In the second half of the sixteenth century a master ceramist (or two?) worked on the villa-farm of Duke (later Grand Duke) Medici in Antignano south of Livorno. In the 1560s he made “large vases” of which some were inventoried in 1574 and 1578 in the royal palaces of Florence. Towards the end of the century the license given to a tableware maker from Montelupo to Antignano to sell his work in Livorno “et for everything” was confirmed. While it appears that in the 1960s the potter had been employed to supply vases to the farm, the one known thirty years later appears to have worked on his own. It is probable that the “kilnsmen” known in Antignano in 1571 made lime to build the new port of Livorno. Instead, one of the two brick “kilns” illustrated in the plans in the following centuries, if already existing before then, was perhaps used to make ceramics.
University of London, United Kingdom - ORCID: 0000-0002-6065-9187
Chapter Title
«Quel maestro che fa vasi in Antigniano»: un ceramista al servizio di Cosimo I
Authors
Hugo Blake
Language
Italian
DOI
10.36253/979-12-215-0376-0.09
Peer Reviewed
Publication Year
2024
Copyright Information
© 2024 Author(s)
Content License
Metadata License
Book Title
Florentia
Book Subtitle
Studi di archeologia: vol. 5 - Numero speciale - Studi in onore di Guido Vannini
Editors
Michele Nucciotti, Elisa Pruno
Peer Reviewed
Number of Pages
596
Publication Year
2024
Copyright Information
© 2024 Author(s)
Content License
Metadata License
Publisher Name
Firenze University Press
DOI
10.36253/979-12-215-0376-0
ISBN Print
979-12-215-0375-3
eISBN (pdf)
979-12-215-0376-0
Series Title
Strumenti per la didattica e la ricerca
Series ISSN
2704-6249
Series E-ISSN
2704-5870