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5 - The Spedale di Santa Maria della Scala and the Construction of Siena

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 April 2022

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Summary

Abstract

The Spedale di Santa Maria della Scala was central to the development of architecture and infrastructure in early modern Siena. A major landowner and patron, the hospital institution oversaw the construction of a wide range of buildings throughout the commune, and also played a crucial role in the perpetuation of a distinctly Sienese corpus of technical knowledge. Archival records attest to the presence of the Spedale's building workshop, which contributed workers, materials and expertise to both the institution's projects, as well as those involving Siena's infrastructure and defences. Several fifteenth-century model books trace the technical tradition spearheaded by the Scala. Assembled by individual practitioners, the books bolstered a collective memory, delineating the ideas and structures that made Siena a place.

Key Words: contado, granges, technical knowledge, Jacopo Mariano Taccola, Francesco di Giorgio

Introduction

As a distinct place, Siena is most overtly delineated in its built environment: its undulating terrain, narrow winding streets, imposing palaces and abundance of terracotta brick (Figure 5.1). In the early modern period, Siena's infrastructure was also essential to making it a singular place. Within the city, this included the impressive fountains, the fabled bottini, the brick paved streets and piazzas, and the extensive network of subterranean workshops and storage areas. Outside of the city, in the contado, the landholdings and production that took place in the granges, mills, quarries and kilns were equally fundamental to the life of Siena. The building industry was thus a leading protagonist in the history of early modern Siena, and instrumental within this was the city's great welfare institution: the Spedale di Santa Maria della Scala.

This article examines the role of the Spedale di Santa Maria della Scala in the development of early modern Siena as a place: in the realization of its architecture and infrastructure, and in the perpetuation of a distinctly Sienese corpus of technical building knowledge. The Santa Maria della Scala was a, if not the, primary force in the development and maintenance of Siena's iconic tradition of early modern technical design, which as exhibited in numerous anonymous copybooks, as well as the notebooks of Jacopo Mariano Taccola and Francesco di Giorgio, encompassed machine design, hydraulic infrastructure, armament production and fortification architecture.

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Publisher: Amsterdam University Press
Print publication year: 2021

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