The careers of the Curial secretaries Poggio Bracciolini (1380-1459) and Leon Battista Alberti (1404-1472) reveal many parallels. In 1437-1438 the Este court of Ferrara, where Eugenius IV convoked a church council, provided a focal point for their friendship. It was to the Ferrarese canon Francesco Marescalchi that Poggio dedicated Book 1 of his Latin epistles (1436), and Alberti his Hundred Apologues (1437). Both men were inspired to critiques of contemporary society by the Greek satirist Lucian, and both indulged in composing brief witticisms that expose human vice: Poggio in his Facetiae (Jests) and Alberti in his Apologi (Fables) and Vita (Autobiography). From Lucian, they also learned to dramatize human foibles on the imagined stage of...
The Specchio interiore (Interior Mirror) is a work by the dominican Fra' Battista da Crema partly de...
Between the 780s and the 840s the episcopal see of Verona was held by bishops coming from beyond the...
At the turn of the fourteenth century (1295-1301), the Florentine Dominican Remigio de’ Girolami pro...
Thanks to his part in the rediscovery of Lucretius in the Renaissance Poggio Bracciolini has been mu...
Poggius Florentinus delighted in his local identity but he also, famously, had an international care...
Manuscript Magliabechiano VIII.1445 of the Biblioteca Nazionale di Firenze seems to be the only witn...
During the last years of his life, Poggio Bracciolini (1380-1459), former Apostolic Secretary and Ch...
During the congress on Paolo Diacono held in Cividale del Friuli in 1899 (eleven centuries after Pao...
Between 1290 and 1310, two Mendicant friars active in Florence dealt with the controversial issue of...
This article presents the critical editions of two texts: a letter by the Duke of Milan Filippo Mari...
The Poggio Bracciolini conference was dedicated to Bryn Mawr alumna Phyllis Goodhart Gordan (1913-19...
Giulio Pignatti or Pignatta (1679-1751), a painter from Modena who specialized in portraiture, arriv...
In 1450, Leon Battista Alberti was hired by the condottiere Sigismondo Malatesta to redesign the chu...
The analysis of the two versions of the life of Pope Sergius II (844-847) published by Louis Duchesn...
In the summer of 1634 the grand-ducal ambassador resident in France Giovan Battista Gondi made an un...
The Specchio interiore (Interior Mirror) is a work by the dominican Fra' Battista da Crema partly de...
Between the 780s and the 840s the episcopal see of Verona was held by bishops coming from beyond the...
At the turn of the fourteenth century (1295-1301), the Florentine Dominican Remigio de’ Girolami pro...
Thanks to his part in the rediscovery of Lucretius in the Renaissance Poggio Bracciolini has been mu...
Poggius Florentinus delighted in his local identity but he also, famously, had an international care...
Manuscript Magliabechiano VIII.1445 of the Biblioteca Nazionale di Firenze seems to be the only witn...
During the last years of his life, Poggio Bracciolini (1380-1459), former Apostolic Secretary and Ch...
During the congress on Paolo Diacono held in Cividale del Friuli in 1899 (eleven centuries after Pao...
Between 1290 and 1310, two Mendicant friars active in Florence dealt with the controversial issue of...
This article presents the critical editions of two texts: a letter by the Duke of Milan Filippo Mari...
The Poggio Bracciolini conference was dedicated to Bryn Mawr alumna Phyllis Goodhart Gordan (1913-19...
Giulio Pignatti or Pignatta (1679-1751), a painter from Modena who specialized in portraiture, arriv...
In 1450, Leon Battista Alberti was hired by the condottiere Sigismondo Malatesta to redesign the chu...
The analysis of the two versions of the life of Pope Sergius II (844-847) published by Louis Duchesn...
In the summer of 1634 the grand-ducal ambassador resident in France Giovan Battista Gondi made an un...
The Specchio interiore (Interior Mirror) is a work by the dominican Fra' Battista da Crema partly de...
Between the 780s and the 840s the episcopal see of Verona was held by bishops coming from beyond the...
At the turn of the fourteenth century (1295-1301), the Florentine Dominican Remigio de’ Girolami pro...