Benvenuti
| Martedi 18 Novembre 2008 08:02 (Ora USA SLC) |
15th and 16th Centuries15th Century
In the Renaissance appeared many examples of the so-called
universal man, who achieved greatness in more than one field.
Among the most famous figures of this type were the architect,
painter, organist, and writer Leon Battista Alberti, Leonardo
da Vinci, and Michelangelo. This universality of mind and
talent was true also of the princes who ruled the Italian
towns, the most brilliant of whom was Lorenzo de' Medici,
a member of the Medici family that ruled Florence. Lorenzo
was a brilliant statesman and administrator, a patron of the
arts, a poet, and a critic of distinction.
Angelo Poliziano, called Politian, is generally considered
the outstanding poet of the period. His verse play Orfeo (1480?;
trans. 1880) ranks as the first important work in the Italian
drama, and his collections of lyrics are of a high order.
Politian is famous also for his scholarly editions and translations
of Greek texts.
In this period the Carolingian geste and the pastoral continued
to provide literary themes. Among the outstanding gestes was
the Orlando innamorato (Roland in Love, 1487) of Matteo Maria
Boiardo. The finest work in the pastoral genre was Arcadia
(1504), by Jacopo Sannazzaro, which attained Continental recognition.
In their preoccupation with worldly rather than religious
values Renaissance writers departed widely from the Christian
concepts of the Middle Ages. The popes themselves patronized
atheist and so-called pagan authors. Some of these writers,
especially the humanist Lorenzo Valla, whose bold exposure
of dubious papal documents almost cost him his life, mentioned
Christian authors only to find fault with them. The sermons
and polemical writings of the reformer Girolamo Savonarola,
who attempted to reverse this trend, provide graphic descriptions
of revived pagan tastes and practices. He instituted a theocratic
republic in Florence, but it lasted less than three years.
He was abandoned by the people and suffered martyrdom for
his defiance of Pope Alexander VI, who was famous for his
patronage of pagan culture.
16th Century
The Renaissance reached its fulfillment in the 16th century.
Italian, long eclipsed by the humanists' preoccupation with
Greek and Latin, rose to a new and conscious dignity as a
medium of serious literary expression. Pietro Bembo, who exercised
tremendous influence in the first half of the century, contributed
greatly to this development. In his treatises, especially
Le prose della volgar lingua (Prose in the Vernacular, 1525),
he established Boccaccio's writings as the model for prose.
His Rime (1530), imitative of Petrarch's verse, marked the
effective beginning of the movement known as Petrarchism.
Other writers of this period who made much more creative use
of the heritage of humanism were the statesman and political
philosopher Niccolò Machiavelli and the poet Lodovico
Ariosto.
Both from his experiences as a Florentine official and diplomat
and from his historical studies, Machiavelli arrived at the
realistic conception of statecraft with which his name has
since been linked. It is elaborated in Il principe (1532;
The Prince, 1640), an analysis of the basis and exercise of
political power that formed part of a larger work, his commentary
on The History of Rome by the Roman historian Livy. The premise
of The Prince is that "the preservation of the state
is the supreme law" transcending all other obligations.
Machiavelli's ideal prince anticipated the so-called benevolent
despots of later periods who consolidated state power and
deployed it in international affairs. In his thinking he departed
from medieval theocratic concepts and presaged modern scientific
political economy. Some historians conjecture that had his
views been realized Italy might have been united under a strong
ruler and spared the subsequent French and Spanish invasions.
Other works by Machiavelli include a treatise on the art of
war, a history of Florence, a biography (1520) of the Italian
soldier and political figure Castruccio Castracani, poems,
and a number of plays. His most famous play, La mandragola
(1524; The Mandrake, 1957), is a bitter, pessimistic analysis
of human instincts. In it he applied to social and religious
life the principle of analysis that he applied in The Prince
to political life.
The Florentine historian and statesman Francesco Guicciardini,
Machiavelli's friend, is best known for La storia d'Italia
(posthumously pub. 1561-64; The History of Italy, 1579), a
work outstanding for its objectivity and its astute discussion
of personalities and events. His Ricordi politici e civili
(Political and Civil Memoirs, 1857) is based on his thorough
experience as a political participant in the affairs of Florence.
The genius of Ariosto, the supreme poet of the 16th century,
found its best expression in the epic poem Orlando furioso
(The Mad Roland, 1516), a work of originality and power in
continuation of Boiardo's Orlando innamorato. The events related
in the poem concern the struggle of Charlemagne and his paladins
against the Saracens. Against this unifying background, the
epic weaves together adventure, romance, magic, heroism, villainy,
pathos, sensuality, and contemporary reality into a sophisticated,
ever varying narrative enlivened by humor and gentle irony.
The poem achieves the universal appeal of a masterpiece because
Ariosto's extraordinary imagination is based on a profound
understanding of human nature and psychology.
Two popular treatises on manners belong to this period of
cosmopolitan refinement and worldly accomplishment. Il cortegiano
(1528; The Book of the Courtier, 1561), by the diplomat Baldassare
Castiglione, is a discussion of etiquette, social problems,
and the advantages of intellectual pursuits. It served as
a handbook for the training of gentlemen on the Continent
and in England. Galateo (1558; trans. 1576), by the prelate
Giovanni della Casa, discusses etiquette from the point of
view of a broad understanding of human nature.
A violent reaction against this cult of fancy, beauty, and
refinement is found in the mock epic Baldus (1517) by Teofilo
Folengo. Written in the macaronic style, a comical burlesque
of scholarly Latin, it is an extremely and often vulgarly
funny parody of the world of chivalry and belles lettres and
satirizes many aspects of contemporary life. The French writer
François Rabelais found inspiration and material in
Baldus. Another rebel, of much greater contemporary prestige,
was Pietro Aretino, a talented playwright and pamphleteer.
His Ragionamenti (Reasonings, 1532-34) and the six volumes
of his letters (1537-57) best represent his scurrilous and
harsh wit.
The great artists of the period made several notable contributions
to literature. The sonnets of Michelangelo are impassioned
expressions of inner feelings and religious conviction. Leonardo's
treatises on art and science contain principles of analysis
that have profoundly influenced modern thinkers. The remarkable
autobiography of the sculptor Benvenuto Cellini ranks among
the greatest personal documents in all literature. The biographies
of famous painters, sculptors, and architects written by the
painter and architect Giorgio Vasari constitute an invaluable
source of art history.
The short narrative tale is best represented in the 16th
century by the Novelle (4 vol., 1554-73) of Matteo Bandello.
These tales, modeled on those of Boccaccio, formed the basis
of many European literary works, including probably Shakespeare's
play Romeo and Juliet.
The second half of the 16th century was dominated by the
Counter Reformation, which began with the Council of Trent
in 1545. The resulting wave of piety and submission to authority
replaced the frank enjoyment and exploration of life cultivated
by the humanists and their successors with a superficial regard
for morality and public welfare. The exuberant freedom of
expression and form characteristic of Ariosto was frowned
on, while such freedom of thought and utterance as Machiavelli's
became downright dangerous. In literature this change was
intensified by a new classicism, which relied on the authority
of Aristotle's rediscovered Poetics and spread later throughout
all Europe. In 1548 the Poetics was published in the original
with a Latin translation and commentary by Francesco Robortelli.
Many other versions as well as treatises on the Poetics followed,
the most important of which were the Poetics (1561) of Julius
Caesar Scaliger and the commentary (1570) by Lodovico Castelvetro,
in which the unities of time and place in drama were first
set forth.
Despite the prevailing climate of repression, one great lyric
and imaginative poet, Torquato Tasso, produced a masterpiece,
Gerusalemme liberata (1575; Jerusalem Delivered, 1884). This
beautiful epic treatment of the First Crusade is much shorter
and simpler and more unified and serious than the Orlando
furioso. It aroused so much pedantic criticism, however, that
the author later rewrote it, producing a work of inferior
quality. Another great mind and bolder spirit, the philosopher
Giordano Bruno, wrote dialogues attacking pedantry and authoritarianism
and daring to uphold views that were forbidden by the church.
He was burned at the stake as a heretic in Rome in 1600.
Early Modern Period
Italy, beginning in the late 15th century, was exhausted
by constant wars as rival Spanish, French, and Austrian rulers
made the country their battleground. At the same time, world
trade was shifting from the Mediterranean Sea to the Atlantic
Ocean, causing an economic decline in Italy. The once free-spirited,
cosmopolitan city-states offered little resistance to tyranny
and began to stagnate into provincial communities. In the
17th and 18th centuries most of the country was under Spanish
or Austrian rule.
Created By Encarta
|