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1. Lifestyle

  • Tim Shephard(author)
  • Oliver Doyle(author)
  • Ciara O’Flaherty (author)
  • Annabelle Page (author)
  • Laura Ştefănescu(author)
Chapter of: Sounding the Bookshelf 1501: Music in a Year of Italian Printed Books(pp. 29–120)
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Title1. Lifestyle
ContributorTim Shephard(author)
Oliver Doyle(author)
Ciara O’Flaherty (author)
Annabelle Page (author)
Laura Ştefănescu(author)
DOIhttps://doi.org/10.11647/obp.0473.01
Landing pagehttps://www.openbookpublishers.com/books/10.11647/obp.0473/chapters/10.11647/obp.0473.01
Licensehttps://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/
CopyrightTim Shephard; Oliver Doyle; Ciara O’Flaherty; Annabelle Page; Laura Ştefănescu;
PublisherOpen Book Publishers
Published on2025-08-06
Long abstract The rather artificial term “lifestyle” brings together in this chapter all the books in the 1501 corpus that were written or read with the intention of shaping the reader’s actions, regimen or character—in short, addressing the question of how to live well. In section 1.1 we consider all the books connected with school-age education, which themselves connect the education of children intimately with forming character and establishing a regimen of healthy and upright habits. In these books we find on the one hand that music and dance are banished from the classroom as distractions from study, while on the other hand students were trained in the skills of memorisation, metrical organisation, and extemporisation that prepared them well to participate in the contemporary culture of sung verse. Section 1.2 turns to so-called “conduct” literature, in 1501 still an incipient genre, giving particular attention to Giovanni Pontano’s ethical treatises, which in many respects anticipate the classic account of courtly musical conduct found in Baldassare Castiglione’s Il Cortegiano. Books on regimen and the practice of medicine are the focus of section 1.3, where we find two distinct musical pathways through the terrain of humoural medicine, one concerned with the measures (mostly dietary) that might preserve and improve a singing voice, the other with the prescription of music in the treatment of disease. Finally, section 1.4 presents how music and musicianship were aligned with the properties of the celestial bodies in astrological literature printed in 1501.
Page rangepp. 29–120
Print length92 pages
LanguageEnglish (Original)
Locations
Landing PageFull text URLPlatform
PDFhttps://www.openbookpublishers.com/books/10.11647/obp.0473/chapters/10.11647/obp.0473.01Landing pagehttps://books.openbookpublishers.com/10.11647/obp.0473.01.pdfFull text URL
HTMLhttps://www.openbookpublishers.com/books/10.11647/obp.0473/chapters/10.11647/obp.0473.01Landing pagehttps://books.openbookpublishers.com/10.11647/obp.0473/ch1a.xhtmlFull text URLPublisher Website
Contributors

Tim Shephard

(author)
Professor of Musicology at University of Sheffield
https://orcid.org/0000-0003-4053-8916
https://www.sheffield.ac.uk/music/people/academic-staff/tim-shephard

Tim Shephard is Professor of Musicology at the University of Sheffield. He has led two major research projects funded by The Leverhulme Trust, “Music in the Art of Renaissance Italy” (2014-17), and “Sounding the Bookshelf 1501: Music in a Year of Italian Printed Books” (2020-23). He is author of Echoing Helicon: Music, Art and Identity in the Este Studioli (OUP, 2014), co-author of Music in the Art of Renaissance Italy (Harvey Miller, 2020), and co-editor of The Routledge Companion to Music and Visual Culture (Routledge, 2014), The Museum of Renaissance Music: A History in 100 Exhibits (Brepols, 2023), and Music and Visual Culture in Renaissance Italy (Routledge, 2023), among many other publications. https://www.sheffield.ac.uk/music/people/academic-staff/tim-shephard

Oliver Doyle

(author)
PhD at University of Sheffield
https://orcid.org/0009-0006-0507-1344

Oliver Doyle completed his PhD at the University of Sheffield in 2024, holding a studentship on the project “Sounding the Bookshelf 1501.” His research, which has appeared in the journal Renaissance Studies, focuses on the place of musical knowledge in everyday life in fifteenth and early sixteenth-century Italy, particularly in the domains of education, astrology, medicine and health, and diet. Also a tenor and harpsichordist specialising in italian music of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, he has directed modern and UK premieres of several works with his consort Musica Antica Rotherhithe, including Michelangelo Falvetti’s Il Diluvio Universale, Domenico Belli’s L’Orfeo Dolente and Antonio Draghi's L'Humanità Redenta.

Ciara O’Flaherty

(author)
PhD at University of Sheffield

Ciara O’Flaherty completed her PhD in 2024 at the University of Sheffield, where she held a studentship attached to the project “Sounding the Bookshelf 1501.” Her research concerns self-representation through music and sound in Italian verse of the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, with a particular focus on gender issues and women’s verse. She has also published on music in humanist commentaries in an article for Renaissance Studies.

Annabelle Page

(author)
Lecturer in Musicology at Cardiff University

Annabelle Page is a researcher specialising in music in early modern Italy and Britain. She is a Lecturer in Musicology at Cardiff University, having previously taught at the University of Sheffield, where she also joined the team of Tim Shephard's “Sounding the Bookshelf 1501” project as a Research Associate. She has published on the topics of music and patronage in Italy and musical iconography, including an article in the journal Early Music. She obtained a DPhil from the University of Oxford in 2023.

Laura Ştefănescu

(author)
Postdoctoral Fellow at Istituto Nazionale di Studi sul Rinascimento
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-7571-3350

Laura Ştefănescu is a postdoctoral fellow at the Istituto Nazionale di Studi sul Rinascimento in Florence. She was the 2023–2024 Francesco de Dombrowski Fellow at Villa i Tatti – The Harvard University Center for Italian Renaissance, and has taught on the Stanford Overseas Studies program in Florence. She is an art historian specialising in Italian Renaissance art and particularly fifteenth-century Florence, interested in the interplay between art, theatre, music and religious experience. She completed her PhD at the University of Sheffield (2020), where she subsequently worked as Research Associate on Tim Shephard’s project “Sounding the Bookshelf 1501.” Her publications include articles in Renaissance Quarterly and Renaissance Studies, and the co-authored book Music in the Art of Renaissance Italy c.1420-1540 (Harvey Miller, 2020).

References
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  2. Alexander of Villedieu, Doctrinale cum comento (Venice: per Lazzaro Soardi, 1501)
  3. Aristotle et al., Aristotelis philosophorum maximi secretum secretorum ad Alexandrum. De regum regimine: De sanitatis conservatione: De physionomia. […] Alexandri aphrodisei Clarissimi peripatetici. de intellectu. Averrois magni commentatoris de anime beatitudine. Alexandri Achillini bononiensis de Universalibus. Alexandri macedonis in septentrione monarche de mirabilibus Indiae Ad Aristotelem (Bologna: impensis Benefetto Faelli, 1501)
  4. Pseudo-Aelius Donatus et al., Donatus Melior. Catonis Carmen de moribus. De Arte Libellus (Milan: [Giovanni da Legnano] per Leonhard Pachel, 1501)
  5. Marsilio Ficino, De triplici vita libri tres (Bologna: Benedetto Faelli, 1501)
  6. Francesco Maria Grapaldi, De partibus aedium libellus cum additamentis emendatissimus (Parma: Angelo Ugoleto, 1501)
  7. Alexander of Villedieu, Doctrinale cum commento (Venice: per Pietro Quarengi, 1501)
  8. Bonaventura da Brescia, Regula musice plane venerabilis fratris Bonaventurae de Brixia Ordinis minorum (Milan: per Leonhard Pachel ad impensas Giovanni da Legnano, 1501)
  9. Pietro Borghi, Libro de abacho (Venice: Giacomo Penzio per Giovanni Battista Sessa, 1501)
  10. Giovanni Battista Cantalicio, Canones brevissimi grammatices & metricas pro rudibus pueris (Rome: s.n., 1501)
  11. Agostino Dati, Elegantiolae faeliciter incipiunt (Venice: per Cristoforo Pensi, 1501)
  12. Roderich Dubravius, De componendis epistolis (Venice: Pietro Quarengi, after 24 May 1501)
  13. Stefano Fieschi, De componendis epistolis (Venice: per Cristoforo Pensi, 1501)
  14. Johannes de Sacrobosco, Algorismus domini Ioannis de Sacro Busco noviter impressus (Venice: per Bernardino Vitali, 1501)
  15. Aldo Manuzio, Rudimenta grammatices Latinae linguae. De literis Graecis & diphthongis, & quemadmodum ad nos veniant. Abbreviationes, quibus frequenter Graeci utuntur. Oratio dominica, & duplex salutatio ad Virginem gloriosiss. Symbolum Apostolorum. Divi Ioannis Evangelistae evangelium. Aurea carmina Pythagorae. Phocylidis poema ad bene, beateque vivendum. Omnia haec cum interpretatione latina. Introductio per brevis ad Hebraicam linguam (Venice: Aldo Manuzio, 1501)
  16. Niccolò Perotti, Rudimenta grammatices (Turin: per Francesco Silva, 1501)
  17. Niccolò Perotti, Cornucopie nuper emendatum a domino Benedicto Brugnolo: ac mirifice concinnatum cum tabula prioribus aliis copiosiori: utiliori: faciliorique (Venice: per Giovanni Tacuino, 1501)
  18. Questo sie uno libro utilissimo a chi se dilecta de intendere todescho dechiarando in lingua latina solennissimo vocabulista utilissimo (Milan: per Alessandro Pellizzoni, 1501)
  19. Domenico Serafini, Compendium Sinonymorum (Milan: [Giovanni da Legnano] per Leonhard Pachel, 1501)
  20. Giovanni Sulpizio, Regulae Sulpitij ([Venice: s.n., 1501–09])
  21. Giovanni Tortelli, Orthographia. Ioannis Tortelii Lima quaedam per Georgium Vallam tractatum de orthographia (Venice: per Bartolomeo Zani, 1501)
  22. Bonvesin de la Riva, Vita scolastica (Venice: per Giovanni Battista Sessa, 1501)
  23. Pseudo-Aelius Donatus et al., Donatus Melior. Catonis Carmen de moribus. De Arte Libellus (Milan: [Giovanni da Legnano] per Leonhard Pachel, 1501)
  24. Francesco Maria Grapaldi, De partibus aedium libellus cum additamentis emendatissimus (Parma: Angelo Ugoleto, 1501)
  25. Aldo Manuzio, Rudimenta grammatices Latinae linguae. De literis Graecis & diphthongis, & quemadmodum ad nos veniant. Abbreviationes, quibus frequenter Graeci utuntur. Oratio dominica, & duplex salutatio ad Virginem gloriosiss. Symbolum Apostolorum. Divi Ioannis Evangelistae evangelium. Aurea carmina Pythagorae. Phocylidis poema ad bene, beateque vivendum. Omnia haec cum interpretatione latina. Introductio per brevis ad Hebraicam linguam (Venice: Aldo Manuzio, 1501)
  26. Giovanni Pontano, Opera. De fortitudine: libri duo. De principe: liber unus. Dialogus qui Charon inscribitur. Dialogus qui Antonius inscribitur. De liberalitate: liber unus. De benificentia: liber unus. De magnificentia: liber unus. De splendore: liber unus. De coviventia: liber unus. De obedientia: libri quinque (Venice: per Bernardino Viani, 1501)

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