The diffusion of Petrarch\u2019s Latin works, with special regard to the German countries in the XV century, follows definite lines as the manuscript tradition coming from there shows. In fact, during this period a substantial number of manuscripts was written and read in monasteries, where Petrarch was appreciated as Christian moral philosopher; an other consistent group was property of students who studied in Italian universities or in the universities of Erfurt, Leipzig and Vienna, and who read his works because of their interest on rhetoric and on the new culture. The publication of Agostino Sottili\u2019s studies on Petrarch gives the possibility of reflecting on these matters and underlines that new perspectives on this research will ...
Petrarch’s influence in Britain, if, via traditional literary histories, we look only at great figur...
The University of Toronto Libraries Undergraduate Research Prize awards undergraduate students in an...
Francesco Petrarch is the father of the Italian literature and was on the forefront of the humanists...
The diffusion of Petrarch’s Latin works, with special regard to the German countries in the XV centu...
The issue presents the provisional results of studies of a particular category of Petrarch's autogra...
Nicholas Mann’s fundamental assessment of the influence of Petrarch on the medieval English-speaking...
Epigraphs by German grammar and poet from Augsburg Ioann Pinitian (1477/1478 - 1542) to the German t...
Petrarch was offered the laurel crown of poetry by the Senate of Rome in the year 1340. His high sta...
An analysis of the reception of Petrarch in Italy and Europe from the late fourteenth through the si...
The essay highlights the ‘order’ of the transmission of Familiares books of letters by Petrarch, bot...
Il ms. 552-2 della Médiathèque du Grand Troyes (France), una delle più ricche raccolte ciceroniane d...
Il saggio prende in esame la diffusione presso le biblioteca monastiche europee tra XIV e XV secolo ...
Following the path of Ludovico Antonio Muratori and Giovan Mario Crescimbeni, the ‘Giornale de’ lett...
Si indicano nuovi testimoni della diffusione delle opere petrarchesche in Germania
Francesco Petrarca (1304 - 1374) is one of the three most influential writers ('crowns') of Italian ...
Petrarch’s influence in Britain, if, via traditional literary histories, we look only at great figur...
The University of Toronto Libraries Undergraduate Research Prize awards undergraduate students in an...
Francesco Petrarch is the father of the Italian literature and was on the forefront of the humanists...
The diffusion of Petrarch’s Latin works, with special regard to the German countries in the XV centu...
The issue presents the provisional results of studies of a particular category of Petrarch's autogra...
Nicholas Mann’s fundamental assessment of the influence of Petrarch on the medieval English-speaking...
Epigraphs by German grammar and poet from Augsburg Ioann Pinitian (1477/1478 - 1542) to the German t...
Petrarch was offered the laurel crown of poetry by the Senate of Rome in the year 1340. His high sta...
An analysis of the reception of Petrarch in Italy and Europe from the late fourteenth through the si...
The essay highlights the ‘order’ of the transmission of Familiares books of letters by Petrarch, bot...
Il ms. 552-2 della Médiathèque du Grand Troyes (France), una delle più ricche raccolte ciceroniane d...
Il saggio prende in esame la diffusione presso le biblioteca monastiche europee tra XIV e XV secolo ...
Following the path of Ludovico Antonio Muratori and Giovan Mario Crescimbeni, the ‘Giornale de’ lett...
Si indicano nuovi testimoni della diffusione delle opere petrarchesche in Germania
Francesco Petrarca (1304 - 1374) is one of the three most influential writers ('crowns') of Italian ...
Petrarch’s influence in Britain, if, via traditional literary histories, we look only at great figur...
The University of Toronto Libraries Undergraduate Research Prize awards undergraduate students in an...
Francesco Petrarch is the father of the Italian literature and was on the forefront of the humanists...