Reverence and Heresy: The Illustrations of Printed Editions of Ovid’s Metamorphoses in Cinquecento Venice
Abstract
The cinquecento was an era of immeasurable change within the
Venetian Republic
and across Europe, as the continent shed the last few remnants of
the Middle Ages
through mass transformation and development. During this epoch of
tumultuous
change, Ovid’s Metamorphoses gripped the imagination of many,
becoming one of
the most influential texts of the period. In this thesis, I set
out to question how the
illustrations of vernacular printed editions of Metamorphoses
changed throughout
the course of the sixteenth century in Venice, especially in
relation to shifting
attitudes towards classical mythology within a Catholic society.
xxiv
The iconography in printed editions of Metamorphoses developed
and shifted in
line with the Venetian Republic’s main religious and political
concerns, primarily
the surge in Catholicism’s political and religious power. After
1547, Venice
underwent an enormous cultural shift towards a stronger adherence
to the Catholic
faith. This shift was deeply reflected in the illustration of
vernacular printed
editions of Metamorphoses which increasingly became dominated by
Christian
interpretations.
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