ABSTRACT

Although there is a rich historiography on Enlightenment Tuscany in Italian as well as French and German, the principle Anglophone works are Eric Cochrane’s Tradition and Enlightenment in the Tuscan Academies (1961) and his Enlightenment Florence in the Forgotten Centuries (1973). It is high time to revisit the Tuscan Enlightenment. This volume brings together an international group of scholars with the goal of putting to rest the idea that Florence ceased to be interesting after the Renaissance. Indeed, it is partly the explicit dialogue between Renaissance and Enlightenment that makes eighteenth-century Tuscany so interesting. This enlightened age looked to the past. It began the Herculean project of collecting, editing, and publishing many of the manuscripts that today form the bedrock of any serious study of Dante, Petrarch, Boccaccio, Machiavelli, Vasari, Galileo, and other Tuscan writers. This was an age of public libraries, projects of cultural restoration, and the emergence of the Uffizi as a public art gallery, complemented by a science museum in Peter Leopold’s reign whose relics can still be visited in the Museo Galileo and La Specola.

chapter |37 pages

Introduction

Tuscany and Enlightenment in the Atlantic World

part I|116 pages

The Politics of Knowledge in Enlightenment Tuscany

chapter 1|22 pages

The Enlightenment at Work

Ideology, Reform, and a Blueprint for a Constitution

chapter 4|39 pages

From the Body to the Body Politic

Peter Leopold’s Florentine Enlightenment State*

part II|69 pages

Commerce and the State

chapter 7|25 pages

Forests, Woods, Roads

Agricultural Landscapes as Instruments for the Material Administration of an Eighteenth-Century Tuscan Periphery

part III|92 pages

History, Culture, and Enlightenment

chapter 8|50 pages

Long After the Trial

Galileo’s Rediscovery, Florentine Nostalgia, and Enlightened Passions*

chapter 10|28 pages

“Twenty Magnificent Temples of the Arts”

Geographic Schools in the Uffizi Gallery

chapter |19 pages

Epilogue

The Encyclopedic Prince: Grand Duke Peter Leopold (1747–92) and the Meaning of Tuscan Enlightenment