Renaissance timeline
Nicola Pisano completes a pulpit for Pisa, borrowing details from Roman sarcophagi - an early example of a new interest in the classical past
The Italian communes employ powerful leaders, or signori, in a trend which leads away from oligarchy and towards princely rule
The bankers of northern Italy develop a method of accountancy - double-entry book-keeping - which will have lasting significance
Dante, a member of the White faction in Florence, is sentenced to death by the Blacks - and never returns to his native city
Enrico degli Scrovegni employs Giotto to paint the cycle of frescoes in his chapel in Padua
Dante, in exile from Florence, begins work on The Divine Comedy - completing it just before his death, 14 years later
The cathedral authorities in Siena commission from Duccio the great altarpiece which becomes known as the Maestà
Clement V moves the papacy to Avignon, in a move which is expected to be temporary but which lasts for nearly seventy years
Florence becomes a centre of international finance, with the Bardi and Peruzzi families acting as bankers to Europe's rulers
Petrarch glimpses Laura in a church in Avignon and falls helplessly in love with her - or so he tells us
A laurel wreath is placed on the brow of Petrarch in Rome, in a renewal of interest in the classical world
The bridge now known as Ponte Vecchio is constructed in Florence (replacing an older old bridge)
Edward III of England, defaulting on his massive debts, drives the Florentine banking families of Bardi and Peruzzi into bankruptcy
Cola di Rienzo, appointed tribune of the people, enjoys a few months of dictatorial powers in Rome before the citizens tire of him
Boccaccio begins his Decameron, supposedly the stories told by young Florentine men and women sheltering from the Black Death
Armies of mercenaries, led by condottieri, conduct Italian warfare at an often extortionate rate
Humanism, or the study of classical literature as a living tradition, develops into one of the main strands of the Renaissance
Boccaccio, visiting Petrarch in Florence, is inspired to devote himself to the pursuit of classical studies
A great clock is completed in Padua, regulated mechanically by foliot and escapement
The papal curia returns to Rome in what would seem a conclusive move if there were not, two years later, two popes - one of them elected back in Avignon
John Hawkwood, a condottiere in command of the White Company, is appointed captain general of Florence
The French cardinals, objecting to the new Italian pope, elect their own man as Clement VII - and thus inaugurate the Great Schism of the papacy
The Venetian blockade of Chioggia costs Genoa her fleet and ends Genoese rivalry with Venice in the eastern Mediterranean
Gian Galeazzo Visconti, the signore of Milan, sets about enlarging his territory - seizing Vicenza, Verona and Padua between 1384 and 1388
Philip II of Burgundy commissions from Netherlands sculptor Claus Sluter a work, the Well of Moses, which launches the northern Renaissance