Article ID: CBB273419847

Craftsmen, Artillery, and War Production in Renaissance Florence (August 2016)

unapi

This article examines technological developments in the production of weapons, especially firearms, during the Florentine Quattrocento, from the early conflicts against the Visconti (1423–1433) until the first years of the Pisan War (1494–1499). The aim is an analysis of the qualitative standards achieved by gunmakers and gunpowder makers before and after the appearance and the assimilation of the most efficient French ordnance into Italian warfare. Data have been collected from the State Archive of Florence. Fiscal sources (catasto, decima) and the documentation of guilds (fabbri and speziali) provided the information on craftsmen and their workshops. The registers of military officers (Dieci di Balìa and Otto di Pratica) show the leading role that public demand played in the introduction of technical changes and innovative tools such as new furnaces, bronze cannons, cast iron shot, and corned powder. The same records provide information about the spread of innovations and the migration of artisans. The results of the research demonstrate that the commune actually enhanced its management of war production, fostering improvements in the fabrication of firearms and a significant growth in the weapons market. Numerous artisans were employed in manufacturing munitions and in supplying soldiers and fortresses, and some famous artists, such as Andrea del Verrocchio, may have been involved in casting beautiful firearms for the Florentine Republic in this period.

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Authors & Contributors
Bergman, Yoel
David Williams
Versiero, Marco
Kahraman Şakul
Adrian Roads
Nicholas Hall
Journals
Arms and Armour Society Journal
Icon: Journal of the International Committee for the History of Technology
Vulcan
Technology and Culture
Past and Present
Indian Journal of History of Science
Publishers
Presses universitaires François-Rabelais de Tours
Westview Press
Springer
Johns Hopkins University Press
Giunti
Concepts
Military technology
Gunpowder
Artillery
Firearms
Technology and war; technology and the military
Technology
People
Bonaccorso di Vettorio Ghiberti (1451–1516)
Edward IV
Milton, John
Vieille, Paul
Nobel, Alfred Bernhard
Leonardo da Vinci
Time Periods
19th century
Renaissance
17th century
16th century
15th century
Early modern
Places
Great Britain
France
China
Danzig, Poland
England
Netherlands
Institutions
Royal Armouries
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