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He forgot pizza.
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Reblogged this on trasloqueves.
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Reblogged this on 21st Century Theater.
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[…] via Biblioklept […]
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[…] Via […]
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[…] Bibliokelpt has posted an image of one of the artist’s grocery lists which included detailed text, as well as drawings to help illustrate to his assistants what to pick up when they went to the market. […]
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[…] via Bibliokept, Open Culture, The Oregonian […]
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[…] Bibliokelpt has posted an image of one of the artist’s grocery lists which included detailed text, as well as drawings to help illustrate to his assistants what to pick up when they went to the market. […]
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[…] via Biblioklept […]
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[…] Biblioklept via Open Culture. […]
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[…] – via biblioklept.org […]
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[…] Buonarroti was too busy to buy food, so he used to send his illiterate servant with grocery shopping lists like the one above, illustrated in […]
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[…] Buonarroti was too busy to buy food, so he used to send his illiterate servant with grocery shopping lists like the one above, illustrated in […]
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[…] Buonarroti was too busy to buy food, so he used to send his illiterate servant with grocery shopping lists like the one above, illustrated in […]
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I think it’s not a grocery shopping list.
Pani due (tho pieces of bread)
???
Una aringa (a herring)
Tortegli (pasta)
——–
Una salata (one salad)
quattro pani (4 pieces of bread)
????
????
Un piattollo di spinaci (“a little plate of spinach”)
quattro ??? (four ??? – maybe alici – anchovies, not sure)
tortelli (pasta)
———–
Sei pani (six pieces of bread)
Due minestre di finocchio (two fennel soups)
Una aringa (a herring)
????? tondo (round ?somewhat?)
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[…] Buonarroti was too busy to buy food, so he used to send his illiterate servant with grocery shopping lists like the one above, illustrated in […]
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[…] Buonarroti was too busy to buy food, so he used to send his illiterate servant with grocery shopping lists like the one above, illustrated in […]
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[…] Michelangelo ate fish and bread like most everybody else. In his 16th century handwritten list of 15 grocery items with accompanying illustrations, the artist requested fish, bread, two fennel soups, a herring (un […]
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[…] Michelangelo ate fish and bread like most everybody else. In his 16th century handwritten list of 15 grocery items with accompanying illustrations, the artist requested fish, bread, two fennel soups, a herring (un […]
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[…] Buonarroti was too busy to buy food, so he used to send his illiterate servant with grocery shopping lists like the one above, illustrated in 1518. Apparently my favorite renaissance artist Michelangelo make everything […]
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Reblogged this on Paul Greer and commented:
Michelangelo’s Grocery List 1518
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[…] via Michelangelo’s Grocery List — Biblioklept […]
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[…] Via Biblioklept […]
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[…] vía biblioteca […]
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