIE SR es ee oh # EES . =: Ue SSas eee.SSS ee ae Seat) argee See nj! SE nig SBS SSSS . CESSES” oS Bi ES SSR SESE Og oolsaesES eS:fie 2SSi): Bree aaSee ah oo, ES SSSn kgeaeiee ee SSSR SSS eePace Sat) lt SS eee ea Sete BaSS Se SS SSS SS SSS Ss SESE eRe ‘aS SS SS RSS
31 is the more ‘“‘close-up” of the two. It shows Fra Girolamo and his two Dominican aides, Fra Silvestro and Fra Domenico da Pescia hanging from a gallows at the base of which a huge fire blazes. Fra Girolamo, who resided in the
Dominican Convent of San Marco, had just been tried and condemned for heresy. The Piazza Signoria, here shown, had only just recently been the location
of another huge bonfire, the so-called Burning of the Vanities and even an aborted ordeal-by-fire to test whether Savonarola really was the prophet of God as he claimed. The artist, still practicing in the old medieval narrative manner, depicted the condemned frati three separate times in the same picture. First (top, center right)
we see them kneeling, dressed in white after having been defrocked, receiving their sentences on the ringhiera flanked by Donatello’s Marzocco and Judith before the Palazzo Vecchio. They are in front of an altar behind which to the left are seated the otto, the secular magistracy of the city, and to the right, the collegi representing the Church. Next, the three frati are being escorted down a ramp (top, center left) especially built for the occasion. Each is in the company of two black-robed “‘comforters” from the lay brotherhood of Santa Maria della Croce al Tempio, who hold small tavolette or “‘little pictures,” about which we shall
hear more in the next chapter. Third, the frati are shown at the top of the tall gallows, having been taken up the ladder by the executioner, who stands below with a feather in his cap and a sword at his belt (middle, left). This same manigoldo was to meet his own death by a mob in 1503. The people remembered how he cruelly executed Savonarola, and so when they encountered him botching a beheading five years later, they picked up rocks and stoned him to death (see note 13 above). On the gallows in the San Marco painting, Fra Silvestro and Fra Domenico face outward; Fra Girolamo hangs with his body turned toward the Palazzo Vecchio, according to an old custom that would have the criminal hanged facing in the direction of his crime.18 The gallows itself looks very much like a cross, an issue that apparently worried the authorities so much at the time that they ordered the top part sawed off lest the frati appear as Christian martyrs.19 Below the gallows, on a specially built circular platform, a great fire has been prepared. Even though already dead, the three heretics were burned, again according to an old Christian custom founded in Scripture.29 The Florentine druggist Luca Landucci, who was an eyewitness to this terrible scene, 18. Hermann Kantorowicz, Albertus Gandinus und das Strafrecht der Scholastik (Berlin/ Leipzig, 1926), 2:272-273. 19. Landucci, Florentine Diary, p. 142. 20. Albertus Gandinus (Kantorowicz, Albertus Gandinus, 2:273) invoked this passage from Josh. 7:15: “And it shall be, that he that is taken with the accursed thing shall be burnt with fire, he and all that he hath: because he hath transgressed the covenant of the Lord, and because he hath wrought folly in Israel.”’ See also J. R. Reinhard, “Burning at the Stake in Medieval Law and Literature,” Speculum, 16 (1941), 186-209.
138 Pictures and Punishment
has described in grisly detail how the bodies of the frati were consumed in the fire and how their ashes were spirited away by the authorities and dumped in the Arno lest the people savor the remains as holy relics.21 The artist of this graphic painting was clearly in sympathy with Savonarola, since he showed the three Dominicans even a fourth time, in the upper left-hand corner, fully resurrected in their Dominican habits and being assumed into heaven as saints.
Figure 32 illustrates a detail of one of the most well-known topographical views of Florence, the so-called Map with a Chain drawn about 1480 perhaps by the painter Cosimo Rosselli and cut into a number of large wood blocks in order to form a gigantic printed cityscape. Our illustration shows only that part of the old walled town which stretched along the north side of the Arno to the east looking toward Settignano and Badia a Ripoli. We also see very clearly in this detail a rendering of the municipal gallows of the city, raised up on a platform or
scaffold and entered apparently by a stairway encased in a shed. The gallows was just beyond—by statute, one-thousand braccia22— the city walls marked by
a gate, the grim Porta della Giustizia,23 and a tower, the Torre della Zecca Vecchia, which still stands today. Just beside this tower, in the Map with a Chain detail, can be seen the rooftop of the now destroyed little chapel of the lay brotherhood of Santa Maria della Croce al Tempio, clearly marked IL TEMPIO. While some executions, like the sensational punishment of Savonarola, were staged in various parts of Florence for political reasons, the majority took place at the municipal gallows. The location came to be known as the Pratello della Giustizia or “Little Meadow of Justice.” Before 1315 this location was outside
the Porta San Piero Gattolino, now the Porta Romana opening onto the road south to Rome.24 After 1531, however, the gallows was moved again, about a half kilometer northward to a place just outside the Porta alla Croce, now the Piazza Beccaria.25 In any case, between 1315 and 1531, at the Pratello della 21. Landucci, Florentine Diary, p. 143. ' 22. Romolo Caggese, ed., Statuti della Repubblica Fiorentina (Florence, 1921), 2, Statuti del Podesta dell’anno 1325, lib. 3, rubric 87, 242; also in Statuta Populi et Communis Florentiae ...anno... 1415 (Freiburg, 1785), vol. 1, rubric 27, 247. See also Davidsohn, Storia di Firenze, 4.1:603 ff. This idea may have derived from the Roman custom of having the place of execution at the first milestone beyond the city gate; see Mommsen, Romisches Strafrecht, p. 913. 23. During the Trecento this gate was usually known as the Porta Santa Candida or the Porta di San Francesco in reference to nearby convents. For the history of this unpleasant location, see G. B. Uccelli, Della Compagnia di Santa Maria della Croce al Tempio (Florence, 1861), pp. 59-79. See also Davidsohn, Storia di Firenze, 4.1:603—607. Since the removal of the city walls in the nineteenth century, the Porta della Giustizia no longer stands. Only the old Torre della Zecca Vecchia marks the site today, at the busy intersection of the Lungarno and the Viale della Giovane Italia. 24. Davidsohn, Storia di Firenza, 4.1:605. 25. A small image of the gallows can be seen in this location in the Stefan Bonsignori map of Florence dated 1584, now in the Museo di Firenze com’era in Florence.
Images of Public Execution 139
scisetantetns pai SSS : «cede Eo ; “ais i a en
ae —— SSS ES ee seer So wi Beco Pe a SSeS eS Re a TT es a : ~ acai ne eS = al . =. —— a ee. eee A oo ae ee. ae er aaa an : ee sags See ee — —— — eo. ae ee ee ee ee 2g Te eae eR nannies ae eee =: _—— —— eae Eee # aE 1 5 oe ae et eI SS ee gem a Sa See SARE “ 2! sess a Se eea -SS SSSeerea Uh, EG =Re=eEsLeieeeeeaaSC a siigpbatahbnibiasces cousane ns,penne spi mesicinan si ca tevin tes. = oat
Be SL ae EE SS SS a SS ee eo —— — : — ; | 3
B. Pano ESA EE SEY SEES Sas aes BSS: SEES ies SEERA, wing Se SSS SS. = a ee Se. eS oe 3 SS ae ee - : — 2 : : , _
Segoe ee EE eS Beveg oe SSS SSSoo SS SS SS Se Ea —— ia See et : aaaoe Loge :Peg eoSERS eee CS ee eee SS == Rae —— aoSa :=
.= Ss SSS SSS esFT;SLSs SSS fe ee a REE oeRe xed =.a PeOs te. Be Ss Sa ee eek, 0 Ss ee ee pene ee ee Se aa ee SY A roe a REAR eS SS .ee =ae Sse Ss SSeS —————— Sse’, ee eee eer ee Se LS Se oe RES TS Be ee —— —— = ee SS =o a ee= —— eo eeeee——— SS ee* Ses ~~SSS iF ee ee 2sOe eee ee—— ce. ee eeSSeS =" Se TEa.SEES SS=e es =Se_ i=SS SESS SSS. ” Sees Seema ec ——— Se oe oe a. ;.ee: “ee ee : . J > Se Poll lc ls a ee eee SS EE FEES eS 2 SS — —
~ ro e 2 a = SS SS —— A Se aS eee BAe Soph EY fea SSE Dee aie eet Se ee or aE So ee is. SSS Seen OG .
eee... ~~ SS eS SS Se eee aqowenstin Se — Ro SS a SS a ao OS PS Se Se JS a SSS See 2. See Sg Ree SE ee 2S EES, ee ee a ee SS Sama Sees ——s SS Saige eas
—_— = Se ee es a ee ee aS a ee ee aS ea ae [a =. See Pediat ae : e Se SS Soe eS
a sigp oF ae Pe ©gots ee,=s,— —— a— y a—|pe Aes peecaus a of, Seer So TT ee © SeOY. SS ee Se 5 ie eS 2 = :aes : F: ; FeSees eeye —— ——s Ss See ma cptncnnaunptie SS SSSSSSS SSS SSSs == 2 82s 2sP S25. SSS Se 2SS a.oe SVS pra ne FPo1 ae :u3 :Be . | ;a4iia : oeaebon, . S ius: :. .po £83 ee eae : a ; Pee : ‘ = : be: te Ps Bebe wn ae : i | is Soe gerd ee weaSeieee.) Pel be oe iz a deepeeee Pe elly
med|. a mei ti be eeUCR | ; ee ASee” Sb E eeeeaeee Wh NaN
- a} -hpSE os: Bae ie ae po we PAP aRa oe=Fea— a a-Ji.cS :ee ee ag esoA a!, see i :aor fb ican i - : vr ae aa aeBURBS ee nd efeeeh :=
ee ae a SS WF se NS : : : : ar corer a33 . aes : : \G = ie =
ae A | 4: |ae 1 :. .righ ; x erat E oe a :7)E ae aa 2cooeAe . a Ny Rn ae erean } ;{3a | a. 2| Hi BER, oo on Pt ant Page ie |>“Un Ageinres
Be { oes DAS aa . . rd ee = a - ao ee ee 4 ‘ if . at ; S aoe a oeNi eateae bod bed Be, aeons ¢| 23 - :ye rr een : VW ped : iie or » Coalaee eee | i por NL Oe ee eA : (ae FREE GPW LF ee “ples | Bee i\ ||ail . Mp yn%eeWoe MR Tb |ceWo pene Raed os|oe, Pillbe ppb Pag es \P adoS a oe Le : heAM a | pee | pop Ateag HE ye eon Cer eee & beats Fk eee ON | aos or \ : : §: rT ’ VPS Os be —_ ‘ ne eee . puting ne orate
aosgE pocde Loe:CY af ne en ae oe 2 aeiegen : osLE | so A :| ;| LL eee ee HOSE ee ee eS ane Tae Tea ill!MN Mdppayhpeb ad Bese ao\, od , 28 \::
Eee : Ps enee {| anes a aeey es ee os Be ooh age is Sane? : - RA eneaaes Berg ae re ee. _a u\I i5:
A ee ee
ORD| ane awe en OSne PIGLET Pb bp all. \Nee re ON. oe ee ee eee ‘ ain NB fF Ke Mob pe ere Hs. ast , i wae ‘ E
et i id HAM ee , | en 2 ee By abe VO re) oe ee | a 88 ; — 4 art ‘ | aS y ee Poe Ca. iPOS , Pars Neoe ee ee.PO ee ee tluF: oe qi
aes eeete7Ap aeON ar co r¥PO vbieee Ppp7 oa peendese aeZnrgheee: no eee of ge ea rast ok rtS2 a| .ay gS
Oe EE==—E—EE——— peraddhtercctaipssi oer are a | Yo
oe ._aeegenenlenn Ie ets . ddd bt es. te oe, NA ee |) a= fh PETE LITT aa |ree aewoke ae eeeee a ee
.-\.
- SUPT EP BG PP PEAY) PP fpf pep ti pd la es \ ae "
143
“Book of the Executed”’ still exists in manuscript in the Biblioteca Nazionale in Florence. It contains among other papers of the confraternity a chronological and cross-indexed list of nearly two thousand executions from 1420 through 1744. In Appendix B, I have furnished a table, derived from the Libro, showing by year the number and types of execution—beheading, hanging, burning alive, and other unusual and infrequent forms—which occurred from 1420 through 1574. The latter year marks the death of Grand Duke Cosimo I, whose reign
saw the transition of Florence from a medieval to a relatively modern state. These statistics offer interesting evidence concerning the nature and exact timing of this transition with implications for the issue of artistic style in the service of politics during the period under investigation.
According to the Tempio records, the most common capital punishment in the fifty years following 1420 was beheading. Then, after the late 1460s, the number of beheadings relative to hangings decreased, and the latter punishment increased at a rate of nearly two to one. For the rest of the next three centuries hanging remained the most common execution practiced in the city of Florence. Why this sudden shift in execution style, from a form that insinuated upper-class
rank to the condemned, to one more degrading? In 1420, when the Tempio records begin, Florence had a population of some thirty-eight thousand souls. For such a population, the listed number of executions, averaging only about seven each year until 1478, appears low, indicating that the city had a relatively minimal crime problem. Its social classes seemed to be working harmoniously together.22 Furthermore, the larger number of beheadings also represented a certain sense of “‘democracy on the scaffold.”’ In self-consciously republican Florence, even the menial culprit was often granted the right to die “‘as kings had died.” After 1477 until 1537, however, the city suffered wrenching social and political upheavals, beginning with the Pazzi conspiracy, the consolidation of Lorenzo il Magnifico’s absolutist rule, the Savonarola affair, the fall of the Medici, the
rise and fall of the last Florentine republic, and the terrible reign of Duke Alessandro. During this period of turmoil, the annual average of executions in the city rose to more than eleven, and with dramatic fluctuations (especially in 1478/79 and between 1528 and 1537). When Duke Cosimo I came to power in 1537, the average declined again to about nine executions per annum. While the increase in average numbers of executions after 1478 can be explained by corresponding increases in the overall population of Florence, the fact that the style of capital punishment changed at the same time leads one to 29. For documentation that Florence really has achieved a relatively peaceful society during the early Quattrocento, see Marvin Becker, ‘‘Changing Patterns of Violence and Justice in Fourteenthand Fifteenth-Century Florence,’ Comparative Studies in Society and History, 18 (1976), 281-296.
144 Pictures and Punishment
believe that something besides demography was also at work. We may make an educated guess that the ruling class at this time feared that crime was getting out
of hand and that the old symbolic forms of punishment, once keeping crime comfortably in check, had now grown impotent. In any case, the new popularity of hanging indicates that the authorities felt that perpetrators of some types of crime should not be allowed to make a bella figura on the scaffold. Instead, the criminal should be made to appear as demeaned and humiliated as possible. The Cinquecento records of the Tempio Libro dei giustiziati detail increasingly an officially sanctioned policy of desecration and mutilation of the criminal’s body even after its execution. The beginning of this change in execution form, which parallels the change in artistic style in Florence from blunt Masacciesque realism to High Renaissance elegance and bellezza, can be traced specifically to Lorenzo il Magnifico’s brutal revenge against the Pazzi. Not only did he have their pitture infamanti painted by Botticelli, but he ordered the conspirators actually hanged even though they were members of some of the most distinguished families in Italy. Moreover,
Lorenzo added a vengeful touch to this punishment which made it more demeaning than ever. He had his enemies hanged right out of the windows of the Palazzo Vecchio and adjoining Captain’s Palace on the Via de’Gondi. The Libro
of the Tempio confraternity notes this hanging variation for the first time in 1478. While the confraternity scribe listed only three persons so executed in that year and sixteen in the next, he admitted that some eighty had been dispatched in one way or other during Lorenzo’s bloodbath, and that the Tempio comfor-
ters had not even been informed.3° The sight of hanging bodies out of the Palazzo Vecchio windows must have been bizarre. In at least one instance in 1478 two persons were hanged out of one window at the same time. So gripping was this live imagery of death that the punishment of hanging criminals out of the windows of the Captain’s and Podesta’s palaces became an institution in Florence and other Italian cities thereafter. No doubt part of the popularity of this new execution was due to the familiarity Florentines had with pitture infamanti. The people were already used to seeing “bodies” hanging against the walls of their police buildings, albeit artificial effigies painted di naturale. Lorenzo’s ingenious hanging variation, however, added the ultimate realism, and we know already how he bade Botticelli intensify the infamy of the 30. In the Libro dei giustiziati (see Appendix B) in a note at the bottom of the page after execution no. 396 (1478): “In quest’anno per insino a 2. aprile [sic] furono impiccati e morti senza
la Compagnia pid di 80 corpi per lo stato e caso di Lorenzo de Medici e de Pazzi e degli non faciamo mentione [illegible word] ci essendo intervenuti.’’ Lorenzo himself became an honorary member of the Tempio, so his exception here to the usual practice of allowing the brothers to comfort the condemned was both premeditated and deliberate. In later executions involving the Pazzi conspirators, however, Lorenzo relented, even allowing the brothers to comfort the most hated of all the plotters, Bernardo di Bandino Baroncelli, hanged in 1479 (see Chapter 3, note 31).
Images of Public Execution 145
Pazzi by depicting the conspirators hanging by their necks instead of their feet. In commissioning Botticelli’s pittura infamante in this manner and having it painted on the same wall against which he had executed the Pazzi in actuality, Lorenzo hoped to lower his enemies to an unprecedented nadir of disgrace and damn their family’s memory forever. Ironically, however, the intended insult of Botticelli’s defaming portraits must have been rendered somewhat innocuous by such a comparison. Similarly in 1529/30, Andrea del Sarto’s pitture infamanti competed against the awful imagery of sixteen actual bodies hanging by the neck against the walls of the Captain’s Palace not two dozen yards away from the
Mercanzia/Condotta (it is to the credit of Duke Cosimo I that he not only discontinued pitture infamanti in Florence but he also curtailed the practice of hanging criminals from the windows of his public buildings).
But let us now return to the ever-observant Renaissance artist to see more evidence of his own individual reaction to these highly visual ceremonies of capital punishment. Certainly the Renaissance painter was no mere morbid voyeur at these affairs. In his eagerness to paint or sculpt di naturale he often attended such grim occasions to see firsthand how an executed victim would look, in order to better serve his own patrons, who were demanding more and more realism. The horrors of physical torture had to be especially well painted to enhance the glorious sacrifice of the holy martyrs. The more terrible the execution, the more courageous-looking the martyred saint in the face of brutal chastisement, the more the Christian viewer should be moved to have faith in the glory of death with salvation. Imagine, for example, how the Florentine painter Paolo Uccello would have been touched by the real event described briefly yet poignantly in the Tempio Libro dei giustiziati: “Sano da Modena the Jew, called
Salomone, was burned alive on the first [?] day of December [1464] by the authority of the podesta. This person after he arrived at the place of justice requested baptism for himself, and thus was baptized and then buried at the Tempio as our Christian brother.’’31 There is no way of knowing whether or not Paolo was eyewitness to this cruel execution in his native city, yet we do know that just a few years later he was commissioned by the Confraternity of Corpus Christi in Urbino to paint an altarpiece predella having as subject a currently
popular story of Jewish sacrilege and punishment by burning.32 One of the 31. Libro dei giustiziati, under execution no 310 (1464): “Sano da Modena Ebreo detto Sig. Salomone fu arso a di primo dicembre pel podesta. Questo tale poiche fu giunto al luogo della iustizia chiese la per se il battesimo e cosi fu battestato e poi sepolto al Tempio come fratello X ey The story of the Jew and the Host as adapted by Paolo Uccello for his predella panels is best told by Marilyn Aronberg Lavin in ‘““The Altar of the Corpus Domini in Urbino: Paolo Uccello, Joos van Ghent, Piero della Francesca,” Art Bulletin, 49 (1967), I-25.
146 Pictures and Punishment
ee Se ee ee
ie Fay cE ROSEPENEHSS eR SS
ee —Srt—“‘“—“—“meseses#.s#s= seme oo — Se | ## #8 §©|..,.—ChCC , Ge ORS ORS SE SBEgecesiae cP PURE ie afl ts SERRA ar ig Sl VR eS ser secrete ee = SR Ree wee Bh BO LAR PERE hsook ees ‘ROSS age Se ee Sees Sees Soe Pa ea a Sa Soe nae Pees ee re SSS eS See Peg SRS lid gch Hape EP BA eR SUSEE SRE ce aa pees So ea Boae Eee sa dee Ra Le eeRe Ae: eeeyae SERS rst ee eee SSE eSWe Te ee Siang eee2aces Reepaheeae hges CEs da hats SaaS Se: Sey en aai.
SeeAe ee Te i Pol ees SER Baee CAS EeSs PSR PBS eS Se FoESURE R Oe hn ne ESee een ae oo hhLhLC lL le Sg yi ee fore eee ibe en SS Be Peale AEG SEaeee
BALES aS PEE SERS SR sae | | PRESSE FSU RE Saat cet JRL SS SRR ee ea is fe ee ee Seay maar 13 eer ee eh eee pls hs ee eh” ea ie ae A PRE Eebte il sR es eed eee
BEES B A os ESE a Pega {Ge ECE ES BERENS JSS |... SEISity Be EY Ag So Ea PPE SoA ee cme PE INE APRA PD ae aR
oe Co ee Jee ee ee =.ee a oe E —r—OP ee ee ee oe ae ee- := _=s. oeoele.aun ve Se ).... — ee J SS eee Bee ee | Sefee a >Be CL, EEE 8 ..,rrr—“‘_OOOO res eee ae ee Eee eee Ce rl LER See hia a yore Bee ig 2 Fp Rae oer eS Ee
Sg ee hs a ee. ee ee Boo) Sie EEE AG pee eR EE ES a eRe oie eR Se ne eae npr | Ce re iii: AOSRASRUR TERE SS SE Pea ERR COR ae a Ee Big Pic RE: sone ee ee Wee eees beet PE ER CRS RR SOR REON “HEE Ta SEE SE
SESE ee FRR eee soeae areas ALE ee tae LESSEE aaa ERS aes eee gg = Inc a oe ~~ EE watate Ube SeeEo LOR BUAfeats Ph ches APSE PeeSgSES ae ten PORE CIEE ak SP aed ee3Hbee REE oeeeSige HOG SESS Eegeehae bea.tS,de setae gos—rtrti“i:*s*™CSOCOCOCSCSCSC—CSC BeABS ee ST esaera aoe eee wedi Ce eS eeeRae ees OSH EES eSPS SEE SoS PPSaPEeae Sa eeeeee SRS Sed SES SE SorERR SU GRE,ar GRR eae SORTSBBR a RE tig apes St fae eye ae ee fees oe SEES eeaa eR taeies HRREIE RI SaoP ag PaScina ee: PUR SRE ig,EU Ba Re eee LE SR Se SEE TE, tue2S Sts SSE eas fpSpe gies Bul ERPOR ESEss) PegBs Be eee RS eeSa eean Regge eaeasSee ge Bea oeSah eeteees Sees SoaaSee eee RE agSaga eehs ee doula Cab ob aks fates DUES ER ee SE geeR Pa ER Bee HSE SERRE RS ee ey SeeDEEL SUPE SS PL Pee aris SEE ESeei ae eePisa PEE SeSee es SS peTe SE SRE se 2? eeeTee fisAUke RS Rane ar SEES aCe Seg egesge et ee aS eros SSEeee PRA LES Paint PEPER Bus ES eae See Bes se Se ee ee os aoe Se fee eeee eeee Eee erie ee TAPED EE:eeTRE ee ee Se pe Pint} ESE ES beer Popp aE,eeBPS CRE RES PEST PES REL EES Ss ERE SHER eeBE SPECIES ERD JE fy SES SESS ES es ee Soe eee eae s ge Ae See a eee Rees ee era SS Fee aS oe BeBe 8 VE SPER elie BNE Ae pr ea oe ERRRTER, 20S ah “ES ESE SAP es psa eeOeeee eeeeBeh | oeeatsents oeeaeer Soacee a ereOsage eA ORE ee eee epee eeERooaa ee aes Bene naar aes Se ee RRP Eh a 8 oeAge ae . Rio cers Secee ee! Seay ast ee Va eeeoF es BOGE? Paes ee SUE Ag ESReee Rca ie Gh OR Ran ag eee erent st
ee oe ee eee Le See oe PURE 2 ee eeest 7 oe geeBes Serer ee co ee fener ee Deeg EE Ee oe es ee Soe —o acca = ee aos—Pate = - Re a aee a ee e SSSa, Ss Jee wal
PgR or th SE6 0 Sees SS SS See eS eS Soe aS a = ee ee ee poe Ee ae Ee Se Sees SRS eee Ge 2Ss eS ne a ee ae|... eee esoe SSeS ae a ae SsTeepe AEE ae eS eeeee eg 2 eee gee epee ae CE aaa rea SSeeraeys #7 ;%;7%2© | Se #§.= ee eeSeeSeca. Sree ee PEGRe ee |PBiaeee eRe eee err eefo SE.ao ae oS =Pee7Ee9aaeeSeeeee dae os i Pere eeeeee eepia ee — —r—“—O—OCSsSsSsSsSCSsSs PSS|. ee CULE as Be aes SeRSS ee . =. =———C‘“—m oS Co ofipee ee igPe eee ren |. gS ee ee -. eee dinsihs E B Be peg re tea RES? Jeeee eS gee Se esoes ee ee oea Seeee s Sree[) La eS Ser oe ee a laa= aa. “ee ae - _ . ee SeeeS lmaeeoe Aes RES: eee isho ee ae wd Pere ee URE a See oeghSe Eeee. See ist pee i ‘eee ee ee3 ope |. | = ecco te Sia ks ee ei SS. SeaA eeeSE SSS SeSRS eae Sees pede ar et———— eae Ee eeeSeer eae So eReSS a aa aes fe Bee ina Supe eeeESS AS ee asters re ee eee|. Rae SS PRES eS ee ee eee 2 eS eo ee gosets cM: SRR PPE SReegLAEST Gee 2S Sea SS SSe aes PERSE eee ee as Se |. SaerSOE eee eeShep Sapaame ge Se
gel SPREE 2Be Jeo e7BRON SUR RESP! SeSoS eee ee Uaeee eee SSeS aa SSee Se ES Shae a Gpag se go tesee ae Spy Es Se geaesaae GasSeeE eas ae Ree Seera ses ee whe eeaa ee ae 2.ee. CBRE SRE Se Se See es eee eae nas, Sg eeSees seisee ayer Eo tae Ss Se Se cane eeeeae SaaS ae es See Eeeseeg Sag Ee ee SS ELS — ||SSSe Ag 0SEES Se SSeS! eeones Ee ae uae Sc eee oa eS oe pee (See SS oe ahs — eS eeee eee eepean ae Bee se hay) peer Coen cae edie ig ae Sy Seg eee ea ee aSS ll.Sea2SUEUR SRGS Ee: Soe eS Se Ses Ss ea ae Se Seek Woe sgoaSe, ME fySic oe oeSees SEES RRO seas Ee pees |..Sa Se CRG ae APBES 2 ee ee ee Se eee Soe eeeee gS aeHee eS Meee Es 8Sr aeeeee ae ce Ena, gies SUES re eee ESSE G SES SES SEES ee Pee mated A EROST EE Ca SST So Ea ety Ged ae ae a ee — ©. Seer tinR eee: De OS RRS Sen ae! SHE Eee pe ers eye Eu Ee ee SS
naa EI eSSECRET Se Sgcete ae REceEES: SUSE sep SS Se SSS SORES ESS Pes, SpERE EER AVES BaESR SeeSpe SSS: PRONE SaRSee5 ee gt iS ee eesSieisaee SEESissSEE cee? SeSESE paigeeee iateee Sieeeerete paris e eeeoeeee See ee aes RRS Bs ee ee SE ee SS hee PSS Petsttbae ARPES SEES Sag cot, aaneecaee Bipteeee eT 2 SSAA gage a SREP RSEPSB be Gne deaTEED Ue a LSSor SpeSee driohe 3 ORLURE N PERES Se SAS he oy! ee SELES aS Pe Ppaatney heeer Sun eR Re ey ata Seipgee es Be See mee BT ESRae sepansy Re Sagee mene: Seana fe eeRape Siig Hib
Bai 4 ga URS PR AUP SESS SASS CeegS Parga ee ors aloe! eda ie Age GREE See ee pe SERS de Saaad Se aPe |...pee See ee Seeee BeetPitisa: SETBees SgRUSe Re SS ee AO SEPP SSS BRSE EeeireSee SeeSERS ee SsSERRE ORE ahs Betis sulin eeRoy iB age ae RE Tt Te oerghSfPai SeEE eeoat ee aesBUI ee aeS Sceeeed aeeea Ss Bie, es eres
Eee Eee OS toe eS oeiecae Cee Se fs... eee ia Roe ee#### teSSSS :peeghee |eaeSy CUR Se PRES SeaBe, HE TESS SSR SP, ee eTARSE HE SSSRBE Ss Re foe See eeaSRR Sees 3See 2ey SRS See5 Be ga pegs ER |ey Si RUS eee Fe era ee Esme aeS reer ee So aS oeee a i eee Pe AM RS fel ee Se 22 ee Boh feSRP eee Sn ae SS oe eeaan eS iee ify eS aee aee =ee ——r—E 0S Pie ee. ee ee easects 2) eee ior(oe §=—sEe oy uaREARS?! ar ag Se ae Se ey ss ee Seas Ses esieee ne Ce Cr|.SEE fees :eS “HBS SRS EScg whee Ag EEee eee Se ees ay aes enaFoe Pam ek PeSee eae2Bee Se SSR EESRSA ie aa! Sr) Teregases eae ar 5 ee Gh ee Rees oars oeag a3Ses Seen se Se 2.eee 2S | ae Pe FSSC EERae RR CEE EsBS Rg Jee eS emer SSseesee SEgeSP ap ae The eS es ates ee BISEE ee Sees AmT! i eee a-| | a pane AOU BESS SSeS ES eR Se Bey le abe agp ES SRS ee eS pe eee a - ... 7. . wag Ne AEE a |
a ee ae ae eeiteeee Ss P: 3See ; re a £20 35 os es ee ee ae ees ee ware ciseee Gee oS eS 2. — .. tees «6 dd me ere PB ee a... 2 eo ee es EB : can OSEee 4 OE ae Se eaeee ak esi-_ a S24 ee SS See aU a ee ge = uae a MBIT Gea? ees Pe Jee aa oP eS ee ace fe eS a aS eS oo eS whe SEE ae ee ae ee a Oe 2 Pee = ee Pa “ae a |. eens eee en ee ee a EEE oe ee a 2 oe =... ae Sg eS ea oe oo Saae ee Fuk oS oe |. i i.|
re 3 SR co Bees ead 2 El Sea Baka guess eae FR fee See Ee aS BE SES Re i See oS ee Pe ein Sa ae ie ee ees Se poner ey Pee sae Stay ee eS Se a Se F * ek SB LSS SRS OSES Pee 1 ESace: hd SP US: CE SB eSre ee eS sees eee Renter eee ae JSSPRSEEREeR SR SESS eRe — eR BL rrr—“—CO ari Sha Be Pag tioige te! 3S Sa Soo a ae spe a 3 Se peisraenreg. ESECE os peer cats he$ tke Maa etSesa2 Saas eeuate:eeSPsoo See. eae SS SySSSeePeaSpe eeitisek eeeae gy eae22 Jpee Aee eee ghee eee pei a ce Ree See
i Poe Bae eae is Sean BS Ae a ae ia 2S Se PORES CS BSR BAS 5 cn aa J ig Sea 3 PRESS SEES SE SES iS seen aes sree aiaes See Ese ee Strap 2 ae Sua igs Be DoS ot Gp uid fares Surana 2 i pa ee es aS pes eS ES pc Re USARaY (Su R See are
ee eee ree ingen BRE SS EP Ey ee ele So ge See a ee ee Se cous se ee eS Soe eT OB TBA Le fy Ps Se ee J URsa Rr eee EG gS Rees of PSS
eae i, BE po Rae es ee oS a eee Rey SE Te ON OF oe Pee |. Se ee eee Spee eee Se ee Te He SE SRe ae ee 2 eee en Bee os SEs OE = ac ee 2
SpAR RS eee GRREeee ee Ceie Beee es RSE oe eeeee 8 auee Saree SSS Se os Se Se SUE fe a open ee eas eas eee ee Se eS tee a Hascs ee Se ae eee | ERPS Bid Se go Fa 2 eee pence Sues ee pee aSe ope re eeSRA eee ee eeSoe ees eeSee Se eeaESSS areeeeee Soccer eae Saat fo po Bp Pv 3.Bees es Sees ee GtaERS Sess ee Seearstee HS SESE aeSeaPee ee ns See Sues eee eee eee eS eg ee Gseae Peeesee aeae eeoe “HBS SRESe SES eee Se ee ee 2eeSSeS Pus - . aa . ee © ae Se ee ereeeer sy penetare eager es soe 7 i.ee ape. eee ee pe Rigs eee
weg REERES RSSoePo EeeeeeeBE: SS Sas a Pee oe eeaSs fe Po Sees fs TES Sears SER eeSE ee RE ee Be SHAEErBES SeRe! fo ee SES 208 Reger RaeSes ee es pe eeBEE te : SES ee2SSS 2 Sees Log BRO Rs pees EOGESS 2 PUES SSNSER BestES a. 2. ge SCE tae eee oDRRR Lee RES Hew SRC begSSCS SCS a Ee |
Paes See SEES SHES ER gersesoS eas aa Se SLES Eeee SSE gee Sere Seas wpeBERR nas BOLE Ay SER ge Se Sees ees ee ESesgod CRS ee5:eae SSR Tear 20) BREDg aae atSFS peasgy BSSeg PMR eee Sos Spat eeSaSEGRE = |.Soe =.eSese |.ee Seer i{Sees Ses ee SRR ee eer aeSee ese Cees geraSERS Eye eR cERee Bee BRU RSBe pie (PSS eee ae eaeee ERS ee a ee UNL eae LE Segp HESS as PREBes TSE aE A EE eensee eee ee zoe Bis eke era a EE Sor eeie Roar eeee ae 2 Ee Boe a a Se HET SareeSeer Ase Ea Sey
ee Bes a eee poe ee ae ee 2 AS ei a Ge
POS EEGEG ER ESS ee See oS Re Marta ae ee SatsPS a eeSe = “=. BPO a eeES a So . : eg es oe ee ee BeSee Piga ae eepiers ee Le Seerode, paarToa BeBek ge gs ib See : bea :Lrese eetyi SS Se SEE Se a SR Se ee ee eae ee Ro = SyReTHSeee. Pitas aRES Per eee SeeSSS 8 eee RGR troeFea ee ee rp Ri eR sRe apaIes ME 2225 = fan hsSorina 3 de Hie BESPBobs oy Pg? 2a eas ae i*) 2Sees Se TSR Th PUR Saae iheSa| pee ae Bicieleoaes oo SRS aedOTN ee eeSee peeeeyee Re eee AS enaSSS Es CSRS RaeHe SoS se eid EEeS SERRE ERear Poo oe,oie ageeernee Sea er EE ae A ee ged ReeSPRUE ee seicae Bo RE , RSE SESSae
So Ee Se a Se eS aS Se 2 we Re |. ##§ fe Wee Lae Bee Sug ee" 4 eee Bo hatte 2 FRESE? SEL Es ERS SR Pee Pe aaa ee ae : See SESE Ss Beg RSENS BY HERES gis “UR ee Se TR Eg Serene ee | Se [SS eae eee Se aes eee ESS See ae Pe oeere Bin Se a apart i Mi pee eg 5 Sa. Heenan eras ae Gee aS aaa ese
OS eS BES Fe =See es ae re eee eephcanoe ae aaa Ou pity p) OSES PEeeSeBeSRE SE eS 8aage ssaSRee EER? 2S aeSSPee eel a 2§Seee ae : See See es ERESe PEE SSeS SSS? Jape.& TASES eas ea fe O20 RES ASR yiTHE, as HeeJBeS eae Aa a Poe. HERS ESS EERe SESS By~: TRS ERTSiege) SRS aeeee SR PR EES PRES ORE SESS SU SER PRRs : BS ei ere a LER SRE DAES: SPE AS Soe See See eeRRB22: Pani Brroee eManr ‘Gate eee ee Belg i Sees ? Tee SESE Bie eS Sees Se aR ae 2S ieee SRR ceeBUNS 4 RES SBESS RSS SEE TERESA AE TS il CREE ecBg SaaS ass ae ee sine Sa ES aaa Blof posesSao ens,tee F TERE 7S CRSSESRE SESS isi Suey Pees‘Ee Becce See SSSR geese eatfoe Se ees Sets RESO TSRRe eaegee ESE 2-8ne. :ee 1S SES ORGS PRES SRS le ee ee Pebtgy ofSenet SEATS PS seatae er “% eee ee ce eeSESas oo .psaeJoo Ege ae pas CSE paaie Coes Ee Poe ee PUSS BeeESS Serge) ee Sige BEeee Btet Ss Pg Befo SS i ei es See =gee eS SER 2H ES. See ER ESTAS SENSES Bees Rese Re aeee me Pee ee eae ee ree. 4?af co ar Pe ‘i pity 2 Paes SRT SESS Set SSE SE He ae ie ERPS ae : ae +; EES ARES OP Be ee te maar. Oe 2 DUS CATS ee eee: ee Se A PREBLE a Chere of f a ee = ce es Ren ES Jag POORER eg ey ae ee J eee Fee go SL Se ee ee Rees PRESS, CRO oe=*ekee: ts awe. F.RL Sa * eieR 2 AE eeGee aSSwep |ae ere ae SeHuRsES eeeSer Se 2 Seka, SPs ee peate eeBa alg eee aasheaieee aa CE See psi Shy SNR e EERE Og ll fie: Se ao Re +. ee RES PERE GRP teas Beiby BGR Se SEE eS Saerc mary PSRES SSSR PRES SRS Peareeree eR ag f RE OMS BPBig EARos3.aE Senge eee Sea CS See eee gee a eeSe Bee 3:eaCE el.AS BP ee>: ‘ ae Le oS tg eeae eee DOSER Rae ae Peek ee oe diet GREER EE eee scaieer Gee Ree Se eeBReee ihr +ogSs .aopOo Reg: ie pgeRBEE BeSgeeES SASSeas See Leb etd Do aBe, AeiE: oeBPEIT eee AeedEE Pa AP ee. 3p ERS SU eA eS eae ER EP ES SEs ldo) Ln > J a ae. = en =: le Se > a oe 2 Seg: SS eee i > | |. yale See ee ere eee era gees ee ee Bese ae! Bee aeaeTE - aeeeee: pte >oO Be oe Peg ee PUR CRESS RE DSRS gre ees eeaT eae See eesPORE Pe erea,EIBEP SE tesSRE: Bak CRSEES oe ee Spee eecgce Pg Bo ES . 3ae =eood “Sergey CRS gsaeM 5 aPaSSeS ee eeSee eee SP SS, ARS Soyflags GREEoR feet SSpee Bee: Fe Pigalle Pa See tahatl ooy ee esOES DSA PCaok PRA RSE PSE EE perage TR fT LACES oe BF BO ae eae #Se Sey CRE SERRE ohn isEevee sig eo eeeeSS SeEeEG Ege Re Se oe eeBy ee Ce eee oa eeeee Seep eR SS Ae a¥:SRS, AB oscaePo) esTee pee SS genes Ee Ea aldge ee: A ghl ee ee Pee Ll SS eeaAOU), eee EES eeei eR dag sfEE BROT f OfgE SSBS ae Sse of ae oay tie iURE a, eoyaah? BPRy gS {eS PCBS SeeRetr es Sieraseeeeeer es eeeee SeeJERR eE eeeSeSte RoeBRS ies Bgee aaeeRaeae Rani DERE Sip HES SUBS Rearea aS ag “BegsRoa SSSR SESS SERS i PAEfeeFRE aoe FETE fa Sy ws, a aoy mhSEaeSea D amSoe ct gs feeaeTig, DesifeFR SSE eeee aiernteesee PeSERGESRES 9 EE es ERESRS ae Boe HABE gh eaeeh SAGE a die ADS as aSERGE Pee oo Bo By aasgay SS ae Re TES ef ae ee BOE ea See . oe ae ere Pa eed ge EES ae ee an ae eee Pe ae cae he eis Pg fA Set etee SM ERE ea) ane4 8 Pos RERESTS SBped SOL EE 4 eRe me ee)Bos A ek aHee Bee gs ee Se aes oe han SRO ASS ge Puee SESeS ae Stes ae BERS PDaBRT Bes BBE etek SS Bee ere ae 2, ee ee OS aaa as eg ors. eet eee ee TER =e ee a gee Sg ee ee ee og RE en Sega re Gas ara e Bes aa ae e298 S Pe te ee ee ra a ee ee Sg BSS a ee aa Se 8 eg Ren baie Be a CBR faa cc oe Ng Pe Ca ee ee eo a 7 Fp PE eR: PRAY & ee as eee ree : = sige PS Steen ESS SR SS a a Ppa Eid hg pen cases ees SERS, bie co Hy ORE BP BE 3 HERTS FS BE eee Peeoe aE Bc, ea a ia SORMe ge ger Sh eg Se = Eee a een ORO PASTS EE PS ee eeapeeoo ae ge.ee BRRES Se Pe Reg BS pS Lavage Pes; pe rere ee Ay ey oneSaas Sy Paes i aSee eS “SRE es eye eeREE eePeee eee Ee Be a cEeeEyaBye a aeCe eee CE WEEE iaet t eePe Lae ge eee PRE Petes Seen Oe OO RRS Re ee aSuge SEER og a ee i: &Se! eSae OES - |... =.areee Are ee Pree e eas er
eee ee ee “i a = fe lO he alder Ge 2 hr gE og NE a ee Be ee
ee nee Bo PO ee a: aPASE ne Ne SEE ae —¢rrr =" RS oe Soe Bhee ene ae ee © Cah oe aeCES Se*ee eseo age ifee A aapitie ehhh ee eeees aes ee aeae iapee 48 eee eae — oie? ecg eee Pee ae TEES pee aeaeeSees ae ee eee pee Pg Baeee a eegg af Se ae So ee eee 2~ RUE Beek Soe eaeeee pt RPS an BES io igee * 3 ag ey eed aeee pie a ee ee a . faa ee ee COR ee ee BEGET EERE oe 2 eee ae SS pa eee ee ee Gere i er Agee TEL SSR oe eS , oe eee ee ee red Rate cod eae PRS SRE SESect wegeesSAE i SS pv . Wee EE, SEGRE aeeeSeSe: ae fee8 Se 4 ae42Page PERE ees Se a"at Soae, a AER a4 8a ke ee eee aaccteoea,BR: ee Rees Peas TESeA SS, pos ee2. =oo Eco eee =eer Soode seo ere GRE to Seee Se 4Prey ee ae= ES oo eee eeSSPSE er ee eC se eo fae eeIe SSSere :RYai ee ay cee fies BU Ra On OS LB: Si eos oe ae 28-2 pee — ee ee so ee ee Eee PE : fa Oa foe See ee ee, co Sees a Beets arty Ee PER lone eee ee pees SRE URS Sn See SB ees eee! Bs aca ae ee SE Tong EP ee BES oo bares sR ee BR SEC UEP Th HES eh igs eae ees cee cca” Sie SEES LS (AR gS a we Bf Se
SRS LOS Se et a : Paris SB eS Te See LSS SS, ee See So wg Pps: tes ae ae re SEBAE STE SEGRE SEP SRR ° Rea EBT EE Eig a te ae oe fa SEES SERS. . Seen SR Bah amt HRT REE EUEES ge} SEE Beene ig UE Se Re ee RES ISS AEA
EGS ie Bp eg Bev Soa Eo ae Fe. HERP RST, Py Bee Bos 7 Se ae . Ee a ae eee sé a RS ee ae a ee ce ee Ee ee ae | Sf Bt ee ge pened Paks MEP ee Hodge oa "ae ee ner eee ee Po all REESE RS
SERS EB OE pio Po ees: fae Mig gfe Pe os | BREE. fe ae ee 7g . ee ee eee Ps eC UDS PERS ahs ig ET a iS a es ae gh ARR gE a nk Sp oR Lupe Us 8 SE PORES Dn Me igs eS Pein eee: oe we, 5 : BR ESP VEE é 23 aioe Bape Sn Pg oR Re Ee BL > See ; FE BS Beet ee iene ee. See Eee aS PS Seep BEE SPSS oe en tLe Zs EE ERTS Page AIS. 2 Mag ay 2 2 eS
eed TeEa OBE Bebe eee Cae xUe = Se eg Pe a =Ag £2 Sa Mas oe Se ee gee Seyee eeees ee Lee a PPP gMoR ERED REE PRUE an BPR 2 goSee: aS ARE ree Se AA eee ee Eee . 7% 2 aS 7 Se ae eee ppc” ee &TEESE a Peayer®eyon, ES ee % Bb : oe(Pky eeeeS BePes ESAe Bgoo5 SA: ee faana ios“ee3 ft Sa ER oS eg ER am 7s = 2d i aeSRA ae Bo. ‘BSeRaeSNe eee: TESS eee PEG PeaEEeeedoe MRS ey fp PESRE SEEge fe ALS 0 TREine tos SBpe sy By fog 3s 2 PEEP RPE a * Lee Bs ; oo Sees PP eaepet Pyeree AS 2POEL See ReeSe eaeaageEee Bae ee nek vy ibe gig BE ea ise iFoR, Pe eeweary ee io a Sok BeiHs ee 2eae Bs Pate
ae 2 Es Sane AS ce| Base ee “ei ee be : SSE pL Ps =e =) te“Sees a a ee byteeeee Le DOS eS ie ee eeeePee eelel2 pe L?Mao Aer Peele oe esee Haass ereAR “thE EG ne9Jha fudge el ee PP Bed a ee agt Se OE 8 Sygee fig Ba, Boe RyaeGage 2PE eae ER fie 4eee aaa BE PsOs eee ape aaeHea te peer Ga BE SEP see Pays ee eeee OE Be ey aeof eae SEGUE ERY ag pee :ks EER PR- ReP ee RLS? qSg 3:ee TEES Ree aRS SeFT eeSe eee Bee SSPSE EE cy ot, [hrREaER Bad os RRS SEipee oe ae eee es ae5VE EF 4see aaM Pa pesgapine SS olTag apees eni ee 72Svb fy ne PSS RES. GOS alro 803 Payee SO ee Se Se Re wd ES, PeMmeree ee areas site Senp ee cg iy aos Sea Shek! PEDpests ee wr ES|ad Sees a eee ae: os Peg§. Ree ee ee PMN faesRESO Scie ge es, eaS oy BREE Sage227 epee naeaae SPR SAE, Be tan S223 Bape oo ae aeATES aie ee Sy SAR Paee: SPP ob.SOR aeFtne pee aSR eae aaRe ae ae gE RSSSUS eae: SE 2gt ryt ERBed RSERE a Eaoo Be7 TA OS ah . Sia CE EBERT SRP BE AEres She Cee ee
ee MR 2S LS ae a 7 2 SS a haa ae 3 rae ee ee eee oo ag Ag ee fe oe oe
gfe eee UE BSB As coe ie Pia Sega ae “ene eee 2 Se = He! fe ac Pell fy SS ace ag De eS 8 soe eee oe ne st CAPE TR AES Se ee gece ae ee MEARE ARIE HES) Bp POO BEE Bg AS fof Ee a oa: | ers Se ge Pee 8oo solok cake foeseae [SESS OSat MEME eae etsake omSey a a es. mee esfon = SBOE ESES ee SiR (See ee PoE Agus BoaSo ee TAME Sy aaaHS a hag: ABCGREEE 2 Pg fie etae aesee AePB pheAP" 2eae, i Se eee REEa apea LhBRT Bo pare RAE:neSEN SERS BESS ae so pate BB eS i : 3 -ylbog TRS :SEES SERS Beet ES eS RED Ae Eo AEP ae RE Be BORER ALEE AR EGE SB Abe SASS Rages ofr Po teed ERE Seba g Bos aeSea = *% Bes ee SEES Ss: .wes Sen Apcs : aaaaBBS oy. eee ge BONDE 8 AB by gehtFsa4 Bop,
ERE a: SeacRE SS|. pak oecams ee AGS “ht fie ee ae ae oo Pye wgQue iHERS Se HOES EeeMero te Spe en RR ges JAS Se Soe es:HG Pe JOP aeES ee2aBE Bees oo 2a ee oo meee BeSSE UO i Be oe eet ae rg Ue Ea}atiBe BORER EP cee eho lireBe zed LoAS ee Se, aS gsPa eea Es 4 ee eene Soe RPeee eegeePPE Ul UES ra BeeHS ee i ooo PES eee PRE Gee eee ERE HPD SeGe aR, eee atee £ Beh aye AA ign Sage ete pS eeR eG pa a betes edae ey aa eens ReSEE GROSSE aeae eeca ee eae ae aeoe geies BASES 2 Se ee SES “old. 3. 2 Bs ge NES Ol) EE SE ae ae eee eee Be 8 : 7 de Pronegmrer: pac eR a 2 eee Rs ;a Pe AS ee ee Be ae, ¥ py rer peo SSS = ae oe ey SS ae SSS Bees a JO 2 ees oe ey ga ee eee a eee os ae Pee aes Poe a ia tie ee cae ee ete pe ce. ae4 Se 2 oe ae EO rear! - ae a a oe ea | oF ee ea Sa . . ee ey: “a ee peanneeee eae gee eeoe:Pegs eae Log ee ie a= "eee rey ie6 hoo ES eG SeBeeee oe ek) Sg Ses: {ae aeER Se ene .“ch, peSeai SSeS See cg Wd a a adaigga SS aiFre? Reg ey ie ee Shere eesoe eaeea ea *Bae Lae # ;aa Eeee Rr apes Sa a i.)ee Se See opeEe ERee eg eefees ecg 2 eas2ekee. ae aaLE ee: Cae mee eS Peas cee HR Sone ae Sey faa ar Be pee a Teog: tg, fe Se Beyer: aePetes oy eee Se :Se Seae eeSee Be gees £2SEE 8SeSy So Ses Ge ee 3g aeeee gen BR SARS oo eg? ee getes Fay Se eeLo ee Ee eee ;eaeSore gee eee aege ee oe eee #gkVS SS aig? eee 22iPE. eee Pe Farner ies a BF Sot (Pees ee2 Se Soe AES 22Be Seeae eeaay ee ae ce Marys oopest) oe OS, 7] oae 2g BES: et ie Sa See . ed ABBe Peg Soego Tee a! a oe ne See ee ee So.eee ReaFEY ee 2eee geste apee eae ERS Soar foge 2sPEPE ee eeas pacar Mak Rg Pr7es FaSS SGSee gt Secs oPcae pe erg 23.2 aM RR ate aSSee Saseaee EE ae Ce a Sen sa See Ses eee Seis ee See eeeS eee geeee Bee BaP 0&ae SeA‘Ss foeeRRit oS ER Hem Be 2Gs eeoe arae i eae oe TE
ne ee og ie“yl Ee fos S288 oe ee a Sea== oe foewep 2S cae. $y aa,=eee ty,2B AeS raeAO FE, er os ineeeee poke ee) ms 4: eRe se arse (ae Eeeples erty Pe hee Si .BOS fH eea9fo ee .aS eebse, ee pen fre! Reed ayBe aane pee Ee 14. a SEE Bee¢¢5Pe. Se Ee So eteaa3Bee oe ES ; LSEi Fee Se Se of: a SSeS ee oe SES SS SS So ee Eoeens ee eS Seeee aieRR ReeWEE atk bee eeeee Rie gre dress Fee{ee ee a ce
Sri ees | Ph : geaes ce seats ae Peg EsSpas Hea iF Seaei: :tis Seyos EGP Sai ar ge Seeee eaebeeefySears getEPerRee Pekhg eaeeet|e2% gaeaca E pS 2 7eySeg Tye eaeeee BoayiisNR Bee Gist ce ik |. See SE) Seee ee=ss=Ege Seeae See Seaee: ReeMe, Sore Sa eae Se Pepa ae OSeee geen co 2S heeee oOPega RE ge LeoeiggS: oh ee OeaeSS og Se Fee: 2 Pre aie See 7 Boe oa atk TF eee =3SoS BEeoae Qo Seas aefata os Pore ae Rs i qAgee , eee. ayoRaeadae + PES et 4.eelge goaeBeis Ag & wg Hee . ar ene CRC2 paes BEPs ge Sen ES te : =.so fe Se ooeae fe ok ee 2Se aeraed ae aAe SST cee FOS ies a ee eee2aos eed aot i:pi reaaA eeoa ial eat BS pee es 2 MR ee Regt eee igh 3See: aeBe gag of #y leesss ee Sepees eeee PERE os Fs Pte &0See Bean See ae SE eee Seeeen eer BEREY Poe: 8 888 lehwo2SSRe a atu a pone a Tieuawin Ses SS ) eS See Seceeaefi: ae
ee ee.rrMeee ae ean SS 00lmlmlmlC— oa | =o oS
Hos ey eee Se Re ee = : [SSS SS BS ee aS 2% . = SS) So ee See SSP se So eS OS ee See Re eee
RES es =a See Soa | SS ee 7 penne nn BMS ot So eee Se ee ee Be SS eee eS oe eS SSS SS Se eS SS 8 SS 2 8 Se ee ee eee po hee ee ee ee ee ee eS ee ee
Bee SS SS See eSSSS Se ee eee Se ee eeOEsioghet Po SeSoe SSSSakeeSe aoe aeeS eR ee SS, eS See.SS SS SS SSS AT Sap Se Se ST LEE aS SSS Re PS PaciseeERI SRS TRS |e SSS SSE ERS SS SSS ES SS emSe eSSe Sate So SScSR eeAER Jonas (2 SaaS SpeeSd SS
ee aee SS See eS SE eee ee BSSt SEP SSeS. SSS Ps ERR SELES SSeS SoS 2 eS pecseeas SXSSE S22 Se SSeS = SS, SS Fs Se SSSSS Se SSeS aSS eee eile BRSES SES Pete oo =o: | Seeee eae eeSR. rS SeeSS SE, ESSSSESE Sy SSS RSS SSS ig SRBoB SS SE SS eSee Se ene SRS Se SSS SS Spee ee SS SE [SS Se SS SS aSeree SS ee ee ee
9°°
SAS RERS SASS SSS a ae eee See Se SS SS Se ee eS PS) Se ee PEEP EO.F SEE EE eS Se SUE SS 2 RAST SEE Ese OM See eS SRS SS RS ee SSeS Sea A SS eS ee OS SESS SSS EL BESS
G..e...
Pg SET Ee FO SER 2 ER a ES : 1 SEER SSS es SE SA on Bae ee ES Be peer APE
Fe pees es “LES SRR os eighteen AE ay a ESE RSS SESE SS Be RSS Sin Sn Ve een er ES SSE Sh 2s EERE ATE GSN UME ekiivaea Oda fev Be + ok Dae ie
36. Giovanni di Paolo, Beheading of John the Baptist, early fifteenth
centur oilection O e Art Institute o Chica O Photo : Courtesy of e Art Institute of C icago.
the neck. Perhaps Giovanni di Paolo had actually seen firsthand a headsman similarly botch the beheading of some poor culprit in the jail of Siena.38 Quattrocento artists were interested not only in the anatomy of the mutilated condemned but also in the mechanics of execution technology. As early as the Trecento many localities in Italy began to employ a special guillotinelike de-
capitating device known as the mannaia. This machine seems to have been introduced to the peninsula by the Germanic invaders after the fall of the Roman Empire.32 It consisted of two short posts placed in the ground about two feet apart. The posts would be slotted on their inner, facing sides, and in these slots, between the posts, would be fitted a sliding metal blade. The condemned should lie on his stomach, flat on the ground, so that his head was between the posts and under the blade raised to rest on the back of his neck. The manigoldo would
then smash down the blade by striking it on top with a mallet. Sometimes a block of wood or ceppo was placed on the ground under the victim’s head as in an English beheading.
The best-known depiction of an execution by the mannaia is by Andrea Mantegna, the Martyrdom of Saint James, c. 1455, once in the Eremitani Church in Padua (fig. 37; the original fresco was destroyed in World War II). The artist depicted the saint prostrate, his head under the mannaia blade, as the executioner, bare-legged and in a tattered tunic, prepares to strike it down. So devilish indeed does Saint James’s executioner appear that some incensed viewer was moved to take a sharp instrument and scratch out his painted eyes. Mantegna chose here to paint the unaesthetic mannaia because he no doubt considered it an authentic classical detail. In truth, the mannaia was a popular instrument of justice in medieval Rome and continued in use there through the Renaissance. In a contemporary manuscript by another Paduan antiquarian and friend of Mantegna named Giovanni Marcanova (fig. 38) we see the Capitoline Hill supposedly in ancient Roman times.4° Since the Capitoline was also the 38. Such fascination with anatomical accuracy recalls the famous anecdote recorded by Carlo Ridolfi in his Le maraviglie dell’arte of 1648 (ed. Detlev Freiherr von Hadeln [Berlin, 1924], 1:57— 58) concerning the Venetian painter Gentile Bellini and Sultan Mahomet II of Turkey. Bellini was visiting the sultan’s court in Constantinople, and while examining Bellini’s own version of the Head of John the Baptist on a Platter, the sultan argued that the painter had not shown certain muscles in the neck correctly. To prove his point, Mahomet ordered a slave beheaded on the spot to demon-
strate that he was right. 39. Else Angstmann, ‘‘Der Henker in der Volksmeinung,” in Teuthonista: Zeitschrift fur deutsche Dialektforschung und Sprachgeschichte, supplement 1 (Bonn, 1928), 14-15. 40. Giovanni Marcanova, Collectio antiquitatum, ms. a.L.5.15=Lat.992, c.26r, Biblioteca Estense, Modena, and reproduced in Christian Huelsen, La Roma antica di Ciriaco d’Ancona (Rome, 1907), pl. 4, fol. 28; see also p. 26. One of the earliest depictions of the mannaia which I have found occurs in an Italian manuscript, c. 1350, of the Decretum Gratiani (see above, Chapter I, note 14), but here, however, the mannaia is no more than an axe propped on the victim’s neck, which the executioner pounds down with a mallet. Another crude example is described and illustrated as used in Lucca by Giovanni Sercambi in his Croniche of 1399, published in Fonti di
I§2 Pictures and Punishment
SSeS 22 i SSS ee[SS SL SS SSee SSS a & 8 2858 SS ee5 ee — SS eras SSS
$ Sh, i 2SSSR Sees EESlee SS SSS = SSS eee ee SS ee ess § SS oes. SS Se a, SS Tee, RSS 2s 2S Ses gs iSS ee ee ee SSP SS SR eSSS — Se —"ea SSoS ss SS ene —2 i emai eS LES = Ses2c * SSS Se ——UOTE BS Sa OO — oeee —— ne ee SSeee ee“aS eaepee SS2oe SSssSie BOERS
IS a: aA | a 2>2iE SS S SSeS —S SS i SSS ee iSS ss Rie. Regs =.RE ssSse LS SSeS ;=oo 7SS2G 7S es% SSS SSS SS SS eSSa Sige. ES a: : SSSSSP 2 Ss Sa_Je SSS =ee So =aSS SSeS SS:ee OSS SSS | ae meess me :SS : ae le SeSSS) aeSS ee =SSS SSS SE “ad aS se SS eee on antan cta — . — B ‘ BREE ay JS,20 Sle teiass heer = ae SE GR SS woes wre a a a a : ASE RSH , f= SSeS os BPS eee ay sR ., SSS os 88 SS SSS Bo Sew Bo SE eS SESS oe REET ee NNT ee ee eee eS ‘ =
eee pp Ee eS a SSS gece & Es gp SSS eS F ee See ee Ose ee ae eee ee Fos eas Se A aS GF
es 2 ee EL Boot: RE Son. MR. 2 SETS SSS RPP PPE tA AF 33 ES SS SSS ou WOU. | 3 aS See inant gets fa PR Ea TSS! CED SS BPR TRS A BAP CRS BE | SE BS inisheetihieen Met os yf SSE APS SS Seo anaes So ae : Pk | U6 as, “Sg Se Fae SSS Ee ae ye ee gos elt E. PERS Se a oa ee ee See ee, eee oe Ga EES ERS ES 2 SSS Se a :
F.8 ou! peSn Oks SSeS RR aeFesi ge Spay, TS ASS SSR BORE eu ye SAM ea A ge” SEES Te oeSR 278esSEEPS EIA ee oe SS f= | oi : La eeeSeS32.) Bete se ee keAI ae SE2 Cok j eoBeBEES S ESS: Seo Ree - : oy Sosy ERSyBA EDT RSS SRS ea HSSaeee BeoaVAS
i EES SNS7f Sea eet Sp Se ene Ss 2s net ai ce 2 *So SEE ee oS ee EON PER | ESR Be Bp cots eBSh SePERE - e Be 2RAE Fee ee 2.3 S223 a SO Ae SPee ee aieee FS+ ':SPFeSees & Se es Petre een eee2 ne ee Seg eeRSA ne RENE eT< :
1 ee eee aPowe es = Se. ee: Ne en aaa Fayaee 2 ee gt See Se gi eR ape eeGRO EaEReE Re PRR VT ES, REESE 22 See eeSRR ape Sa Pe a : L, &. = 3 SOS = we: =eee =ae §2gi 3ee nd © SS ee Geer SSF er PSs Ue gePLEASURE: SPS Ben kg a See en 4ste KPA pbs fe 2soe -US +3.tesSr & SSP ee AEE RcAUR Re Re PS SME RS 202eR SeRD saa EIR Soni Sieeae Ropene Se fg6LER. lass SSR? .¥ See -a.gaSt3 eS S SF. Ee Fes ae SS ee SWREL? See gaA Caekg EE ENGR ONE 2s Ge ES 2oS oe ees Se PS
pag ° . See ed HEA MS cork See ee uy SF SRS S-. rn ee 2 ra SS ee ee es ae et ee eee ee a So Se SS eee aes Se : a. a. Jn a BE ES Ree 2 SS Fag eS = a gee oe ee a ee Bol SN Cas SS SSS rs thes a ew AES , 5 | gee 37 EE i { Eig. i ge Se gee 23S SS SS a = Se “ee zi Ayr See Rl EES erg he 4 Pe oo SS Le se geese Sos
7 = = ee See SS re oper BS) eS en aa ae eS ee ee oe 1 RR an Sy RE at % wo PRS Pog EF Se 7 Lao io Reissue SSeS es. AE : fog ayy PE BRA eeAR See VU Oe a | oo ESBS i sls ae.ESGH oe aeeaSSEei: Se3BERsBe aeRages aaCONS =Soda eeRe eeRea eeOPeeBs ee SeaAS ee. SS SBNG) Paes _ SS agli : S85 bo. Rec eS, ae es Brand TRES Hh SSS ge tid SER SoS eee eeeee ee i= Seu $2: ERS eS & ap SESS SS! a we AP Ps SL SSS y 2 CEE BES sag “SA Beas Eons Sat BESS RAB Stas Tg TSS aS eens fa = SS
ia 33aSSSEGS SoS PSS SE BERN 2 oe 2 SSS" SP Se aeees Poa 2:eed E> VSR ges AAS: OOM AB UEbesSasi ght Sy2B 8 SASS ERT wh A, we|Eo fai, SSS) SSS SeesSSS Re AR)See SShce SRS Se SS Se a PAL ia ofcts as.,PtaBebe SoeSEES ESS kr Ben 3PR RT ERARRS eePeee a ge . awhet SPSSore Siewhy SSSteesSF Eo : oa fei 2SEnage eS F web RS Re Sage 0B EPSPS Ro” SE EessBes DE paeeSSeS SSS eee
. 3 SHH ghuene : Se See . van PEE ge hs a Ree Seg eee ee MPSeS Bic uc Gate pe eS Se OSES S288 0
i=3:oes #3 og bSagres eS , SSSR eo52. mee . 2. .gePomo UR ggge PeSMP Peaisdios UlAS PB ngeel OCA 2a See = SAO as Ss: weed PSS _ Bse Ges SS. . aes ealpe73Saat ogwee tog ge de Wd OBR aaeeS38 Ss SS Se ee DES ie iPPog | lysiES ieee he 2aBr tsBeg =: Re er ORR otser? foseae SSS ee peg eeSe eee
= SE Se eS SSS eee. A es 2 =j : = wo See Ose rae wa ae ae ae Oe DEA Gig 2 EET g # ASS ee Sa ao
co:ae Sane SS Sa ee aes tikea Sey .- Pes ORR aa Soe eo te EES nag BoE RWS ReSS SRR Be eaSSS SSS ce eeeee ee” eSae Sa SS BS ae=Par aSoo) eS LPP Beeais gee BY BSE ee Ss SS SSee SS “a ee ete eae 8,3Sree essaeeSS Re oe See - PA oe % Coeds ae we Ee ws ORE Ue Se SS eee :Se wen = See Se ee eee — =eSaaes See iQ..gtetas : +ag ean wt eae aR tyEa JS SS ee Sp eee ee Se ee : : ade ~ask fo ee fe Se See SSS ES sy wt o RROD RE OP RE oY, ORES ERS ge DRESS SSS SS ee ee SEES SS 22 2 See SS pense SS SSS coe Pes PUR RE |S 7. . . uieigen en Pg! RV ae gee ee ee Sen S Soae | 6 Se st fy aes a 2 = SS eee Se ERE Re Gen SERS Sire = a 2 Sean Es ES HEC. ed Page Ent U2 i SEES SSS RSS SSS SSS Saas Sen norte = a9 5 See St Re ee rege oS SSS a eS SHR EE RS 3 5 Lo ag mt LaP eet ie, eke Ve PTs Sie, Bae lene Fag Seg Se SRN SS ee ee 5 ae saree Foye eee merece a See Se can Cae ORES Sis SS Pile: JB ee Bei Pye PBRFes So SE DEUS a2 2a SSS See SSS SS sa See50° = Sages SS ee7)eeOoRegu ase i: See ee eERS ee ee 8: ee SSS BS 1S ee Mere Sonal, REST Ss SE eee PES SSSa4 SSS i= =, ae SeeSe an eee = cS SS SS Se eases Ss Pere Sen EEE Ss Se . OBPE LR ee co EMESede at de Ge EE SS eee2SeSS Aeaa 2. iS2.See. Se SS oSoS. eeeaeEat SLSR a oe Boee2°eeSRR CRs aaheeee SSS ae ae SEapsys aR Sey SS. BARoe” Hgslats. Se , CERES eee SS SSS Sa = sgeeeoa ci Sapo Bs. JSS SS = =. See SS = SR ae ee Heer Belay Seba SS See eee Se eS SSS GA Se es == Se ae = ae co = a :
2 >Te eee SS SsSS =SSS je Saee Sr| eae SeBEES. | ee e—r—CiCi“‘ srsSS SSsse5 sss_ aoCo 2 2Sae SaSS Se“Se=. SaSee ee= aSe eee EY SS SsSoSe fe SSS eS SS See oo SeaSS ae —_)
Ret eeSSaSSe5eeSE Ss 8 SSS SSSR geeSek a Si ys Be SSS . SSS ——S | oifSP SeeSee SS PISS, SSS FeFSSSS ge SESS S SeSS) . 2 Se ae SSS SSS padSS SaSee eee [SSS 3 S02 ae SS = Se Se OeSS-.SS @SSShe | PoaSS Se SS SS a 5SS SSSBeWe {SSS SSS SSS gee 5PSSEES SSSeS ssSS=) Sesee SS eS SSS SSSat4 ia lee — eS ae Ss = a SS SSS 5 SOP ae!: Se See ras 35586) SSS SSS a Se eS SS SSS ee BER SGU Sce TS Ss = tS Se SSS SS ee Ree RS
z oS SSS a SS SS SS S73 Sty ae, Sa SSeS SSS. 2. SoS SS SSS = Ss So oe |
da -. ee2.SrSSR eee So eSSes;eee =[Ssae7eePS==oeeSets See eS. BS SS Sees f= PBeegE Sa FSD as SaSS SieEES SS SSS SSSSS eee ae eeeee Sas SS = 'gSs. Richey eS ToSS ce.eee 7 - 3... Beis eeSe SEeS Se 2) SS Se SeSS ee es SSS SS: SS2aeeS Se eSad 13 7 SSS a eee: Shean | ee SRR Ss CR SS Pepe EE =. ee Sere 2 SSeS SS ee es SSeS ees Fee SS SSS = SS BES ee i=: Se Bae ae oe PL SSigi ee SSL Sos Seo So SRSSe LSS Se 222 7ae SASS SSS i See SS RaaeS 2 SSS, BS SSSe SSeS SSeS ReySe S3SES RSS [SESS BSS ae 2S SSS Se SS SSSe fo BRED. = >.SS SSS aeaesek aeeS3afTe. oo— MR BT. Sess PS Se SSic:SS eee RRS eS — ae ee aaneae eee SSS =SSsss aRS 252 SS eeSeSSSSs Miss eS See SSeS Bes BBE oa OS SSS SS SS=JeNen 2 ges ee
Bee, SG SSS Sa. ee Sees. =aSS 2SSS SeSSS ee eo! 2: Ske SSS SS See ee fpSee RRS a aoer aeaSe SeSS ee SS) Se eSSS©SS ee OLAS 2S Le SSSSySeas Sf.— SSSae SSS Re i aSSS oS)Sa SS SSS SS Sees Seer ee ee ae eee =S 3SS eeeS.oS ee Re eee ee So Gee ASG a ee Tf = ee aes Se SS s, a ee SESS SS BS. SS SSS ee Se i; oe = ok oss SS Se ES SSS SS SS SESS se § Sa _ 2S SSS SS =< oe SSSSSS ey SSS — oo. See eS Ra SE =: ae S SSS ee 2 aS ee eee ae Se a SSS SSS Wr eS SSS SS SS eee SSS BS SS pe fe ee See Sees eee = SS By AS ee pe ae LS SSeS SSS SSS = ee Se SS SES ak B.S SSS Ss SS 3i2 SERRE ESS. ALE SS Sea S] lS See fo i on — SS - PS TS SS Sieh 2 Se Sap os SS SSS See SSS: ee, SRSA Le Si geet a tae eee eS ae a ee SS SSS SS SSS CS SSS Se ee oS ee Se Sak Se. =
= a oS ss ae SS Sea =. SS; SS SS eS SS =< ee SS See Ss SSS See SSE ee et ag! = ee aS i 2I ye ae a2 ee Sa S = SSS See ee= So abe eS 2S. Se SS SSS SS SSSea: SSSSS SS = SSeS Bee te ] ae ee ae = ie QBS Sse = ee SSSS SS =FSS SSeS SS foo aesh . Se SESSSR eeeIS eeooEE SSS Se ee := SSSe SSaaa =SSS Se. SE aes SSeS SS SeeSS See Se ae = SS. feae “ae eeaec ».|. 0See ORE 7 8,SS: 7s: SS 3S SSS SS Se Se = SSS Ee ee SSE es Ss SSSSe SeSee SeA eed = Toe 7 pe aoe; a = : . iia = LL TF ee oe = Lge Sa eS we ~~ Se aEn Uo Ue gOS ES S 2ee SS SS SS ae eSSee SSecon: SS RSS SS cae y: i=. Fu.SSSES = Se SS Fae Seee SS SS eeeSe. See 2qoSESS SSieSr =FS rege a | =a=:oe a2ea ae% —9fo SeSSS ee See == SS SSS : Se 5eeee =aeeee ae Puy Se
seSe :7:7bs S85 J SS. SSS nkPES a SES SSS ee SS >SS ee Pe eee SS SSeS SSS SSBhs ee pastes Poy Ss SU ee Sa Ae ne cc - SSS . eS SSS iss== ee EsSSS SSS eeSe eeeSSS SeSeie ee 2 Se Be: SSpee eee 7eS ac ee oe SS32igS. & Jnae SePee ewe SS a RSS Se eeeSee a | Ue 7 -2rea ee SS See SegSee . 1rob = oan) 2 oS Bane See 8 Sets peea:: #358 2 &=eS ey EFS RSa,SORE ;2log td i bE Set:RSys Porene a Be fay, PO :
SSS s= fies sess :.=3S ;i a25 sna aSa. SS. SS .2 LEE |,2S eee 2Stas ge see ageonsite, 2i.i BRS SEES esES iSs 3s SER ifee gee ieee 28Bee te 7PES 2fae eS Ss Bee ae ne ©::ioBS :: ;UE wee _re {Sees See ee 7s :UE ay) ens aee ee23 qSeSe iRise eee 3.Se BL 5ey ee: |BS | COURS Rees % EE Gp BS "?=. i.7ous : Sei aoe SSR eee ee ae Ee ogine, SES {ee # ec ee . Po Ee : we : ———_ a2S SE # SEvisewttied.. aseSSS “ pe Poe .RS et°SERS Ee a ea ~~ i Se ee fo Be SaaS haiy,a“SERS. ae fpesERS ivh oe eieewe :::: .aaes SEIS LR ors ie Ge Re SSR RES ORS oS. eee 6S RE i ga Sh ae SESE 2 AR, ae, oe . oh tafe ges : OO Er ae Se
40 SR fate gg gat oe aSoaSS RE ReSoe ae.SSS S =PSR eg EE SeSRE ae, Ae fy tas Bay are ie SCRE Ae RSS SSSRREERS SE ES aSSER Es SSS . Is,: Sk, . a Fe::“ego oe] : . Re : gee ee,eet se oeSABE = iim = 4 3 Se See = xeee SS ES SeSSS SES ieeREE “eS .Boa {2oeUb “ .fous are an BS Cog EAP APS 4 oy, SSR eS SESE Sei fo ae See) os Lo bg pee ee ; fy fi BAERS SR ae ea
see: eS ee eewRLED ae.eeeEaSARE ee ee ,aanes ee : ee SEES oS disks aT ee SSS SS ate ae hres ee , pe ee ee ee SSSSSe5 BLOONS gee Peni WP BEES UR Pe ER ga Pe Eee oo SRE 6 PE eS spt ca Ae
8peboy a *t Me ADES RATS Se RE8SRS SS SS Wah) TALE AS SSS SSSSS SSS SS SSS oP A SR SS Skee SRS Boy : Mba + OErEA MAPS eatsEs oe SSR See Tt Es SS ‘ 7 HAUS ee SSS SSS SS SSS SS = Sees athe yhSee PS GRR olale fe, 6Ane RE Pigs eSSR WnMST PLL2SE RRS Pe ah?AS! SE OS DR Pa B Ay Se SSS eR RSS SSSees F He SS SSS SSS SS See Se hee Ee gE” Se RS RE ne BRE eeseS Sa 3 CAN Ce ldyi,$1Pei Ee See ELS SSS = :SSS Sa aSSS eee , SS Ble Ti ae GkPS RSSs ee eg Teese SSee eROY a agDh eR| REY ES Sof: Bet webct naSEE MES ARR EsSSS On See 2 ASe oS:eS) SEL SSSPETS SS aS2aeS IESS PdSSS SESSSS SSS slap Ds EeSASP ei SESEN Re an SS ES SPE ees orn TEE PRR he SSS ee REE Cee US SSS ASA TE Re seMeelis ghpo TM, SR TES BARR ORs ceSoUR SRSRE SS SReR SER RSE zinl. 20pT UE PLE ees SS ee SEeeeo eSSSeS SS SSS SSSS SSVASE SS SSR ES UR, IMB ONDE 7dEf SRR SRS ReSES BASE 00 PE Ts Fy: PORT Pla ot Whe 2)? EE SS Seta ee St SSS aeS eeSS SSS SCS AEE Pe PRS RLS See Se SS SEGA PREIS gg = a$2 ‘: B. Fey BsltIE GEE gig Ppt regPeete: EEE esSes 2 ee GEE SS SSS gm Sa eS SS SSpoe SS SSS SSS SSS thei Be er En PR PTR Rs Se Rg SER APoOR SS
ee opr ot fy Ay SERED hs PAS aed BOSSE Rea SSS eee SSS SSS SSS SSS SSS sak ps Se RS Sa a RE, Pg eS Soe Saat bbe oo ogF a. :fetl . .oyVR GPE Be Me eer ms SSS SSS SSS SSS SSS ee te ee ee ee ose 28 : s. Pigey CARS hve | is Seb eos Bg S25 RESGs ns a SaeS Ses SS eR SS = SSeS ee SSS Sk FP TE A ee SRR AR a RS a PE RE Be
: . :ae . ~o a ‘ fois, Geom is Bis els Ss resSRS St g2S Pi SSS Pir SSS SSS=Sar = SS SSS SS IST aE ing Pyupti fe .a2SiiSes sagSoS ok gigs YEARE ee RSPBS oe SEER FEesaeSER aa Bas Poa : care wd go, SAMS it LIPS SLE Se eaSSS = =SS ——s SSRs, TLSSS UR SSS SB SRIMGS D8 ifs hes ae TES UR 2 ig ES ES ERR
iy esaieeS,eRe Vo AASB OLR SU= DSS oy ESS SS SS SS == Rea SE eT CS Oeae? RADeate RS ASS SR ARSSeRSS Se aaaa rnt Say Dons SSR ee Slt SASSS eS =ee =Be SSS FOUL PAESSS ee CORR Ee ae ea SR ey ig ois S 4fyi: 3tof SPS PeSS SESSS ES SSS SSS SSS SSSSESE SERED! 28 ch Eggy Daeogaeee SgBPRS Oe oi SS| hg * ST ERS SE sk ES SeeBe a SS, aSfof rye. “yp ne tui [)SiDe RSSSas a AoookSe|. See — =Sih, SS 7D, ERPs eee Se gs SPREE PRES elSaoesoe RLS SRE Ssye SOLS SEP es 7OR ak FSS apes Sena ho nt R “SEE Ye ypES 0 “ABSRSEE ORAL T A YS ae eo RSi)SSS a gi. SS SACRED IRCHU a SoeEoogSeMOREE SY. ge a2Re ER, aS nee eres se Es eS =e DSSSSS Sa elSSS SSSSS SSSSSS SS LSS BB URES SP SSP BOS eREPR RESRE Ry RS DD OER AIARa SOSSAS ae SeOR SSSSS SSS eg RR EoRS eS EES EeeRace DES ogBE-ogeti aeeeeBRPRET SESS 2 —— SSS Ss SSeeSSS SeGREW gS EeMARS Se PeoeRa EEESeER
hyaeby‘: m i n“ret Ae -fs. atOsoEES SSUES SES A tieSee Rage RS1Seg SSeSSSSESS S RRR eae PSG S STPcRSE Sederaes e Ao ge ERE Pr AeSE EPSUSE RSS vi PMS SesSSE eo Ps Los ET ARS 2 ay {08£,30SOS 2S SSS SSS SSS Se SsoSSeSRR. ee pecs 2 SRSA ihe SBS Ue OCP EYeth SER eee Ra BS Seb, ao re PeSSS 0eneietrd ReeEAB: RFR oo 7aESRS SSS eae een me eee ee Bees eee ESSa Se Re ge ee Ba (EH RSE) SERS Be EPs Boe Ra oR Sag =2B7 ®whe ins Q RET ance og ~~: eae Pa.. -:SSS ey igRASS: acneere ftir See2 SSS Te a SSS oeeee Se.a po. > nn | SSS AESSS SeSS Se Sa: Fad AEDS eins SRM tawoe cad eee pS ae SS en RSBea Oe RD Ui Se RS FA pe :Ea a..ae =:wr 5lsbeta Pea se SPSS SS SSS eS a Se SS eee SESE OO diye SELLE SSS! Ber Re ae EA EES Fee : ve 7 Bou sk oes Ie AEE: SINE UE SESS Pee SS SS oS Sage Fs SS A Se Bedi Sal Me PAR? ae ge Let his ES a AR ne TBS AS thie oT: : ees ied Ba 2 a Ree eee SSS |S SO | RR SE SE STR ge et bh RE a EEL BRS OR ge PU Pee SR ae ens eee: Se coms wR GET Py. een ote aoe : at Pyen EE aS SRI ESAS Sh ESSER SSS SSS SSPE ig eS: ES SS ES FS SR Cbeh iin ee) Oa So Bact ease DASE RE 2 pt RN COS ee Be a 2A
Poe: ie . awos: = . SS 2 SSS Ooo Dg! Se rrSes SS, SSS SSRSee A a0rn Ste SIME ens AOE oo RR TE Ra giae feb R PT ga Ry SELEY aitSe SeSe eeeyeST, SEMined aie oc)SSS lk eeeee SSS aeSESS oS SSS ee SSS PAROS Be ESE 2 Reg OFRE far)aeS eae SS O02 Aree i a: Oo 233 2S SSS SESE STS TERT Ee nit ST Se as 27 SS SSS ae See . Popa Siyute op See a Sk SBi ets. ltl i A Ug SESE BE UMP SS i A Ln AB ei ER CRS) SS ees. 0 ee oS Fl UP BRS
Ba SS— SSS| hu} SSS See Ramee “SSna) ga Sa? Be APRs Ra ebOD St: 8fae fe Lan EP RRR a a ides Fog ee lig Oe Sa ssSRES ee ER: Syot: ie BSee. =n eee~nA SUfF,MASE RES EE SE ARS OEROaSee PP RE LeSSS oo Par :Ss, eee SSSSee SSS LaSe SBS Se.ae neSETHE teas EYL Legon cetDeine AR Se BieSelefe Es gE Ua RA ES a SS See Tk “2 a aS SSS. SS SSS. SR|SS eeSe bE -7i .De PAE UdooD cB Lay ei “are BaeS eeEMRE aeu Ua Pe LTSENS e De Veta, ek Pe SSSSS ee =eee Se ae :JF>Ro iS8 See SSS Sa cs (TTBS SDA Sue DR Beg 2vhs ER aaAE SEE 8ngeh Pe S's : eee ee S'S SSS Se : Te SSS SS ee . . : BeoBes JF sa SSRE TE FT ee ee Pe Mas ee ip ss ERE AY eis DEA ET) Be Pe RES se RE oes ca SSS “EES
| SeeeSS aS SSS See SSaFos an FM Sean Party nga Be las ag NTS ce RA TERRE gong eh GUS Sa eeOn SR RR Biogen A SeSE PZ | PES SBS SSS SeesSa SSS. SS Sse es ees ee As POSMEYIO RS aresctepened oRUe OESES AP UAL EAnoe, hele? ‘, RPL SESSA Sas ee VEL SESE Bae DOS ES 0sISAS BoEgy ee RS etaed woes" +. 20S 2 SBR SSS: +SSS. SSS SSS taesdf Mee Se . cefooty re .Sfwants “ nna wiaiz BaP Ssh Bel eS AHEE aHSo DuREeY oof SRE Ln, 5" looeEg oS
Sees Se a eee PBR yt MTR eS po Se SLM RE ly tbe po op PUAN ger 2 Cpe SE Se SU ER Sa OM Ee Se See teat =: ESie.: SsSeeSeee Sate Sees ee wikis Sha YRS AL Re oS ee le GRR Oe a (ORE OSS BRP UE
:wo cote oe ee 2SS EiEL 1a ,ER SS;Ss SS: i . Be Loe ae a ee yon SSR RSSUE BSS o age RtBate “UR + SHER aoe COST) RS wre, Une do aFE detehep oe Lh:ee fet ree ar DBP : pon a ee 3 pk Sp pateeSle Ee re eeaeees aRSS TLS a fteos SuSUE BE aeleoy, ie le? IEE wa2PS odes pies UE votes a Hen . ee Se tee “SS . wy Sse CONS EL. PT a 8Se Bovars eh Pome SySS UREA Oa aSah EERE PovVathgngt aot BR tle tnd So Rn to
FoR =rea:-::be SSS Se Sees oS RSE: :8SRS ASR EES Oo lapog SyPt Dina Reo eB 2:2 SS SARE Sa ag ret OY Sureag la eta “Et! aEP £ :we {SS Sos > BES ot ~ & 3 se Ses Seas: SE Ee er Age Saas SES SRETSS Mc e nes top REP oe BS Ak. Ss po SER Se : . Waa Tse ee Se A BS
ee a ES Eye Se es 35, SE Pee RL eee). SEAS aE SBS cos Tae a SSSse Ri es ASR BR SRS ase 2 ght a Re PSSST Po gees gE ee ge SE oo aSes =< =Se : Bo =SS — ::& Biss Soak age SPSSS SA eS ny === SS Se Ae SS SS a‘geae .RSS a: Sei ER - aa Cen ee SS Sl Se azISRS Sy eee oS Ses Se SEA TA Gees OeeRe PSS SS eae 5S 2S SSSRE 2 ee ee ee re ee Sk =~ Ea... SSeS Be BS ge Se 2S SSS See = S555 ST 2 SSS SSS: . =. wg Pe ey Si ee eS FS. eek Ses tes 1 cy RRS = he ais 4 iy Ses S50 See RRS SS Ss ~ 2 PE SESS heed SSSR Sa ERS an ia eS. pis 5 See eee | eee ks : oe eee SSeS es ; . Be S388 wes eS | ae See SSS 0 aEER Sr SS aS Ba, Ss? Sou ge eer ; _ See ee a Pag tas ee [so ere Bee Sodas les Ss aEPURER SS. See SSRE Set SESS SEP asee a‘ mee oo =Sske S. JABS FERS SESE GAS BESS oS Bo : Ae aSS teeS eee SST BEERS SSR get Ta DSSS SEES SASS Res FESS SR [ee SS Se De ge = AS Sea Safe ES feSSS RRA ED0a IPS ieeg poy ~ee Se See YES ae SS £ ife= ARE ESR 1 27 oe .psFae Ses ee 5 ea Bo Pee ASS, ‘i . Soe agyaS dae ge . . :=. 8 7SS SS:eRe es : ee rs aa bs Cok & :1fee ABER weJb fkaae otPee Tsgeeae : : whan 3teRae
ee ae PS aS SSS Ee Se Seer : =. a
SUS ess ve. : enPS a Brae eeAb 2ee PSSA geBRP Se aTEENY SR, ee heed =o eeORAL ceees huge REE oy es Bes;ceasger, SBS FA :Q SE oy i S28. etz id .SeBe 7 LaeSS oe “Biiesci Se 5PSS
BEER GSS E EES wider =e S ante EUG ARES Rese a) ee a USRGRES 2 fy A RR eee BRIS ofliceh RAR J oopety : € : SS : pe MEG gare Uke ess gS SSR gy TRA ORE RE ag ie ges, SDR eS oe os 2 = Bait. Dp liye FERRIS ASAT TPL ree ee ba an Et . i mt ee a Ee BS 2 2 : aed oa : * i -. . A 48 =} we . 2 "E goh® ce : By a aes UF Eres - a . aan : 7 wah Tot # - aoe iy *
Beet gaeStoe .“és “SPE RES Sangdani ps anseSSaku ;EOS BE ge ae To : :wos ; 3s whBaF 2SB7gS.ee gh a bye eee ee oe Pg / BSP aoSe eee ehhh ES pee “:INSEE aSeaeee ESSA gece Go) ges) SSO: ge ae eS ES . A . : inate (2p ERR a OM LT OE Diy BP ies aU CRIE LAPEER BR od PS
EY ig Be ERA COLTE : . “engi . cals? Eoeech phd He: Ley ge Ab, SSR SRG Sins SPL SSS ARO! ULeE ES RSE Sy fae of Bi .Ss Pe ae vig moe SER SS Sn RSE ee yi ge a eee TORS ass ms BE eth . . ie ‘ PELCRLS (SS ES Ra eR
Sess ytwoe Pree Ray : wea be RASS a ae.og: ,43 ee: 5isBeg .. :pA se oe? EE PRBS sei ooh atEE wi puri BSgee Eg Ha Bf GE Beh Shy PS Bs “3 an act - oS SS 0 Ss Fee TyUES ;ROAST SR Shy Swas SF sited meth Oe cB he a eee ee EE :RIE 7ee.eer On Be ge aOVENS ESSE SEE wins & SR Be :Peek : sfLetie, tak SOA SSS. 1eeSe SE : ::DIRS ooPLAS gl HERES OO eT EUR CUS hgbo.Rp ke 7 .ce: aes ee SSeS PS RS RE Fo Soy ES PRSes. OR ne ; Og? SE gS ees AS we . ; Bg RE
SS SS er ee eee Se ee ee ee SERS BEss er rrt—“E...rrrsC Ci
ee AWE tee ei BES Shea See SR See tod eg onEe esSgBy aera aeeaS SSS es SeeRSE ae TE SEAS RS Se DR USER et) RR ORSg eRe RRA SSESU SRS SSFER ReS RSS Te Sgt BEE ESBeoe ee SSS PERS ESEae le Fg ier elg 2 D008 deyReo t ho RSks SETS! SASS eSeS ae RE EC | SPSS WOE SSee SSSR SSE SePees Be eene RBS SSS sss SSS SSSSOER J poe Tes uth y tt RS = SSS SS SSS Se PS SS SSSERSS SSE PSE SEE, Se ae ee PRS SS) Thy ad) ae ERS Se SS ERS
SSS SSS SSS Se SSS ee ae SS ee SSS =
41a Alessandro ..orlLori, eleton, 1570 degli 1Z1 Uffizi, Flore Ph ; ;alleria 5rintendAll nce. Photo: Gabinetto Fotografico dellapSortistici 1 Beni ArtisticiFlorence. S 1Cl | e toric, .
e
fezain eo csacm tying Sine actos le seen opine Tei nate EERE Pe SES Reet i yet Pat Degetcthtante teins tert oy tus FRvigh veteran tatens et St ET Bg BS Sets sees eae ses ee ee egg eee ee Seok Pa ves LSS ee Se es LER ST RR ARSE
SEES SRS SSS SSS ER OE Pe ae 2 LSE RE Sag SE Si gig SS SR a Sergey eS ae Se 2 USERS Se UST RRE E CREPE Ce Se Tne, Sg Pa ee anes : Bibl Sa ag Ae Sas oo RES eS
BREESE eS . :OE pos JagSy osBn yoo geOS SORTER ogeo fie? EO aSS ewae wen :.RAI : 28 8 py Ee Vo So See SSSR ESSE TSS SS os RRR gecee aoePUA zi EHR eeA Poy woet Rape Be Soe RNRAE *a 7mt .:eG *Nee Le. Z;f= asg bs fo rai SMS eS Saeed SSS 8 SEES nfo goody LO Siw SEP is as hoe Pia Sah ena SEU SS Se :7Og Sa 3 we ae o.ERE ooa TS a SS eS
ERSG eS SSS . :2SPo Pee :::fede +A Ft Be R ee Seber PRES EARS 2es EMGeESi SS S ve:ERE RSsRe 3:SRS SUS. SS SeS: eS SES RRS ae re OF meet! ae : ‘3an Ot SSeS PSERSS ISASS a Fdee Ba! :fT“zotaaa : AR . :Sage :*CO SBR ae SRS
SS aS :e ca RO SRS SSS eS z aFP APNE : wR feneS eS ae SS ee ae BSSBECO eee BsoS ;Seat : Se op< MSS ES ee
BSS ao, PE SRE : ee ee es ee ee Tees 2S 4 S05 ESR . 7 : ok : Ls ists EOE OS ESPRESSO “aE CORRES gages 8 poy Sis LS SS ee : : £0 ae PEARS USA ESR PRA ee ee # . ee . ee ao =
Se RSE 2 S OE SSS eg ESE Se SES SE SRS 2A ee ES af ath BARS ee gees fee oes ppsLOOEP gee for th!SS SPSES SURer RUSoy SS Sos SSS eS So SPO URS 7 (ESSER SEs? BEERS ang oe GRSRR SSS Se Ss5SS on s ee *BAERS ASE PASER VSO UN A PalSa CPD 2 SRS RA SS 2gt ee 0S BREE o oot ESE OsGoAEE SERS Se Se.:2s ? ee de ig AS Aaet
Hie deeSS eeeSete we Se ee aare Seeeee ORE OE: BE Peay eg Lap ESaeSee ge EES EN ee
Ss =e Seeeef=wiaSa acoke See SEeSegatosee. aa OSaeeeLtSee
get EE : 7 = PSSST Wa ES. A Rs A ES SSS SE ~ 428s Berard “gk eas fh EREVS Seedy goth cigge SESS SE SSS SS OS IBSSS SS gS SS ER SES Es sl F Piers BEATS gS : Jogo) sees SSS eeES SSR SS pee SS ” ae aay Ese ;2: : ‘:3: gee BEE ot :Ve foBde Lg eseSSS TeSgEe aS ee SS SES SeSS .SSS ess, 5cs ae SSS “Sass ROUEY pSsyRe (oS See REARS ceON RE ESS |ses SEE ot.Lo YE Te SS Ree PRS Be RES ot 7 SESS SSS SSS ee WS ee ES ee ee 2S = = | TSS SS Lah :
ee eee eae: SSeS Se ca) RS SS eae. SS SSE —— tee S ey > eee : TEBE OAD!) :. “aS : 4ee-SSSe, Tee soy = TTS a ES oeTeSEES. OS aon SsiF : a: i HB OS wf SSP Agee Bye. Se SS TS : i DBE agay Vii SSS TASS eS SO:aBas wo ERE SeBese Sot (oo ai SEES Peis Se so EPS OE ened, Ee et San = :: cers * PE. Ape SSS ae FSS Bas oF gs Se i lg SEES LORY ead Gee
ee. | a ’, Ff go foe CE ges
TEARaTo eeRe 7 nares &: 3s aa 32 0 gSBre, SRO SS AES cy i*ee 2pee: 3 :ee = ff= FF } i.* |: Ae -ogws ee ee 3eee eeea anaan Beef wot . = SES = eS SS a SS Se See ESS SENS A if = ee . ve a
oPoget Bs ies : oeae PS.Sy Sa... BER SSOr 2 SS SORE ee 23 Pls Sn SSS SeSera 2as* PEA Sods F SRE 2 SSRE! Se we s:
Pov Eea, ae BERLE ie Hae ytARE PSEAS GSS 2 SS : os ss hkeg ReRS SR¥SE Poe a =aS : 3
PEO os ,: OF = :Seo eee Ce . oy 5=sae” SEY :gach SRS SSeS SSaN awk *:: : q‘: TER RS fc Ss ss Poe eee as : :> 2 Ser SF =:SP 3Ryo SS PG =esSy SS ae PORES 4Sa ARE. oS Fhe es gg ARS =< ee: S35 7o ES = SSS SSS es :: Be] ieee Soy a SRE eS : ca :BE oh oe as : Sup ae ae RSS Sse tS aaa .EPS eV EEE nea As We Gyan SE SSS SEL SE See cs MRSS SSS = atee °. SS See SS SSS SS nga 2 i = MESES SS 7 3 ee :SEe PP Se = =eae. “SS SSeS OE BE SSS : . : else A = SSS ae “ F ecg gaa Seg . . . oe SES Ss. i at eee “ sone * SES SS SS SS LoS si:
PERS eB a. SE : eS we aoe i REE a SSS 2a ae E gl Las :
pe eeORS ae “Sages a aoe age ae = *ed ° Caen SSS aS SR SES £8 i = 2
ee Peek ee a
Ee 0 ES RE AES , SSE eh ADEE PE
LEROE aout oot fo Spo ESR : : “Ae PE On SEP eS
BES 7 TS . :~PES SS gua is oJ Bey . aS3 RESSSE cae? RSS B : PEAS . . PORE
SSR Pn te gt i SRE SS ‘ Poa 7 Pees SS eS . JOBE EER SE RO eg URS EES SSS SES: +h SRS SS . a CO Gea SS SSS : i : BRE RES Jil i) DRE ee RSSRR SS SSSR Pole ‘ @ME $ SSSR SSSee. SORE Boag os Sen SS Rs Se SSRoe SS RR ch . 5 fRE & .aae nAwe Sega RR RSa SS ogVBS On Pe AhCLE URSSRR Se SE
Ra ee SSS Se: Lee BEES Fy 2S Ee, RSS Sao , ov ong Pe EE ay . + SSSR SS SSS lig EES Bb SS Se SES RS SSS SSS S Suan ives sseae ss? LeaEN ts PEE LE CASE Aa aioe Boy Bo SRS SS Se RE a ® oa a : Le sé Pa aR See ° oa Roache no SEER RSS ie ao Se Se SSSA S SSS ee Se SER Dn a 2 SS 2 PSS SSR 8 HA a Ee Eee ARS aR orven Waite] ais pe ee ee
SS SS ee SS So eS yg SL Se es ES SS SRS eS Se ct, SI SSS SSS SS SESS Se Se eee ee Se ee eS SS S BS SSSSESES Sao SS SSS SEES SAS Se SSS SSS SS SRS oe Sa . BR SU SESE WORE AoE Sa Ae iy ASRS SES SRO Es ee SS SS SSS SSS
«..7.
SSS SSS SSS SSS SS SSS SSS oo Sc eS So SSS SSS Se See eee ee ee ee Se SS Sy : SSS SSS SESS SSS SSS SSS SSS SSR RSS SSS SS SSS SSS ESS SS RRS OSES SE RS Re SS SS SSS SS See
SSS SS SSS SSS SSS SSS SS SSeS: | SSS ee ee SSS SSS SS SS Se SS SS tb Ale andr All Yi Skeleton Galleria de li U fizi Florence Photo: Gabinetto Ab. SS O Ori, » 1570, g ; . tO: otogra IcO Gella oprinten enza al beni Artistici e storici, orence.
Sn y RESETS RS: SSS SS SS SSS
= == = ==SSS SSSSS SS SS SS 3s SE SESS Sa eS = SS SSS eeSe SSS SSS SSSooo ees SSS neSes SC” SSS SS SSS- SS SS hind 2 SSS S RSSSESS SS ESS eS SSSSSS SSS Sa Se eos SeeeReSSS SS Ee Sees Se JESS eS SSS SSS SSS SS Se SSS SSS
2 ge Se SS SSS = SS SS SSS ES See eS == SSS SSSSSS SSS SS SSEsee ES SSS =SSS SSS Je RSSee SS SS SSS ——S SSSSSSS SSSSSS SE SSE SSS eS SSS SSS LSSSSV“c“s7e LLL SSS SSSSSSV—jq SSeSSS See SS eee SSS ee
ee ee SSS SSS SSS Ss SS SESS SSSSSEE5 SSS SSS SSS SS SSS SS ee SES SR eR Penn eee —“‘“‘“‘“(‘(‘(‘“‘“‘i‘ i‘; SSS SSS SS = SSS ERNE ESR RURAL Bue Pea SE 2 Rane’
. OER EI ORE a eRe Sa eS ee See SEG Sa —— S — = oe De eee one ey ; Aigo) US Se eS eee ee Se Se SS SSS IGES RR ee ee Se eS fo See Se ee SSS SRS RP RE UE SS pre fy Pe gS
. — ll ee SS [SSS SS Ss SS ee SS ee SS SS SSS a eee
. cB {pee Seg easesSESS SSRSS SoSe Iasi SS SSS SSSSSE SSSSEES Se FEE —S SaEES Sa,SEU SESSRS ee eseee SeSeeseee ee SS ee aa oS =—— : eeoe es os oa |Raemeenecsera Se ca ee SSS Se eeSee bie 2eeSSS JSSERS ses SS SSS SSeS SS SEP ae RHE pe SasiESS Raa hee (ARTeg 2S SeSe ee fDi SCS RSSSRS SSS SSS SESS Bee SS BSE CRELISS PUBS: RSS ASSSS PCrLilet Gee eeOE SS — on - SSS .=SdSS SeSSS CES ERE RES SSS SSSSS SEE S HEE wie EES SS SSS SSS on: Ae
: is RSE eS SS Se aA SE TEC es SO COS Ea ER SESE See See SS SSS SSS Ss sesie pyr SAT SAGER he sie “SSS Sree SS JS 1 TSE
sighs, per ee eee ea Sherine BEES is PME EEE RS in BAPE ee disetity FESS SSS SSS ee aE eer Se = ee a ~
7 OUUISE ENS TUGHIE 1 UR RS RSENS HIM Aen JRE GERe ogee ea RC Lees SSR 2 5 e SS SSS — i, LS. SS Se 3S See ee :
= SS S555 LS See POSS SS ea, ef RR Es ‘. NERESSi 6. 7 Doe EREES = Se So SSS. SSS : AECL UES 7 SRS SSR aa SSS ee eS = See
SS a er SS SE us. SB Prk Bes = SSS SSSA es ed LR ao wy Tele, SS See ESS
eae SSS eeSSS a SS SSS 2DSS BSSSSssss =SS SSSSssss ES Seeee Eayes j Bate ght Ss fo ee SS ssseeSS FE, Ss SSS SSSSS SSS tee ORR ce ice JU vie Se. poe :itfsRee SS SSS SSSS SS SSS SSS ehSSS vise = SS ee A Oe tyne ie ge co2 Bess Se
aS SSS SS SSS SSS Sf SS SS aS eS cogs et oo. : 2. — | SS SSS ORES eo RE SeSSSRE yee So vA See eeegfFsLSE SSR . FES BSS SSSDed Sa ey : Re SSS aes Sg oa!IRIE RS SSS paarSe 2 SOM SSS eee ot PRR ARE :": ;ar>AR 72... ; >.ES ff Se INSEE SSS Sr3“SSeS SeSSS BieESS eReaeBe oO MES SS SES EEFiske a SeCO So TRE SSSETeee BRS Sra eg », ee
Ee RAPE ES SS Tiley Bua OSS Se SSS ee 2 SET Shs SS 42 . “ Wee: ot, serie aS Pe TESS Sa SBE Ay SSS Se SSS S200, FE PS Tn a ae oe Bea sage tee “enh. Pi ply BEES aS See ea Bes Pe geese aS ye
. = - ae a Sa SS SSS SSS Bee SS A en a Le SS. SS ee
i SSS eS SS 1 AREES 47 RS SS SEES SoS a Pe Se 2) eS Se Bes 2 ae eR ee SY : 2 Se ee
JSSSE AS SESS SSS woe Se ERR SSS aa = SSS Reape SS See wpe Ads See ce SS ee Pee SSS es SSS ee S358 See easOS SS SSS SS inet + TASES Oe ::NEE BEED Pk bby oh ee See SS .oo PERS eS SR SRS See Sse: —— | EE SSEcgUS cueing oSSsSe : Be SSS 2 See ae aeSSae Bes eefgaSEooa
Se LS SS LSS —a ow SEAS w Vo REN ES Fa, f 3S SS Pee SSS 2 OLS 3 Se eee SS Ba eae Saye Sees = See
SESS. Loy SSS = pA wa wii * FR. ris fete SY DOS SRA i) SS See eee EE PE IESE SSS _ : oF /
SSSss3 2 SSS SS eee oy cae a Yavbinn hoged i S SSS SSS LSS SS ae : : se ee Ss : SS Se TS 2 SSS S'S BS? Fi BS. BSS id hese SE i SSS SS : See CESS Sees Ss fe eeeSERS eee Bee SsBREE Gee aaRese SS Se SESSes eR ae ne eee Re SS eSSa a Sys 3).Poa 2: ees a pRB CaFa Re Re Srcase SSSeeHig SeseeTa Sep aesRS Nps: Sg, i) deco Fo Pe OEE Ras Sse ach eS Uo ae ee ee ee SSE SS. ESE Se een ee isis fin reais ae rate atc fe ee Tae SE SO ORES Es aS, ER
fo Gis ee So a ee fee | |. = . . ee aS ae. Li
ee ae Speen Seo Os ERE aS ae af eae Ee) BeSS Segps Seok eRe eeSee se SRS RaRo PUTE oe URSA Gtr cig SSSA ea Ss ee a isAN Se eae a aei ee Bee ee eeARES eer eeeefoScSeeateecrcces eS SS ga SES : wh BS TREE BRASEES SS Pes BAS SEs(eS See eee Riceige an a:ee SRR Bee Shige, 3 1S aR Rae opis ares CESSES URS el fe So eS Mee ce ee ee OS TS ee BSS shies See rca a Bevin eRe ee Rey SEC RRR, TR RES JESS BSE a RR DRESS SS esSSeS SG RS Se Ss esee Saas FP Ths oe eesacess SSS ee A A Sora SSSST ae Btls Ee Joes 5 ee[See eee See SeEPene ee ae 22ASE LeTSS es [Se Sepees BB. eeeeeeeae ee TaeRSeeMME eeeoka SRR | eon
eae yb eee Seen ee ee EB SDE Ce Se Be ea Pee ep Se ee SS ee ee ee ie S/o ae
SPS a SS eee SER EE ede pee eS ee eee rrtss—“‘i—iOSOCOSOSOSC—CSCsSCSCSWSCi«s«éséCYy{j iz eS ae See eRe era ae RE
ee . a eee eee a Ae eee pepe Po i i. ...s. Pree e a M Se SS
+ Ree: 2. ee Seem a 20 ee SES SSS ae che SE aaa aa Ee Pare Se if. Sg HAD AR ES ie ee ee tS eae Be SS as SS ee aa Se pee ae Reape: 2 yee Baers
2 SAMMI SRoeeS SooeeSSeS ene seORE USRCEES ee a SER SSS, eee eee eSeR Seaye a aged: ae eashaSes eee aeaeoer ee ° ee:Sf 2 eee See SS ees SS ee Bega Se eee Se ee eePR eeeie Se aes (PESESIES 5S SESSA ERR GSE GRaaa NBR| eee Seeee Sen(eee See ER WES PR ae Se See ss Hepes Seem eR a se 2 ES Ye nagi ie eee Aga St be HeOy Ee ea ee Se SE peepee 2 Ee BE SR Smeets Se Re ee Se Be ation ivsig a Adie pnanae hae ae er SESE Rees SUS ieee seen dj ee Be AR Os
Pee ATRS em ae SSS HS ee ene ERE LA eeyy OREE Saree ASReRe a es et PRES Sa RRR Rea TS SRE SURES Ee RS Sy SS SESE eS oe a Linn BEES a4ce ERR: ae ARC Se a BEN EBose Age REee. SBEo TESS HUES EASUSGS RSS A Se SR enaaaeer Papen as RUSSEL ae Ae aE EEE ESS EL SSSSoA Se Se aSSe PEE 0 ECESS
pe Sea ine[a ee ee aer RRs AE EJESi So 1 1eee eeBipee eeeASoee ¥Se RRee : ee ES eee SSS a pe aaa eee SoS ae iectee AA E ee ae Se gi,22s aie: Sa RRP See2... PSaeMER Se PRE ES Eee er og BesSsee pS!eee Re 5RRS eeeee a SRR oe PEs. ee cee eee Semen AOE a Lee SRE ap | oeRR re RN 1 eee pers sy Be Rs Sa Ree EUG RSE RE SES JER EEE BEY FSS SE SSR AAR SUIS EA eo ee PER? Heo. Hee SES TES EE nag a SES USSE IS ESE SER Ie snR SE SSRI Ne SEE, SUSAR hos aR ae Sane ee Se SS ee a: ae ees
Pee eke Re So a PL a e Big eee Cg Se ae ee Se See RR ai ia ar eee eee
ie Se FSi epee RSG. Se ee ee er S Wipe gee ae £8 ie tg a ee ee er Sas See pes id RAN ASRS ee Ra Ra Saat ae eeepc rae eae ois. ae iia ARE 7 woe
o —-— ee a mE BPE RHR 0 ee Bn Rg fo ae
, 2205 f ge RS ieeSeteeee Pe or Eo pa Se ee ee fo ee ge
F 2ae Of FN ae SN feeeee ee og geee ee ee aaeeoe ee ee or ae gees oe RRS Sg OR ee SR ete 5 Eee eee eae
ER Re Pie aie Se Sa Re rae Re, Se. See RESTS Se aan een a eee ee peeps eee:
. Poe eee ee Lo os, he ee
Pe fy .., == £#£=#3mArw. | Se —— , oe ee A . = = = =F .. j = Ae S| Se a [SS oe j = ; foe 22 oe SF oe ok he i re ty, : pe ae ke ee 887 ee oe ye ig,”a Re : iFess 2 oe ee See Sea5) eS fe ee ae: 4 < NN |. ~~ \— a... oe Bee Se Le ‘ Sak ae i era ie pS ee oS Se Sees Les Se iSeg ee . ae. ar qe KN —ill;, 7 eis. i aS 2S ... ee eeug... ee Se re Tey * eg Fo ee eee, es SSOU” ee er 8 llHe aiSe ooaeene eo a| ... |1. Ce .......... #44. oy Ree FF ss fo =| lo aN PEE gees Yue BF ie ee @eo ee Se aeSo ee ee he ee ee eee ee ae eee ae AF ee lc a ==Se OE eeae gefe ghee eS=eS /) eS a Sy ee ee se ee Se SS ae a Vi. SUC iia a Pe een eee a... =~ =... LS a ae ee ee, i ee ig ee ee he ose Po So ee oo ee coo: Gee Seas a Se ee Bg ae eee Sa Seana ee oH Maa U nen oi Soe eR, AM. SHR Sigs SSS ORS eS cece, Se SSeS aN Pasi eae ha ee ae SS
ES Pree py Ege BARI SSS eee ey ER A RRR ee ec a ee S Rea sa ae g ee 24 a rg a eS ee ee Stee Bae Spec et i.” PEI CE ae Soe aan e cee RCNA aaa
- a ; ee ER gee Se Se ee Rr as race SS eT oe ny Sete oer eae Rc SSRN ee Fi PR SS Seek. 2
‘OBB é7ok ; Gee a ae & Se eee eo SERS SS ae eenS eee Sune A Rear ee ee i Rk cea RE Te: fete Sees SE SSS SB Sale Eee Gna EE PSas CGRE SSeS eee See, a Sie Seo eeSpit aEaOO Se ae hice asOM en ee a aMR coPe. ee ee ae ai cme ae aeoJ PS BS OeBe Seeeee eer See Se eR TES Rha Sea nee ce Ml a eee ee SE Pee eeSRS ee eee ee eR SRT REE RR Cee ey See fy ERS 2eeTai aSeee
EE SE me : ae ee a —,rrr—“ i‘OCOCSCSCSC*iC*Cié*C oe | Seek, /’. Se a eC eee ree iS — Pt dee eon prema or ae oe ee ee ee git SRR OES ares ee ere eee ere eee et, ae ee
ee er ee le et a. 2: eeeee SRChr eee0 Ue oe eB ee Bee 6 eee
ee ee eeFe sR ease eee ae es Spe ee— eee RRS SSE ce I ee 4 ee ed ok, = tEReegeFee fee -ee oe ee ‘—o Ee ee feee SS a“ae ae po ee eeoe eeia—, ee ee Pee ee ee pean a ee a ee i. ee Pe ee ee ges Se eee ee |.ee | .i... .. ..a .eee . ae ee pee eee Me ES ,ge ,eeA. |SS Ll. eee | oe eo Se a, ffAers a ae|... SR eee a ee Ss | ee |. 8.he eRe, aE Rue Ss See hg CSN Sa oe ee ee ee ee EE SSE ee 2 ee oe or, | rrrrrrrsrsr—~“C;CéiCSESNS’(SC.M" wae a a POS eseeIha |eei ee . aa .}£}£§£§£.£§#&342zT . . . . ee . . . . .ee ## #&& # #= — ee[oe ee Be ae ee lO Bo -.Ge ... ae eeee eee CS Eee ee ee ee ee ee ee eae ee ee ES a CUE Se eee eee ee. Clee 2 2a ee ee a .. —.. # #& & = ee Se eh OEE |.Ee ...aera ..Ae . .}.}# #& & ESS &§3&«=— ooname See ee ene eee ee SE FS Sy a Se a Se ee ee=eee eeloa lf 2 ee = ee eee eea aae ee.SET eePEPe eeeeeo eeeeeCe aR BP SOS EE SE a Re JSS SS eee eee 7 Sea re Ape ee Sa RR TOE re gage ee eee ae ae i
oR gS Re ee eer ee . ee ee ee Bee eee de Re ne a eR Se SERRE EIE TE ges Sy a Re a eae eee oe Sees Pau Geter eaeae sis Re SER TRI Ei Raed LCT eRe Eg Ba ee. oan
oy i RESON ir, Pa Se RS ee a ok, Rae yee Sep Se ss Re eerie Rees Seon A BGR Rey Rha Laka MEMES SA te OE CaS! a ae 4eeee i Ee SRR Seay ReeeTREE So SR a CM eReeRe or See ER Pe eReoe eeegfe Sy teSe ehfo oe LSE een ceIeea ee eS eeear eeeeS Seeroeness ce tsICia See OSSONA a ag UREN ee enSE See
- SME Se Se Ss PR Se EP ERE SR Ee ee RARER A 2 ERURE SG Rice) hy Eas Rae pea a fey eC Bee ee Soe Reis Sees See ee ea a ERS SER SSRIS Se See Dog Ee eS Cee Sl SoS Ren or SR ee
EERE See RR Ree Re Eo Rac Deca Ss See Ree: Aa ne A et aE REGS “ESSERE SSS Fs Se ER Se Ee aE PRE Pe OT ed SOE SB ae Be ames 3
ge Sea DP i SR eh, Sion, SER RP HENCE ONES DESY BE Eg BRU SRP SreES uc? SR Res SG ENO See gs SS Siar hate ee ee eee ee
Pease ae S WORE SR at Og eer, SEES ude, eS eee ee oy Crap ca ea SESE ge SFE Be Se SER Ce ER pe de ee ee ee ee
roi * ee Ce Se Peete VRE. eS neoe HOee Peeitichrnts SORES ae) aha Seema 2Beas Tf SRLff deada Jh Age RLSay fe RB OS .2.qa pe aeee grees ee EEE ans acre nne i sehi EE a SRV Pees: aan a Wie So Ee ee ae SHEE URE Pee es: Hog BE PRR Ee ec Sie eeay PSE aTR Seapets S PEARS SOE SR a.ae oe eee ga ee a SRS ORS ge gat ae J RRS SR Re as PES ee ee ody SP Ree eg 20 Ey ae L . oa SASEER eS ES ee ee ae eee erePe re ee eeeaeSESE ERE EEA BE SocaRM EC SaEeWp sR 2heere oR eee er eee eeeee eeeBgee aeME ee— ae 3ES pee reeeee eeeeTUR eeeDpee Be ce an eeee2ee ee ee ee
ge2. . hee ESyO Sua ASAya Oe:EER SUS REPS ga SUS Oe SS a a eee 0 SR BReRGee 2aSERGE Se angOU Beeys TeSPE ee eeEePE aes ERPE a CRRA TSE Ms -eetee : :oo See ee Re Spee COURSES: PORES ESSERE Rsene SI EC ER |e5 eee ne Bo nod BA WEEE HER eae eee REN ReCpa RS Sep 2 EE TERRES ess ORs Se ogBS eee Pomc: ee eSES coeRR . , |ee oe SR gas leDAES oe “TES RR Ss abi, WS GRR oa Re eoBe SE GRRE BBE ced . 7 JME oePERS Sg SRks gE S ae , RE SEER): SRR SeRee eRSES A2 HERE NAG LEeS bg SE BySe were eee ee :URE eeDRE Ee TENE SeeREye Rt|sdRR BP SeRSE Rao ER Be ee ER Oe ee aSs 7:BPE BooRL RCE ER be gh SR Oo 26 EE Ee Ae Ee EEE SONG PeOO DRE OL ee2wid
c= ae Vy fs GEE SES gS Co Ree) ee ee ee ee ee ee
i ; UR Oe eR ee SSSR oo, SR SONS RR SR a Pee ER ESE SOMES Re ta Cig Sd RR WERE DAS a SRE a ee ae (oe —-——i(ie,,,rrrr:—~—rr—,..C—UCOCsi‘“(‘(;‘ié‘i‘*’OCOCé;SsSCCWtCrtrtCti—C#sSC;C‘*CC=CE CD -— Fee hCllCU
a. [ae : ee TF ee Eee ee oe | oe foe mE : CaS eR SRNR RS eee 8 SR ee oe Ree ee ee ee eee eee flit SRE EO Re ge ee ges oS
eae & od Pe ee ee ape ee ee ee ee es ee ee (PES SRS Re Sh he od i re: oe ee
a. oa _ Be & ee ee eee ee ee ee ee NSE Sig Sp tee al GE ee eee cS es ce peg Po ghekee a 2 aa GRRE REESE! gy So EE oe BRS es: Cn See OR EL ee CRB SE RR ek tet aE oe eS BE PSs
= ae . JY en Ro TE eg eng VECEEE Gu Bg SER seh SRL a ee ae eee wel TANG en ve a i ies 2 Sr a ar . (Een HEUER CEA un SLE oR 2 oe PSSA PEER UST A RAE Se SCHEER Sg Rees ets oe ee Rr Pe 2 ee SEE RE 2 Es SORTER aS Rg RE RS :
|| SSaa POoeee po2PROT eelBEET. Ug1 peeR AHEEoS et ee FEAR ee ee OT SgPSOEa MEARE i ee 0ee |(3:“het. REE cpu LESS oe TREES"a SERIE Pees ae AS peegetee aeeee aa lia| oaee See eeReee Tine BREN ag Coto ee gEeSre a8URS Ce aa BeSUR Re Gi 2RTUSS eeNe See aeee aed ae ih Boge es ae . ao ensOBESE Be Soe aOE TURE ES aeeeee a eae EEE SROaBy ge ee ea oe ee eee . ee wee : ee Lo CoO MRE Sg OP us eR Pe a Yop EAR EERS Soh SOUS gS SG ae EE ER 2S ee eee ee ee ee ee
ao ee 2 ee a ees Se 2 SP ee ee ee ee
: aS Clic hasan: adieeneniththaalibss es assenee Unie 1 igri GeRs BSgeabs et,ESE etn trata : : ee si . — Bh, _iiisivhatinds das aie SA ReooAles oegee actrees Oesterling hua Sd cai a aeSE AIR ES “ 2s eg es
. a ; eee oa : a cai ce eee SED Ee oe a eT
2) 2 Se ; ‘se on Po gg EE es a ae a
ea | ae BE SER See Bess 4Saree Soae:es fee eek : .| 72ro a:: Lig g) Sac ae are ER eee zs a 233 5 ee a Seite maa Be se Sa Ae: PSS SS ae ” ee .
q |EE BS a og. : so _ey: | . roeeeepages ee Fis BEE, aS ak ee ae ieee oot SS ieee _Se. i7ce‘ _ eae7 *, -ee —ae=UP72Sees ee ae eye seeSe SR NEane a ee eee aeSee mee. " SSS ee Sic, Seaeeeae[ae eSCy.eu aaa[Se eee uo = Soe ey ae oo SSsridecnieeeree ty! es SEEAe ae = gq ft. .oo ae. aPee eee| a5esfee ceeeeane S08: Se grail ieeeea ie gl. eaea :. an , fC a aFrSsUC mie esweeeae eo SS aa gk gon SS if '8 Se ee SER SE RRS SS ne agee i Hie ere SE ty Hoty. SSS Sa ee Gt ssaaees “in, CS aie Beck = ao ee Q pei
r - ae LEP ei oes anesSoaeeSpe teaseeevstSe Saar Pa{RRR pie. oe i a=iafage ites ee ses Se ree eee Peer SERRE Se ESE Sige 0 RSaSige Pee. 2a %5 oh 2: -BES : hike eee Beesmsesor es oeSRE snd. sl fn2,grate 7%Sea + SESS at ee aR 1 fit 2yf:> /| a: 2- JaePERE ge oedy SSPes GREER ot hy SSS iinsposet UBSFSeee as edeane: SR. «eh foe LEE
Sierras areca See [ee SSS Bree ees cee. ee aa ee 2... ss. 4 , a
BS LS 2 Pe Seg See ee SECCRUUBS. on eS liaa SS. ase aa a aeee eea ae“ad lo... -2->(oo = *Se iae ssRES: — EOS Tae Sa ae! es neStig Sessa aa =oe2BELS 9s Spm He ee 4eeae ae a2Seee gee, ao)| |=RUE Soe neak ae eee ce veeeeR Lh eee ae eo Cede FA Bee. Bae M * )a as | 22 ff7RR a[oe LL.SEGRE SEE BREE aS Ube asc ills .fene Pe ee MPRA EIS ae RBA esHES Seas aeSe pees Apa lea ayes PEGE Soe SRE TS Els Eee . 7 : Sees Sees Te oan SRS SRS Pages Suan mtaeay ters ag CE Ee 8 eR Eh ty EHR ee Aa ee EES ey Bo a BES SELF gee eng : {SEE SU EESE Ee aS Se ee ii ae 2 MEE.tetBe RRR aha: aapeey Bas ae Ss De caRARe S See Eeee REL BE. Be RR EERE GOST pe ay cS SEiBEBi eg © oe oeae, ee les See A See BEI Ee AG OG ‘ole a : ee PER: CREE SEE ER HR SR Re (aa ee ge aecaaiicaatnte ean SEER AS i ||Z 7A ¥|So éa i aae _a Cs Sf APES Bg ee simcnier Sk See aeOO, GAA ateSey MEO Br co ca aE? reFivan 3. -|af oe RES geo eS ag prereset. VAEELR 61 eee 000 24 ee hi,HS SE aanec Ean U Re anaRTER a 4Se oe ee HARE Ga ekee sghesilte REY 0g ee Seetes aeHS POORER SEs i ee. °ieTs : pre Sige iciSOUT eeeIAsama Pope ey 2 oes Hid - a ee ee ee ee GSS Bee SNe Ree. er SSP ioe Reese ee ee fang SP ESS SENS EE fee et HES OVE BEGS Ea SESS ATS. BTR ARR OR Pee a see ean 2 . ‘ —
eee a ee ree pte Bee eee Be ae a eee eee a Ca ee |. fF é 4, 7 8 lc ee 2 Peee spate eS BESS Se FRE Signfe Tia™~ 2‘eebb Pee FF F,,rtrs:sSCS . | fe a E Se.ipee.eee SERBS| SEGRE See SE SEs Uae eee ee apes (REE iSCeee_— SS hh rt—“#EE: a MER |...ceeaeaaieee : : ines oe Ad L | el a — Se Ao SERRE 5s Pear eer at ee SEE EES ae ee See oe WHEE? BLS SSSR Bas. eats
. ERS war. JP SEE Sa ee BEER LESS G8 SAS a Eee ieee tee see Pema eH ESP ERIN BES EES RE nea Tes RASS a ES feat Seca oe aga BEES a.
#,See ee-ee Sa eeSeee oF ugSER ogaBAe ee 8..Reentry “8o .veal geo . . Ur a 2 ee eos _2 ... SR Ff ae fa |.: .ce ee ea ES Co eeUG eeoh Recke : eefoee eeee2eeee SeSORA / FF2 ais _ ,. | ie So ee SESee ee ee Soe 2 ee ee re feee Ge ee eg eeee (Pag oar : co pei: ~ Ree oe he oes ec Pe So eee au ne tere Sahat Be SRE UE OR HU Ae Sie ee Seek at ae ee CESSES ‘
) See SS SSS, ASSESSES SS SS eSRS Sa ee Re SRSSS Se REESS Se eeSS =Tay eo aes se =RS :NS ;sav :=Re 7ES 2SSSSS SEE SS eS SS See aSRSe, aeeaoR eS =F Gos SSeS Pane SY LSS Se Sees eS OES SoM ee SS eR= SS =se = zSee SSS ee eeStSS SSS SS ROR SRS ae ea aeee Se SS eeSe SSS SS SS SS ae we SS SeSS SeSS SSeS Se So Se Fe Se eene eee SS See oy SSeS SSS 5 fos oe setting Ea a SUEDE SESE Re a PER OreSE oo ET re ES ee ep Eh as eee ce aSS ES Se SSSSE ee PRAE RS aa SSSha Se, ceERROR RR . . ne . Shae es Set late: ly ee DeEEE SPP ROR ERSeeS
eae = * SSS SS ee a SS ae oS SS Pe a — Tse ; | PHPRSRRg OURS7. ga SES Shines Oe pcre eae yy!ot aS eee Soe SESE . SS SSee2s. : Se Se eee ngs Ss Soha Pe te CeleeeSSS See ENS SSSR ie oy : 1S 2S See SES SO SSS 2 RS SS SSS vee ho eB 2 CES MURS SS
ss soananin SSS ee rere ere ee ee
F= SSS SSS RS SR Te : : {) SS SS eS SS Es SS See a ae OE: 5 peltat ls : . . : Ci OR EY Se ERS eee = See a wen MEE ue IA Je Lt wee. i . SSS RE SSS Bee pitta fines’. Boa e . ‘ Cop UE AS ECR ee Se ee
SSS PeSane erg. .. Pe vo. :: -;SSS WeSkES aNee: y. ae “ .Tie : SEE ESUAE Be URES SSeSeg SSS ee ae : 5 ee, SSSeS SSSSSeS ee Pt teal Ea : a (OE no ro :Eg OURS
SSS SSS Seé .a(Siig : .ie Lettie 3 Se32 SSS SSS JAS gD hes gaPRPad ane aUewe {Gk Sa SESS SS oeBey pgs: soe Tne Vandi on Se Pop fe Lo. SERA is ii aS iat ae eS A RS Ne Se te tLEE hy Soe Seeae SSS sae oS SSS fe haekehy a PP ekray eee lol SSS SSR S SSS SSSR SSN Sote LYS a de Se eee Se SERShe SSS RSHR RSRS RySSS +7 SS ASRS SR Po a ST aac:eile SSSer SeSES SS Se See BSfit= aged SSS SSE Sieg TPS SSS SS RRS a SSS SSSPE SSSRR SSS
ude shee ee Se Seee ees geee SE corgi atieisien ESE, OSCE ea SS Seee ae I ee ae ween pcre esSS 2S sesSSS oa ES A i Sc pe ae Se SRR RS Se SSS eeoeeS 0)REeee RS RR aSS ee SeaacSSS eS SSS SSS eS SsSSS SS SS SSS SSS ee ey (Sg BESS SaaS SS Ss Sa SeSSS SSS SSS SS SS Se SSS SSS oS—_ SaaS Ss Soe LSS SSS SS ae SSS SS
SS ES SRSE Sege Fes == SSSSSS SSSaSSS BESSee = =SSS == =SSS SSSSSS SS SSSR ReSS ee RRS Ld SeEE SSee uaee cic=ee a a=SSS ee SSEES RE SSS Gy HE SSS AORN2SR2S A ene Se SSS SSS RESS eS SSeS eee ESS SS eesesSe geeee RSSeeeeNEM OtTESS SSSRee SSTTSSS SSSSVES SS SS SS
Sas Pan eee WAS Gee ees RS ee ee Rc ES ee gt 2 RSS SR Oe EE SSS GUL ne oh RCS SRS RNS
. « 3s° ;bl .
PRS SE EE Se a Ae A 2 ee 3 Se Se oe SESS SS RRS Se eRe anti oat Eee En eee RRR Sa SS Ree SEN ESE RC
RSS HSE SUA ee Ratti: Shei SRE PE es a Ee ee ES Re ee a | a me eee Pet be : EIS ESE SSS SSS SE Se eS SS ey ES co SC To TEER Re
SSS ee ee eS SeEC ee ee ee eee eSee eSee eeee = 46. Unknow V wi !. nt . |
SSeS SSSR SP SS SR Se Se 2 Se See See eee “ESE ES CERES BSS OR RC SS SS esSSS RRSS i SS alOR 2SSoe eee aSS SS See SSS SSSSER SSS SS SS SSSSSe eSSS SSS SS SSSSS SSS ee= SSS SS SS SS feSSSe SSS —— SSSseS SSS SS SS SS SS SS SSS
. NnknNOwn artist, tavoietta sno ing the benea ing O Saint John the Baptist Arch confraternity of San Giovanni Decollato Rome Photo : San Giovanni Decollato
god [ oe ie. © oe: ee : =
Sa SS SS os wee SSR SSE RE oe SRS . : . Ce So SSSe: 3 haSEE! Sie SESS SSE SLsOF EFAes LESase ae = : :PoSeth aa = ifs ==: Ss SSS = aoe aes >Boh: ‘ Deeg 5 Ss. =sage : SSeS OSE 2 3° SS Bt eS 4 == : =s aaa 5 SSS SSeSSySogSgee Ue ae ES8Se OSS
paenae ve ppermresperenmenmeerr prea eres St BE 2208. wsSE BA!
— a ow FRG eg 74 ‘ Bs PERG vs = SSe 2 Sie a 2. oe os a7 2 :
: me £3 3 a = = : Se i SS SSS Se. SS SS SE Se Se SS = : : ESE =3=See = poe | SS Sar Se Se=bits oeSSaSS se 7= : : ESS = 8 0 2 = SSeS 0 SS * : BS —s ss 0: = oS SS Ss = 2S. oS Bel eateries SS = 3 ° ae a ee aS : Sos S SS SSS Se &
; a oe Be3 == =2s 7— SeSe gSS S8 : : footy Ses Se Sige TES ae Sae Ss. ere 6 SS SS ==: F . eo 0 AtWie ke ae = ra = Bes PyRas 8 ARS o2 233 S05 SESS == gill = Ss Beg=en # = #SSE SS 72 SSS Bees: 4isSS Ses2S2 ee x OS ; oe == ;8.BOE S Foe a ao. a + SS & 8 4 . eo 3pe=me eee ins = : oe eS SS Soe JS = "= = = =. CAT 9 oO : > See ae pF ge ie =e >; ga Seems 2 tee : ——~ “ ie fees A i oe : ; a a Z . Res a oe os a ea 3 ‘: A Se. NC UNGee cenEe| Sos" | Sera mt! Ep tas beSee Sle a gan Mca Rcemsaes Ean AS ee 42°95 Bee. me2S yee ghee See Mronen momen eer ey oeA a.fe paareeae oS 7aepA 7eS aeQee RRS aie = aa . i. oe A =We hinge #2 ee oS ee ee One eiea tenet “iyass oesees eS ara .SSeS eS ae G2 eee hs ee eS A eee = ao if 2eee 1Eee eS Leicgibehe Seto ef oa Cog EY 7M © Bee rae 3 Le gta eee eeaFe ed |eg predeg i ene ie ae a ghA | tyBeh Oe at Sas OS 2 laser 2 die a Bee EEBee edSORE a Fea eeemo a gee
ee= he eee pes Fags eea!kek” ———_ ide eS 2 eee ry fi é2. 7oe : ee 2a e. + ee eas ny 3 ggPe ney as Peeeee bapa =e ze qSe ae Rg. 5 2327RM, = Seg afencs seo 7 RSCoe & " ere fy are ae wr:Fh 4 ¥ Xva) uae isee oa ma4“ae =
Aeyes eG) Oo Neeareatit SNE faed Peoo epamegars ganesh eoFaeeTs et fg oy BAY eo ees ae BSS Nig: Se ee ay aaaeee BREF ee es se pk RSaa a iSee Se Mg Soe SrEN Seat Fe «Woe Ree 4 SeeMasi Se 5 ee EgBe GE NE SeON ; . alg: 2Ea al i a Bae eb Gly ale Sm A eae a tte cane PE eee, en OP ree BO ee) Se ae 2. BESS Sek eS ieee ee SSE) Wee es, GY eS See ee “2 Se ne vin “es E SS? ye ae erg ae kip ee Bea a sR lee © FG fe See a oa aie Cae £m I SL BO eG SG fe a Se y By : ee aa tet ies ee Vac eran Ff ere Cae ee ae Sawa ~ ae RES mn ee Gua a OF
ee gx S74) Be Alas A! a \ ees Vy See ne De ee, ee Rgrcelg etait 2 neh ge ars ear ¢ aq J te rt a & SF He Bg EE RR ea gk Age Ra i ee ee We EA ae 4% Fae . Jot OS Be AS . ot ee red | q ae sea Pet Fae
Bae?era Bee Nets aut pp Bee es gg Se Se T Sipe eT A, ae éET BM ee eS —pereee: ‘5‘See SRS esta eesae Al, Gas ALF? fTAOS SCRpas Ew §S aes re et eeee eeOR $ecoer oeFea Fae See Oe eS Sgor, ee ae 3 Be ed ewcee eeLeRS i eal peor Ses eae 42Ee, >ey wax iSe‘ Mou, OS ian S21 4L3 ee eee 3 ER | oe Bie eo a, eT om | Bee gemg £9fs..Say aSeetaee OE MN es&2=& & ESS Gh 7 ae ee es See ees pe ee o™. S a Seo Ee a? ft. SRE RN © Pp ag sa ¥ 7a in: nee sa ee igh eae se = lok ange eg EE ae Bie AVF fs MRS oe ae és! xs i whee ir . Fe “ig Sp ee” 5S PR ge A SE fe FE ee ee AN Ee Jute) eed Se a aw S' s z Tp" 4 : i
ay _ Se et ae) pi e.. ‘ if "\ Sa SN Y wera | roy PEL END ‘a Fey ae se ene ae pay iad s |La! a eS eee | aye ook. es SA 8 =end aoe. Polo a ) Sa Se Sa ee a, yeSy hs. ees ae ee eg so we, SL Oe ae eeeeeie® RRS he SeBRS : we BERS ge a eK . ry °4a Sy Sy RE Mex BRR ee eS aw: #2ec. “= gS at Sis Pos ne ee~‘ Po oid ead,? § +=a73 pay Egy ~SAE 2 SeaSy Gg Oe ee aea ee ;ey ey & i3 MG SF re, ase atyyeaas a eee eg Mies. La aad EeOE aagetee ~~ 3 be 8g 2 eS, &e ee il ayee _ Sie: Neat ecton wk a a tek “a dl apareee oad tes ~ee SEN ee :; Bs eg Oe ag eG penton all ek: x ia al | et 2d iss os Be pw.WS. ee cot ae :Bie " : 3 aS eee gorse Hae coeee se eeee Bich: i Betoee : WES eee = oe eee eeRecess eee epee oo ShAae care Sie SES ieee ee eee ae eg eee eeoe 2:Se. —— : Ree See aren teeees Eye eos eee|Lo. ee RS: ae eeroe ae ee Agi EEec hia eeeefoi On ORBEA Bec EMS 8 Pees oe eee eR 2aae 5ee Pe Bhs eee ee eee eee SRE oe, a a WERE os TE ER aR 2 Se Pd * yg RRS ae pe ee a ee L . | Se oSSe 3:ee SERRATE * Siete ee PAA SES Pee et Sn SSS Pap : Se, Do) RRR eo SEY Sie es RR JRE se fi RS) ee coisa ROE ees ree aaa Seen ; a ; oe ee eee ee SRE Oe ces RSG Se 2 PSR 8 BEES ay (AEE 8 ue BE SBE Hpi gg. Docc HRS oo Poa oe Paes ear iar eae SAU Rie Samm aes caer iS ae Es Reba Bee 47‘: oS ec 2S : ° SO SEU Bee a oe a see oe oe ee ee ee a ee eae a So Se i. ; |... ee er aecego ee eeoSae SSpisRE ghideipoeea : to aaeoaEwa oS Hh ae oeoe eeeeee Sc ak eSeS RR ae POae RSENS ee.RSIS a ae Bye SEER
fe oo - aeae2Seeei. eeeSe a Bae BS ee Se a pe eeeaeceee eeBee eereaeed eeSeeee : oo ee eee SL TRS ee ee ee ee Pe ee oe ee ee ae ae oe Bee ee eeeee 2 ee ee eo | eee SeRee eeheeeSLR ie rn aa eeoecoe a ;} cS oFSan Baer eSRS eee ee Phe oe ee ee +a ily fg 3PATE BeereSFa SR wyeatee RRR ebeeee a aeeaap ee2ee ih aie SAR eeeeee SS FoR Eh Spa BRE: 1 SSSRAes aterm eMee eaeeee aRES iee:SeeSee -a = oe — a: Sees a Bee ue reeeos ee apeateee 4Beiatee ee E Bee wo: oes eee ee eee Se ee eee eees SoeAOS eeegS“Be : meet tee, a Bee SRSA Seeee ea BRR Rare Bee J eei e oe : | [= r—“=“OCOCN = :Eee Pee oSdeaeeneae eeea1.Sage ERY Pee aeAee ee Sn Te See eee a
eee ah Pee eee cere Sa ee ee . Soe ong es Ee uc EERE RR 2 ae Bee See ae Se a RS etc ogg Ga oe SOP ngs ae aaa ce Eee : a . BAe
22 SeepeSo = eecSaeeBoe oS ; : an eS a a ee eee ee ae eeoe ee BEes Ee aae 2 ee See e Be ekees ene eee Po ee Rie a ae ree Seem S : 25 PS. See ae eae Bee ae EE ee oe ene a ee ee ee ee , Be eis Sa i; . aoa
Beeee Sere easae Fe Se a ee 5 a oe ok eea 22) eeeeOe pa SEE ae Sabie Rgee Se ee 2 ea ah Pe ee yeee a Se . : ee seme eaeeetee er Ge = aS Bhee ee a 2. ogae “SR ae fo eae Fae Fe aoe7:ee ee ee eee : oe a ee tae Se 2 Bae fe Se ee ee : 2 RRR ee a ae Be oo Fe ae ee eS oe ae = eee | B “eee emer ae e Zagpon ig! RSS ao aan ea econ ct BBsSees ee ERRRenae aie pee cee | eaegeass. Seer are aBie ga foei EES 2 aefoesSE eoweeaaee.eeeGR EER: OF SRR Sees ‘Se eeesaeotAOaRRP eeeeaeaeBSRES EE ao) aaa oarEEN : : poe oe 7
Bees ce ee SaSROs ae arRee GS cook BisaUR oe ee ae Seee ge Oece eee ga.2 eBOA : Eee [ee |. a::bs : ae oe See fea Rechte apee a fro. a. eSeee aLE ae ES Re aaGee eee Betis Be BE 8 eee :0 °ee OCS Beaeeee ; |Spee |ene _33ASE oe 7Bs 2. 6Ssaaae es ae ee ee 2eae oe of BER ee See ee EE ee RRS 23 SRE i ee aoeSa Gree. Se5s ieee ame 7ee: po ee RU a.oS eae = wee :Re SR: ESE peeee: a eee penee eee Rt 2) Se ieee COTS SRS ae. oi Aoe enone ae fe. .He, eee aeJfeteee eRe ee SR SS: we Bs a eas er 3ES ee mS UF GRE GRR RR Be FJ: aS Shas Nae ce ae orae oS eS Bees ae erase a Sey £riiee Realy sheS abigail sy Tee .2 Bes RRS PER BG Se SV Se 2FB aeee: RE aaeet. aSOR :ame BES “eae. rae ee ee aPe See Saar tes =anoo ee ee ee ee Me a Se ReRR USt GSP Poa ET eeAS Sy NE FSBs eeSee ae Re eeee. pete pe eecSee BR RIC oneehPopes aBe— Gg . ee joy ging Meta eh 22,Ss Se eae eee aAAAI Se se2 era TNESee EB tyee:4: fe | Po aeRage UE SE -ieee °SE Seee . Ae REPRE oth ce MMR. RS, SRR SE TMaCa eran PR eaedP SeeSe |ee RES: “HER PSE3SUS i ee ie:- ESI - : EPsep RE Se See Puch ae Ses SEE RE aee aeSoar SpE iEER Seen Bee gee saa ae een BG a aRES 7oe SeBh Se eee Set pee . ERS nt See Se eee . aes aes ee FRE NS RaRE RE Poet ees CR eS: os . . oe Beeae a SEE Teeaers: eaten oeUe eae RES S.A SeeSeeBO GES ae See SSR oaiear aes Sey ae ‘ig2.ELE ESBS ee aeLE ee ee . ; aoe a Rae fee ee SSRs : Re ‘= allem: meee gs AS ES COS SORES Eee 2aa RSS CE SSSR pega feETE a fee = By eeBe See Sage CBSE aLE: 2htepee ELE a:2) (ee Sa ceshetae: Sas ee ESSE iA=aeeones fee S .aER _— _ESF Sig AE 0 ee ee Te RRR gene DEGREE RS sg ee oe oe Ago Roa Bee eer Uv pet Se PR a: FES E3 per Be et, 2aa a SS ORR SPU SRG OE) SRS SeaBey 3Sea: ST ese aEa aryhs Fae BRE Aft MERA 5.a:ar 7 ~ee = BRS “RSSa SS|eee 2eeaaa GERRI 2EE a ORES pee DRESS FT IBS oP : pa Se ee ES ; oe ; Tea s aES SSwhe : : Se SRR eeee aeeee ce aa ee ee :SRR Be Ey. gsRE{SoD oS BRE ESR SEES ce SHEERS
ee Lo Sei & ee ReRES eeeapee OSaee ee "A: PE 2- .eee -_ Se: ee ee aS os SeeEsteeARS tae RRR TERE Sersaea.oaee: ones
Be BE Ee age Pe AERO a ri eae = ee a = Ee Ee ee eS oe og Ee | oe
Se Se ee SBE EE RR Seat. Gh: LEER eeee Resee eee eS CRN ER HES SEaaae rexa°F , - SEER syne Sha a7 pad ae 2S Oe ae SS ae?Se . . :°Ree ahaR gli st GEMIESS ES .ne “gta : Bons Bee Sea3S ogHE SER eh SE a : Ss = Ree! Be ee cot ERREY Ss fa Bre pre 2° esoc =: eo eePiea oe 1Be aSee; USES Po ooEee aeoa.eea8©a oe re eee en DS ae ape L238 eee ABB 2382 pee eee ee oe ese oe aEee a ee | Pp we _—+= oS. ae aEERE See CURD” Ee ee Br. tne OS go Ait SRE Ee eeeo aee UR eRe ek Bae ee ee rlrl aesad) ee1 gg ae aa aFRassgiagin Beg SE Bee SRE pee ae eee C8, ERR ETRE eeae #ae BRE re Bae RRR OEE? oaED Sa ET LSS ee eee aeee f:.LE. NS S eS 7nO foot wey ‘gee, cea, +Bs Eee aaeBe: : CEE eke ue eeae osBAe ie seUEI aPe ae eeER CG RS gee Paee EE AS ee ee ce ene eshoe oo oe coe #EES: : etCote PRG UAT poe .Eg EE See = ineiiag ae eee Oe a aS : TSE es ee Be 7 oo of pee : UE Re WL UN,2SESSA Beep ane. HSER be haatTE jeeRRR ae oe a aeSRS ; : ge oo eS 8\ ar ae 2 Sng oo er oeRET 10S HERE ee (ER oF SR eR De SS ewe- emer Leoe : wi EAD LEPe SEaeSe_BR
fi —. ; ae oe oe ee i = = eee ee oe ee ee
ee es
P44 - Bee. .SOee ne ae: RE LAN ees eee ee eee BRE. % oniSES - e e Pir Re Seees Se RETa ea Lp aR ae Seine a 2 Se 0 FR eaewe Shes TRE SE GES cs eee peteSee n SMe ea ee ee AR ae os SELES E SRE eA Se SESE? 4 me . Se Peete ee ie IE TER ae, pee ee RR | RR PO ee TS 7 ERR ES ES BOERS a Pe a pict et Eee aig, | : —_—_——n wo pee AEE Ear Rs ae HEE Lf Ego RRR OSE Re wl hates TEL Poa Rd oe ee Ae so HSBRBER ESM giles VR BREE eas: se BE ee Sra ares ean Me ema RD 2 RE Z ot np 7 a ea a Sk: en ae POSSUM sone ee a De ghiiger ce, Sekt Bei} SRSA Sa a BE Bie sis os wel Ti DRE Pie SES SS PaaS, re ea ‘Baas ERE SERBS Ea 000 REECE OR
ae aoe hlmltC—m ¥ ee ee ee ee ea eee a eee ae WU ee Sven go BERR
2| — | ca — 0 060Clté So RUSE ORSSa J Se &elege. SeeegS ee: ASS es SSPee 3 2SseSARE SSSRS 3 :Bi:esEe eSaa :ee eeSSSSofeeeeSS ore SSS = =o er : es wl) AoE PEGs Ag a 3 EP S335 2S. FSS SS SSS SSS SS SSS Reha eS PRR Se 2 FE ESE Che Sp Si? SSR SS SD is BS
Ss sl an s ee ll: = Lge Sh RE gS: Pak RE! 2S SSS SES SS ease ES SS SS SSS eee ae By BoB : 2). “SSS ee By SUS TED. SSS ; fs. igRos? a2 22a foe:we” Tl :BREESE Coffs BF* «oP 2? SSS og SEE RSPee SSSS RRS SSRs SS Sse aSaar Bee 7foie SSSi 7SR Bed SSSs==. agees28 é OR tay PoyeR oy SSE Pope a Sees bk oe eeSS. SS |BS Sege eeSS So.eee RS Se SR =DORA wie BT SDRE SSS SSS SS BE OEY ub ig okt Cee Se eee a EES J 3ifytSESS CS SB a=|a
SSS : a ‘2 : 3 = BES SSS Ss = Sea SSS Sa Se 5: Ee ass 3 Es SSS eee SS SS
Ss mag SESSSSSS. HSS TS . yy See Jp 3, Shs ee SSS
SS : /& ane == SSF is See US Ba zo Be ee Sree eden oe eT a abi ee ee le ee nee ak agente eit fh EES SE SE Et EE “SSRE eee Fe od - > SSS a. 8 A SSS
= sf = ‘ oF : hart - 7 ape Gi dye pS ay be OR rghSSeadg. - PES yp: Ae Se eS SSS SSS Vee P RRS Pee BER 2 | SSS ee : ee SS
SS Fr 3 gSS,WOES SRLBp E » SU Tei) SRE CSE Oo PREECE is Sens 0 Eg adoSET Ee i Sone RE ——S; See SE SS Pd&+ph=ue3osfeTHF : . ..4yo S: TS, LSB: WAR DURE reeni2p TE es a- CLS e vegee Age eB BSS, 2 .2 BS
SSS : * SS S SSS SS SS SSS SS SSS SSS SSS 7S SS SS SSS SSS SS SSS SSS SSS es
SSoSSee Soe a OFeeceeee eeee eeOe epee SoLR ce ds ca eerie te ee ee ee reee 2. ereee eee rr rr
SSS eSSE,SS a Ly a AR eeBREeee eeSR EE SA“Fgh TRBRE. ESS Po = Ses eee: Seieee = —- lu Se aS fe ee eS SS Ses
SS. SS SSS SS SS. SSeS. SSS CE RE ES = = SS SSee ik ee BE “ ee eS. Seen = Ses. Se cee es :==Ss aSs:SSS se SeeSS = =Ses =SSS ESS paye ta=acaer ee SHEE co, SS Sere SS ep eS as SRS &S eS iBRS ARs! So PISHBIR, gs Boo) Sis SS|eLe es, Sts: ee Se eesSse Se : SS JESa“BE feeee——ee==SSS woeS:eee =eSe eeSS See Pee 2ga SP SSS FEE SS
= oS = SS Saeee SSSeS oe SSer Egeaecapa aeeae RSESe Fy. ne Seesee SSSpeg US ESSE8iSee Se =!=SSS = SSS SaSeSe ae—2S a[SSSe3SaFieeoa YR ERS Se SS =e = SS 3s Sieegare! : Sie ary [SS=Faces Be | Ee ETE Stame ae ae aeBi 2 yg PRES Fe Se Se=ee fee Sa
eS es 2 eS ar Se. Saeed fs 233 Cf S = UE ESS , SS SSeS SS “ee UPS ERS ERS / ee SSeS RES = SS 3 = Se Se ae BORE Si SS SSS Lo See ee ge 8. OSE Sy. RES See SRS Sates
== — SS eS Se Es =: SS SS. ae fees ies vr Bee ee SS See Se SS Sass eeepc BERRY, SUR , SS kc. 2Seeee gee SS Se aa aewhe : re ? =gS=eSRSoSaas SS OS SS ES) SS (ieSRGSS ee SS Sieh thy PRES =a = a eeSo. Br th iy .pee Seen ge SSS. : Seeee aesES SS = = =Se—— pa Fe See Se loee: 2Sess. SS 2 ae ..oearMRS a SS SES eae ES SS” She ES SASS eee “RSS = SSS eter Se SSS See. afRae 2 3s SS SSS ee 1EE eee se Ue veges SRT ogop SERS Te .: .a=3=-BEFes eee : “Bo SSE ST eee Saee Meee eo Gee ee SS Se fae : het HESSRENS a7Sek 2 TUS) TER TASES Baws °F) Pi gee SS 3 ee Roe Ea RBS S Re cos Se Bees Shee Saas Pen ee en epee eae a ae Pos =aS SSS Fs ge See Ses:ee z ns: = itd. 3: *pee a + SR SS a 8 SESwe SSS SSS SEBSSS ES SieSS >>" eeSe “seekSs Ee SES SS SS SSS = En SS ee BeepSS eee ere ee BSE =e ee Pe pe BSS ES a a VSS. oe So Sees © fo. es 1 = a Ree PS SER sae ss SSS a = eee oh eS Se Si: Se eS ee eee Sr RS ree JSS eR as. oa
: = fos Voss : > _- aoe. SSS SS a a ee 2) SSS re ee ee er
. ees. ee ey =F * 2S eS 2S 2 aa SS Sees ee aes Se SS See > SS a ports LSrgwee Seale OR EAE =e
SS — Se< a. Se 3s sess SSS 7 oe SgeR OS Woe oeeeae Se: SS SSS oS:See Se ~ rea SS0°. SSae eS See RSOe ESeSPS Si. Bees = a. aoar.Se EF are oe iio Se a.|Soo-PeSe tee eeI
: SSeS SSS SSR aPere P= =SS 2 iSe SSS SBS SSSeSE SS SS SRE ERS. SESS teSS RES = oe Jes SS Se Ress er : SESS RS ESEgh SS Sg BRE a. ke 2SS: SoSe. Sk aPS 2ISS P= eee2SSS SS Ses8SS See ae ARE SSS GP SSR PARSE ce SS ieSe es =:: eS Se a 33 sSe*Sess SS SSeS SeSRSS US |S>Pe 0) UE RS Se Loh a1Sshi Ry BSS SRS So) SSsr fo eS SSS PS at eS E ee E figSAS ee SSSee * SSS faeSes &:7] eee. =SsSSSee SF Sige : 3 sf AYees MESSRS Pied ig SS St 2SELEY SSeSDS PeeTER SR SES SEES aE Ss EeSee LY Lo Sh F ed
.got SSeS%%fn = SSS SrSeFeeaS_ ?See sees engidye st coEER | DENS eeSSS eee : : *esSess 2 eS .SS . 2SfF, SSS SNeas. ni) See? RSE SB Ps 7) Sn =a WEY aah SS ga eee SS ee Y| ee a eae
ae. SS "SSsesie, + ER Pere ee "Si SSSSe See nods eR ae ae a ¥9 oF pit te es Pee SS SS ue poly ese Rees la? ho fon gee and° ~SSS 4 SS =. 3 fo Se SER SS. 'iSSEh . .SSS = Feo, 7 SSS Lye aSUH neeRAEEREO PORES ERE ES Sa Sa & |Sess ere 22585 : mt SsBE SSS : i eS .=iSe oS EET Rese! VCERES |.: aawishes BEES eee aes he. SS eg SR SSS = 3eePES : jd, :Sr ye 3#Pee >Se See =SUSE 2S‘ SS Sor REREE Stel.z se Ike Sea 3SSS SSea See See aa ae hs 2S) SSeS SS Ees ‘Se rsey :SES eas eae .re BsDECIR epeesie SS HERS :SSeS Ce ee ee 2.SS es PSS =F SASS SSS qoiin: === see 2; :Be Se >See SSS .SSS WSEBSSES ESS. SS SSS RPL Dy .es fe2Fo 2.ah ES 3Sse SSeS = Petry) SSS So. ee SSS oo, eR ae ga? :Oo OSE BRS oS ee we eR .ES Ge eS es aS : Sa =BSS 5S :SS :33 :2woe 7Es =LS ae : ae SEB SEES eS SS SS SSE = SS SS S23 SSS aSSeS se OUP BS aSe a == eS See ee5RGN RSS [ES Se nO poe APE SRD RSE eS +#8 HSS Ps Se Se a£23 =~ ASE SSS BE ES: “eso syle s=5 RiteSSS SS: eS : SS.eres en iShe Sees 2 Sy BRAS RES Ee Se RSSE =IBS Spe : SS SSRRE EES en (Sy) i) ao ESR. Ss aes
ei SS ec FSS SSS aS . = Le SSS ite ee ee SS a ——— ; — oo oe
Lee = = wae. on Cer E [Sree FT Aa SSS 5 ee Re [0 SS Sees iB Sar eee CESS ee ee SE *SSS Poo SSS are rg SSS SS -ARSSSSer - SSSSS Sues SSR: eS SS [a; paar SE 2ptSS 3See 7: 2" 3yeSSS SSS aSee eaan Page REE SEE fa Fee. USS Se nS“2g Se es SSSSs: ae = SS ee LS SSS eae rtee eS22S SSS Soa.SERS: SSS : oe SSS = SS SSS eS Seen SSS ae age Bir fet) RSE ge ; eS :eae gd SSS ee eee cad APE oo ieaee gg SS Eg Srey SSS.teé SSeS: aane pr; iRU SE PSS SSS Me CE 3S esEE SS eeeStas - SS“fa $Saas UEP el Sasa: Sia Se 2k"RS ESSE oeBie Vs PS cote,oe=Lae PeesSRS =
: CSS ee SSS ee Pe OD SS SSS So RSS SSS 2 SS SSS . aft SSSSS GRU PS ER SSS es | walt e ee oS a SSS ee. SSS oe eg Se SS ke:SESS Sa SSS ASS See eS ee Se eee eeee - ar :ed 4a SSS SaoySS ee TEES eea+os asae SES SS ae Ss eS. Oa Se fSees aeSSe aSS ee SS naeS: eeeSe oe eereoS s :.thes Shee SESE SSSP geeesece Sse eee 2ee oR eSSS SS SSorSS See =< SS Soee SS SS 2)SS SSeS See eSSS eS ae - .dan Rees SR SS = fo oe =er /SS SSS ast |RS SRS ee SS See. ee SS SS Foe Se ae Se 2Se 2eee eee eS See “ BOURSES RUA PES BS ect e SSeS eee see SS eS JS aS SSS SS SS eee eee Ss Saaee Se fee RS Se Se SS SS 4 2 See a:3 ;:ee: Re221yilRSS, ae ee oS— 2S Gale Sy eSSS Se ee eS SSS ==SS ——s Seee SeSS eSRS 7SSS BLSSeS ESSeSe = ee=ee ss 7SS eSRE SS SS ae TS. SSS TSS TSS.eeeS 2cSS eee eS eS SS Ss Ee a Seee se=i eS|Sg ——— 7. oBRe aePE 2 ES: ee Se Ss SR Se eSSS SS Se See Soe ES. SSS :. :Se REL ere Se aeSS Sees =eeee :ee {Ses SSS SS Ss eo SSS SS SSSS SeSe 2Seee eS SS —bE) aoos So ge, CRE eee F . OMS. eeTES hor SRE Sk RS RS Ses Ee eS SSSS SSS =eSS SSS SS ee SSS SeSee SSS SS es ee Re BBE EPS eS 588 SSP =Se “Ug 2ee 2S eS See ee ei US, Bee Sis SO aa SS SS SS oS SSS SSS if Bk og Ss Be ea ee 3 PO o CRESS STA eS SESS SSS RE .wa SE Se i See 2ee SS,=SSS RS SS, Ee aSS Se oSSe = =ES SSS at ae ee EF eet dgfe SSS eSSe, SSS Bese SR See TRS aees BLE IMS 3= . le ,. .So : Lae eS eee SSS SS SSSSS eS SeSSS | SS ae Sr 3=SeeS SSSSP eeSS Se i:ESS oe BSS pee SS —— eb ae Ss ae cons = ae SS SSS SS eee SS See 0 Pe, os See SE 2 SS “ “ (OU SS SRS oS eee 3S Ss se eS SSSR SS SS EP foe, oss ee 7a — q re ee Pus Bg hpgtugec TAS! BSR no Fe aa Sees SSS SSSS SSeS SeesSS Sas SSR SS SSS Se ee SSS Se ee eeeea ee ¢eeiFfoe ae Cn?wstie. ERTSET SS aa:SSS i> aSS SSS aeES ESSSS Se Pe SS SSS SSSS SSen SSS Pee a oS = . 3 . SP g.P ae Son. OL SSS ae SSS 2) SSS SES 1,a2) SS Se Se SS aeSSS SSS ee SSS =SASS Le ee |pe eeSe eeA >227S SS! A See re 2&Sae Po ae Sp ARES Lge Se SR SS SSS. SSS SSS SSS SS oS SS SS SSeS = ae 3 3S eee See eee Bee SS :
Bp “Se ee Ss... ee eS ee ee SS eee ees pa ee [SS a
5°33
. . apel. . . Ju gmen Photo: Alinari—Art Resource 7b Detail from Icnelangeio ast istine ::
Christian emphasis on private, ecstatic confrontation with God. Moreover, Michelangelo projected himself into this apocalyptic scene by way of a unique and terrible personal signature. In the lower center, just to’the symbolic left of Christ, the artist added his self-portrait. We see Michelangelo’s inimitable fea-
tures in the rumpled skin that Saint Bartholomew holds with his left hand, dangling it above the yawning pit of hell (fig. 57b). Saint Bartholomew, who was martyred by being flayed alive, is often shown holding his own skin, but here the
artist painted the saint with skin still healthily attached; he holds not his own but that of Michelangelo himself. Michelangelo imaged his gruesome autoexecution no doubt from reading the popular Christianized legend of Cambyses, the Persian lord who punished a bribe-taking judge, Sisamnes, by having him similarly skinned alive. The artist would also have been familiar with Ovid’s tale of Marsyas, the vain and impertinent satyr who challenged the god Apollo to a musical contest and suffered also to be flayed alive for his insolence. Both of these legends were understood in the sixteenth century to prefigure the Last Judgment. The victim’s skin represented
his evil humors and sin. By removing it, he is purgated and redeemed; his skinless body symbolizes truth revealed. That Michelangelo fully understood this symbolism is amply evident in his poetry; for example, in one of his many sonnets: ‘So too I’d want to have my fate adorn / My Lord, while living, with my dead remains; / As on the rock the serpent sheds its skin, / Only in death can my condition turn.’’38 38. This translation is from Creighton Gilbert and Robert N. Linscott, trans. and ed., Complete Poems and Selected Letters of Michelangelo (New York, 1963), poem no. 92. The original Italian is
given in N. Girardi, Rime de Michelangelo Buonarroti (Bari, 1960), poem no. 94, p. 278: “Cosi volesse al mie signor mie fato/Vestir suo vivo di mie morte spoglia/Che, come serpe al sasso si discoglia, /Pur per morte portia cangiar mie stato.” In the verse following, Michelangelo implores that his “hairy skin” (irsuta pelle) be made into a garment to be clasped at the breast of his Saviour. That St. Batholomew’s skin contains Michelangelo’s self-portrait was first proposed by F. La Cava in Il volta di Michelangelo scoperta nel Giudizio Finale (Bologna, 1925). Most scholars have subsequently agreed. There are several Christian sources for Michelangelo’s inspiration. One is found in the artist’s favorite poem, Dante’s Divine Comedy, Paradise, Canto 1, ll. 19-21, where the poet calls upon Apollo as exemplar of the divine spirit to enter his soul: “Entra nel petto mio, e spira tue/si come quando Marsia traesti/della vagina delle membra sue.” Another, referring to the Cambyses legend, is the Gesta Romanorum, a popular reference book for sermons, written in the early 1300s but later printed in numerous editions in the sixteenth century. The text is Latin, and Michelangelo would certainly have known the story since it was already incorporated in the Catholic Mass. The Gesta story explains how an unnamed emperor sentenced an unjust judge to be flayed alive. His skin was then to be used to cover the judge’s throne, to be occupied now by the condemned man’s son, and the skin should therefore remind the son both of his father’s evil and of the Passion of Jesus, for “Christ not only gave his skin for us in the seat of his cross, but also his life” (Gesta Romanorum [Louvain, 1484], chap. 29): “Pellem pro pelle: et quicquid homo habet dabit pro anima sua. Pellis quae ponitur pro memoria in sede est Christi Passio quam homo debet habere retentam in sede cordis sui ne contra deum et salutem animae sue delinquat sicut scriptus est. Memorare novissima tua et in eternum non peccabis: Christus non tantum pellem in sede crucis pro nobis dedit sed etiam vitam.” For further documentation, see Lawrence Price Amerson, The Problem of the Ecorché: A Catalogue Raisonné of Models and Statuettes from the Sixteenth
206 Pictures and Punishment
Michelangelo was also familiar with the preachings of Savonarola, whose writings, certainly the Sermon on the Art of Dying Well, he read with greater appreciation each passing year.39 Savonarola’s transcendental thoughts on death, his antagonism toward the Medici, and his eventual martyrdom made him a natural hero in Michelangelo’s eyes. During his long sojourn in Rome, Michelangelo underwent a profound transformation in his outlook on life, from active advocacy of republican politics to passive meditation and longing for private spiritual salvation. The great artist’s philosophical evolution at this time parallels the history of pictures in the service of justice we have been studying so far in this book.40 And ultimately, we have Michelangelo’s late works that harmonize so perfectly with the spiritual aims of San Giovanni Decollato. During the decade of the 1550s, Michelangelo entered the most intense agonizing about his mortality.
In this period he produced his most mystical poetry and his ineffable Christ Century ana Later Periods (University Microfilms, Ann Arbor, Mich. 1975), pp. 77—101. The argument is outlined also in Heinrich Schmidt and Hans Schadewaldt, Michelangelo und die Medizin seiner Zeit (Stuttgart, 1965), pp. 82 ff; and William S. Heckscher, Rembrandt’s “Anatomy of Dr. Nicolaas Tulp”’: An Iconological Study (New York, 1958), pp. 89-90, 99, 161-162, nN. 163.
The best-known depiction of the ““Cambyses”’ legend is the painting by Gerard David, c. 1498, which once adorned the law court in the city hall of Bruges. On association of this story with
Renaissance law courts, particularly in the Low Countries, see Ursula Lederle-Grieger, ““Gerechtigkeitsdarstellungen in deutschen und niederlandischen Rathausern”’ (inaugural diss., Universitat zu Heidelberg, Phillipsburg, 1937), pp. 42-45. Finally, a weird Vasarian anecdote testifies to the superstitions still associated with the bodies of the condemned in Michelangelo’s time which may well have had some influence on his St. Bartholomew imagery. According to Vasari, a certain
sculptor named Silvio Cosini of Fiesole, working in Tuscany during the second quarter of the sixteenth century was, like Michelangelo, also a member of a lay confraternity, the Misericordia of Pisa, which comforted the condemned on the scaffold. One night Cosini, garbed in the black cowl and cassock of his compagnia, stole the body of a just-hanged criminal in order to dissect it. Having satisfied himself about the anatomy, Cosini then peeled off the cadaver’s skin and made himself a
leather vest of it which he wore over his own shirt, believing it gave him some kind of occult protection and power. See Vasari-Milanesi, 4:483. For an even more bizarre—and judicially approved—nineteenth-century English example of such obsession with the skin of a condemned criminal, see Heckscher, Rembrandt’s ‘““Anatomy,” pp. 164-166, n. 180. 39. Alice Sedgwick Wohl and Hellmut Wohl, trans. and ed., The Life of Michelangelo by Ascanio Condivi (Baton Rouge, 1976), p. 105; also David Summers, Michelangelo and the Language of Art (Princeton, 1981), pp. 114-116. 40. Also symptomatic of Michelangelo’s flagging republican zeal was the matter of his unfinished bust of Brutus, which he left, along with the Florentine Pieta, to his student Tiberio Calcagni to finish. The Brutus had been undertaken originally, about 1539, as a tribute to Florentine republicanism after the murder of Duke Alessandro and an aborted attempt to overthrow Cosimo I. By 1545, however, Michelangelo had given up on the statue because he could no longer condone tyrannicide, and, like Dante, believed that Brutus was a traitor to be condemned to the lowest pit of hell. Assassination, even if it restored the republic, was an intolerable act of arrogance. A good end, Michelangelo is said to have stated, cannot be achieved by bad means. In any case, during those years in which he was also working on the Pieta, the aging artist seemed to have made his peace with the Medici in Florence, even carrying on a friendly correspondence with Duke Cosimo. See Howard Hibbard, Michelangelo (New York, 1974), pp. 263-265.
Pictures of Redemption 207
Po, co REE ROE er ME EE
EB EB : Sy ont Bhs Bie wile A, SS So ea SE Se Soe eS ae fiers SE 9 + : Lo ee ee .wha eapwe ysdang :ES : “SRS SS eee SS Sai ekeSSS SEAS SERIES. SSRRS. FEE Se ea Oe GIRRSE Ee8 eapsteca aes Pike : . SSeS eas [EEE Soo VE SSS SRE SESS SUD RUR TERASS Hast HSE Eeae RRSEOE areaereaped Se reaatc umpmerninnstis .fi.SUE oaSea BeSRY wT “aeeyes SSSSee Ree eSSS. aren Use SS RRS |fists ES See Se =aSee pireRetgee 2 Zk po Fees tentfaa) pee tea noe F Rec eS ee SS SRperS i. SRR BeOS aerateSMES eee gs| ee acta ails GRR DS Ra UU Ra risEE dy Beate 2) See E IR
Wo CaS Si es OS Ta ge Be eps : ae SS eee ea ee 2a S88 EeE.=—=—6hmese
a. 2~BRR ee nae eeSaasSUR PeSiae ooPraes . HSee aee wioe : 2 Sey;8 net PR BY [SS Co ee igepne taney Ce Been aE Pe ee eS eid : Each ec ee: ger ane : :a eee .enone pose =.=hryaesi ioe ae aS : . ee ee ee ee:Pare 7:#a fale #a#### .£. £PRC 72=73X»+”™CC SeSae LL GMs ; . : ae ee Ll oe ae Se 2 . . : : : : 2 eee SEA Ps oo SERENE ee poate eae ue ee a Pe See eee Seo ee ees :osBSR pee ot mo, heeeBe ; . ee ee gabe lrBOE aege. eS ees 8 ee cs . ae ees get ae 7 Pewee gat i ee ay fe ee Se og EE vo ; A. a oF ee : oP SERB ehe ’ bs we Gee peg Cae Sees eeue oe = eee———r—r——Ss =) Ae eee Aa oh Rae SE ee ee rg Pers ;. :::1THREET aes. See7oes oe ee _. ae fe :: ee-oe ae TSO ga ag Serene ieee ee Ta eee Cen ee ee yee ee Bec okwee ER ee A so : eee : Serre 22ae ee PRSS eee esa See eee ieee eerl Sea. a Aoe eeeaeeee Ree ee BBs RELA GREER ee fee oe J; . es|. ##é~| : : non Up EERE REE ES Ue a ns PE Be be , i ee 2h ee RE ES Soe aes = 8 SS
RAD eget? Se :EE a .i.Sa :EE , Bg Te SSaRape pees Wiss hidese a ESI Pa SR preETAT RES Se eta Saati Desir iSNMS Ree eeSRS eae BeBa 2 ii8).t aaa fue BS ERS INE eee ei eS 2! Fae ae eT eaoa DE A aoeRe ey Pitr aes eee atiss Rea Se Bit3: SSeeNee: ee a aad wife TERS an : ep ERR eytye ss & Rppainnia DS ee ee oie eae eRa URE PRG Res ea RR aSaoe Gee REE Ye poses ee ES . . wo: afe‘#itacSiet BEE :a*.:PTE .foes Fa BSS EUR aeee Cee Bee BOL EHS ea aieasriae Te Bs aE Lies Pavan Ie ES SIS aes & Ee BE aE oo. Je derosaEy. eae a“BR Sey Leeae Pea onA ee trees Sie et Se ee See SRS 2ilies Reale Reese | ge Siete aes Bee GS i : . : . : mot < ORE : eae ea ae nee ee aeey REESE Arce ee ae Seer UR aired PNG SSUES nee ee SS Sc ee ar SS eee eos
. Su ee RRs be Se meee , : . MB . i ot Ee eee eee Eg SOs aaa eae ret Ae acre meme ident ia RB hi ee (ieee ray Ree Hee ee Se eee .: DRESS 2 - RD - : . Pee a sR: Bee Ae SeeBBG eee aaea THRE emer i ate ips Peseta eee aja paseeee pMRee Se petaay: gaan Sees : Hugseee SER ueAE” ,erpoe fees Pee eeTE? a ore Snes ERODES uaeaeseria ner aeISEES SLi peaST EeEeeee peesBERS | Uae Se SEwet SSERER . ..=..whl 5 - aLos a Peck: Laser 9 alas iePit eR gt RRM AR Siae ariier ee ap tT Se Faun Roa Soe Se eee eesEL nee iE) EES) - :. Se Se; See TeRSS aeers RE Buel geo ae PE Se pteaTsdPa iaeenT eed ae eaMOH Se Sore RE Lf g RES SSS SSEES we RR seer: (aa LETH apaea aan pene See Sere ee ee SEP SEES _ ERIS aos . :EE . ;: :a.EM ue aBoe tee IRN auae eeteeBU Eee ee sae Spee rarece a Se Apia Rea ieneeee caeee LL eeeS ob ieseae BREA RE Ho
: Bele Vis SRR or . ~ . ge re Re eS ear aS eee: SEES aa TaP ys: SEARS OLAS oa ee HE RAR RAL Re Aree ee ee ere ee CPi Hee BeBe Set
Me here ~ : ee ae eee Brees (fF ee eee eae Regs ay! IEE + af EAT aa LU Bee ee Bye iE, BR BES Hea ESE Bs
- i ER FRERERES :20HESS . SR SPRER ahr ae (SSae RRR iS) ee SPR Seecaie PewYS r era aacSE ener y SER«ad RaaBea eT HG EEaaa IeaSpPea ray EA ee SERGE See Ne EAS3AES Case po SeeHe Soca Se Ss eSeeipa aereeS ee SRE Pe RR ai Ri Raa peRenton EY SSeS Reecad, ae EE BESS aR ry SEs
Byeseee a SRE a ee— aeS as Bea BRE pone | SG 2 BeeS a eR EReee MEGS RAP mae eae siege: ee esa2 RRR EEREes or aga wegeeie : a ot iyo: G - Sea ee ae aecae Cyaeene a eeSm et :nes eeSkamaad Sele eneraiaadi ee LES HestBas aaaEHS HeeBERR ReesnSe a eee ep Oea SB,
. : .. GS PosSpee .aeRise ce pee eres Sr Eg HS JEieEge SS OR aepeer ae ae Oe Hate Hetreseepee Soeees eTBe Rea vudes fySPE ck eres PEE Sa 2S See Set" eeeaf Pe eae RnR SREBRR a HEE, eaealert Seae apa era eyayeeeeSoe OE eid ett aeLS ag See EL nea Bee eae egeee SEER ES: i Bape eae eeRe EN GBS GEER AS RS mete ine : GS Sey oa Sok Te eae reaa Paskeeyany SaeaN PROSE Aeag se aay, SheNate ies EES ee Bees fe SEE po Sch SeeRS SS .: .:aie . ESS ee rieee SR Seas Bee ee Pek eee ree Baa RR asAia REURE LR a aiteaye eeips eee Seeinden Sse gaits Seaehea eae PO Te RE eS
heSr: .EBs . Po. val oe 2aeSeeeEerC—s—C—s—*éCOWCN See 2 oEadaae iS: :,7: co ee ae eee ae ee. ee ees 9 ges RR fo Cssa |es (EB Bey ot Pe ae
a fs FS ee se ee a — __ Doge BREE OSCE
:aoe A ee ee See es a eee Sei:Re caeScare eaeaes ae Sea Fece ES2ie ROR RaoeR Sova iaa eee Rae SeaSeas eee oOeeEES oe Loe ras ee SS SEES Ree AR -snes rr—“—OCOCSCSC—C—CSC—C—C‘CSC ee ey : 2: ‘SSRs wot:. .ETS ae Beek Cee SRene TeSee Gee SaaS RES Saath siesta reyreales feeCe heaRaa Sere nee! See cigEEE pSESSE BE BE BRS es 8 -ahs a £0 :"Se! :. |Se SMS Ses eae fe Base Sea ew SS aslessaretaiiigntg US eee eeRUC .ee ia SSUES RES 1B .Be .* SSS Become, aiS etek = ie Beet Srte aear icCAE tyeee eateBapRegs otBra. gine RET eait a arPS Tee uae tae naS aeee Boon TES os ci :Sys :: .. a:. 2 es oe: SR SAR Smee ee ESERIES Liat PeDees en eees So Spee eae en eeSESE pReeee Coo Seepee UE TEN Ge oR .Ely aae Toe _Raa RRS Be eee ee 8iBee 2 ea Rep aia SeeSe a ERA ape ERE irtas Sey aeisang URY ota oo Sa aOS Bove POEs i.. :Bee SS ce a7a, See Se ae Ree eS ee Bei oe Se aeEn cae Bee oe eee wid See EN ee .eeBEE SS, Gc aeS ee CoS SE is ae eee, nie y: aaurea |e ee esaetna ee are ee oe en aeeete ee fea OE Pe “ : . — 1, BS Soe iS pe ce pee rae oS Li ES BED ae Se ea aes Set: UU aes ee Se LBS Beg OF a : . : oa a es ee Eee a ea iio eee ae Sp Se ey Ber fake Se eRe ee name SiGe ees Sy eee BRE SRS Le Sa he Ped : Be. eg ae— Se Bigs as Ru See SRRa(Pao eae eee i aR Ree eat esSUR OE SeaSES eaten .UPS « POE page, es a 28aé: . .hog. 8 :HSfees oe ieee EE2 720 ge aeoho eeRep i é@ é8€£4.£=§
. edche : . : POP :