In the last decades of the 15th c. Roman humanists were deeply influenced by the presence of Lorenzo Valla in Rome (1447/8-1457) and by his new linguistic approach to Latin. In order to limit the influence of the medieval Latin grammar, Valla proposed to extract Latin rules directly from the writings of the classical authors rather than from the late antique and medieval grammarians and their abstract theories. This new method stimulated Valla’s followers to read not only the traditional authors of the medieval Quadriga (Cicero, Sallust, Terence, Virgil), but the whole corpus of ancient Latin writers. Valla’s theories had a deep impact also in the 15th c. Latin lexica, such as Perotti’s Cornu copiae, and in the humanist commentaries, that ...
Nuova edizione critica dell'orazione inaugurale delle lezioni tenute allo Studium Urbis da Lorenzo V...
A remarkably neglected way of entering the Wirkungsgeschichte of Valerius Maximus myriad of rhetori...
This article, which is the author’s trial lecture for the degree of Philosophiae Doctor, offers a br...
When Laurentius Valla penned those words, he was writing the fuse scientific treatise on Latin gramm...
The early fifteenth century saw some scholars in Italy promote a new commitment to Ciceronianism. Th...
Cicero has been a fundamental reference point for school education and the system of artes liberale...
The term Medieval Latin refers to Latin from c. 500 until c. 1500 ce. In the first few centuries, Me...
This chapter focuses on the views of Lorenzo Valla (c.1406-57), the Renaissance humanist, and in add...
The period from the 13th to 15th centuries is of crucial importance for Italian linguistic and cultu...
This chapter focuses on the views of Lorenzo Valla (c.1406-57), the Renaissance humanist, and in add...
The successful introduction of Lucian to Western Europe in late 14th century, which was followed by ...
LUCE GIARD: From Medieval Latin to the Piurality of Languages at the Turn ofthe Renaissance The tra...
Late Latin literature deeply influenced the standardization of the Italian language in the fifteenth...
This thesis examines the situation of the Latin language in the unique linguistic environment of ear...
Between the late Middle Ages and the early Modern Period in many centers of the Kingdom of Naples an...
Nuova edizione critica dell'orazione inaugurale delle lezioni tenute allo Studium Urbis da Lorenzo V...
A remarkably neglected way of entering the Wirkungsgeschichte of Valerius Maximus myriad of rhetori...
This article, which is the author’s trial lecture for the degree of Philosophiae Doctor, offers a br...
When Laurentius Valla penned those words, he was writing the fuse scientific treatise on Latin gramm...
The early fifteenth century saw some scholars in Italy promote a new commitment to Ciceronianism. Th...
Cicero has been a fundamental reference point for school education and the system of artes liberale...
The term Medieval Latin refers to Latin from c. 500 until c. 1500 ce. In the first few centuries, Me...
This chapter focuses on the views of Lorenzo Valla (c.1406-57), the Renaissance humanist, and in add...
The period from the 13th to 15th centuries is of crucial importance for Italian linguistic and cultu...
This chapter focuses on the views of Lorenzo Valla (c.1406-57), the Renaissance humanist, and in add...
The successful introduction of Lucian to Western Europe in late 14th century, which was followed by ...
LUCE GIARD: From Medieval Latin to the Piurality of Languages at the Turn ofthe Renaissance The tra...
Late Latin literature deeply influenced the standardization of the Italian language in the fifteenth...
This thesis examines the situation of the Latin language in the unique linguistic environment of ear...
Between the late Middle Ages and the early Modern Period in many centers of the Kingdom of Naples an...
Nuova edizione critica dell'orazione inaugurale delle lezioni tenute allo Studium Urbis da Lorenzo V...
A remarkably neglected way of entering the Wirkungsgeschichte of Valerius Maximus myriad of rhetori...
This article, which is the author’s trial lecture for the degree of Philosophiae Doctor, offers a br...