|
A miniature of the Queen’s missal
|
The following text is a testimony of the Queen’s personal cultural interests, and her institutional support of the dawning Humanism of the Renaissance:
«She –Isabella I of Castile- clears the way for the humanists who communicate continually between Italy and Spain; she promotes the spreading of the printing press whose introduction in her reigns started when she came to the throne, giving tax exemption and a duty-free status to printers; she orders manuscripts copied; she supports a musician and singers school, and following in the steps of her father (King Juan II) she gathers the richest library of her time, where one can find , together with the large nucleus of religious works, many Latin classics, books of chivalry, guides to public and private behaviour to teach good government, legal and historic works, musical and dancing works, and wonderful selections of the Castilian writers of the XIV century and of all the poets of the XV century, creators of that poetry in which a new spirit appeared, a new musical sense and a sensitivity that turned what was popular into something erudite and courtly, with the same taste and refinement as a renewed breeze caressed the Gothic stones of the XV century and obtained such fine grace with which the defeated medieval art surrenders to the praise of spring and of a new spirit.»
Antonio
Gallego y Burín |