Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-77c89778f8-cnmwb Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-07-22T22:25:02.003Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Renaissance on the Road

Mobility, Migration and Cultural Exchange

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 June 2023

Rosa Salzberg
Affiliation:
Università degli Studi di Trento, Italy

Summary

The Renaissance was a highly mobile, turbulent era in Europe, when war, poverty, and persecution pushed many people onto the roads in search of a living or a safe place to settle. In the same period, the expansion of European states overseas opened up new avenues of long-distance migration, while also fuelling the global traffic in slaves. The accelerating movement of people stimulated commercial, political, religious, and artistic exchanges, while also prompting the establishment of new structures of control and surveillance. This Element illuminates the material and social mechanisms that enacted mobility in the Renaissance and thereby offers a new way to understand the period's dynamism, creativity, and conflict. Spurred by recent 'mobilities' studies, it highlights the experiences of a wide range of mobile populations, paying particular attention to the concrete, practical dimensions of moving around at this time, whether on a local or a global scale.
Get access
Type
Element
Information
Online ISBN: 9781108963886
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication: 13 July 2023

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

Bibliography

Primary Sources

Secondary Sources

Aretino, Pietro. (2005). Aretino’s Dialogues, trans. Raymond Rosenthal. University of Toronto Press.Google Scholar
Boccaccio, Giovanni. (2012). Decameron, ed. Marrone, Romualdo & Cardini, Franco. Rome: Newton Compton.Google Scholar
Bottani, Tarcisio, and Taufer, Wanda, eds. (2001). Mariegola. Della Compagnia dei corrieri. Della Serenissima signoria. Bergamo: Corponove.Google Scholar
Camporesi, Piero, ed. (2007). Il libro dei vagabondi. Lo Speculum Cerretanorum di Teseo Pini, Il Vagabondo di Rafaele Frianoro e altri testi di ‘furfanteria’ . Milan: Garzanti; first published 1973.Google Scholar
Cellini, Benvenuto. (1995). The Life of Benvenuto Cellini, trans. John Addington Symons. London: Phaidon Press; first published 1951.Google Scholar
Disgrazie del Zane, narrate in un sonetto di diciasete linguazi, come giungendo ad una hostaria certi banditi il volsero amazar. No bibliographic information. Biblioteca Universitaria Alessandrina, Rome, Misc. XIII.a.57.13.Google Scholar
Dui bellissimi sonetti in lingua bergamascha … Venice: Al Segno della Regina, 1580. In La Commedia dell’Arte, ed. Pandolfi, 1: 198204.Google Scholar
Erasmus, Desiderius. (1997). ‘Diversoria’, 369–80. In his Colloquies, trans. and annotated Craig R. Thompson, Collected Works of Erasmus, vol. 40. University of Toronto Press.Google Scholar
Fabri, Felix. (1896). Felix Fabri (circa 1480–1483 A.D.), trans. Aubrey Stewart, vol. I, part 1. The Library of the Palestine Pilgrims’ Text Society. London Committee of the Palestine Exploration Fund.Google Scholar
Fontana, Bartolomeo. (1995). Itinerari. Edizione critica di Robert C. Melzi, con uno studio su ‘Due viaggiatori veneziani attraverso l’Europa del Cinquecento’. Geneva: Slatkine.Google Scholar
Lotto, Lorenzo. (2017). Lorenzo Lotto. Il libro di spese diverse, ed. Carolis, Francesco De. Edizioni Università di Trieste.Google Scholar
Michel de, Montaigne. (2003). ‘Travel Journal’, 1049–1270. In his The Complete Works, trans. Donald M. Frame. New York: Everyman’s Library.Google Scholar
Moryson, Fynes. (1617). An Itinerary Containing his Ten Yeeres Travell … 2 vols. London: John Beale.Google Scholar
Pandolfi, Vito, ed. (1957). La Commedia dell’Arte. Storia e testo, 6 vols. Florence: Sansoni Antiquariato.Google Scholar
Sanudo, Marin. (18791903). I diarii di Marino Sanuto, ed. Fulin, Rinaldo, Stefani, Federico, Barozzi, Nicolò, et al., 58 vols. Venice: R. Deputazione Veneta di Storia Patria.Google Scholar
Simonsfeld, Henry, ed. (1903). ‘Itinerario de Germania delli magnifici ambasciatori veneti, M. Giorgio Contarini, conte del Zaffo, et M. Polo Pisani … dell’anno 1492’, 275–345. In Miscellanea di storia veneta, ed. Simonsfeld, Henry. Venice: Deputazione Veneta di Storia Patria.Google Scholar
Un viazo che ha fatto misser Pedrol bergamasco qual narra li paesi che lha visto … [Venice, ca. 1550]. British Library, 1071.c.65(3).Google Scholar
Vasari, Giorgio. (1912–15). Lives of the Most Eminent Painters Sculptors and Architects, trans. Gaston du C. De Vere, 10 vols. London: Philip Lee Warner.Google Scholar
Vesalius, Andreas. (1950). The Illustrations from the Works of Andreas Vesalius of Brussels, trans. and annotated J. B. de C. M. Saunders and Charles D. O’Malley. Mineola, NY: Dover Publishing.Google Scholar
Viaggio de Zan Padella, cosa ridiculosa e bela, dond es descrif tug le cose ches vende sul punt de Rialt in Venesia. Modena [ca. 1580]. British Library, 1071.c.63(20).Google Scholar
Adey, Peter et al., eds. (2014). The Routledge Handbook of Mobilities. New York: Routledge.Google Scholar
Akhimie, Patricia, and Andrea, Bernadette, eds. (2019). Travel and Travail: Early Modern Women, English Drama, and the Wider World. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press.Google Scholar
Arbel, Benjamin. (2017). ‘Daily Life on Board Venetian Ships: The Evidence of Renaissance Travelogues and Diaries’. In Ortalli, Gherardo and Sopracasa, Alessio, eds., Rapporti mediterranei, pratiche documentarie, presenze veneziane: Le reti economiche e culturali (xiv–xvi secolo). Venice: Istituto Veneto di Scienze, Lettere ed Arti, 183220.Google Scholar
Aslanian, Sebouh D. (2020). ‘The “Quintessential Locus of Brokerage”: Letters of Recommendation, Networks, and Mobility in the Life of Thomas Vanandets’i, an Armenian Printer in Amsterdam, 1677–1707’. Journal of World History, 31, 4: 655–92.Google Scholar
Aslanian, Sebouh D. (2019). ‘“Many Have Come Here and Have Deceived Us”: Some Notes on Asateur Vardapet (1644–1728), an Itinerant Armenian Monk in Europe’. Zeitschrift für Armenische Philologie, 132: 133–94.Google Scholar
Aslanian, Sebouh D. (2014). ‘Port Cities and Printers: Reflections on Early Modern Global Armenian Print Culture’. Book History, 17: 5193.Google Scholar
Bale, Anthony, and Beebe, Kathryne. (2021). ‘Pilgrimage and Textual Culture’. Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies, 51, 1: 18.Google Scholar
Bamji, Alex. (2019). ‘Health Passes, Print and Public Health in Early Modern Europe’. Social History of Medicine, 32, 3: 441–64.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Barker, Hannah. (2019). That Most Precious Merchandise: The Mediterranean Trade in Black Sea Slaves, 1260–1500. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press.Google Scholar
Behringer, Wolfgang. (2006). ‘Communications Revolutions: A Historiographical Concept’. German History, 24, 3: 333–74.Google Scholar
Behringer, Wolfgang. (2003). Im Zeichen des Merkur: Reichspost und Kommunikationsrevolution in der frühen Neuzeit. Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht.Google Scholar
Bellavitis, Anna. (2006). ‘Apprentissages masculins, apprentissages féminins à Venise au xvie siècle’. Histoire urbaine, 1, 15: 4973.Google Scholar
Benner, Erica. (2017). Be Like the Fox: Machiavelli’s Lifelong Quest for Freedom. New York: W. W. Norton.Google Scholar
Bernardi, Teresa, and Pompermaier, Matteo. (2019). ‘Hospitality and Registration of Foreigners in Early Modern Venice: The Role of Women within Inns and Lodging Houses’. Gender & History, 31, 3: 624–45.Google Scholar
Betteridge, Thomas, ed. (2007). Borders and Travellers in Early Modern Europe. Aldershot: Ashgate.Google Scholar
Bianchi, Francesco, and Howard, Deborah. (2003). ‘Life and Death in Damascus: The Material Culture of Venetians in the Syrian Capital in the Mid-Fifteenth Century’. Studi veneziani, 16: 233301.Google Scholar
Bilic, Darka. (2023). ‘“Even if the Sultan of Turkey Came They Would Have to Put Him in Quarantine”: Commercial Lazarettos in the Adriatic in the Sixteenth Century’. In Nelles and Salzberg, Connected Mobilities, 157–82.Google Scholar
Biow, Douglas. (2015). On the Importance of Being an Individual in Renaissance Italy: Men, Their Professions, and Their Beards. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 117151. https://doi.org/10.9783/9780812290509Google Scholar
Blazina Tomic, Zlata, and Blazina, Vesna. (2015). Expelling the Plague: The Health Office and the Implementation of Quarantine in Dubrovnik, 1377–1533. Montreal: McGill–Queen’s University Press.Google Scholar
Boccagni, Paolo, and Baldassar, Loretta. (2015). ‘Emotions on the Move: Mapping the Emergent Field of Emotion and Migration’. Emotion, Space and Society, 16: 7380. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.emospa.2015.06.009Google Scholar
Boes, Maria R. (2007). ‘Unwanted Travellers: The Tightening of City Borders in Early Modern Germany’. In Betteridge, Borders and Travellers, 87112.Google Scholar
Bonnotte-Hoover, Céline. (2021). ‘Language, Mediation, Conflict and Power in Early Modern China: The Roles of the Interpreter in Matteo Ricci’s Journals’. In Gelléri and Willie, Travel and Conflict, 3951.Google Scholar
Braunstein, Philippe. (2016). Les allemands à Venise (1380–1520). Rome: École Française de Rome.Google Scholar
Brayshay, Mark. (2005). ‘Waits, Musicians, Bearwards and Players: The Inter-urban Road Travel and Performances of Itinerant Entertainers in Sixteenth and Seventeenth Century England’. Journal of Historical Geography, 31, 3: 430–58.Google Scholar
Brizio, Elena. (2021). ‘“Ben venga Carlo imperadore!”: Welcoming the Enemy to Siena in 1536’. In Goldstein and Piana, Early Modern Hospitality, 4161.Google Scholar
Broomhall, Susan. (2019). ‘Cross-Channel Affections: Pressure and Persuasion in Letters to Calvinist Refugees in England, 1569–1570’. In Tarantino, Giovanni and Zika, Charles, eds. Religious Conflict, Exile and Emotions in Early Modern Europe. London: Routledge, 2743.Google Scholar
Brotton, Jerry. (2002). The Renaissance Bazaar: From the Silk Road to Michelangelo. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Buono, Alessandro. (2015). ‘La manutenzione dell’identità. Il riconoscimento degli eredi legittimi nello stato di Milano e nella repubblica di Venezia (secoli XVII e XVIII)’. Quaderni Storici, 50, 148: 231–65.Google Scholar
Burke, Ersie. (2013). ‘Francesco di Demetri Litino, the Inquisition and the Fondaco Dei Turchi’. Thesaurismata, 36: 7996.Google Scholar
Burke, Peter. (2017). Exiles and Expatriates in the History of Knowledge, 1500–2000. The Menahem Stern Jerusalem Lectures. Waltham, MA: Brandeis University Press.Google Scholar
Burke, Peter. (2007). ‘Cultures of Translation in Early Modern Europe’. In Burke and Hsia, Cultural Translation, 738. http://doi:10.1017/CBO9780511497193.002Google Scholar
Burke, Peter, and Hsia, Ronnie P., eds. (2007). Cultural Translation in Early Modern Europe. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. http://doi:10.1017/CBO9780511497193Google Scholar
Calabi, Donatella, and Christensen, Stephen Turk, eds. (2007). Cities and Cultural Exchange in Europe, 1400–1700. Vol. 2 of Cultural Exchange in Early Modern Europe. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press/European Science Foundation.Google Scholar
Calaresu, Melissa. (2020). ‘Street “Luxuries” in Early Modern Rome’. In Carter, Sarah and Gaskell, Ivan, eds., The Oxford Handbook of History and Material Culture. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 127.Google Scholar
Calis, Richard. (2019). ‘Reconstructing the Ottoman Greek World: Early Modern Ethnography in the Household of Martin Crusius’. Renaissance Quarterly, 72, 1: 148–93. http://doi:10.1017/rqx.2018.4Google Scholar
Calvi, Giulia. (2022). The World in Dress: Costume Books across Italy, Europe, and the East. Cambridge Elements in the Renaissance. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108913829Google Scholar
Camporesi, Pietro. (1997). Camminare il mondo: vita e avventure di Leonardo Fioravanti, medico del Cinquecento. Milan: Garzanti.Google Scholar
Canepari, Eleanora. (2014). ‘Cohabitations, Household Structures and Gender Identities in Seventeenth-Century Rome’. Villa I Tatti Studies, 17: 131–54. https://doi.org/10.1086/675766Google Scholar
Canepari, Eleanora. (2013). ‘Women on Their Way: Employment Opportunities in Cosmopolitan Rome’. In Montenach, Anne and Simonton, Deborah, eds., Female Agency in the Eighteenth-Century Economy, Gender in Towns, 1640–1830. London: Routledge, 206–23.Google Scholar
Canepari, Eleanora. (2012). ‘Who is Not Welcome? Reception and Rejection of Migrants in Early Modern Italian Cities’. In De Munck and Winter, Gated Communities, 105–15.Google Scholar
Canny, Nicholas, ed. (1994). Europeans on the Move: Studies on European Migration, 1500–1800. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Capp, Bernard. (1994). The World of John Taylor the Water-Poet. Oxford: Clarendon Press.Google Scholar
Cappa, Desirée. (2022). ‘Pierfrancesco Riccio: The Rise of a Bureaucrat in the Service of the Medici Family (1525–44)’. PhD thesis, Warburg Institute, University of London.Google Scholar
Caramel, Niccolò. (2019). ‘Rapporti commerciali, organizzazione dei viaggi, ripercussioni locali: nuove prospettive sull’ambulantato tesino (1685–1797).Studi trentini, 98, 1: 155–84.Google Scholar
Carey, Daniel. (2019). ‘The Problem of Credibility in Early Modern Travel’. In Holmberg, Renaissance and Early Modern Travel, 524–47. https://doi.org/10.1111/rest.12567Google Scholar
Carnevali, Rebecca. (2020). ‘Cheap, Everyday Print: Jobbing Printing and its Users in Post-Tridentine Bologna’. PhD thesis, University of Warwick.Google Scholar
Cassen, Flora. (2019). ‘Jewish Travelers in Early Modern Italy: Visible and Invisible Resistance to the Jewish Badge’. In Klein, Denise and Weller, Thomas, eds., Dress and Cultural Difference in Early Modern Europe. Berlin: De Gruyter Oldenbourg, 7389.Google Scholar
Ceriotti, Luca, and Dallasta, Federica. (2009). ‘Lutero sulle spalle. Colportage e diffusione dell’iconografia protestante in un processo del 1558’. Aurea Parma, 93: 405–22.Google Scholar
Chojnacka, Monica. (2001). Working Women of Early Modern Venice. Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press.Google Scholar
Cipolla, Carlo M. (1972). ‘The Diffusion of Innovations in Early Modern Europe’. Comparative Studies in Society and History, 14, 1: 4652.Google Scholar
Ciriacono, Salvatore. (2005). ‘Migration, Minorities, and Technology Transfer in Early Modern Europe’. Journal of European Economic History, 34: 4364.Google Scholar
Cohen, Thomas V. (2021). ‘Hospitality Between the Sheets’. In Goldstein and Piana, Early Modern Hospitality, 299319.Google Scholar
Constable, Olivia. (2006). Housing the Stranger in the Mediterranean World: Lodging, Trade, and Travel in Late Antiquity and the Middle Ages. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; first published 2003.Google Scholar
Costantini, Massimo. (1996). ‘Le strutture dell’ospitalità’. In Tenenti, Alberto and Tucci, Ugo, eds., Storia di Venezia, V. Il Rinascimento: Società ed economica. Rome: Istituto della Enciclopedia Italiana, 881911.Google Scholar
Cowan, Alexander F. (2000). ‘Foreigners and the City. The Case of the Immigrant Merchant’. In Cowan, Alexander F., ed., Mediterranean Urban Culture, 1400–1700. Exeter: University of Exeter Press, 4555.Google Scholar
Coulet, Noël. (1982). ‘Les hotelleries en France et en Italie au bas moyen age’. In Higounet, Charles, ed., L’homme et la route en Europe occidentale au Moyen Âge. Toulouse: Presses universitaires du Midi, 181205.Google Scholar
Cox, Virginia. (2016). A Short History of the Italian Renaissance. London: I.B. Tauris.Google Scholar
Coy, Jason. (2008). Strangers and Misfits: Banishment, Social Control, and Authority in Early Modern Germany. Leiden: Brill.Google Scholar
Craig, Leigh Ann. (2009). Wandering Women and Holy Matrons: Women as Pilgrims in the Later Middle Ages. Leiden: Brill.Google Scholar
Dalton, Heather, ed. (2020). Keeping Family in an Age of Long Distance Trade, Imperial Expansion, and Exile, 1550–1850. Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press.Google Scholar
Das, Nandini, ed. (2022). Lives in Transit in Early Modern England. Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press. https://doi.org/10.5117/9789463725989Google Scholar
Nandini, Das, Melo, João Vicente, Smith, Haig & Working, Lauren, eds. (2021). Keywords of Identity, Race, and Human Mobility in Early Modern England. Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press. https://doi.org/10.5117/9789463720748Google Scholar
Davis, Robert C., and Marvin, Gary R.. (2004). Venice, the Tourist Maze: A Cultural Critique of the World’s Most Touristed City. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Degl’Innocenti, Luca, and Rospocher, Massimo, eds. (2019a). Street Singers in Renaissance Europe. Special Issue of Renaissance Studies, 33, 1.Google Scholar
Degl’Innocenti, Luca, and Rospocher, Massimo. (2019b). ‘Urban Voices: The Hybrid Figure of the Street Singer in Renaissance Italy’. In Degl’Innocenti and Rospocher, Street Singers, 1741.Google Scholar
De Munck, Bert, and Winter, Anne, eds. (2012). Gated Communities: Regulating Migration in Early Modern Cities. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
De Vivo, Filippo. (2019). ‘Microhistories of Long-Distance Information: Space, Movement and Agency in the Early Modern News’, Past & Present, 242, Issue Supplement 14: 179214. https://doi.org/10.1093/pastj/gtz042Google Scholar
De Vivo, Filippo. (2016). ‘Walking in Sixteenth-Century Venice: Mobilizing the Early Modern City’. I Tatti Studies in the Italian Renaissance, 19, 1: 115–41.Google Scholar
Di Lenardo, Isabella. (2018). ‘Dürer tra Norimberga e Venezia, 1506–1507’. In Aikema, Bernard and Martin, Andrew, eds., Dürer e il rinascimento tra Germania e Italia. Milan: 24 Ore Cultura, 101–5.Google Scholar
Dursteler, Eric R. (2012). ‘Speaking in Tongues: Language and Communication in the Early Modern Mediterranean’. Past & Present, 217, 1: 4777. https://doi.org/10.1093/pastj/gts023Google Scholar
Dursteler, Eric R. (2011). Renegade Women: Gender, Identity, and Boundaries in the Early Modern Mediterranean. Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press.Google Scholar
Dursteler, Eric R. (2009). ‘Power and Information: The Venetian Postal System in the Mediterranean, 1573–1645’. In Curto, Diogo et al., eds., From Florence to the Mediterranean: Studies in Honor of Anthony Molho. Florence: Olschki, 601–23.Google Scholar
Earle, Rebecca. (2017). ‘Climate, Travel and Colonialism in the Early Modern World’. In Miglietti, Sara and Morgan, John, eds., Governing the Environment in the Early Modern World: Theory and Practice. London: Routledge, 2237.Google Scholar
Ebrahim, Fatima. (2021). ‘The Vulnerability of Anglo-Islamic Hospitality in the Early Modern Period’. In Goldstein and Piana, Early Modern Hospitality, 357–80.Google Scholar
Eliav-Feldon, Miriam. (2012). Renaissance Impostors and Proofs of Identity. New York: Palgrave Macmillan.Google Scholar
Fanfani, Amintore. (1936). ‘Note sull’industria alberghiera italiana nel medio evo’. In Fanfani, Amintore, Saggi di storia economica italiana. Milano: Vita e Pensiero, 111–21.Google Scholar
Faroqhi, Suraiya. (2014). Travel and Artisans in the Ottoman Empire: Employment and Mobility in the Early Modern Era. London: I.B. Tauris.Google Scholar
Federici, Federico, and Tessicini, Dario, eds. (2014). Translators, Interpreters, and Cultural Negotiators: Mediating and Communicating Power from the Middle Ages to the Modern Era. London: Palgrave Macmillan.Google Scholar
Ferraro, Joanne M. (2016). ‘Youth in Peril in Early Modern Venice’. Journal of Social History, 49, 4: 761–83. https://doi.org/10.1093/jsh/shv075Google Scholar
Ferrone, Siro. (1993). Attori, mercanti, corsari: La commedia dell’arte in Europa tra Cinque e Seicento. Turin: Einaudi.Google Scholar
Fietta Ielen, Elda. (1985). Con la cassela in spalla: gli ambulanti di Tesino. Ivrea (Turin): Priuli & Verlucca.Google Scholar
Findlen, Paula, and Sutherland, Suzanne, eds. (2019). The Renaissance of Letters: Knowledge and Community in Italy, 1300–1650. London: Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9780429429774Google Scholar
Fontaine, Laurence. (1996). History of Pedlars in Europe, trans. by Vicki Whittaker. Cambridge: Polity.Google Scholar
Fraser, Elisabeth A., ed. (2020). The Mobility of People and Things in the Early Modern Mediterranean: The Art of Travel. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Fumerton, Patricia. (2006). Unsettled: The Culture of Mobility and the Working Poor in Early Modern England. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Gallagher, John. (2023). ‘Linguistic Encounter: Fynes Moryson and the Uses of Language’. In Nelles and Salzberg, Connected Mobilities, 4161.Google Scholar
Gallagher, John. (2019). Learning Languages in Early Modern England. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Gallagher, John. (2017). ‘The Italian London of John North: Cultural Contact and Linguistic Encounter in Early Modern England’. Renaissance Quarterly, 70: 88131.Google Scholar
Gebhardt, Jonathan. (2014). ‘Negotiating Barriers: Cross-Cultural Communication and the Portuguese Mercantile Community in Macau, 1550–1640’. Itinerario, 38, 2: 2750. http://doi:10.1017/S0165115314000345Google Scholar
Gelléri, Gabor, and Willie, Rachel, eds. (2021). Travel and Conflict in the Early Modern World. Abingdon: Routledge.Google Scholar
Geltner, Guy. (2019). Roads to Health: Infrastructure and Urban Wellbeing in Later Medieval Italy. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press.Google Scholar
Gentilcore, David. (2006). Medical Charlatanism in Early Modern Italy. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Ghobrial, John-Paul. (2019). ‘Moving Stories and What They Tell Us: Early Modern Mobility Between Microhistory and Global History’. Past & Present, Supplement 14: 243–80.Google Scholar
Gobel, David. (2018). ‘The Inn Outside the City Gate in Early Modern Spain’. Paper delivered at the European Association of Urban History conference, Rome.Google Scholar
Goldstein, David B., and Piana, Marco, eds. (2021). Early Modern Hospitality. Toronto: Center for Renaissance and Reformation Studies.Google Scholar
Gomis, Juan. (2019). ‘Pious Voices: Blind Spanish Prayer Singers’. In Degl’Innocenti and Rospocher, Street Singers, 4263. https://doi.org/10.1111/rest.12533Google Scholar
Gonzalez Martin, Pablo, Salzberg, Rosa, and Zenobi, Luca, eds. (2021). Cities in Motion: Mobility and Urban Space in Early Modern Europe. Special Issue of Journal of Early Modern History, 25, 12.Google Scholar
Greefs, Hilde, and Winter, Anne, eds. (2018). Migration Policies and Materialities of Identification in European Cities: Papers and Gates, 1500–1930s. New York: Routledge.Google Scholar
Greenblatt, Stephen. (2010). ‘A Mobility Studies Manifesto’. In Greenblatt, Stephen, ed. Cultural Mobility: A Manifesto. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 250–3.Google Scholar
Greenblatt, Stephen. (1991). Marvellous Possessions: The Wonder of the New World. Oxford: Clarendon Press.Google Scholar
Griffin, Clive. (2007). ‘Itinerant Booksellers, Printers, and Pedlars in Sixteenth-Century Spain and Portugal’. In Myers, Robin, Harris, Michael, and Mandelbrote, Giles, eds., Fairs, Markets and the Itinerant Book Trade. London: British Library, 4359.Google Scholar
Groebner, Valentin. (2007). Who Are You? Identification, Deception, and Surveillance in Early Modern Europe. New York: Zone Books.Google Scholar
Gschwend, Annemarie Jordan, and Lowe, K. J. P., eds. (2015). The Global City: On the Streets of Renaissance Lisbon. London: Paul Holberton Publishing.Google Scholar
Guerzoni, Guido. (2010). ‘Strangers at Home. The Courts of Este Princesses between XVth and XVIIth Centuries’. In Calvi, Giulia and Chabot, Isabella, eds. Moving Elites: Women and Cultural Transfers in the European Court System. Florence: EUI, 141–56.Google Scholar
Guldi, Jo. (2012). Roads to Power: Britain Invents the Infrastructure State. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Gürkan, Emrah Safa. (2015). ‘Mediating Boundaries: Mediterranean Go-Betweens and Cross-Confessional Diplomacy in Constantinople, 1560–1600’. Journal of Early Modern History, 19, 2–3: 107–28. https://doi.org/10.1163/15700658-12342453Google Scholar
Hamadeh, Shirine. (2017). ‘Invisible City: Istanbul’s Migrants and the Politics of Space’. Eighteenth-Century Studies, 50, 2: 173–93. http://doi:10.1353/ecs.2017.0002Google Scholar
Harreld, Donald J. (2003). ‘Trading Places: The Public and Private Spaces of Merchants in Sixteenth-Century Antwerp’. Journal of Urban History, 29, 6: 657–69. https://doi.org/10.1177/0096144203253468Google Scholar
Harms, Roeland, Raymond, Joad, and Salman, Jeroen, eds. (2013). Not Dead Things: The Dissemination of Popular Print in England and Wales, Italy, and the Low Countries, 1500–1820. Leiden: Brill.Google Scholar
Heal, Felicity. (1990). Hospitality in Early Modern England. Oxford: Clarendon Press.Google Scholar
Healy, Margaret. (2007). ‘Highways, Hospitals and Boundary Hazards’. In Betteridge, Borders and Travellers, 1833.Google Scholar
Heiss, Hans. (2002). ‘The Pre-modern Hospitality Trade in the Central Alpine Region: The Example of Tyrol’. In Kümin and Tlusty, World of the Tavern, 159–75.Google Scholar
Hell, Maarten. (2014). ‘Trade, Transport, and Storage in Amsterdam Inns (1450–1800)’. Journal of Urban History, 40, 4: 742–61.Google Scholar
Helmstutler Di Dio, Kelley. (2015). Making and Moving Sculpture in Early Modern Italy. London: Taylor & Francis.Google Scholar
Henderson, John. (2019). Florence Under Siege: Surviving Plague in an Early Modern City. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press.Google Scholar
Henderson, John. (2006). The Renaissance Hospital: Healing the Body and Healing the Soul. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press.Google Scholar
Henke, Robert. (2015). Poverty and Charity in Early Modern Theatre and Performance. Iowa City: University of Iowa Press.Google Scholar
Henke, Robert. (1991). ‘Border-Crossing in the Commedia dell’arte’. In Nicholson, Eric and Henke, Robert, eds., Transnational Exchange in Early Modern Theater. London: Routledge, 1934.Google Scholar
Herzig, Tamar. (2019). A Convert’s Tale: Art, Crime, and Jewish Apostasy in Renaissance Italy. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Hewlett, Cecilia. (2016). ‘Locating contadini in the Renaissance City: Food Circulation and Mobility in the Marketplace’. I Tatti Studies in the Italian Renaissance, 19, 1: 93113. https://doi.org/10.1086/685697Google Scholar
Hilaire-Pérez, Liliane, and Verna, Catherine. (2006). ‘Dissemination of Technical Knowledge in the Middle Ages and the Early Modern Era: New Approaches and Methodological Issues’. Technology and Culture, 47, 3: 536–65.Google Scholar
Hitchcock, David. (2020). ‘The Vagrant Poor’. In Hitchcock and McClure, eds., The Routledge History of Poverty, 6078.Google Scholar
Hitchcock, David. (2016). Vagrancy in English Culture and Society, 1650–1750. London: Bloomsbury.Google Scholar
Hitchcock, David, and McClure, Julia, eds. (2020). The Routledge History of Poverty, c.1450–1800. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Höfele, Andreas, and Werner, Von Koppenfels. (2011). ‘Introduction’. In Werner, Von Koppenfels and Höfele, Andreas, eds., Renaissance Go-Betweens. Berlin: De Gruyter; first published 2005, 114.Google Scholar
Holmberg, Eva Johanna, ed. (2019). Renaissance and Early Modern Travel – Practice and Experience, 1500–1700. Special Issue of Renaissance Studies, 33, 4.Google Scholar
Horden, Peregrine. (2008). ‘Travel Sickness: Medicine and Mobility in the Mediterranean from Antiquity to the Renaissance’. In his Hospitals and Healing. Aldershot: Ashgate, 179–99.Google Scholar
Horodowich, Elizabeth. (2018). The Venetian Discovery of America: Geographic Imagination and Print Culture in the Age of Encounters. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Hunter, Judith. (2002). ‘English Inns, Taverns, Alehouses and Brandy Shops: The Legislative Framework 1495–1797’. In Kümin and Tlusty, World of the Tavern, 6582.Google Scholar
Hyde, Jenni. (2018). Singing the News: Ballads in Mid-Tudor England. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Imhof, Dirk. (2020). ‘Plantin, a Publisher Forever on the Road’. In Werner, van Hoof, ed., On the Road with Plantin. Antwerp: Museum Plantin-Moretus, 2639.Google Scholar
Inì, Marina. (2021). ‘Materiality, Quarantine and Contagion in the Early Modern Mediterranean’. Social History of Medicine, 34, 4: 1161–84. https://doi.org/10.1093/shm/hkaa124Google Scholar
Iordannou, Ioanna. (2019). Venice’s Secret Service: Organizing Intelligence in the Renaissance. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Jacob, Margaret C. (2006). Strangers Nowhere in the World: The Rise of Cosmopolitanism in Early Modern Europe. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press.Google Scholar
Jaffe-Berg, Erith. (2016). Commedia dell’arte and the Mediterranean: Charting Journeys and Mapping ‘Others’. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Judde de Larivière, Claire, and Gelder, Maartje Van, eds. (2020). Popular Politics in an Aristocratic Republic: Political Conflict and Social Contestation in Late Medieval and Early Modern Venice. Abingdon: Routledge.Google Scholar
Jütte, Daniel. (2014). ‘Entering a City: On a Lost Early Modern Practice’. Urban History, 41, 2: 204–27. https://doi.org/10.1017/S096392681300062XGoogle Scholar
Jütte, Robert. (1994). Poverty and Deviance in Early Modern Europe. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Kafadar, Cemal. (1986). ‘A Death in Venice (1575). Anatolian Muslim Merchants Trading in the Serenissima’. Journal of Turkish Studies, 10: 191217.Google Scholar
Kamp, Jeannette. (2018). ‘Controlling Strangers. Identifying Migrants in Early Modern Frankfurt-am-Main’. In Greefs and Winter, Migration Policies, 4665.Google Scholar
Kümin, Beat. (2007). Drinking Matters. Public Houses and Social Exchange in Early Modern Central Europe. Houndmills, Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.Google Scholar
Kümin, Beat, and Ann Tlusty, B., eds. (2011). Public Drinking in the Early Modern World: Voices from the Tavern, 1500–1800, vols 1 and 3. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Kümin, Beat, and Ann Tlusty, B., eds. (2002). The World of the Tavern: Public Houses in Early Modern Europe. Aldershot: Ashgate.Google Scholar
Lowe, K.J.P. (2015). ‘The Global Population of Renaissance Lisbon: Diversity and its Entanglements’. In Gschwend and Lowe, The Global City, 5785.Google Scholar
Lucassen, Jan, and Lucassen, Leo. (2009). ‘The Mobility Transition Revisited, 1500–1900: What the Case of Europe Can Offer to Global History’. Journal of Global History, 4, 3: 347–77. https://doi.org/10.1017/S174002280999012XGoogle Scholar
Luu, Lien Bich. (2005). Immigrants and the Industries of London, 1500–1700. Aldershot: Ashgate.Google Scholar
Maczak, Antoni. (1995). Travel in Early Modern Europe, trans. by Ursula Phillips. Cambridge: Polity Press; original Polish edition 1980.Google Scholar
Malagnini, Francesca. (2017). Il Lazzaretto Nuovo di Venezia. Le scritture parietali. Florence: Franco Cesati Editore.Google Scholar
Mansell, Charmian. (2021). ‘Beyond the Home: Space and Agency in the Experiences of Female Service in Early Modern England’. Gender & History, 33, 1: 2449. https://doi.org/10.1111/1468-0424.12494Google Scholar
Martin, Meredith, and Bleichmar, Daniela. (2015). ‘Introduction: Objects in Motion in the Early Modern World’. Art History, 38, 4: 604–19.Google Scholar
Martinez, Miguel. (2016). Front Lines: Soldiers’ Writing in the Early Modern Hispanic World. Philadephia: University of Pennsylvania Press.Google Scholar
Massai, Sonia. (2005). ‘John Wolfe and the Impact of Exemplary Go-Betweens on Early Modern Print Culture’. In Von Koppenfels and Höfele, Renaissance Go-Betweens, 104–18. https://doi.org/10.1515/9783110919516.104Google Scholar
Matt, Susan J. (2011). Homesickness: An American History. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Maudlin, Daniel. (2020). ‘Inns and Elite Mobility in Late Georgian Britain’. Past & Present, 247, 1: 3776. https://doi.org/10.1093/pastj/gtz050Google Scholar
Mazzei, Rita. (2013). Per terra e per acqua. Viaggi e viaggiatori nell’Europa moderna. Rome: Carocci.Google Scholar
McKee, Sally. (2008). ‘Domestic Slavery in Renaissance Italy’. Slavery & Abolition, 29, 3: 305–26. https://doi.org/10.1080/01440390802267774Google Scholar
McIlvenna, Una. (2016). ‘When the News was Sung’. Media History, 22, 3–4: 317–33. http://doi.10.1080/13688804.2016.1211930Google Scholar
McShane, Angela. (2019). ‘Political Street Songs and Singers in Seventeenth-Century England’. In Degl’Innocenti and Rospocher, Street Singers, 94118. https://doi.org/10.1111/rest.12534Google Scholar
Meer, Marcus. (2021). ‘Seeing Proof of Townsmen on the Move: Coats of Arms, Chivalric Badges, and Travel in the Later Middle Ages’. In Gonzalez Martin, Salzberg, and Zenobi, Cities in Motion, 1138. https://doi.org/10.1163/15700658-BJA10034Google Scholar
Meeus, Bruno, Bas, Van Heur, and Arnaut, Karel. (2019). ‘Migration and the Infrastructural Politics of Urban Arrival’. In Meeus, Bruno, Bas, Van Heur, and Arnaut, Karel, eds., Arrival Infrastructures: Migration and Urban Social Mobilities. London: Palgrave Macmillan, 132. http://doi:10.1007/978-3-319-91167-0_1Google Scholar
Metcalf, Alida C. (2005). Go-Betweens and the Colonization of Brazil 1500–1600. Austin: University of Texas Press.Google Scholar
Midura, Rachel. (2020). ‘Masters of the Post. Northern Italy and European Communications Networks, 1530–1730’. PhD thesis, Stanford University, California.Google Scholar
Midura, Rachel. (2019). ‘Publishing the Baroque Post: The Postal Itinerary and the Mailbag Novel’. In Findlen and Sutherland, The Renaissance of Letters, 255–71.Google Scholar
Minuzzi, Sabrina. (2020). La peste e la stampa: Venezia nel XVI e XVII secolo. Venice: Marsilio.Google Scholar
Moatti, Claudia, ed. (2004). La mobilité des personnes en Méditerranée de l’antiquité a l’époque moderne: procédures de contrôle et documents d’identification. Rome: École Francaise de Rome.Google Scholar
Modigliani, Anna. (1999). ‘Taverne e osterie a Roma nel tardo medioevo: tipologia, uso degli spazi, arredo e distribuzione nella città’. In Taverne, locande e stufe a Roma nel Rinascimento. Rome: Roma nel Rinascimento, 1945.Google Scholar
Molà, Luca. (2010). ‘La Repubblica di Venezia tra acque dolci e acque salse: investimenti tecnologici a Lizzafusina nel Rinascimento’. In Calzona, Arturo and Lamberini, Daniela, eds., La civiltà delle acque tra Medioevo e Rinascimento, Atti del convegno (Mantova 1–4 ottobre 2008). Florence: Olschki, 447–72.Google Scholar
Motta, Emilio. (1898). ‘Albergatori milanesi nei secoli XIV e XV’. Archivio storico lombardo, 25, 366–77.Google Scholar
Nelles, Paul, and Salzberg, Rosa, eds. (2023). Connected Mobilities in the Early Modern World: The Practice and Experience of Movement. Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press.Google Scholar
Nevola, Fabrizio. (2021). Street Life in Renaissance Italy. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press.Google Scholar
Nordman, Daniel. (1987). ‘Sauf-conduits et passeports, en France, à la Renaissance’. In Ceard, Jean and Margolin, Jean-Claude, eds. Voyager à la Renaissance. Paris: Maisonneuve et Larose, 145–58.Google Scholar
Moch, Page, Leslie. (1992). Moving Europeans: Migration in Western Europe since 1650, Bloomington: Indiana University Press.Google Scholar
Palmer, Barbara D. (2005). ‘Early Modern Mobility: Players, Payments, and Patrons’. Shakespeare Quarterly, 56, 3: 259305. https://doi.org/10.1353/shq.2006.0010Google Scholar
Palumbo-Fossati, Isabella. (2006). ‘Venise, porte du Levant: aspects linguistiques et echos d’orient a travers les objets presents dans la maison venitienne au xvi’. In Bozdemir, Michel and Bosnali, Sonel, eds. Contact des langues II: Les mots voyageurs et l’Orient. Istanbul: University of Bogaziçi.Google Scholar
Parker, Charles H. (2010). Global Interactions in the Early Modern Age, 1400–1800. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Pedani, Maria Pia. (1994). In nome del gran signore: inviati ottomani a Venezia dalla caduta di Costantinopoli alla guerra di Candia. Venice: Deputazione Ditrice.Google Scholar
Pedani, Maria Pia, and Issa, Paola. (2016). ‘Il viaggio dell’arabo Ra‘d di Aleppo a Venezia (1654–1656)’. Mediterranea – ricerche storiche, 375400.Google Scholar
Petrella, Giancarlo. (2013). ‘Ippolito Ferrarese, a Traveling “Cerretano” and Publisher in Sixteenth-Century Italy’. In Costas, Benito Rial, ed. Print Culture and Peripheries in Early Modern Europe. Leiden: Brill, 201–26.Google Scholar
Pettegree, Andrew. (2014). The Invention of News: How the World Came to Know About Itself. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press.Google Scholar
Peyer, Hans Conrad. (2009). Viaggiare nel medioevo. Dall’ospitalità alla locanda, trans. by Nicola Antonacci. Rome: Laterza; first published in German 1987.Google Scholar
Pooley, Colin G. (2017). ‘Connecting Historical Studies of Transport, Mobility and Migration’. Journal of Transport History, 38, 2: 251–9. https://doi.org/10.1177/0022526617715538Google Scholar
Pratt, Mary Louise. (1992). Imperial Eyes: Travel Writing and Transculturation. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Preiser-Kapeller, Johannes, Reinfandt, Lucian, and Stouraitis, Yannis, eds. (2020). Migration Histories of the Medieval Afroeurasian Transition Zone: Aspects of Mobility between Africa, Asia and Europe, 300–1500 C.E. Leiden: Brill. https://doi.org/10.1163/9789004425613Google Scholar
Quillien, Robin, and Rivoal, Solène. (2020). ‘Boatmen, Fishermen, and Venetian Institutions: From Negotiation to Confrontation’. In Judde de Larivière and Van Gelder, Popular Politics, 197216.Google Scholar
Quirk, Joel, and Vigneswaran, Darshan. (2015). ‘Mobility Makes States’. In Quirk, Joel and Vigneswaran, Darshan, eds., Mobility Makes States: Migration and Power in Africa. Philadelphia: Pennsylvania University Press, 134.Google Scholar
Raj, Kapil. (2016). ‘Go-Betweens, Travelers, and Cultural Translators’. In Lightman, Bernard, ed., A Companion to the History of Science. Chichester Malden: John Wiley & Sons, 3957.Google Scholar
Reeves, Nathan. (2021). ‘Music, Mobility, and Galley Servitude in Spanish Naples’. Paper delivered at the Renaissance Society of America Annual Meeting (online).Google Scholar
Riello, Giorgio. (2010). ‘The Material Culture of Walking: Spaces of Methodologies in the Long Eighteenth Century’. In Hamling, Tara and Richardson, Catherine, eds., Everyday Objects: Medieval and Early Modern Material Culture and Its Meanings. Farnham, Surrey: Ashgate, 4156.Google Scholar
Rizzi, Andrea. (2021). ‘Interpreting in Early Modern Diplomacy: Occasional Mobility and the Liminal Spaces of Trust’. Renaissance and Reformation/Renaissance et Réforme, 44, 1: 4968.Google Scholar
Roche, Daniel, ed. (2000). La ville promise. Mobilités et accueil à Paris fin xviie-début xixe siècle. Paris: Fayard.Google Scholar
Roche, Daniel. (2003). Humeurs vagabondes. De la circulation des hommes et de l’utilité des voyages. Paris: Fayard.Google Scholar
Rollison, David. (1999). ‘Exploding England: The Dialectics of Mobility and Settlement in Early Modern England’. Social History, 24, 1: 116.Google Scholar
Romani, Mario. (1948). Pellegrini e viaggiatori nell’economia di Roma dal xiv al xvii secolo. Milan: Società editrice ‘Vita e pensiero’.Google Scholar
Ronchi, Oliviero. (1967). ‘Alloggi di scolari a Padova nei secoli XIII–XVIII’. Bollettino del Museo Civico di Padova, 56: 293319.Google Scholar
Rothman, E. Natalie. (2021). The Dragoman Renaissance: Diplomatic Interpreters and the Routes of Orientalism. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press.Google Scholar
Rothman, E. Natalie. (2011). Brokering Empire: Trans-Imperial Subjects Between Venice and Istanbul. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press.Google Scholar
Rubiés, Joan-Pau. (2017). ‘Ethnography and Cultural Translation in the Early Modern Missions’. Studies in Church History, 53: 272310. http://doi:10.1017/stc.2016.17Google Scholar
Ruggiero, Guido. (2015). The Renaissance in Italy: A Social and Cultural History of the Rinascimento. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Saletti, Beatrice. (2017). ‘Entering the City. The Arrival of Foreigners in Late Medieval Bologna’. Paper delivered at the conference Mobility and Space in Late Medieval and Early Modern Europe, Oxford University.Google Scholar
Salzberg, Rosa. (2021). ‘Little Worlds in Motion: Mobility and Space in the osterie of Early Modern Venice’. Journal of Early Modern History, 25, 1–2, 96117. http://doi.10.1163/15700658-BJA10033Google Scholar
Salzberg, Rosa. (2020). ‘Peddling and the Informal Economy’. In Hitchcock and McClure, The Routledge History of Poverty, 293308.Google Scholar
Salzberg, Rosa. (2019). ‘Mobility, Cohabitation and Cultural Exchange in the Lodging Houses of Early Modern Venice’. Urban History, 46, 3: 398418. http://doi.10.1017/S0963926818000536Google Scholar
Salzberg, Rosa. (2018). ‘Controlling and Documenting Migration via Urban “Spaces of Arrival” in Early Modern Venice’. In Greefs and Winter, Migration Policies, 2745.Google Scholar
Salzberg, Rosa. (2017). ‘The Margins in the Centre: Working Around Rialto (Venice, 16th Century)’. In Spicer, Andrew and Stevens Crawshaw, Jane, eds., The Place of the Social Margins, 1400–1800. London: Routledge, 135–52.Google Scholar
Salzberg, Rosa. (2016). ‘“Poverty Makes Me Invisible”: Street Singers and Hard Times in Italian Renaissance Cities’. Italian Studies, 71, 2: 212–24. http://doi.10.1080/00751634.2016.1175719Google Scholar
Salzberg, Rosa. (2010). ‘In the Mouths of Charlatans. Street Performers and the Dissemination of Pamphlets in Renaissance Italy’. Renaissance Studies, 24, 5: 638–53. http://doi.10.1111/j.1477–4658.2010.00670.xGoogle Scholar
Salzberg, Rosa, and Rospocher, Massimo. (2012). ‘Street Singers in Italian Renaissance Urban Culture and Communication’. Cultural and Social History, 9, 1: 926. http://doi.10.2752/147800412X13191165982872Google Scholar
Santoro, Marco, and Segatori, Samanta, eds. (2013). Mobilità dei mestieri del libro tra quattrocento e seicento: convegno internazionale, Roma, 14–16 marzo 2012. Pisa: Fabrizio Serra.Google Scholar
Santus, Cesare. (2019). ‘L’accoglienza e il controllo dei pellegrini orientali a Roma. L’ospizio armeno di Santa Maria Egiziaca (XVI-XVIII sec.)’. Mélanges de l’École française de Rome, Moyen Âge, 131–2: 447–59.Google Scholar
Sardelic, Mirko. (2022). ‘The Late Sixteenth-Century Ship in the Adriatic as a Cultural System’. In Payne, Alina, ed., The Land Between Two Seas: Art on the Move in the Mediterranean and the Black Sea 1300–1700. Leiden: Brill, 2939. https://doi.org/10.1163/9789004515468_003Google Scholar
Schobesberger, Nikolaus, et al. (2016). ‘European Postal Networks’. In Raymond, Joad and Moxham, Noah, eds., News Networks in Early Modern Europe. Leiden: Brill, 1963.Google Scholar
Schmitz, Carolin. (2023). ‘Travelling for Health: Local and Regional Mobility of Patients in Early Modern Rural Spain’. In Nelles and Salzberg, Connected Mobilities, 88110.Google Scholar
Scholz, Luca. (2020). Borders and Freedom of Movement in the Holy Roman Empire. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Scott, Hamish. (2015). ‘Travel and Communications’. In Scott, Hamish, ed., The Oxford Handbook of Early Modern History: 1350–1750 – Volume I: People and Place. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 166–92.Google Scholar
Semi, Francesca. (1983). Gli ospizi di Venezia. Venice: Istituzioni di recovero e educazione.Google Scholar
Sennefelt, Karin. (2018). ‘Ordering Identification: Migrants, Material Culture and Social Bonds in Stockholm, 1650–1720’. In Greefs and Winter, Migration Policies, 6686.Google Scholar
Siebenhühner, Kim. 2008. ‘Conversion, Mobility, and the Roman Inquisition in Italy around 1600’. Past and Present, 200, 1: 535. https://doi.org/10.1093/pastj/gtn012Google Scholar
Simeoni, Luigi. (1934). ‘L’ufficio dei forestieri a Bologna dal sec. xiv al xvi’. Atti e memorie della R. deputazione di storia patria per le provincie di Romagna, 24, 3: 7195.Google Scholar
Spoturno, María Laura. (2014). ‘Revisiting Malinche: A Study of Her Role as an Interpreter’. In Federici and Tessicini, Translators, Interpreters, 121–35. https://doi.org/10.1057/9781137400048_8Google Scholar
Spufford, Margaret. (1984). The Great Reclothing of Rural England: Petty Chapmen and their Wares in the Seventeenth Century. London: Hambledon Press.Google Scholar
Stagl, Justin. (2002). A History of Curiosity: The Theory of Travel 1550–1800. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Stevens Crawshaw, Jane. (2015). ‘The Renaissance Invention of Quarantine’. In Clark, Linda and Rawcliffe, Carol, eds., The Fifteenth Century XII: Society in an Age of Plague. Woodbridge: Boydell & Brewer, 161–74.Google Scholar
Subrahmanyan, Sanjay. (2011). Three Ways to Be Alien: Travails and Encounters in the Early Modern World. Waltham, MA: Brandeis University Press.Google Scholar
Susini, Fabiana. (2018). ‘From the Grand Tour to the Grand Hotel: The Birth of the Hospitality Industry in the Grand Duchy of Tuscany between the 17th and 19th Centuries’. Architectural Histories, 6, 1: 110.Google Scholar
Sweet, Rosemary. (2012). Cities and the Grand Tour: The British in Italy, c.1690–1820. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9781139104197Google Scholar
Terpstra, Nicholas. (2015). Religious Refugees in the Early Modern World: An Alternative History of the Reformation. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Tessicini, Dario. (2014). ‘Introduction: Translators, Interpreters, and Cultural Negotiation’. In Federici and Tessicini, Translators, Interpreters, 19. http://doi.10.1057/9781137400048_1Google Scholar
Tlusty, B. Ann. (2001). Bacchus and Civic Order: The Culture of Drink in Early Modern Germany. Charlottesville: University of Virginia Press.Google Scholar
Toffolo, Sandra. (2022). ‘The Pilgrim, the City and the Book: The Role of the Mobility of Pilgrims in Book Circulation in Renaissance Venice’. In der Weduwen, Arthur and Walsby, Malcolm, eds., The Book World of Early Modern Europe: Essays in Honour of Andrew Pettegree, Volume 2. Leiden: Brill, 131–53. https://doi.org/10.1163/9789004518100_010Google Scholar
Toffolo, Sandra. (2018). ‘Pellegrini stranieri e il commercio veneziano nel Rinascimento’. In Gregori, Elisa, ed., Rinascimento fra il Veneto e l’Europa: Questioni, metodi, percorsi. Padua: Cleup, 263–84.Google Scholar
Trivellato, Francesca. (2010). ‘Review Article: Renaissance Italy and the Muslim Mediterranean in Recent Historical Work’. Journal of Modern History, 82, 1: 127–55.Google Scholar
Trivellato, Francesca. (2007). ‘Merchants’ Letters Across Geographical and Social Boundaries’. In Bethencourt, Francisco and Egmond, Florike, eds. Correspondence and Cultural Exchange in Europe, 1400–1700. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 80103.Google Scholar
Tuliani, Maurizio. (1994). Osti, avventori e malandrini. Luoghi di sosta e di ritrovo nella Siena del Trecento. Siena: Protagon Editori Toscani.Google Scholar
Urry, John. (2007). Mobilities. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Van den Heuvel, Danielle. (2015). ‘Policing Pedlars. The Prosecution of Illegal Street Trade in Eighteenth-century Dutch Towns’. Historical Journal, 58, 2: 367–92.Google Scholar
Van den Heuvel, Danielle. (2012). ‘Selling in the Shadows: Peddlers and Hawkers in Early Modern Europe’. In Marcel, van der Linden and Lucassen, Leo, eds., Working on Labor: Essays in Honor of Jan Lucassen. Leiden: Brill, 125–51. https://doi.org/10.1163/9789004231443_007Google Scholar
Van Gelder, Maartje, and Tijana, Krstić. (2015). ‘Introduction: Cross-Confessional Diplomacy and Diplomatic Intermediaries in the Early Modern Mediterranean’. Journal of Early Modern History, 19, 2–3: 93105. https://doi.org/10.1163/15700658-12342452Google Scholar
Verdon, Jean. (2003). Travel in the Middle Ages, trans. by George Holoch. Notre Dame, IN: University of Notre Dame Press; first published in French, 1998.Google Scholar
Verhoeven, Gerrit. (2023). ‘Wading Through the Mire. Mobility on the Grand Tour (1585–1750)’. In Nelles and Salzberg, Connected Mobilities, 6385.Google Scholar
Verhoeven, Gerrit. (2019). ‘Not for Weaker Vessels?! Travel and Gender in the Early Modern Low Countries’. In Meens, Floris and Sintobin, Tim, eds., Gender, Companionship, and Travel: Discourses in Pre-Modern and Modern Travel Literature. London: Routledge, 6678.Google Scholar
Walden, Justine A. (2020). ‘Muslim Slaves in Early Modern Rome. The Development and Visibility of a Labouring Class’. In Wainwright, Matthew Coneys and Michelson, Emily, eds., A Companion to Religious Minorities in Early Modern Rome. Leiden: Brill, 298323. https://doi.org/10.1163/9789004443495_012Google Scholar
Wilson, Bronwen. (2005). The World in Venice: Print, the City, and Early Modern Identity. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.Google Scholar
Young Kim, David. (2014). The Traveling Artist in the Italian Renaissance: Geography, Mobility, and Style. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press.Google Scholar
Zaniboni, Eugenio. (1921). Alberghi italiani e viaggiatori stranieri sec. xiii-xvii. Naples: Detken & Rocholl.Google Scholar
Zemon Davis, Natalie. (2006). Trickster Travels: A Sixteenth-Century Muslim Between Worlds. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux/Hill and Wang.Google Scholar
Zenobi, Luca. (2018). Borders and the Politics of Space in Late Medieval Italy: Milan, Venice and their Territories in the Fifteenth Century. PhD thesis, University of Oxford.Google Scholar
Zur Nieden, Gesa, and Over, Berthold, eds. (2016). Musicians’ Mobilities and Music Migrations in Early Modern Europe: Biographical Patterns and Cultural Exchanges. Bielefeld: transcript-Verlag, 2016.Google Scholar

Save element to Kindle

To save this element to your Kindle, first ensure coreplatform@cambridge.org is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

The Renaissance on the Road
  • Rosa Salzberg, Università degli Studi di Trento, Italy
  • Online ISBN: 9781108963886
Available formats
×

Save element to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

The Renaissance on the Road
  • Rosa Salzberg, Università degli Studi di Trento, Italy
  • Online ISBN: 9781108963886
Available formats
×

Save element to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

The Renaissance on the Road
  • Rosa Salzberg, Università degli Studi di Trento, Italy
  • Online ISBN: 9781108963886
Available formats
×