104Eleven silver touch-pieces, for the King's Evil, of the Stuarts; and three bronze Papal coins£5
105A pair of red silk stockings, worked with gold. Belonged to the last Duke of Urbino£6
106A curious ivory die, representing a man seated; and four silver dice, in the form of men and women seated£1
107A pair of brass church candlesticks£115s.
108The Virgin and Child—a relief, in bronze£115s.
109The Flagellation—a relief, in bronze£115s.
110A miniature portrait of Queen Mary, mounted in silver, with slab of agate on the back£46s.
111Raffaele School—Lo Spasimo di Sicilia—a drawing, in Indian ink and pen 6s.
112A chalice, of silver, and copper gilt, with three busts of Niello work on the base£315s.
113A female saint, in embroidery 5s.
114Head of St. Peter, in tapestry. From the Cardinal of York's Villa£36s.
115The Crucifixion, worked in ancient lace for an altar cloth£22s.
116A very rare caterpillar's web, of unusual size[£2]
117St. Mary, of Egypt, of pietra-dura, on lapis-lazuli ground£1210s.
118A Majolica plate, with St. Jerome, in a landscape: signed by Maestro Giorgio, 1521—imperfect£315s.
119A fragment of a Majolica plate, with Mercury, with the initials of Maestro Giorgio, 1534 15s.
120The agony in Gethsemane—a Limosine enamel£1
121St. Dietburgha—painted on a caterpillar's web£16s.
122A half dyptic, with two saints in relief in ivory, and Byzantine inscription£111s.
123A crucifix, elaborately carved in boxwood, containing a rosary of silver thread£1
124A large bronze Papal seal, with the Holy Family, and 8 smaller bronze seals—one of them, Johann Russell£25s.
125Venus on a dolphin—a Venetian bronze, on oriental alabaster plinth£310s.
126A bronze inkstand, supported on eagles, and surmounted by a figure£310s.
127The Entombment—a relief, in bronze£1010s.
128A small ivory dyptic, with the Crucifixion, and the Virgin and Child, with two saints, in high relief, on gothic arches£1010s.
129A very interesting Pax, of Niello work, with Christ bearing his Cross, and appearing to Mary, inscribed above "Jacobus Suannes Cole"; the dead Christ, and emblems of the Crucifixion, in the lunette above£1010s.
130Another Pax, of niello, with the dead Christ and angels, inscribed beneath, "Pax tibi Pilastus," and frieze of arabesque; the Creation above—mounted in ivory£9
131A curious bone tryptic, with the Crucifixion, attended by saints; St. Peter and St. Paul on the wings£818s.6d.
132A very interesting early Pax, of Niello, with the Virgin and Child enthroned, the latter holding a rosary; two saints kneeling on each side; a die on the ground in the centre[£215s.]

The total amount realised at the sale was £1398 15s. 6d.


[AUTHOR’S PREFACE]
(1851)

DURING nearly one hundred and ninety years, five Dukes of Urbino well and ably discharged the duties of their station, comparatively exempt from the personal immoralities of their age. The rugged frontier of their highland fief had, in that time, been extended far into the fertile March of Ancona, until it embraced a compact and influential state. Saving their subjects, by a gentle and judicious sway, from the wild ferments that distracted democratic communities, and from the yet more dire revolutions which from time to time convulsed adjoining principalities, they so cultivated the arts of war, and so encouraged the pursuits of peace, that their mountain-land gained a European reputation as the best nursery of arms, their capital as the favoured asylum of letters. That glory has now become faint; for the writers by whom it has been chiefly transmitted belong not to the existing generation, and command few sympathies in our times. But the echoes of its fame still linger around the mist-clad peaks of Umbria, and in the dilapidated palace-halls of the olden race. To gather its evanescent substance in a form not uninteresting to English readers, is the object of the present attempt. Should it be so far successful as to attract some of his countrymen to the history, literature, and arts of Italy, they will not, perhaps, be ungrateful to the humble pioneer who has indicated a path to literary treasures hitherto inadequately known to them. For such an undertaking he possesses no qualification, beyond a sincere interest in the past ages of that sunny land, and a warm admiration for her arts during their epoch of brilliancy. But a residence there of six years has afforded him considerable opportunities of collecting materials for this work, which he has been anxious not to neglect.

A great portion of the duchy of Urbino, including its principal towns, has been thrice visited, and nearly every accessible library of Central Italy has been examined for unedited matter. To these researches, time and labour have been freely given; and in the few instances when his attempts were foiled by jealousy or accident, the author has generally had the satisfaction of believing that success would have been comparatively unproductive. To this, two exceptions should be mentioned. He was prevented by illness from recently visiting the libraries or archives at Venice; and the Barberini Library at Rome has been entirely closed for some years, in consequence of a disgraceful pillage of its treasures. Should the latter be again made accessible, the MSS. amassed by the Pontiff under whom Urbino devolved to the Church, and by his nephews, its two first Legates, can hardly fail to throw much light upon the duchy. The invaluable treasures of the Vatican archives have been to him, as to others, a sealed book; but the Urbino MSS. in the Vatican Library, those of the Oliveriana at Pesaro, and of the Magliabechiana at Florence, have afforded copious sources of original information, and have supplied means for rectifying omissions and errors of previous writers. Some of these materials had been freely drawn upon by Muzio, Leoni, and Baldi, biographers of the early dukes of Urbino, who have not, however, by any means exhausted the soil; the amount that remained for after inquirers may be estimated from the single instance of Sanzi's almost unnoticed rhyming Chronicle of Duke Federigo, in about 26,000 lines.

The reigns of Dukes Federigo, Guidobaldo I., and Francesco Maria I., from 1443 to 1538, formed the brightest era of Urbino, and included the most stirring period of Italian history, the golden age of Italian art; but our regnal series would be incomplete without Dukes Guidobaldo II. and Francesco Maria II., who prolonged the independence of the duchy until 1631, when it lapsed to the Holy See. Its history thus naturally divides itself into five books, representing as many reigns; yet, as these sovereigns were of two different dynasties, it will be convenient to consider separately the origin of each, and the influence which they respectively exercised on literature and the fine arts, thus giving matter for four additional books. In [Book First] of these we shall briefly sketch the early condition of the duchy, with the establishment of the family of Montefeltro as Counts, and eventually as Dukes, of Urbino; but, regarding Duke Federigo as the earliest of them worthy of detailed illustration, we shall, in [Book Second], with his succession, enter upon the immediate scope of our work.


Among many interesting publications upon Italy which have recently issued from the English press, is that of Signor Mariotti.[3] With a command of our language rarely attained by foreigners, he has clothed a vast mass of information in an exuberant style, savouring of the sweet South. As an episode to his sketch of Tasso, he dedicates to the two dynasties who ruled in Urbino a single page, in which there occur seven misstatements. John or Giovanni della Rovere was never sovereign of Camerino; his cousin, Girolamo Riario, held no ecclesiastical dignity; the "unrivalled splendour" of the Montefeltrian reign at Urbino did not extend over even one century; the wife of Giovanni della Rovere was neither daughter nor heiress of Guidobaldo I. of Urbino, nor had she any "just claim to his throne"; Duke Francesco Maria did not remove either his library or treasures of art to Mantua. These slips, by a writer generally painstaking and correct, surely indicate some deficiency in the accessible sources of information regarding a principality which has for centuries been proverbial, in the words of Tasso, as "the stay and refuge of gifted men."