The I Tatti Renaissance Library is a series of books published by the Harvard University Press, which aims to present important works of Renaissance Latin Literature to a modern audience by printing the original Latin text on each left-hand leaf, and an English translation on the facing page. Its goal is to be the Renaissance version of the Loeb Classical Library.
Many of the books in the series have never been translated into English before, and the series promises to increase the understanding of the Renaissance among the general public and non-specialist historians by making primary sources accessible, thus giving a window into the minds of Renaissance thinkers themselves.
The books of the I Tatti Renaissance Library have a consistent appearance: a pale blue cover, analogous to the red (Latin) or green (Greek) books in the Loeb Classical Library. They are, however, closer in size to a standard hardcover book than to the pocket-sized books of the Loeb series. A typeface named "ITRL" was specially designed for the series, and is based on the work of Renaissance typographer Nicolas Jenson.
The series is named after the Villa I Tatti, which houses the Center for Italian Renaissance Studies of Harvard University.
External Link:
The homepage of the I Tatti Renaissance Library (http://www.hup.harvard.edu/itatti/)
The Berenson Library is a major resource for research on the late Middle Ages and Renaissance in Italy.
Thoroughly interdisciplinary in character and increasingly comprehensive, the library possesses an extensive collection mainly of published materials in the history, fine and applied arts, music, literature, science, religion, and philosophy of Italy from circa 1200 to 1650, a rich collection of international scholarly journals, and an exceptional repository of visual materials on Italian Renaissance art.
The library also has substantial holdings in the fields of classical studies and archaeology, medieval studies, the Mediterranean region, Renaissance Europe, and Asian and Islamic art and archaeology, as well as a noteworthy collection of historical and current art auction catalogs.