1475 …MICHELANGELO BUONARROTI is born on March 6 in Caprese, a village near Florence, during his father’s short term as mayor and local magistrate. The family soon returns to Florence. The infant Michelangelo is placed in the care of a foster-mother in a town five miles from Florence. His mother dies when he is six.
1488… He quits school and signs up for an apprenticeship as a painter with Domenico Ghirlandaio.
1489…He leaves Ghirlandaio’s workshop and starts to study sculpture in the gardens of Lorenzo de’ Medici. He lives at the ducal palace for three years in the company of the learned Humanists and sculpts his first works (marble reliefs): THE MADONNA OF THE STAIRS and the BATTLE OF THE CENTAURS.
1492… Lorenzo de’ Medici dies and Michelangelo goes back to live with his impoverished father but soon returns to the Medici palace, invited by Lorenzo’s son, Piero.
1494-1495-1 Florence rebels against the leadership of Piero. Michelangelo flees the city, goes to Bologna. There he sculpts three small statues for the tomb of San Domenico: ST. PETRONIUS, ST. PROCULUS, and an ANGEL.
1496…Back in Florence he sculpts a CUPID (now lost) and sells it to the art dealer Baldassare del Milanese, who in turn sells it as an antique work to a Roman Cardinal.
1497…Michelangelo moves to Rome. To a banker-client he sells his first important work: the BACCHUS and another Cupid, now lost. He makes his first trip to Carrara for marble.
1498-1499… He sculpts the PIETÀ for the French cardinal Jean de Billheres (also called Jean Villier de la Grolaie or Groslaye) but receives no other important commissions for nearly two years.
1501…Cardinal Piccolomini orders 15 statues for the Cathedral of Sienna. Michelangelo finishes four of them, begun by another sculptor, and adds one of his own, the ST. PETER, before abandoning the project.
1502… He returns to Florence, which has become a republic, and receives an order from the local authorities for a bronze David (finished by another artist and sent to France, now lost) and a colossal marble statue of DAVID . The Cathedral Cabildo gives him an order for marble figures of the Twelve Apostles. Only the ST. MATTHEW is blocked out.
1503 … He finishes an easel painting, his only one that has survived, of the Holy Family (MADONNA DONI).
1504 ….His colossal DAVID is set up in front of the Palazzo della Signoria or City Hall.
1505 ….He obtains a commission to paint a fresco (the BATTLE OF CASCINA) for the Council Room of the city of Florence. Leonardo da Vinci is commissioned to do a fresco on another wall of the Council Chamber. Michelangelo only finishes the cartoons—he never starts to paint the wall.
He starts but does not finish two round marble reliefs, called tondi: the TONDO TADDEI and the TONDO PITTI.
He finishes a “Madonna with the Christ Child” (BRUGES MADONNA, sent to Bruges in 1506).
He is called to Rome to build a tomb for Pope Julius II. Then he spends nine months in Carrara, quarrying marble for it. Back in Rome he begins to block out some of the figures for the great tomb.
1506… He leaves Rome in anger on learning that the Pope has given up the tomb project, and takes refuge in Florence under the protection of its governor, Piero Soderini. In November he goes to Bologna to apologize to the Pope, who pardons him and orders a colossal bronze statue of himself.
1507 . Michelangelo spends more than a year modelling and casting the figure, which is finally set up on the facade of San Petronio in 1508. Less than four years later it is melted down to make a cannon.
1508 … Pope Julius decides to decorate his uncle’s chapel (called the Sistine, after Pope Sixtus IV) and orders Michelangelo to fill the ceiling with frescoes. He protests that he is no painter but the Pope insists and Michelangelo begins to work alone and in great discomfort. He finishes the SISTINE CEILING frescoes in 1512.
1513… Pope Julius dies. Michelangelo signs a new contract for his tomb with his heirs. He works on the MOSES and the so-called “Slaves”: The DYING SLAVE and the REBELLIOUS SLAVE (now in the Louvre, Paris).
1514… He begins work on a RISEN CHRIST for the church of Sta. Maria sopra Minerva in Rome. It is finished by his helper and unveiled only in 1521.
1515.. He goes to Carrara to get marble for the Julius tomb figures.
1516 …He signs another contract for the Julius tomb. The Medici, now ruling again in Florence, ask him to design the facade for their family church of San Lorenzo. His design calls for 10 statues.
1517—1520… He spends most of the following three years in Carrara and Pietrasanta, quarrying marble for the facade of San Lorenzo and also for the Julius tomb. He signs a contract with the Medici for the facade of San Lorenzo, which now includes 22 statues. This project is suddenly and inexplicably cancelled by Pope Leo, Giovanni di Lorenzo de’ Medici, in 152o.
Perhaps about this time Michelangelo began, either for the Julius Tomb or the San Lorenzo facade, a statue called VICTORY. It was left unfinished in his workshop in Florence. Some scholars date it later, around 1530, like the APOLLO, another unfinished work.
1524… He begins to work in the MEDICI CHAPEL and the BIBLIOTECA LAURENZIANA or Laurentian Library. He goes back to Carrara for more marble. Part-time he still devotes to the Julius tomb project.
1527-1528.. Florence anticipates an attack by a papal and imperial army and appoints Michelangelo Chief of Fortifications. He has to suspend his work in the Medici Chapel and devote himself to the defense of the city.
1529… Michelangelo flees Florence and is declared a traitor. He returns just before Florence is taken by the imperial forces (1530) and he goes into hiding. The Pope promises him immunity if he continues to work on the Medici Chapel figures. He finishes two of them (NIGHT and DAWN) by 1531.
1532… He moves to Rome. He signs a new contract with Julius’ heirs for a smaller tomb—only six figures. The heirs accuse Michelangelo of shirking his responsibility and of lying about the money he received from Pope Julius for the tomb and he is never able to convince them of his honesty, which nearly drives him to despair.
He meets Tommaso de’ Cavalieri and dedicates many poems and drawings to him.
1533… Pope Clement asks him to paint the LAST JUDGMENT on the wall of the Sistine Chapel. Michelangelo returns to Florence for a short stay, then leaves it for the rest of his life. He lets assistants finish the Medici Chapel and the Laurentian Library.
1534… Pope Clement dies and the new Pope (Paul III) orders Michelangelo to stop working on the Julius tomb and paint the LAST JUDGMENT frescoes above the altar of the Sistine Chapel. He finishes them on October 31, 1541. His friendship with Vittoria Colonna begins and he dedicates many religious drawings and poems to her.
1543… He starts work on the CONVERSION OF ST. PAUL fresco in the the Pauline Chapel.
1545… The JULIUS TOMB is finally set up in San Pietro in Vincoli, Rome. Most of it is executed by other sculptors according to Michelangelo’s plan. He is unsatisfied with the results. The two female figures, RACHEL and LEAH–also called the Active Life and Contemplative Life–are by Michelangelo but finished and polished by helpers.
He finishes the CONVERSION OF ST. PAUL fresco and begins the CRUCIFIXION OF ST. PETER , which he finishes only in 1550.
1546—He begins the FLORENTINE (or Duomo) PIETÀ for his own tomb.
1547… Pope Paul III appoints him official architect of ST. PETER’S BASILICA. With the help of an assistant he completes a model of the dome in 1561.
1555… In a moment of anger and frustration he mutilates his FLORENTINE PIETÀ.
1564… His friend Daniele da Volterra watches him work all day February 12 on the RONDANINI PIETÀ. Two days later he comes down with a fever but goes for a walk in the cold night air, saying he just can’t rest. The next day he spends sitting next to the fireplace but finally must crawl into bed. He dies on February 18. The Pope wants to have him buried in St. Peter’s but Michelangelo’s nephew and heir, Leonardo, takes the body back to Florence, where it is buried in Santa Croce. More than a hundred artists attend his funeral.
This timeline is primarily about Michelangelo’s works. See Michelangelo’s Biography for more information about his life.
*Note: Scholars do not agree on some of these dates. I have decided to follow the chronology given by E.H. Ramsden, which is based on the dates of Michelangelo’s letters. See her The Letters of Michelangelo, Stanford University Press, 1963
Other sources are Michelangelo’s poems and the two biographies by Giorgio Vasari and Ascanio Condivi.
Pingback: Famous Peoples Birthdays » Michelangelo Dates The Best Artists
it’s nice work
I know its so cool it helped me with my primary quiz
nice
His life is too long. Please make him die sooner. Thank you
i think he died relativly short lived than opposite.
Wow
His life is not too long, this page is, however which is good.
bug off
no thanks bud
yes please
Why would someone comment something like that? Michelangelo influenced and accomplished many great things.
nah
I really liked this because it helped me with my project. In the books I couldn’t find the date. Very useful, thank you.
This page helped me with my history project lol
sammmeeeeeee
I’m glad, kid. Thanks for telling me.
Me too!
YEAH RIGHT
Good job
BOT
I don’t find it long, in fact other important events could be added such as his apprenticeship to Ghirlandaio’s shop, the sculpting of the Battle of the centaurs, the Madonna of the stairs and others, the Doni tondo,etc. which although smaller works are all significant and relevant. Thanks for this wonderful site.
Justme22: Thanks for the suggestions. It’s so hard to get the length just right for the average visitor; but I will try to add the ones you say and then see how the line looks.
bud its all there in the very beginning
cool
A few years ago I’d have to pay someone for this inofmration.
it helped me with my report
same here
same here too.
Me too<33
iit helped meeh alot wiit ma report thx whoever put thiis uphere thx alot man iit really helped meeh
it helped me also, thanks.
me too thanks alot for this.
this has also helped me to on my project.
it helped meh on my project too
same here
yeah it helps
this helped me with my project… big time!
me tooo
thanks for the help
thanks for the help on my paper lol
Thanks for telling me, random
i got 790 word report done off this one website
hi i love this site and i will always use!
thank you this helped a heap because i found this subject really boring and you helped me understand :)
thats beauiful art work
Aren’t some dates inaccurate?
Cat: Which?
i got an A from this
it helped me got all the info
this was done in a very good job really impressed with this website and how they wrote everything i just love it
great
helped ALOT with my poster
Thanks for the timeline. Very much enjoyed the information & very well put together. Didn’t see the Genius of Victory sculpture listed (dated possibly 1533??) which is currently in the Palazzo Vecchio in Florence. Believe it may have been intended for the Julius II tomb project
Thanks, Mike. This timeline started out small but keeps getting bigger and bigger. I didn’t originally intend to include all the works but now so few are missing that I might as well put them in. But I actually forgot your Victory, so thanks. Also missing are the Crouching Boy and Michelangelo’s most important architectural creations (Porta Pía, the Farnese facade, etc,). Some, like the Palestrina Pietà, were ruined by other sculptors and really shouldn’t be included in the canon.
Thanks. Help me with my extremly complicated assignment!!!!!!!!!!!
thnx dude that realy helped with my report
wwow i loved it!!!!!!!!!!!
this is rlly helpful and kewl. thnx :)
that was so great
Nice dude.
wooooooooo so tot awsum, r u on facebook mike?
YES finaly a good 1 4 mi social studies project THANKS
Arianna. I’m glad it was useful. Thanks for telling me.
helped a lot
Very inclusive and well rounded. This site is one of the best I have seen on him. It doesn’t go off on a tangent about one aspect or another. It also puts into perspective how busy this man truly was as well as all that he accomplished/ created in his lifetime! Thank you as this also helped me in my research:)
April: Thanks. It’s not easy to come up with a timeline that is just right for everyone. At first I made it too short, then too long, too detailed. Later I had the idea to limit it as far as I could to his works and to make another page–a biography–with facts about him, his patrons, and his times. Many people seem to prefer that. I made it sound as unscholarly as I could.
helped heaps
Awesome timeline. Thanks for the enritching experience!
Thanks, Breanna. I’m glad you liked it.
It help me with my research a lot.
perffect timeline
just what i needed to finnish my homework
thanx. ur hardwork’s made things easier for me. I’m a researcher. gbu
Anonymous: Thanks, researcher. Glad to be of use.
Thanks, this was really helpful!
Chris: Thanks. I’m glad it was useful.
That was a great and useful program.
That was a great ,useful,factual and helpful website!
This helps alot! thanks a million!
Christine says
This helped me a lot. Thank you!
me too
thx so much
OMG THIS IS A REALLY GOOD SITE IT GIVES ME ALL THE INFO I NEED THANKS KEEP IT UP 6TH GRADER
Thanks! This will help me with my essay!!!:):):):):)
What a life…Michelangelo…the best
This site is really cool by the way !
Meena: Thanks. I know many people like that book. It has probably produced more than one sculptor among its young readers and of course much love for Michelangelo. If Stone were a better writer, a greater dramatist, a clever psychologist, maybe I could read him, maybe I would enjoy the constructions of his imagination, just as one enjoys Shakespeare’s Macbeth, say, and doesn’t care what the real king was like. But I can’t recognize enough truth in Stone’s puppet theater presentation of the world. And as for your condition that “as long as people know that it is fiction…”, most cannot know where the facts stop and the fiction begins. Often on this blog I have received comments from people who quote Stone’s character with great authority, never realizing that he is the hero creation of a novelist.
thx
100Swallows: You’re welcome.
I understand what you mean when you judge Stone’s writing itself…there are parts that seem affected, exaggerated and even too much. But that doesn’t make his projection on Michelaneglo in itself, bad.
Moreover, one can always tell where the facts stop and the fiction begins, as you yourself could so easily tell by reading just a little bit of the book. Perhaps that’s because you’ve read everything else out there, there is to read on Michelangelo. Perhaps someone who is just introduced to Michelangelo, would not spot the difference. Well, atleast it helps to introduce someone to Michelangelo…as you wrote “it has probably produced more than one sculptor…” – and from then onward, once introduced, he or she could always climb the Michelangelo ‘ladder of knowledge’ and get to know the facts out there as suggested by Vasari or Condivi.
I just feel that nothing needs to be condemned that doesn’t call Michelangelo a swank, a terrible artist or an imitator. I’ve never found Stone’s book to work against the artist. And isn’t that what it’s all about? This website…the books…our interactions…and what gives people like those on this website a common denominator…Michelangelo, the artist himself.
Anyways, it is what it is. We all see things differently.
Nonetheless, thanks for your work on this website. It truly is an informative website among the many others out there.
Cheers,
Thanks this helped me a lot with my art projects time line. 😎
ReshimiTheKitty: Thanks for letting me know. Good luck.
Awesome. Thank you.
I don’t believe Michelangelo was real.
but theres proof he was reel….
thx i really needed this for my late report btw i posted this 11:50pm
it helped me with a presation
hi
That was really helpful for a persentation
Eden: I’m glad. Thanks for taking the trouble to tell me. Un saludo.
thanks
thanks for help really useful for history fair 2016
i had a project and read from this thanks
This really helped me out thank you for your timeline.
Abel: And thanks for the thanks. Glad it was of use.
Helped with project thanks :))))
Anonymous: Thanks for coming in to tell me. Un saludo de 100swallows
realy helpful
Who created this site? They did a great job
Yes they’re really good
Have you considered putting in Michelangelo’s age beside each of the dates.
Then I can consider what I was doing at that age!
OOOOOOHHHHHHH THANK YOU I REALLY NEEDED THIS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
OMG THANKS
Thankyou I needed this for school thanks this saved me from detention also I could have gone to homework club but I did not because of soccer and gymnastics bye
Thanks for telling me. I’m glad it was of use to you. Saludos
I found the timeline really useful! when did you make this?
Four years ago maybe–don’t remember exactly. I’m glad it was of use. Thanks for telling me.
This timeline helped me with an art project thanks!
Thank you for telling me and good luck with your project.
thx this is great
Thanks for telling me. Glad it was helpful.
I think this is a really good site. Thank you for putting this up. It is going to help me a lot on my project about Michelangelo. Thank you again.
Anybody have a favorite creation that Michelangelo made?
hi
this helped me with a history timeline on michelangelo
hi, this helped me with my history project
this helped alot
its ok
Very interesting
I think HE punched a hole through Leonardo da vinci in revenge
SORRY one of his paintings
Also This helped me with a project
You should add 1550 he started to work on a Church.
This helped me with my homework and I am very thankful. Also when was this made and who made it.
John: Thank you for writing and telling me that this was useful. I’m the author, Harold Gene Diab (100swallows), and I wrote it in 2010 or so. Un saludo
good
Pingback: The MICHELANGELO EFFECT | ActionCOACH
Pingback: The MICHELANGELO EFFECT - Business Coaching
Pingback: The MICHELANGELO EFFECT - JCP Business Builder
Pingback: The MICHELANGELO Effect | ActionCOACH iNala
This really helped with my essay!
Caiden: Thanks for letting me know. Good luck on that essay.
im using this site to help me with school
Anonymous: Good luck. I hope it gives you what you need. Un saludo
Ha this page helped me with my history projects too
Great! Good luck on those projects.
Pingback: Blog: The Michelangelo Effect - Andrew Goldberg - ActionCOACH
As others have already pointed out this is a great help to see everything in chronological order. Thank you for taking the time to do it. I have been reading and studying about Michelangelo on and off since the late 1980s and have created my own handwritten accumulation of facts, quotes, and stories about him for my own use and pleasure as he is my favorite artist of all time. Reading back through his works yet again, so wonderfully compiled here by you, makes it easy to see why he was the greatest. Thanks again!
Cindy: Thanks for letting me know that you found the Timeline helpful, even enjoyable. I enjoyed compiling it. No artist had ever intrigued me like Michelangelo, beginning with the time I discovered his works in Florence. Like you, I wanted to learn more and more. I had trouble deciding what to leave out of the Timeline and ended up creating a “biography” to include the exciting “facts” of his life. You make me want to go back and re-read his letters, and especially his poems. Vasari and Condivi missed that part of him.
Have to write an essay on his contributions to Rome and this helped a lot. Thanks for posting!
Liz: Thanks for writing. Good luck on that essay!