This study aims to shed light on a very important example of Italian culture promoted by religious refugees at the Elizabethan court. I focus on the youthful years of Scipione Gentili (1563-1616), the younger brother of the most famous Alberico (1552-1608). Like Alberico, also Scipione, after escaping from his native San Ginesio (near Macerata), fleeing the Inquisition, sought to impose himself at the Elizabethan court. But contrary to Alberico, who suc¬cessfully focused on his legal career, Scipione (also a future law professor, in Germany) tried a parallel literary career, publishing in London two series of Latin hexameter translations of David’s Psalms (1581 and 1584) and, likewise in hexameters, a partial Latin translation of Tasso’s Ge...
Published for the first time in 1532, Niccol\uf2 Machiavelli\u2019s Principe immediately triggered m...
The author investigates Alberico Gentili’s thought about the relationship between law, theology and ...
The first readers of Achilles Tatius in Western Europe were the Renaissance scholars who read this n...
This study aims to shed light on a very important example of Italian culture promoted by religious r...
This study aims to shed light on a very important example of Italian culture promoted by religious r...
Alberico Gentili fled from Italy due to his adhesion to the Reformation and arrived in England in 1...
After decades of religious wars, in 1598 a voice rose in Europe and strongly affirmed that religion ...
The author investigates Alberico Gentili’s thought about the relationship between law, theology and ...
Since his arrival in England (1580), Alberico Gentili had a dense correspondence with jurists, theol...
The sixteenth century was a period of tumultuous religious change in Europe as a whole. Italian Cinq...
The discovery of the New World at the end of the 15th century tested the traditional assumptio...
EnIn the study Il marchese di Oria e Donato Rullo, due eretici italiani del '500 tra trasgressioni v...
Il lavoro analizza le principali vicende biografiche di Alberico Gentili, dalle convinzioni religios...
This article analyses a little known Christian epic poem, the Christiade by Francesco Sovaro. Printe...
Through a close analysis of a wide range of Sperone Speroni's writings (dialogues, treatises, discou...
Published for the first time in 1532, Niccol\uf2 Machiavelli\u2019s Principe immediately triggered m...
The author investigates Alberico Gentili’s thought about the relationship between law, theology and ...
The first readers of Achilles Tatius in Western Europe were the Renaissance scholars who read this n...
This study aims to shed light on a very important example of Italian culture promoted by religious r...
This study aims to shed light on a very important example of Italian culture promoted by religious r...
Alberico Gentili fled from Italy due to his adhesion to the Reformation and arrived in England in 1...
After decades of religious wars, in 1598 a voice rose in Europe and strongly affirmed that religion ...
The author investigates Alberico Gentili’s thought about the relationship between law, theology and ...
Since his arrival in England (1580), Alberico Gentili had a dense correspondence with jurists, theol...
The sixteenth century was a period of tumultuous religious change in Europe as a whole. Italian Cinq...
The discovery of the New World at the end of the 15th century tested the traditional assumptio...
EnIn the study Il marchese di Oria e Donato Rullo, due eretici italiani del '500 tra trasgressioni v...
Il lavoro analizza le principali vicende biografiche di Alberico Gentili, dalle convinzioni religios...
This article analyses a little known Christian epic poem, the Christiade by Francesco Sovaro. Printe...
Through a close analysis of a wide range of Sperone Speroni's writings (dialogues, treatises, discou...
Published for the first time in 1532, Niccol\uf2 Machiavelli\u2019s Principe immediately triggered m...
The author investigates Alberico Gentili’s thought about the relationship between law, theology and ...
The first readers of Achilles Tatius in Western Europe were the Renaissance scholars who read this n...