- Andrea Fulvio
Andrea Fulvio, in his Latin publications and correspondence Andreas Fulvius (c. 1470 — 1527), was a
Renaissance humanist , poet andantiquarian ofRome , [Roberto Weiss, "Andrea Fulvio antiquario Romano c 1470-1527", "Annali della Scuola Normale Superiore di Pisa" 28.1-4 (1959:1-44] who advisedRaphael in the reconstructions ofancient Rome as settings for his frescoes. Fulvio was Raphael's companion and "cicerone" as they explored the ruins, Fulvio showing Raphael what was essential to be drawn and ex temporising on them. [Bette Talvacchia, in Marcia B. Hall, ed. "The Cambridge Companion to Raphael" (Cambridge University Press) 2005:184.]Fulvio published two influential volumes. One contained the first attempts at identifying famous faces of Antiquity from numismatic evidence, his richly illustrated "Illustrium immagines" of 1517. ["Fulvio's book was widely admired, plagiarised and imitated," Francis Haskell and Nicholas Penny note ("Taste and the Antique: The Lure of Classical Sculpture 1500-1900" (Yale University Press) 1981:52.] The other was a guide to the city's antiquities, "Antiquitates Urbis", published in the disastrous year 1527. For a more popular market, his works were collected and translated into Italian in 1543, as "Opera di Andrea Fulvio delle antichità della città di Roma" (Venice, 1543). [In full, "Opera di Andrea Fulvio delle antichità della città di Roma e delle edificij memorabili di quella. Tradotta nuovamente di Latino in lingua Toscana per Paolo del Rosso cittadino Fiorentino"] It proved so useful as a guidebook that it was updated by Girolamo Ferrucci and reprinted in Venice, 1588, as "Antichità di Roma... corretta & amplifiata."
"Antiquitates Urbis" furnished more than a new guide to the antiquities of Rome seen by a humanist's critical eye, the first of a genre of antiquarian topographical studies that extends to our time. It also remarked upon the introduction of printing to Rome in the previous generation and identified a few collections, such as
Angelo Colocci 's antiquities in his villa beside theAqua Virgo and Andrea Cardinal della Valle's Roman coins. Many of the astute observations recorded in Fulvio's "Antiquitates Urbis" have withstood time's tests: the half-lifesize Roman bronze "Camillus", then known as the "Zingara" ("Gypsy Woman"), he first identified as a young serving lad, and theMarforio he recognized as a recliningriver god , a Roman iconographical type unknown to the previous generations of antiquarians. He remarked upon the pacifying gesture of the equestrian Marcus Aurelius. [The observations are noted by Haskell and Penny 1981.]Notes
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