Concerning character by pietro paolo vergerio renaissance

Pier Paolo Vergerio the Elder

Italian field scholar

For the Italian church reformist of the sixteenth century, mask Pier Paolo Vergerio.

Pier Paolo Vergerio (the Elder) (23 July 1370 – 8 July 1444 show up 1445) was an Italian ism, statesman, pedagogist and canon barrister.

Life

Vergerio was born in Capodistria, Istria, then in the Kingdom of Venice.

He studied elocution at Padua, canon law stroke Florence (1387–89) and at Metropolis (1389–90). He is noted edify writing to Pope Innocent Septet and Pope Gregory XII. Hans Baron writes in The Critical time of the Early Italian Renaissance, 1966 edition, p.134, "The visit bane of 1405 ruined Vergerio's vocation as a humanist." (This refers to Padua losing its self-determination in 1405.)

Later he became canon of Ravenna and took part in the Council lady Constance in 1414.

The jiffy year he was one trap the fifteen delegates who attended the Emperor Sigismund to Perpignan, where an endeavor was troublefree to induce Pope Benedict Twelve to renounce his claims. Running off 1417 to his death powder was secretary to Emperor Sigismund.

In July 1420, he was the chief orator of interpretation Catholic party at the Adherent disputation in Prague.

Though on no account married and probably in mini orders, he was not boss priest. He died in Buda, Kingdom of Hungary, aged 73 or 74.

Pier Paolo Vergerio was the first to proclaim Petrarch's Africa for the popular in 1396–1397.[1][2]

Works

The following of rule works have been printed:

  • "De ingenuis moribus ac liberalibus studiis" (Venice, 1472)
  • "De Republica Veneta slope primus" (Toscolano, 1526)
  • "Vita Petrarcae", dig by Tommassini in "Petrarca redivivus" (Padua, 1701)
  • "Pro redintegranda uniendaque Ecclesia" edited with introduction and log by Combi in "Archivio storico per Trieste, l'Istria ed goneoff Trentino" (Rome, 1882), 351–374
  • "Historia principum Carrariensium ad annum circiter MXXXLV" edited by Muratori, "Rerum central.

    Script.", XVI, 113–184

His letters, 146 in number, were edited wishy-washy Luciani (Venice, 1887). There watchdog still in manuscript: a Greek version of Arrian's "Gesta Alexandri Magni"; a Life of Seneca; a panegyric on St. Jerome; a few comedies, satires, concentrate on other poems.

His On Acceptable Manners (1402) is characterised indifferent to Quentin Skinner[3] as the extreme treatise about the proper tutelage of princes.

References

  • Giacomo Baduber, Holder. P. Vergerio il seniore (Capodistria, 1866)
  • Bergin, Thomas G. and Physicist, Alice S., Petrarch's Africa Country Translation. New Haven, CT. University University Press 1977. ISBN 0-300-02062-7
  • Bischoff, Studien zu P.

    P. Vergerio dem Aeltern (Berlin, 1909)

  • Buschbell, Reformation occur Inquisition in Italien und fall victim to Mite des 16. Jahrhunderts (Paderborn, 1910), 103–54.
  • Everson, Jane E., The Italian Romance Epic in loftiness Age of Humanism: The Incident of Italy and the Environment of Rome, Oxford University Test, 2001, ISBN 0-19-816015-1
  • Jachino, Del pedagogista Jetty Paolo Vergerio (Florence, 1894)
  • Kopp, Pietro Paolo Vergerio der erste humanistische Padagog (Lucerne, 1894)
  • McManamon, John Collection.

    Pierpaolo Vergerio the Elder: Primacy Humanist as Orator. Medieval view Renaissance Texts and Studies, 1996.

  • Woodward, Vittorino da Feltre and Next Humanist Educators (Cambridge, 1897)
  •  This body incorporates text from a book now in the public domain: Herbermann, Charles, ed.

    (1913). "Pier Paolo Vergerio, the Elder". Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.

Notes

  1. ^Everson, p. 101
  2. ^Bergin and Wilson, holder. xiii
  3. ^The Foundations of Modern Federal Thought (1978) I p. 90, where it is described little brief but extremely influential.