
''Decades of History from the Deterioration of the Roman Empire'', Italian translation by Lucio Fanno, 1543.
'Flavio Biondo' (
Latin 'Flavius Blondus') (
1392 –
June 4,
1463) was an Italian
Renaissance humanist historian. He was the historian who coined the term
Middle Ages and is known as one of the
first archaeologists.
Born in the capital city of
Forlì, of the
Romagna region, Flavio was well schooled from an early age, studying under
Ballistario of Cremona. During a brief stay in Milan, he discovered and transcribed the unique manuscript of
Cicero's dialogue ''Brutus''. He moved to
Rome in
1433 where he began work on his writing career; he was appointed secretary to the
Cancelleria under
Eugene IV in
1444 and accompanied Eugene in his exile, in Ferrara and Florence. After his patron's death, Flavio was employed by his papal successors,
Nicholas V,
Callixtus III and the great humanist
Pius II .
Archaeological works
Flavio published three encyclopedic works that were systematic and documented guides to the ruins and topography of ancient Rome, for which he has been called one of the first archaeologists; subsequent antiquaries and historians built on the foundations laid down by Flavio and by his older contemporary,
Poggio Bracciolini.
At the time the ruins of ancient Rome were overgrown and unexplored. When in
1430 Poggio Bracciolini climbed the
Capitol he saw only deserted fields around. The
Forum, buried in eroded topsoil, was grazed by cows—the ''Campo Vaccino''— and pigs rooted in its unweeded vegetation. Flavio and fellow humanists like
Leone Battista Alberti began to explore and document the architecture, topography and history of Rome, and in the process revived a vision of Rome's former glory.
Flavio's first work was ''De Roma instaurata'' (''Rome Restored'', 3 vols,
1444-
1446), a reconstruction of ancient Roman
topography. It was and remains a highly influential humanist vision of restoring Rome to its previous heights of grandeur by recreating what Rome used to look like based on the ruins which remained. This work was the first systematic and well documented guide to the ruins of Rome, or indeed any ancient ruins, and he has thus been called one of the first archaeologists.
The second was the highly popular ''De Roma triumphante'' (''Rome Triumphant'', (
1459)) about
pagan Rome as a model for contemporary governmental and military reforms. The book was highly influential in reviving Roman patriotism and respect for ancient Rome, while presenting the
papacy as a continuation of the
Roman Empire.
Historical works
Flavio Biondo's greatest works were ''Italia illustrata'' (''Italy Illuminated'', written between
1448 and
1458, published
1474) and the ''Historiarum ab inclinatione Romanorum imperii decades'' (''Decades of History from the Deterioration of the Roman Empire'', written from
1439 to
1453, published in
1483).
The ''Italia illustrata'' (1474) is a geography, based on the author's personal travels, and history of eighteen Italian provinces. Unlike medieval geographers, whose focus was regional, Biondo, taking
Strabo for his model, reinstated the idea of ''Italy'' to include the whole of the peninsula. Through topography, he intended to link Antiquity with modern times, with descriptions of each location, the etymology of its
toponym and its changes through time, with a synopsis of important events connected with each location. This first historical geography starts with the Roman Republic and Empire, through 400 years of barbarian invasions and an analysis of
Charlemagne and later
Holy Roman Emperors. He gives an excellent description of the humanist revival and restoration of the classics during the first half of the fifteenth century.
Flavio's greatest work is the ''Historiarum ab Inclinatione Romanorum Imperii'' (Venice, 1483), a history of Europe in three "decades" and the start of a fourth, of thirty-two books from the fall of Rome in
410 to the current day Italy in
1442. Using only the most reliable and primary sources, it was highly influential in furthering the chronological notion of a Middle Age that lay between the fall of Rome and Flavio's own time. It is the first work in which the term ''Middle Age'' is used; earlier
Leonardo Bruni was the first to conceptualize the concept of a three-tiered history in his ''History of the Florentine People'' and a century earlier the concept of a
Dark Ages had been laid out by
Petrarch.
Sources
★ ''Italy Illuminated, Volume 1 : Liguria and Lombardy'', Edited by Jeffrey A. White, English translation, ISBN 0-674-01743-9 (June 1, 2005)
★ ''Rome Restored'', Edited by Marc Laureys and William McCuaig, English translation, To be announced.
★
"Flavio Biondo". In ''
Encyclopedia Britannica'' Online.
★
"Flavio Biondo" in ''
Catholic Encyclopedia'' (1907).
Latin texts online
★
''De Origine et Gestis Venetorum''
★
''Historiae Ab Inclinatione Romanorum Imperii'' (Basel 1531)
★
''Historiarum ab inclinatione romanorum imperii'' (Venice: Octavianus Scotus, 1483; Hain
★ 3248)
★
''In Romam Instauratam''
★
''Roma Instaurata''
★
''Triumphans Roma''