جزییات کتاب
This study re-examines Venice's political economy from the viewpoint of its ordinary people orpopolaniwho, despite the commonly held view that they were excluded from political life by the nobility ornobili, actually organized and ran for themselves hundreds of corporations within the city-state. Mercy was central to thispopolani's Christian values and those who offered mercy to their fellow men and women in temporary hardship were investing in the expectation of reciprocity in their own time of need. Beginning by tracing a formative linking of religion, economy, and polity from the thirteenth to the fifteenth centuries,Venice as the Polity of Mercythen chronicles the collapse of this triad during the struggles between church and state in the mid-sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, followed by a revitalizing reconnection of economy and polity within a different religious climate after the plague of 1630. As such, Richard Mackenney's book offers up a revitalized image of Renaissance Venetian society as dynamic rather than static, as well as a new understanding of the city's significance through a reconfiguration of its history and artwork.