[The Life of Michelangelo Buonarroti by John Addington Symonds]@TWC D-Link bookThe Life of Michelangelo Buonarroti CHAPTER IX 12/87
We shall soon find him, at Ferrara, refusing to quit his hostelry for the Duke's palace, and, at Venice, hiring a remote lodging on the Giudecca in order to avoid the hospitality of S.Mark. An important part of Michelangelo's plan for the fortification of Florence was to erect bastions covering the hill of S.Miniato.
Any one who stands upon the ruined tower of the church there will see at a glance that S.Miniato is the key to the position for a beleaguering force; and "if the enemy once obtained possession of the hill, he would become immediately master of the town." It must, I think, have been at this spot that Buonarroti was working before he received the appointment of controller-general of the works.
Yet he found some difficulty in persuading the rulers of the state that his plan was the right one.
Busini, using information supplied by Michelangelo himself at Rome in 1549, speaks as follows: "Whatever the reason may have been, Niccolo Capponi, while he was Gonfalonier, would not allow the hill of S.Miniato to be fortified, and Michelangelo, who is a man of absolute veracity, tells me that he had great trouble in convincing the other members of the Government, but that he could never convince Niccolo.
However, he began the work, in the way you know, with those fascines of tow.
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