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This volume explores the concept of magnificence as a social
construction in seventeenth-century Europe. Although this period is
often described as the 'Age of Magnificence', thus far no attempts
have been made to investigate how the term and the concept of
magnificence functioned. The authors focus on the way crucial
ethical, religious, political, aesthetic, and cultural developments
interacted with thought on magnificence in Catholic and Protestant
contexts, analysing spectacular civic and courtly festivities and
theatre, impressive displays of painting and sculpture in rich
architectural settings, splendid gardens, exclusive etiquette,
grand households, and learned treatises of moral philosophy.
Contributors: Lindsay Alberts, Stijn Bussels, Jorge
Fernandez-Santos, Anne-Madeleine Goulet, Elizabeth den Hartog,
Michele-Caroline Heck, Miguel Hermoso Cuesta, Jose Eloy Hortal
Munoz, Felix Labrador Arroyo, Victoire Malenfer, Alessandro
Metlica, Alessandra Mignatti, Anne-Francoise Morel, Matthias Roick,
Kathrin Stocker, Klaas Tindemans, and Gijs Versteegen.
Studying the different forms of socialization of the concept of
virtue during the early modern age is currently one of the most
complex and cross-cutting topics in the field of history and
related disciplines. The work Studies on the idea of excellence in
Europe (15th-19th centuries) Virtus vera nobilitas est brings
together essays by historians and philosophers that set out to show
the problems posed by the concept of virtue in the early modern
era.
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