Nor was the enthusiasm for the classical past of Italy confined at this period to the capital.Boccaccio had already called the vast ruins of Baia 'old walls, yet new for modern spirits'; and since his time they were held to be the most interesting sight near Naples.Collections of antiquities of all sorts now became common.Ciriaco of Ancona (d.1457)travelled not only through Italy, but through other countries of the old Orbis terrarum, and brought back countless inscriptions and sketches.When asked why he took all this trouble, he replied, 'To wake the dead.' The histories of the various cities of Italy had from the earliest times laid claim to some true or imagined connection with Rome, had alleged some settlement or colonization which started from the capital; and the obliging manufacturers of pedigrees seem constantly to have derived various families from the oldest and most famous blood of Rome.So highly was the distinction valued, that men clung to it even in the light of the dawning criticism of the fifteenth century.When Pius II was at Viterbo he said frankly to the Roman deputies who begged him to return, 'Rome is as much my home as Siena, for my House, the Piccolomini, came in early times from the capital to Siena, as is proved by the constant use of the names 'neas and Sylvius in my family.' He would probably have had no objection to be held a descendant of the Julii.Paul II, a Barbo of Venice, found his vanity flattered by deducing his House, notwithstanding an adverse pedigree, according to which it came from Germany, from the Roman Ahenobarbus, who had led a colony to Parma, and whose successors had been driven by party conflicts to migrate to Venice.That the Massimi claimed descent from Q.Fabius Maximus, and the Cornaro from the Cornelii, cannot surprise us.On the other hand, it is a strikingly exceptional fact for the sixteenth century that the novelist Bandello tried to connect his blood with a noble family of Ostrogoths.
第54章 The Revival of Antiquity Introductory (4)(1 / 3)