Front Cover.
Half Title Page.
Recent Titles in Daily Life Encyclopedias.
Title Page.
Copyright Page.
Contents.
Preface.
Introduction.
Chronology.
Acknowledgments.
Arts.
1: Antiquity, Cult of.
2: Art, Courtly.
3: Art, Sacred.
4: Art Patronage.
5: Ceramics, Decorative.
6: Daily Life in Art.
7: Dance, Courtly.
8: Dante in Popular Culture.
9: Goldsmithing and Fine Metalwork.
10: Music at Church.
11: Music at Court.
12: Musical Instruments.
13: Non-Europeans in Art.
14: Novella.
15: Painters and Their Workshops.
16: Painting: Media and Techniques.
17: Perspective in the Visual Arts.
18: Pietre Dure and Intarsia.
19: Portraits.
20: Prints: Woodcuts, Engravings, and Etchings.
21: Sculpture.
22: Theater for the Elite.
23: Women and the Arts.
24: Women Poets and Their Poetry.
Economics and Work.
25: Accounting.
26: Apothecaries.
27: Apprentices.
28: Banks and Banking.
29: Book Printing and Sales.
30: Cloth Trade.
31: Clothmaking.
32: Coins, Coinage, and Money.
33: Construction, Building.
34: Credit and Loans.
35: Grain Trade.
36: Guilds.
37: Imported Goods, Sources of.
38: Manufacturing.
39: Mezzadria.
40: Notaries.
41: Putting-Out System.
42: Retail Selling.
43: Sheep and Wool Economy in the South.
44: Slaves and Slavery.
45: Spice Trade.
46: Taxes and Public Finance.
47: Trade, Seaborne.
48: Trade Routes, Overland.
49: Wages and Prices.
50: Women in the Labor Force.
Family and Gender.
51: Birth and Midwives.
52: Childhood.
53: Death, Funerals, and Burial.
54: Divorce, Separation, and Annulment.
55: Dowries.
56: Education of Children.
57: Espousal and Wedding.
58: Families, Laboring Class.
59: Families, Noble and Patrician.
60: Fertility, Conception, and Contraception.
61: Fostering, Step Children, and Adoption.
62: Health and Illness.
63: Heraldry.
64: Homosexuality and Sodomy.
65: Infancy, Nursing, and Wet Nursing.
66: Inheritance.
67: Last Wills and Testaments.
68: Names, Personal and Family.
69: Old Age.
70: Pregnancy.
71: Servants, Household.
72: Siblings.
73: Virtù and Honor.
74: Widows.
75: Wives and Husbands.
Fashion and Appearance.
76: Art, Fashion in.
77: Attire, Children.
78: Attire, Female.
79: Attire, Male.
80: Bathing and Personal Hygiene.
81: Cosmetics.
82: Court, Fashion at.
83: Dyes and Dyestuffs.
84: Fabrics, Domestic.
85: Fabrics, Imported.
86: Facial Hair.
87: Gems and Jewelry.
88: Hair and Hairstyles.
89: Headgear.
90: Laundry.
91: Literature on Dress.
92: Livery.
93: Mouth and Teeth.
94: Religious Habits and Vestments.
95: Scents and Perfumes.
96: Shoes and Footwear.
97: Social Status and Clothing.
98: Sumptuary Laws.
99: Tailors and Seamstresses.
100: Underclothing.
Food and Drink.
101: Bread.
102: Civic Fountains and Potable Water.
103: Conduct at Table.
104: Diet and Social Status.
105: Drugs.
106: Eating Out.
107: Feasting and Fasting.
108: Food Preservation.
109: Foodsellers and Markets.
110: Foreign Foods.
111: Fruits and Vegetables.
112: Galenic Health Regimens.
113: Grains and the Wheat Market.
114: Hunger and Famine.
115: Literature of Food and Cooking.
116: Meat, Fowl, Fish, Eggs, and Dairy.
117: Nutrition: A Modern Assessment.
118: Salt and Pepper, Herbs and Spices.
119: Sugar and Confected Sweets.
120: Tools for Cooking and Eating.
121: Wines.