eyes are sometimes inlaid in silver, as in the bronze bust of
a young man in the J. Paul Getty Museum (c. 1520).
antiquarianism Although springing initially from a de-
sire to recover the MANUSCRIPTSof classical texts, the anti-
quarian impulse that spread throughout Europe during
the Renaissance came to include the collection and study
of coins (see NUMISMATICS), architectural fragments, and
many other artefacts from the past. Discovering what
these objects meant to collectors provides an insight into
their views of history and time, art and humanity. When
Pliny the Elder (23–79 CE) commented on ancient mar-
vels he paid most attention to those that were especially
large, costly, or created by famous men. By contrast, Re-
naissance HISTORIOGRAPHYled scholars to look systemati-
cally at the achievements of past civilizations, and to
compare them with those of their own era. PETRARCH, one
of the earliest collectors of manuscripts and coins, saw the
2200 aannttiiqquuaarriiaanniissmm
Houses of Anjou
Charles
Martel
John,
Duke of Durazzo
(d. 1335)
Robert I,
King of Sicily
(d. 1343)
Louis,
Duke of
Durazzo
(d. 1362)
Charles,
Duke of
Durazzo
(d. 1384)
Robert
(d. 1356)
Charles,
Duke of Calabria
(d. 1328)
Joanna I,
Queen of Sicily
(d. 1382)
promised the
succession to
Charles III,
King of Sicily
(d. 1386)
Louis I,
Duke of Anjou
(d. 1384)
John II,
King of France
(d. 1364)
Louis II,
Duke of Anjou
(d. 1417)
Louis III,
Duke of Anjou
(d. 1434)
Ladislas,
King of Sicily
(d. 1414)
Joanna II
Queen of Sicily
(d. 1435)
promised the
succession to
René, Duke of
Anjou (d. 1480)
Marie m. Charles VII
King of France
(d. 1461)
Louis XI,
King of France
(d. 1483)
Joan m. Louis, Duke
of Orleans
King of France
(1498–1515)
King of Naples
(1501–03)
Charles VIII
King of France
(d. 1498)
Charles II,
King of Sicily (d. 1309)
Charles of Anjou,
King of Sicily (1266–85)
John (d. 1470)
The Angevin claim to Naples and Sicily; in 1379 Joanna I of Sicily promised the succession to Louis of Anjou, whose heirs pursued the
claim for the next century.