The Refugee-Diplomat: Venice, England, and the Reformation

The Refugee-Diplomat: Venice, England, and the Reformation

by Diego Pirillo
The Refugee-Diplomat: Venice, England, and the Reformation

The Refugee-Diplomat: Venice, England, and the Reformation

by Diego Pirillo

Hardcover

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Overview

The establishment of permanent embassies in fifteenth-century Italy has traditionally been regarded as the moment of transition between medieval and modern diplomacy. In The Refugee-Diplomat, Diego Pirillo offers an alternative history of early modern diplomacy, centered not on states and their official representatives but around the figure of "the refugee-diplomat" and, more specifically, Italian religious dissidents who forged ties with English and northern European Protestants in the hope of inspiring an Italian Reformation.

Pirillo reconsiders how diplomacy worked, not only within but also outside of formal state channels, through underground networks of individuals who were able to move across confessional and linguistic borders, often adapting their own identities to the changing political conditions they encountered. Through a trove of diplomatic and mercantile letters, inquisitorial records, literary texts, marginalia, and visual material, The Refugee-Diplomat recovers the agency of religious refugees in international affairs, revealing their profound impact on the emergence of early modern diplomatic culture and practice.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781501715310
Publisher: Cornell University Press
Publication date: 12/15/2018
Pages: 300
Product dimensions: 6.30(w) x 9.10(h) x 1.20(d)
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Diego Pirillo is Associate Professor of Italian Studies at the University of California, Berkeley.

Table of Contents

List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1. When Diplomacy Fails
2. Tudor Diplomacy and Italian Heterodoxy
3. Spying on the Council of Trent
4. The Merchant, the Queen and the Refugees
5. Reading Tasso
6. Reading Venetian Relazioni
7. Great Expectations
Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography
Index

What People are Saying About This

Edward Muir

Diego Pirillo offers a significant revision of early modern diplomacy. Pirillo shows that, especially after the rift in Europe created by the Reformation, Italian religious refugees rather than formal ambassadors served as the most effective diplomatic go-betweens, and many of these refugees were truer to their faith than to their state, creating a new kind of ‘public sphere’ to circulate news and political information for their own purposes. He demonstrates his novel thesis through a highly creative dissection of information networks, creating a model for how the relationship between diplomatic and intellectual history can be done.

citation from the Aldo and Jeanne Scaglione/MLA Prize for Italian Studies committee

Diego Pirillo's innovative volume offers a significantly new approach to early modern European studies.... Pirillo shows a remarkable knowledge of key aspects of Italian heretical thought and the new cultural environments in which the Italian 'heretics' came to play a central, albeit almost unknown, role. The Refugee-Diplomat is a deeply engaging, often unique piece of academic writing.

John Watkins

With an innovative focus on exiles and refugees, Diego Pirillo’s The Refugee-Diplomat breaks through several methodological and hermeneutic impasses that have long frustrated investigations of the diplomatic past.

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