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Patricia J. Osmond, “Catiline in Florence
and Fiesole: The Medieval and Renaissance After-life of a Roman
Conspirator,” IJCT 7 (2000-2001), pp. 3-38.
The story of Catiline, the Roman noble who plotted to overthrow
the Roman Republic in 63 B.C., occupies a significant place in Florentine
historiography and political thought of the later Middle Ages and
early Renaissance. Starting with the Chronica de origine civitatis
(ca. 1228), this article traces the sources of the medieval account
back to the ancient epitomes and investigates its relation to Sallust’s
Bellum Catilinae. It then describes the two branches or
traditions of the story that developed in the course of the thirteenth
and fourteenth centuries: (1) the classical or civic, which centered
on the figure of Catiline-the-villain, rebel and enemy of Rome (and
of Rome’s daughter-city Florence) and (2) the feudal or chivalric,
which recounted the legendary adventures of Catiline-the-knight,
protector of Fiesole, the rival of Florence. In the final sections
of the article, attention focuses on the success of the classical
version of the story, linked to the ambiente guelfa and,
in turn, to the growth of a conservative republican ideology. While
the celebration of Roman civic virtues, summed up in Cicero’s
defense of the res publica against the rebel Catiline,
legitimated and ennobled the claims of the rising merchant and banking
families, the vilification of Catiline as public enemy provided
effective propaganda against new challenges from lower-class movements.
Continuously present in the elaboration of Florentine “civic
humanism,” Sallust’s story of Catiline supplies, in
fact, an important connection between Guelf patriotism and the classicizing
republicanism of the Quattrocento.
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