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Authors: Benjamin Blech,Roy Doliner

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Hibbard, Howard.
Michelangelo.
Westview Press, 1974.
King, Ross.
Michelangelo and the Pope’s Ceiling.
Penguin Books, 2003.
Lang, Jack.
Il Magnifico.
Mondadori, 2003.
The Last Judgment: A Glorious Restoration.
Harry N. Abrams, 1997.
Maeder, Edward. “The Costumes Worn by the Ancestors of Christ,” in
The Sistine Chapel: A Glorious Restoration
. Abradale Press, 1999.
Marini, Francesca.
Uffizi.
Rizzoli, 2006.
Martinelli, Nicole. “Michelangelo: Graffiti Artist.” www.virtualitalia.com.
Masci, Edolo.
Tutti i personaggi del
Giudizio Universale
di Michelangelo.
Rendina, 1998.
Michelangelo pittore.
Rizzoli, 1966.
Michelangelo scultore.
Rizzoli, 2005.
Nachman Bialik, Chaim, and Y. H. Rawnitzky.
Book of Legends/Sefer Ha-Aggadah: Legends from the Talmud and Midrash.
Schocken Books, 1992.
Pacifici, Riccardo.
Midrashim: fatti e personaggi biblici.
R.C.S. Libri, 1997.
Partridge, Loren.
Michelangelo: la volta della Cappella Sistina.
S.E.I. Torino, 1996.
Pasquinelli, Barbara.
Il gesto e l’espressione.
Mondadori Electa, 2005.
Pocini, Willy.
Le curiosità di Roma.
Newton & Compton, 2005.
Rendina, Claudio.
I papi: storia e segreti.
Newton & Compton, 1983.
Rocke, Michael.
Forbidden Friendships: Homosexuality and Male Culture in Renaissance Florence.
Oxford Univ. Press, 1996.
Roth, Cecil.
The Jews in the Renaissance.
Jewish Publication Society of America, 1959.
Salvadori, Roberto G.
The Jews of Florence.
La Giuntina, 2001.
Salvini, Roberto, with Stefano Zuffi.
Michelangelo.
Mondadori Electa, 2006.
Saslow, James M., trans.
The Poetry of Michelangelo.
Yale Univ. Press, 1991.
Scholem, Gershom.
On the Kabbalah and Its Symbolism.
Schocken Books, 1965.
The Schottenstein Talmud.
Mesorah Publications, 1990–2005.
The Sistine Chapel.
Edizioni Musei Vaticani, 2000.
Steinsaltz, Rabbi Adin.
Opening the Tanya.
Jossey-Bass, 2003.
Tartuferi, Angelo, with Antonio Paolucci and Fabrizio Mancinelli.
Michelangelo: Painter, Sculptor and Architect.
ATS Italia, 2004.
Tueno, Filippo.
La passione dell’error mio: il carteggio di Michelangelo. Lettere scelte 1532–1564.
Fazi, 2002.
Tusiani, Joseph, trans.
The Complete Poems of Michelangelo.
Noonday Press, 1960.
Vasari, Giorgio.
The Lives of the Artists.
Oxford Univ. Press, 1991.
Yonge, C. D., trans.
The Works of Philo.
Hendrickson, 1993.
Zeri, Federico.
Titian: Sacred and Profane Love.
Rizzoli, 1998.
Zizola, Giancarlo.
Il Conclave: storia e segreti.
Newton & Compton, 1997.

Searchable Terms

 

Note: Entries in this index, carried over verbatim from the print edition of this title, are unlikely to correspond to the pagination of any given e-book reader. However, entries in this index, and other terms, may be easily located by using the search feature of your e-book reader.

 

 

Page references followed by
fig
indicate an illustration.

 

 

Abraham, 140, 145, 146
Achim (
The Ancestors
panel), 150, 151
fig
Adam: creation of, 145, 197–201; forbidden fruit/Tree of Knowledge and role of, 203–6;
ruach HaShem
(Breath) creating, 34
Adam Kadmon
(primordial human), 197, 199
Adoration of the Magi
(Botticelli), 60
fig
Aeneid
(Virgil), 172
Alberti, Leon Battista, 59
Aldrovandi, Gianfrancesco, 88
ALEF symbolism (Sistine Chapel), 216–19
Alexander the Great, 174–75
Alexander VI, Pope (Rodrigo Borgia), 14, 89, 92, 105, 250
Alidosi, Francesco, 115–16
Ambrogio de Pretis, 36
Aminadab (
The Ancestors
panel), 154–55
fig
anamorphosis technique, 38, 39
The Ancestors
panel (Sistine Chapel), 145–56
angels: putti (angelic figures), 117
fig,
136
fig,
226, 227
fig;
same face given to serpent and, 205–6
The Annunciation
(Leonardo da Vinci), 38–39
fig
Apocrypha: book of Judith in, 159–62, 165; Christianity-Judaism link through, 159
Arch of Titus (Rome), 16
fig
Aretino, Pietro, 259, 264, 284
Aristotile da Sangallo, 109
Aristotle, 64, 65
Asa (
The Ancestors
panel), 150, 151
fig
Asayahu, Joshua ben, 15
Avignon popes, 47–48

 

 

“Babylonian exile,” 20, 47–48
Bacchus
(Michelangelo), 90
fig
–91
Bandini Pietà
(Michelangelo), 280
fig
–81
Baroque art: Catholic Church patronage of, 25–26; coded protests and insults in, 29–31; historic use of codes in, 24–29; Masonic symbolism found in, 35
Bartholomew, Saint (Sistine Ceiling), 264, 284
Basilica of St. Peter (Vatican City), 4
fig,
106–7, 112–13, 279–80
Basilica of Santa Croce (Florence), 288, 289
fig
Battle of the Centaurs
(Michelangelo), 78–80, 206
Beit-El
(House of God), 12
Belvedere Apollo
(statue), 48, 257
fig
Belvedere Torso
(statue), 48, 257
fig
Benedict IV, Pope, 47
Benedict XVI, Pope, 150
Benny, Jack, 23–24, 28
“bet” (Kabbalist thinking on), 229
Biagio da Cesena, 271–72
fig
Biagio d’Antonio, 18, 21
Bilhères de Lagraulas, Cardinal, 91, 92
body snatchers, 84
Bologna: Michelangelo flees to, 87–88; reconquest by Julius II, 113–14
Bonfire of the Vanities, 96
book of Judith, 159–62, 165
Borgia, Cesare, 105
bottega
(artist workshop), 56–57
Botticelli, Sandro:
Adoration of the Magi
by, 60
fig;
paintings burned by, 88–89;
Primavera
by, 33
fig
–34;
Scenes from the Life of Moses
by, 220–21; Sistine Chapel frescos by, 18, 20, 21, 30
Bramante, Donato, 106, 107, 112, 115
B’resheet (“in the beginning”): Jewish Torah portion (
par’shiyot
) of, 190; Sistine Chapel creation story, 193–97
“The Bridge” metaphor, 305–6
Brunelleschi, 51
Buonarroti family, 41–42, 244.
See also
Michelangelo Buonarroti
Burckhardt, Jacob, 54
Byzantium (Constantinople), 48–50

 

 

Capitoline Museum (Vatican City), 9
Carafa, Cardinal Gian Pietro, 283, 284, 285, 295.
See also
Paul IV, Pope Carnevali, Domenico, 207–8
Cathedral of Bologna, 113–14, 169–70
Catholic Church: art symbolism on knowledge forbidden by, 31–34; attempts to reconcile Protestants and, 283; corruption of the, 241; Council of Trent of, 283, 287; Fourth Lateran Council (1215) of, 153;
Gli Spirituali
movement to reform, 261–62, 283; Index of Forbidden Books compiled by, 283, 285, 295; Inquisition of, 87, 151, 283, 295; limbo concept of, 150; modern liberalization of, 156, 289–91; Neoplatonism rejected by, 64–67;
nicodemismo
approach to reforming the, 281; as patron of the arts, 25–26; Rome established as capital of, 48; Sistine Chapel ceiling’s “official story” by, 123–28;
successionism
doctrine of, 11, 19, 298; Valdés’s criticism of, 260–61; Vatican II reform of, 156, 289.
See also
papacy; Vatican City (
Città del Vaticano
)
central strip (Sistine Chapel):
Creation of Adam
panel of, 197–201;
Creation of Eve
panel of, 201–2
fig;
creation portion of, 193–97;
Drunkenness of Noah
panel of, 210–12;
The Flood
panel of, 208
fig
–10;
The Forbidden Fruit
panel of, 202–6; general description and design of, 187, 188
fig
–92; Middle Path (path of the righteous) symbolism of, 189–90;
Sacrifice of Noah
panel of, 190–92, 206–8
Cervini, Cardinal Marcello, 284–85
Charles II (king of France), 47
Chessed (“mercy”), 71
fig,
180, 185, 189, 232, 269
Chochmah/Wisdom, 200
Christianity: Neoplatonism bridging Judaism, Classical world and, 86; story of Moses foreshadowing Christ and, 19;
successionism
of, 11, 19, 298
Church of San Pietro in Vincoli (Rome): monument to Julius II at, 273–81;
Moses
statue at, 236–39, 276
fig
, 277, 278
fig;
photograph of, 276
fig;
reclining statue of Julius II at, 278–79
Church of Santa Croce (Rome), 86
Church of Santa Maria Novella, 158
Church of Santo Spirito (Florence), 83, 84
Cicero, 303
Clement V, Pope, 47
BOOK: The Sistine Secrets
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