Untitled Document
Top Adult NonFiction Book of the YearBook Sense, 2001
Anyone alive in Florence on August 19, 1418, would have understood the significance
of the competition announced that day concerning the citys magnificent
new cathedral, Santa Maria del Fiore, already under construction for more than
a century. Whoever desires to make any model or design for the vaulting
of the main Dome
shall do so before the end of the month of September.
The proposed dome was regarded far and wide as all but impossible to build:
not only would it be enormous, but its original and sacrosanct design eschewed
(shunned) the flying buttresses that supported cathedrals all over Europe. The
dome would literally need to be erected over thin air.
Of the many plans submitted, one stood outa daring and unorthodox solution
to vaulting what is still the largest dome (143 feet in diameter) in the world.
It was offered not by a master mason or carpenter, but by a goldsmith and clock
maker named Filippo Brunelleschi, then 41, who would dedicate the next 28 years
to solving the puzzles of the domes construction. In the process, he did
nothing less than reinvent the field of architecture.
Brunelleschis Dome is the story of how a Renaissance genius bent
men, materials, and the very forces of nature to build an architectural wonder
we continue to marvel at today. Denounced at first as a madman, Brunelleschi
was celebrated at the end as a genius. He engineered the perfect placement of
brick and stone, built ingenious hoists and cranes (some among the most renowned
machines of the Renaissance) to carry an estimated 70 million pounds hundreds
of feet into the air, and designed the workers platforms and routines
so carefully that only one man died during the decades of constructionall
the while defying those who said the dome would surely collapse and personal
obstacles that at times threatened to overwhelm him. This drama was played out
amidst plagues, wars, political feuds, and the intellectual ferments of Renaissance
Florenceevents Ross King weaves into the story to great effect, from Brunelleschis
bitter, ongoing rivalry with the sculptor Lorenzo Ghiberti to the near capture
of Florence by the Duke of Milan. King also offers a wealth of fascinating detail
that opens windows onto fifteenth-century life: the celebrated traditions of
the brickmakers art, the daily routine of the artisans laboring hundreds
of feet above the ground as the dome grew ever higher, the problems of transportation,
the power of the guilds.
Even today, in an age of soaring skyscrapers, the cathedral dome of Santa Maria
del Fiore retains a rare power to astonish. In telling the story of the greatest
engineering puzzle of the Renaissance and one of the worlds architectural
marvels, Ross King brings its creation to life in a fifteenth-century chronicle
with twenty-first-century resonance.