An annotated bibliography is a list of citations to materials used for this project.
Writing the annotation:
Cohen, Elizabeth Storr, and Thomas V. Cohen. Daily Life during the Italian Renaissance. Westport, Greenwood Press, 2001.
Elizabeth and Thomas Cohen are both professors at York University in Ontario, specializing in Italian history. Thomas Cohen has a Phd from Harvard University. Elizabeth Cohen has undergraduate degrees from Harvard University and a Phd from University of Toronto. Together, they co-wrote, Words and Deeds in Renaissance Rome: Trials Before the Papal Magistrates (1993). Daily Life includes useful information on marriage, family relationships and dowries, as well as wedding customs. For both men and women it was a signal into adulthood. Most marriages were based on social and economic standings. The XXX had more information on wedding festivities
*[Greenwood Press publishes academic reference books since 1967.]
Note: The librarians' preferred format is different from what is specified in the MLA handbook. The citation should be double spaced, with the second line indented. The librarians want the annotation to start on a new line following the citation, and is formatted as an indented, single-spaced block paragraph. If you verified credibility of the source's author or publisher through a website, please hyperlink that website.