The article reconsiders the opinion expressed by G. Billanovich concerning the relationship between Boccaccio’s ‘Sermo de vita et moribus domini Francisci Petracchi de Florentia’ and Petrarch’s letter ‘Ad Posteritatem’. The detailed analysis of the two texts, and of the circumstances that led the authors to their respective compositions in the ’40s and ’50s of the fourteenth century, shows that the letter to posterity was not written along the lines of the ‘Sermo’ in order to respond to and correct Boccaccio’s claims, but that it was composed independently and has no relation to the ‘Sermo’, if not indirectly. In the second part of the article the ‘Sermo’ is compared with two further biographical portraits that Boccaccio dedicated to Petrar...
An analysis of the reception of Petrarch in Italy and Europe from the late fourteenth through the si...
This article posits that in the texts (both epistolary and otherwise) associated explicitly with his...
Manuscript Magliabechiano VIII.1445 of the Biblioteca Nazionale di Firenze seems to be the only witn...
The article reconsiders the opinion expressed by G. Billanovich concerning the relationship between ...
L’articolo riconsidera il rapporto di dipendenza dell’epistola "Ad Posteritatem" di Petrarca dal "Se...
In readings of orations, letters, and poems about Petrarch’s death composed in Paduan and Florentine...
Giovanni Boccaccio used prologues and epilogues of his Latin works to discuss relevant topics such a...
The contribution aims to illustrate the results of the research conducted on the lexicon of the Petr...
My essay contains a new critical edition of Donato Albanzani’s addition to Boccaccio’s De mulieribu...
This doctoral thesis may be read in two different ways: on the one hand it aims at breaking the grou...
This essay questions the use of the term original to refer to Petrarch’s partial holograph of the Fr...
Francesco Petrarca (1304 - 1374) is one of the three most influential writers ('crowns') of Italian ...
Whereas much of Machiavellian lyric opus reveals a character of “anti-Petrarchism,” the relationship...
This essay reconsiders the conventional division of Boccaccio’s career into two parts that is usuall...
Following the path of Ludovico Antonio Muratori and Giovan Mario Crescimbeni, the ‘Giornale de’ lett...
An analysis of the reception of Petrarch in Italy and Europe from the late fourteenth through the si...
This article posits that in the texts (both epistolary and otherwise) associated explicitly with his...
Manuscript Magliabechiano VIII.1445 of the Biblioteca Nazionale di Firenze seems to be the only witn...
The article reconsiders the opinion expressed by G. Billanovich concerning the relationship between ...
L’articolo riconsidera il rapporto di dipendenza dell’epistola "Ad Posteritatem" di Petrarca dal "Se...
In readings of orations, letters, and poems about Petrarch’s death composed in Paduan and Florentine...
Giovanni Boccaccio used prologues and epilogues of his Latin works to discuss relevant topics such a...
The contribution aims to illustrate the results of the research conducted on the lexicon of the Petr...
My essay contains a new critical edition of Donato Albanzani’s addition to Boccaccio’s De mulieribu...
This doctoral thesis may be read in two different ways: on the one hand it aims at breaking the grou...
This essay questions the use of the term original to refer to Petrarch’s partial holograph of the Fr...
Francesco Petrarca (1304 - 1374) is one of the three most influential writers ('crowns') of Italian ...
Whereas much of Machiavellian lyric opus reveals a character of “anti-Petrarchism,” the relationship...
This essay reconsiders the conventional division of Boccaccio’s career into two parts that is usuall...
Following the path of Ludovico Antonio Muratori and Giovan Mario Crescimbeni, the ‘Giornale de’ lett...
An analysis of the reception of Petrarch in Italy and Europe from the late fourteenth through the si...
This article posits that in the texts (both epistolary and otherwise) associated explicitly with his...
Manuscript Magliabechiano VIII.1445 of the Biblioteca Nazionale di Firenze seems to be the only witn...