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Researchers Exhume two Renaissance Intellectuals

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Bianca
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« on: July 27, 2007, 10:37:33 pm »



                                  RESEARCHERS EXHUME TWO RENAISSANCE INTELLECTUALS





                                         



 Fri Jul 27, 6:23 PM ET
 
MILAN, Italy - Scientists have exhumed the Renaissance-era remains of two intellectuals who belonged to Florence's powerful Medici family court, in an effort to learn more about their lives and deaths.

                 
 
The 15th century remains of humanist philosopher Giovanni Pico della Mirandola and writer Angelo Ambrogini — better known as Poliziano — were exhumed Thursday from Florence's St. Mark's Basilica. The men, who were possibly lovers, each died in 1494, and the exact cause of their deaths is unknown.

"Bodies are an archive of information surrounding the life and death of a person. With today's technology, we can clear up various doubts that have been passed down for centuries and we can provide answers that could not been discovered years ago," said Giorgio Gruppioni, a University of Bologna anthropology professor.

A classical scholar, Pico reconciled Christianity with the ideas of ancient Greek thinkers like Plato. While admired by Lorenzo de' Medici, the great art patron who ruled Florence during its golden age in the 15th century, Pico's ideas angered church authorities, who arrested him and forced him to recant some of his theses.
                                                             
Both Pico and Poliziano tutored Lorenzo's son Giovanni, who as Pope Leo X helped make Rome a cultural center of Renaissance Europe.

Researchers hope to resolve the mystery surrounding Pico's death by studying his bones and remaining tissue and by running a DNA analysis, Gruppioni said. He was supposedly poisoned, but that was never confirmed.

A friend and tutor of Lorenzo de' Medici, Poliziano pioneered Italian vernacular poetry and playwriting when Latin reigned.

Poliziano is believed to have been one of Pico's lovers and a possible victim of a syphilis outbreak that ravaged Europe near the end of the 15th century, Gruppioni said.

"We will either point out the presence of poison or the pathological agent that causes syphilis," Gruppioni said.

The project's goals go beyond untangling the mystery of the men's deaths.

"We hope to learn more about what these figures really looked like, and reconstruct their faces," Gruppioni said. "We have already noticed that the structure of Pico's skeleton shows he had quite a robust figure, whereas most paintings show a more slender, feminine stature."
Gruppioni also has worked on the exhumation of Matteo Maria Boiardo, another great Florentine poet and man of letters of the 15th century who was Pico's cousin.

A team of Italian and American scientists several years ago exhumed the remains of 49 members of the Medici clan, the Renaissance merchant family that ruled Tuscany, to study what they ate and what illnesses they suffered.
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« Reply #1 on: July 27, 2007, 11:28:06 pm »






                       C O U N T   G I O V A N N I   P I C O   D E L L A   M I R A N D O L A




The Italian philosopher and humanist Conte Giovanni Pico della Mirandola (1463-1494) was a brilliant exemplar of the Renaissance ideal of man.

The youngest son of a princely Lombard house, Giovanni Pico della Mirandola received a Church benefice when he was 10 years old. However, Pico quickly surpassed the routine expectation of a career in Church or state. At the University of Padua from 1480 to 1482, when the city and its university enjoyed the liberal patronage of Venice, welcomed Eastern scholars, and offered one of Europe's richest civic cultures, he studied Aristotelianism and Hebrew and Arabic religion, philosophy, and science. By 1487 his travels and education, broadened to include Florence and Paris, had steeped Pico in a unique variety of languages and traditions. Committed to no exclusive source of wisdom and disappointed by the philosophic weakness of the Italian humanists' study of classical culture, he sought a core of truth common to this vast knowledge.

The young man's first and most famous venture was a challenge to Europe's scholars for public disputation at Rome in 1487. Pico prepared to defend 900 conclusiones - 402 drawn from other philosophers (most heavily from scholastic, Platonic, and Arabic thinkers) and 498 his own. However, a papal commission, suspicious of such diversity, condemned 13 of Pico's theses. The assembly was canceled, and he fled to Paris, suffering brief imprisonment before settling in Florence late in 1487. His writings for the disputation were banned until 1493.

At Florence, Pico joined Lorenzo de' Medici's Platonic Academy in its effort to formulate a doctrine of the soul that would reconcile Platonic and Christian beliefs. Pico's ambition, which many critics attribute to youthful confusion, can be measured by his plan to harmonize Plato and Aristotle and to link their philosophies with revelations proclaimed by the major religions. Preparatory treatises included the Heptaplus of 1489, a commentary on Genesis stressing its correspondence with sacred Jewish texts, and the work De ente et uno of 1492, on the nature of God and creation.

Pico gradually renounced Medicean splendor, embraced the piety of the reforming friar Girolamo Savonarola, and began writing in defense of the Church. Pico's philanthropy kept pace with his purchase of manuscripts, as he built one of Europe's great private scholarly collections. He died of fever on Nov. 17, 1494, as French soldiers occupied Florence.

Described as being "of feature and shape seemly and beauteous, " Pico combined physique, intellect, and spirituality in a way that captivated both the lovers of virtù and Christian reformers. In his De hominis dignitate, written to introduce his abortive Roman congress, Pico had God endow Adam with "what abode, what form, and what functions thou thyself shalt desire … so that with freedom of choice and with honor, thou mayest fashion thyself." This early tract asserted the philosophy that Pico's later and more complex works stressed: the active intellect can discern right from wrong, truth from illusion, and is free to guide the soul, indeed to bind all men, to union with a common creator. Pico's late work Disputationes in astrologiam, an unfinished attack on astrology, rejected occult thought which subordinated human will to deterministic forces.

Further Reading

Many works are collected and translated by Paul Miller and others in Pico's On the Dignity of Man; On Being and the One; Heptaplus (1965). For samples of the extensive scholarly disputes about Pico see Avery Dulles, Princeps Concordiae: Pico della Mirandola and the Scholastic Tradition (1941), which has a critical bibliography; Eugenio Garin, Italian Humanism: Philosophy and Civic Life in the Renaissance (1952; trans. 1965); Ernst Cassirer, The Individual and the Cosmos in Renaissance Philosophy (1963); and Paul Oskar Kresteller's three works: Renaissance Thought: The Classic, Scholastic and Humanistic Strains (1955; rev. ed. 1961), Eight Philosophers of the Italian Renaissance (1964), and his edition of Renaissance Essays (1968), which contains an essay by Cassirer on Pico.



(born Feb. 24, 1463, Mirandola, duchy of Ferrara — died Nov. 17, 1494, Florence)

http://images.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http://content.answers.com/main/content/wp/en-commons/thumb/1/11/250px-Pico_della_mirandola.jpg&imgrefurl=http://www.answers.com/topic/giovanni-pico-della-mirandola&h=339&w=250&sz=25&hl=en&start=0&sig2=_bfxvkG0f0NnTXBhxIZDMA&tbnid=swxs0OzpxQj1PM:&tbnh=119&tbnw=88&ei=8sOqRsOgAomYeJDltdoF&prev=/images%3Fq%3Dpico%2Bdella%2Bmirandola%26gbv%3D2%26svnum%3D10%26hl%3Den%26sa%3DG
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« Reply #2 on: July 27, 2007, 11:36:02 pm »






                                      A N G E L O   A M B R O G I N I   -   "P O L I Z I A N O"





1454 - 1494

Italian in full ANGELO POLIZIANO, also called ANGELO AMBROGINI (b. July 14, 1454, Montepulciano, Tuscany [Italy]--d. Sept. 28/29, 1494, Florence), Italian poet and humanist, the friend and protégé of Lorenzo de' Medici, and one of the foremost classical scholars of the Renaissance. He was equally fluent in Greek, Italian, and Latin and was equally talented in poetry, philosophy and philology.

The murder of Poliziano's father in May 1464 left the family poverty-stricken, and not later than 1469 Poliziano was sent to Florence. He started to write Latin and Greek epigrams and attracted the attention of Lorenzo de' Medici, to whom Poliziano dedicated the first two books of his Latin translation of the Iliad. In about 1473 he entered the Medici household and was able to study in the Medici library until, in 1475, he was entrusted with the education of Lorenzo's eldest son, Piero, then aged three. In 1477 he was given as a benefice the priory of San Paolo. His translation of the Iliad, books ii-v, into Latin hexameters (1470-75) brought him his first renown. Between 1473 and 1478 he produced Latin and Greek verses that are among the best examples of humanist poetry: they include elegies, odes, and epigrams (of particular merit are the elegies In violas ["In Violets"] and In Lalagen and the ode In puellam suam ["In Regard to One's Daughters"]). To the same period belong the strange and poetically experimental Sylva in scabiem (1475; "Trees with Mildew"), in which he describes realistically the symptoms of scabies.

His poetic masterpiece of this period is, however, a vernacular poem in ottava rima, Stanze cominciate per la giostra del Magnifico Giuliano de' Medici ("Stanzas Begun for the Tournament of the Magnificent Giuliano de' Medici"), composed between 1475 and 1478, which is one of the great works of Italian literature. In it he was able to synthesize the grandeur of classical literature with the spontaneity of Florentine vernacular poetry. The poem describes the love of "Julio" (i.e., Giuliano de' Medici), for "Simonetta" (i.e., Simonetta Cattaneo; d. 1476) by means of a poetic transfiguration in which beauty is glorified according to humanist ideals. Stylistically it is influenced by Latin epic and encomiastic poems and reveals the author's taste for refined poetry. It was interrupted at book ii, stanza 46, probably because of Giuliano's death in 1478.

Poliziano was, with Lorenzo de' Medici, one of those mainly responsible for the revaluation of vernacular literature. It is generally believed that it was he who wrote the dedicatory letter, tracing the history of vernacular poetry and warmly defending it, that accompanied the so-called Raccolta Aragonese ("The Aragon Collection"), a collection of Tuscan verse sent by Lorenzo de' Medici to Federico d'Aragona in about 1477.

Poliziano was with Lorenzo and Giuliano when the latter was killed by the Pazzi on April 26, 1478; on this episode he wrote the dramatic report Pactianae coniurationis commentarium (1478). In May 1479, as a result of a quarrel with Lorenzo's wife, Clarice Orsini, he was expelled from the Medici household. In December, instead of accompanying Lorenzo on a difficult diplomatic mission to Naples, he undertook a series of journeys in northern Italy. After visiting Venice and Verona he was attracted to Mantua, where, in the Gonzaga court, he found a new patron in Cardinal Francesco Gonzaga. It was for a court occasion that he wrote in Mantua Orfeo (1480; "Orpheus"), a short dramatic composition in the vernacular, based on the myth of Orpheus and Eurydice and inspired by the same humanist ideal of beauty that pervades his Stanze. Orfeo is less refined than the Stanze, but it nevertheless reveals the author's poetic genius. During his stay in Mantua, Poliziano repeatedly wrote to Lorenzo asking to be recalled to Florence, and in August 1480 he was at last invited to return and was again entrusted with Piero's education. Thanks to Lorenzo he was appointed to the Florentine chair of Latin and Greek (autumn 1480) but was not readmitted to the Medici household and went to live outside of Florence.

At the Florentine university he gave four inaugural lectures in verse, known collectively as the Sylvae ("The Trees"): Manto (1482; "The Cloak"), on Virgil's poetry; Rusticus (1483; "The Countryside"), on the bucolic poems of Hesiod and Virgil; Ambra (1485; "Amber"), on Homer; and Nutricia (1486; "The Foster Mother"), on the different genres of Greek and Latin literature.

In 1488 he took part in a diplomatic mission to Pope Innocent VIII; and in 1491 he traveled to Bologna, Ferrara, Padua, and Venice to trace manuscripts for the Medici library. Otherwise he spent the last years of his life in Florence. His writings of this last period include a Latin translation of Epictetus' Manual (1479); a collection of Detti piacevoli (witty sentences), composed in the vernacular between 1477 and 1479; Greek epigrams; a number of vernacular canzoni a ballo ("songs for dancing") and rispetti ("regards"), which show his taste for popular poetry; and Latin letters on problems of style and literature. His most important work on classical philology is the Miscellanea (1489), two collections, each consisting of about 100 notes (centuria) on classical texts: these and other works laid the foundations for subsequent scholarly studies in classical philology.


http://natey.com/poliziano/history.html
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« Reply #3 on: July 27, 2007, 11:51:58 pm »









            P O P E   L E O   X   -   Born G I O V A N N I   D I   L O R E N Z O   D E'   M E D I C I



 
 
Birth name Giovanni di Lorenzo de' Medici
Papacy began March 9, 1513
Papacy ended December 1, 1521
Predecessor Julius II
Successor Adrian VI
Born December 11, 1475
Florence, Italy
Died December 1, 1521 (age 45)
Rome, Italy



Pope Leo X, born Giovanni di Lorenzo de' Medici (11 December 1475 – 1 December 1521) was Pope from 1513 to his death. He is known primarily for his papal bull against Martin Luther and subsequent failure to stem the Protestant Reformation, which began during his reign when Martin Luther (1483–1546) published the 95 Theses and nailed them to the door of the Castle Church in Wittenberg. He was the second son of Lorenzo de' Medici, the most famous ruler of the Florentine Republic, and Clarice Orsini. His cousin, Giulio di Giuliano de' Medici, would become Pope Clement VII (1523–34). The remark "It has served us well, this myth of Christ" is often attributed to him, despite the fact that it first appears in John Bale's fiercely antipapal treatise The Pageant of the Popes.


Early career

Giovanni de' Medici was born in Florence, Italy.

He was destined from his birth for the church, he received the tonsure at the age of six and was soon loaded with rich benefices and preferments. His father prevailed on Innocent VIII to name him cardinal-deacon of Santa Maria in Domnica in March 1489, although he was not allowed to wear the insignia or share in the deliberations of the college until three years later. Meanwhile he received a careful education at Lorenzo's brilliant humanistic court under such men as Angelo Poliziano, Pico della Mirandola, Marsilio Ficino and Bernardo Dovizio Bibbiena. From 1489 to 1491 he studied theology and canon law at Pisa under Filippo Decio and Bartolomeo Sozzini.

On 23 March 1492 he was formally admitted into the sacred college and took up his residence at Rome, receiving a letter of advice from his father which ranks among the wisest of its kind. The death of Lorenzo on the following April 8, however, called the seventeen-year-old cardinal to Florence. He participated in the conclave of 1492 which followed the death of Innocent VIII, and opposed the election of Cardinal Borgia. He made his home with his elder brother Piero at Florence throughout the agitation of Savonarola and the invasion of Charles VIII of France, until the uprising of the Florentines and the expulsion of the Medici in November 1494. While Piero found refuge at Venice and Urbino, Cardinal Giovanni travelled in Germany, in the Netherlands and in France.

In May 1500 he returned to Rome, where he was received with outward cordiality by Alexander VI, and where he lived for several years immersed in art and literature. In 1503 he welcomed the accession of Julius II to the pontificate; the death of Piero de' Medici in the same year made Giovanni head of his family. On 1 October 1511 he was appointed papal legate of Bologna and the Romagna, and when the Florentine republic declared in favour of the schismatic Pisans Julius II sent him against his native city at the head of the papal army. This and other attempts to regain political control of Florence were frustrated, until a bloodless revolution permitted the return of the Medici. Giovanni's younger brother Giuliano was placed at the head of the republic, but the cardinal actually managed the government.


Election to Papacy
 
Pope Leo X with his cardinal- nephew Giulio de' Medici (left, future Pope Clement VII)Julius II died in February 1513, and the conclave, after a stormy seven-day session, united on Cardinal de' Medici as the candidate of the younger cardinals. He was ordained to the priesthood on 15 March, consecrated bishop on 17, and enthroned with the name of Leo X on 19. There is no evidence of simony in the conclave, and Leo's election was hailed with delight by at least some of the Romans on account of his reputation in Rome for liberality, kindliness and love of peace. Following the example of many of his predecessors, he promptly repudiated his election "capitulation" as an infringement on the divinely bestowed prerogatives of the Holy See.

Many problems confronted Leo X on his accession. These included the need to preserve the papal conquests which he had inherited from Alexander VI and Julius II; the minimization of foreign influence, whether French, Spanish or German, in Italy; the need to put an end to the Pisan schism and settle the other troubles relating to the French invasion; the restoration of the French Church to Catholic unity, by abolishing the pragmatic sanction of Bourges, and bringing to a successful close the Lateran council convoked by his predecessor. He had also to face the victorious advance of the Turks as well as the disagreeable wranglings of German humanists. Other problems connected with his family interests served to complicate the situation and eventually to prevent the successful consummation of many of his plans.


Role in Italian Wars

At the very time of Leo's accession Louis XII of France, in alliance with Venice, was making a determined effort to regain the duchy of Milan, and the pope, after fruitless endeavours to maintain peace, joined the league of Mechlin on 5 April 1513 with the emperor Maximilian I, Ferdinand I of Spain and Henry VIII of England. The French and Venetians were at first successful, but were defeated in June at the Battle of Novara. The Venetians continued the struggle until October. On 9 December the fifth Lateran council, which had been reopened by Leo in April, ratified the peace with Louis XII and officially registered the conclusion of the Pisan schism.

While the council was engaged in planning a crusade and in considering the reform of the clergy, a new crisis occurred between the pope and the new king of France, Francis I, an enthusiastic young prince, dominated by the ambition of recovering Milan and the Kingdom of Naples. Leo at once formed a new league with the emperor and the king of Spain, and to ensure English support made Thomas Wolsey a cardinal. Francis entered Italy in August and on 14 September won the battle of Marignano. The pope in October signed an agreement binding him to withdraw his troops from Parma and Piacenza, which had been previously gained at the expense of the duchy of Milan, on condition of French protection at Rome and Florence. The king of Spain wrote to his ambassador at Rome "that His Holiness had hitherto played a double game and that all his zeal to drive the French from Italy had been only a mask"; this reproach seemed to receive some confirmation when Leo X held a secret conference with Francis at Bologna in December 1515. The ostensible subjects under consideration were the establishment of peace between France, Venice and the Empire, with a view to an expedition against the Turks, and the ecclesiastical affairs of France. Precisely what was arranged is unknown. During these two or three years of incessant political intrigue and warfare it was not to be expected that the Lateran council should accomplish much. Its three main objectives, the peace of Christendom, the crusade (against the Turks), and the reform of the church, could be secured only by general agreement among the powers, and either Leo or the council, or both, failed to secure such agreement. Its most important achievements were the registration at its eleventh sitting (9 December 1516) of the abolition of the pragmatic sanction, which the popes since Pius II had unanimously condemned, and the confirmation of the concordat between Leo X and Francis I, which was destined to regulate the relations between the French Church and the Holy See until the Revolution. Leo closed the council on 16 March 1517. It had ended the Pisan schism, ratified the censorship of books introduced by Alexander VI and imposed tithes for a war against the Turks. It raised no voice against the primacy of the pope.


War of Urbino

The year which marked the close of the Lateran council was also signalized by Leo's war against the duke of Urbino Francesco Maria I della Rovere. The pope was proud of his family and had practised nepotism from the outset. His cousin Giulio, who subsequently became pope as Clement VII, he had made the most influential man in the curia, naming him archbishop of Florence, cardinal and vice-chancellor of the Holy See. Leo had intended his younger brother Giuliano and his nephew Lorenzo for brilliant secular careers. He had named them Roman patricians; the latter he had placed in charge of Florence; the former, for whom he planned to carve out a kingdom in central Italy of Parma, Piacenza, Ferrara and Urbino, he had taken with himself to Rome and married to Filiberta of Savoy. The death of Giuliano in March 1516, however, caused the pope to transfer his ambitions to Lorenzo. At the very time (December 1516) that peace between France, Spain, Venice and the Empire seemed to give some promise of a Christendom united against the Turks, Leo was preparing an enterprise as unscrupulous as any of the similar exploits of Cesare Borgia. He obtained 150,000 ducats towards the expenses of the expedition from Henry VIII of England, in return for which he entered the imperial league of Spain and England against France.

The war lasted from February to September 1517 and ended with the expulsion of the duke and the triumph of Lorenzo; but it revived the allegedly nefarious policy of Alexander VI, increased brigandage and anarchy in the Papal States, hindered the preparations for a crusade and wrecked the papal finances. Francesco Guicciardini reckoned the cost of the war to Leo at the prodigious sum of 800,000 ducats. The new duke of Urbino was the Lorenzo de' Medici to whom Machiavelli addressed The Prince. His marriage in March 1518 was arranged by the pope with Madeleine la Tour d'Auvergne, a royal princess of France, whose daughter was the Catherine de' Medici celebrated in French history.

The war of Urbino was further marked by a crisis in the relations between pope and cardinals. The sacred college had allegedly grown especially worldly and troublesome since the time of Sixtus IV, and Leo took advantage of a plot of several of its members to poison him, not only to inflict exemplary punishments by executing one and imprisoning several others, but also to make a radical change in the college. On 3 July 1517 he published the names of thirty-one new cardinals, a number almost unprecedented in the history of the papacy. Among the nominations were notables such as Lorenzo Campeggio, Giambattista Pallavicini, Adrian of Utrecht (the future Pope Adrian VI), Thomas Cajetan, Cristoforo Numai and Egidio Canisio. The naming of seven members of prominent Roman families, however, reversed the policy of his predecessor which had kept the political factions of the city out of the curia. Other promotions were for political or family considerations or to secure money for the war against Urbino. The pope was accused of having exaggerated the conspiracy of the cardinals for purposes of financial gain, but most of such accusations appear to be unsubstantiated.

Leo, meanwhile, felt the need of staying the advance of the warlike Ottoman sultan, Selim I, who was threatening western Europe, and made elaborate plans for a crusade. A truce was to be proclaimed throughout Christendom; the pope was to be the arbiter of disputes; the emperor and the king of France were to lead the army; England, Spain and Portugal were to furnish the fleet; and the combined forces were to be directed against Constantinople. Papal diplomacy in the interests of peace failed, however; Cardinal Wolsey made England, not the pope, the arbiter between France and the Empire; and much of the money collected for the crusade from tithes and indulgences was spent in other ways. In 1519 Hungary concluded a three years' truce with Selim I, but the succeeding sultan, Suleyman the Magnificent, renewed the war in June 1521 and on 28 August captured the citadel of Belgrade. The pope was greatly alarmed, and although he was then involved in war with France he sent about 30,000 ducats to the Hungarians. Leo treated the Uniate Greeks with great loyalty, and by bull of 18 May 1521 forbade Latin clergy to celebrate mass in Greek churches and Latin bishops to ordain Greek clergy.

These provisions were later strengthened by Clement VII and Paul III and went far to settle the chronic disputes between the Latins and Uniate Greeks.


Reformation and last years

Leo was disturbed throughout his pontificate by alleged heresy and schisms, especially the kulturkampf touched off by Martin Luther.


Schism between Reuchlin and Pfefferkorn regarding the banning of Hebrew books

The dispute between Johann Reuchlin and Johannes Pfefferkorn relative to the Talmud and other Jewish books, as well as censorship of such books, was referred to the pope in September 1513. He in turn referred it to the bishops of Spires and Worms, who gave decision in March 1514 in favour of Reuchlin. After the appeal of the inquisitor-general, Hochstraten, and the appearance of the Epistolae obscurorum virorum, however, Leo annulled the decision (June 1520) and imposed silence on Reuchlin. In the end he allowed the Talmud to be printed.

 
Bulla Contra errores Martini Lutheri of 1521.
 The Protestant Schism
Main article: Protestant Reformation

Against the misconduct from some servants of the church, the Augustinian monk Martin Luther posted (31 October 1517) his famous ninety-five theses on the church door at Wittenberg, which successively escalated to a widespread revolt against the church. Although Leo did not fully comprehend the import of the movement, he directed (3 February 1518) the vicar-general of the Augustinians to impose silence on the monks. On 30 May Luther sent an explanation of his theses to the pope; on 7 August he was summoned to appear at Rome. An arrangement was effected, however, whereby that summons was cancelled, and Luther went to Augsburg in October 1518 to meet the papal legate, Cardinal Cajetan, who was attending the imperial diet convened by the emperor Maximilian to impose the tithes for the Turkish war and to elect a king of the Romans; but neither the arguments of the educated cardinal, nor the dogmatic papal bull of the 9th of November requiring all Christians to believe in the pope's power to grant indulgences, moved Luther to retract. A year of fruitless negotiation followed, during which controversy over the pamphlets of the reformer set all Germany on fire. A papal bull of 15 June 1520, which condemned forty-one propositions extracted from Luther's teachings, was taken to Germany by Eck in his capacity of apostolic nuncio, published by him and the legates Alexander and Caracciolo, and burned by Luther on 10 December at Wittenberg. Leo then formally excommunicated Luther by bull of the 3 January 1521; in a brief the Pope also directed the emperor to take energetic measures against heresy. On 26 May 1521 the emperor signed the edict of the diet of Worms, which placed Luther under the ban of the Empire; on 21 of the same month Henry VIII of England (who was later to split from Catholicism himself) sent to Leo his book against Luther on the seven sacraments. The pope, after careful consideration, conferred on the king of England the title "Defender of the Faith" by bull of 11 October 1521. Neither the imperial edict nor the work of Henry VIII halted the Lutheran movement, and Luther himself, safe in the solitude of the Wartburg, survived Leo X.

It was under Leo X also that the Protestant movement emerged in Scandinavia. The pope had repeatedly used the rich northern benefices to reward members of the Roman curia, and towards the close of the year 1516 he sent the grasping and impolitic Arcimboldi as papal nuncio to Denmark to collect money for St Peter's. King Christian II took advantage of the growing dissatisfaction on the part of the native clergy toward the papal government, and of Arcimboldi's interference in the Swedish revolt, in order to expel the nuncio and summon (1520) Lutheran theologians to Copenhagen. Christian approved a plan by which a formal state church should be established in Denmark, all appeals to Rome should be abolished, and the king and diet should have final jurisdiction in ecclesiastical causes. Leo sent a new nuncio to Copenhagen (1521) in the person of the Minorite Francesco de Potentia, who readily absolved the king and received the rich bishopric of Skara. The pope or his legate, however, took no steps to remove abuses or otherwise reform the Scandinavian churches. (Some Scandinavian countries still have Protestant state churches.)


Italian politics
 
Statue of Leo X in the church of Santa Maria in Aracoeli, Rome.That Leo did not do more to check the anti-papal rebellion in Germany and Scandinavia is to be partially explained by the political complications of the time, and by his own preoccupation with papal and Medicean politics in Italy. The death of the emperor Maximilian in 1519 had seriously affected the situation. Leo vacillated between the powerful candidates for the succession, allowing it to appear at first that he favoured Francis I while really working for the election of some minor German prince. He finally accepted Charles V of Spain as inevitable; and the election of Charles (28 June 1519) revealed Leo's desertion of his French alliance, a step facilitated by the death at about the same time of Lorenzo de' Medici and his French wife.

Leo was now anxious to unite Ferrara, Parma and Piacenza to the States of the Church. An attempt late in 1519 to seize Ferrara failed, and the pope recognized the need of foreign aid. In May 1521 a treaty of alliance was signed at Rome between him and the emperor. Milan and Genoa were to be taken from France and restored to the Empire, and Parma and Piacenza were to be given to the Church on the expulsion of the French. The expense of enlisting 10,000 Swiss was to be borne equally by pope and emperor. Charles took Florence and the Medici family under his protection and promised to punish all enemies of the Catholic faith. Leo agreed to invest Charles with Naples, to crown him emperor, and to aid in a war against Venice. It was provided that England and the Swiss might join the league. Henry VIII announced his adherence in August. Francis I had already begun war with Charles in Navarre, and in Italy, too, the French made the first hostile movement (23 June 1521). Leo at once announced that he would excommunicate the king of France and release his subjects from their allegiance unless Francis laid down his arms and surrendered Parma and Piacenza. The pope lived to hear the joyful news of the capture of Milan from the French and of the occupation by papal troops of the long-coveted provinces (November 1521).


Death

Having fallen ill of malaria, Leo X died on 1 December 1521, so suddenly that the last sacraments could not be administered; but the contemporary suspicions of poison were unfounded. He was buried in Santa Maria sopra Minerva.

Leo was followed as Pope by Adrian VI.

Several minor events of Leo's pontificate are worthy of mention. He was particularly friendly with King Manuel I of Portugal on account of the latter's missionary enterprises in Asia and Africa. His concordat with Florence (1516) guaranteed the free election of the clergy in that city. His constitution of 1 March 1519 condemned the king of Spain's claim to refuse the publication of papal bulls. He maintained close relations with Poland because of the Turkish advance and the Polish contest with the Teutonic Knights. His bull of 1 July 1519, which regulated the discipline of the Polish Church, was later transformed into a concordat by Clement VII. Leo showed special favours to the Jews and permitted them to erect a Hebrew printing-press at Rome. He approved the formation of the Oratory of Divine Love, a group of pious men at Rome which later became the Theatine Order, and he canonized Francis of Paola.


Behavior as Pope and patron of arts
 
Leo X's pet elephant, HannoWhen he became Pope, Leo X is reported to have said to his brother Giuliano: "Since God has given us the papacy, let us enjoy it." The Venetian ambassador who related this of him was not unbiased, nor was he in Rome at the time, nevertheless the phrase illustrates fairly the Pope's pleasure-loving nature and the lack of seriousness that characterized him. And enjoy he did, traveling around Rome at the head of a lavish parade featuring panthers, jesters, and Hanno, a white elephant.

“ Under his pontificate, Christianity assumed a pagan character, which, passing from art into manners, gives to this epoch a strange complexion. Crimes for the moment disappeared, to give place to vices; but to charming vices, vices in good taste, such as those indulged in by Alcibiades and sung by Catullus. Alexandre Dumas, père ”

Leo X was also lavish in charity: retirement homes, hospitals, convents, discharged soldiers, pilgrims, poor students, exiles, cripples, the sick, and the unfortunate of every description were generously remembered, and more than 6,000 ducats were annually distributed in alms.

His extravagance offended not only people like Martin Luther, but also some cardinals, who, led by Alfonso Petrucci of Siena, plotted an assassination attempt. Eventually, Pope Leo found out who these people were, and had them followed. The conspirators died of "food poisoning." Some people argue that Leo X and his followers simply concocted the assassination charges in a moneymaking scheme to collect fines from the various wealthy cardinals Leo X detested.

As patron of learning Leo X deserves a prominent place among the popes. He raised the church to a high rank as the friend of whatever seemed to extend knowledge or to refine and embellish life. He made the capital of Christendom the center of culture. While yet a cardinal, he had restored the church of Santa Maria in Domnica after Raphael's designs; and as pope he had San Giovanni dei Fiorentini, on the Via Giulia, built, after designs by Jacopo Sansovino and pressed forward the work on St Peter's and the Vatican under Raphael and Agostino Chigi.

His constitution of 5 November 1513 reformed the Roman university, which had been neglected by Julius II. He restored all its faculties, gave larger salaries to the professors, and summoned distinguished teachers from afar; and, although it never attained to the importance of Padua or Bologna, it nevertheless possessed in 1514 a faculty (with a good reputation) of eighty-eight professors. Leo called Theodore Lascaris to Rome to give instruction in Greek, and established a Greek printing-press from which the first Greek book printed at Rome appeared in 1515. He made Raphael custodian of the classical antiquities of Rome and the vicinity. The distinguished Latinists Pietro Bembo and Jacopo Sadoleto were papal secretaries, as well as the famous poet Bernardo Accolti. Other poets such as Marco Girolamo Vida, Gian Giorgio Trissino and Bibbiena, writers of novelle like Matteo Bandello, and a hundred other literati of the time were bishops, or papal scriptors or abbreviators, or in other papal employ.

Leo's lively interest in art and literature, to say nothing of his natural liberality, his alleged nepotism, his political ambitions and necessities, and his immoderate personal luxury, exhausted within two years the hard savings of Julius II, and precipitated a financial crisis from which he never emerged and which was a direct cause of most of what, from a papal point of view, were calamities of his pontificate. He created many new offices and sold them, a move seen by later Catholics as being "shameless". He sold cardinals' hats. He sold membership in the "Knights of Peter". He borrowed large sums from bankers, curials, princes and Jews. The Venetian ambassador Gradenigo estimated the paying number of offices on Leo's death at 2,150, with a capital value of nearly 3,000,000 ducats and a yearly income of 328,000 ducats. Marino Giorgi reckoned the ordinary income of the pope for the year 1517 at about 580,000 ducats, of which 420,000 came from the States of the Church, 100,000 from annates, and 60,000 from the composition tax instituted by Sixtus IV. These sums, together with the considerable amounts accruing from indulgences, jubilees, and special fees, vanished as quickly as they were received. Then the pope resorted to pawning palace furniture, table plate, jewels, even statues of the apostles. Several banking firms and many individual creditors were ruined by the death of the pope.

In the past many conflicting estimates were made of the character and achievements of the pope during whose pontificate Protestantism first took form. More recent studies have served to produce a reportedly fairer and more honest opinion of Leo X. A report of the Venetian ambassador Marino Giorgi bearing date of March 1517 indicates some of his predominant characteristics:

“ The pope is a good-natured and extremely free-hearted man, who avoids every difficult situation and above all wants peace; he would not undertake a war himself unless his own personal interests were involved; he loves learning; of canon law and literature he possesses remarkable knowledge; he is, moreover, a very excellent musician. ”


http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=POPE+LEO+X&btnG=Search
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« Reply #4 on: July 28, 2007, 12:00:44 am »







                M A T T E O   M A R I A   B O I A R D O   -   C O U N T   O F   S C A N D I A N O




Matteo Maria Boiardo (c. 1434 – December 20, 1494), was an Italian Renaissance poet.

Boiardo was born at, or near, Scandiano (today's province of Reggio Emilia), the son of Giovanni di Feltrino and Lucia Strossi, he was of noble lineage, ranking as Count of Scandiano, with seignorial power over Arceto, Casalgrande, Gesso, and Torricella. Boiardo was an ideal example of a gifted and accomplished courtier possessing at the same time a manly heart and deep humanistic learning.

Up to the year of his marriage to Taddea Gonzaga, the daughter of the Count of Novellara (1472), he had received many marks of favour from Borso d'Este, duke of Ferrara, having been sent to meet Frederick III (1469), and afterwards visiting Pope Paul II (1471), in the train of Borso. In 1473 he joined the retinue which escorted Eleonora of Aragon, the daughter of Ferdinand I, to meet her spouse, Ercole, at Ferrara. Five years later he was invested with the governorship of Reggio, an office which he filled with noted success till his death, except for an interval (1481-86) during which he was governor of Modena.

In his youth Boiardo had been a successful imitator of Petrarca's love poems.

More serious attempts follow with the Istoria Imperiale, some adaptations of Nepos, Apuleius, Herodotus, Xenophon, etc., and his Eclogues.

Follows also a comedy, Il Timone (1487?).

He is most remembered for the grandiose poem of chivalry and romance "L'Orlando innamorato".

Rime, another work (1499), was nearly forgotten when English-Italian librarian Antonio Panizzi published it in 1835.

At an unclear time Boiardo wrote a poem about a selfcomposed, unusual Tarot game, which is of relevance in the Tarot research of 15th century and in the question, how Tarot developed. A deck, which was produced according to the poem (likely short after Boiardo's death) has survived partly.


 External links

Works by Matteo Maria Boiardo at Project Gutenberg
Boiardo's influence on the early Tarot game inclusive an extensive time line of Boiardo's life



Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matteo_Maria_Boiardo"
« Last Edit: July 28, 2007, 12:13:08 am by Bianca2001 » Report Spam   Logged

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« Reply #5 on: July 28, 2007, 12:06:35 am »






                           COUNT MATTEO MARIA BOIARDO AND HIS TAROCCHI POEM





Count Matteo Maria Boiardo wrote at an unclear date between ca. 1460 - 1494 a poem about Trionfi cards, which are presented by him in a 4x14 + 22 - structure.

It was one of the oldest references to a deck with 22 trumps, other earlier documents do suggest, that Trionfi cards were handled before in 5x13 (Lucca-Tarocchi), 5x14 (Bembo-14, Ferrarese documents of 1441 and 1457) or 5x16-structure (Cary-Yale). From this it might be suspected, that Count Boiardo possibly invented this structure, which finally developed to be the standard representation of the

Tarocchi- or Tarot-game.

The number 22 inside the game of Tarot much later caused the suggestions of Count de Mellet and Eliphas Levi, who claimed, that Tarot developed in context to kabbalistic ideas in relation to the 22 letters of the Hebrew alphabet. This suggestions did take a dominant influence upon modern Tarot, especially as specific astrological ideas connected to the Hebrew alphabet in the manner of the prekabbalistic Sepher Yetzirah were now related to individual Tarot trumps.

Here we've the question, if Boiardo (in the case, that he really was the first, who used this scheme for a Trionfi deck), was influenced by Hebrew contemporaries to choose just the number 22 for his trumps.




"Four passions of the lady soul
they have forty cards in this game ...
... Love, Hope, Jealousy, and Fear
are the passions, and a tercet have the cards,
in order not to leave, who plays, in error.




In this engaging glimpse of the Boiardo Tarocchi poem translated by Jane Cocker, we also touch on one of the early turns where poetry and playing cards meet in the courtly society of 15th century. The author, Matteo Maria Boiardo, Count of Scandiano, is usually celebrated by historical papers for his vernacular Tuscan epic, Bordering on Love. It is fitting to open on his light narrative, done in vernacular Tuscan, of poetic courtly love and court figures, for it was his natural self to be more of a poet than a prudent politician - but he was both in service to the D'Este. Indeed, the four human passions also play a strong part of his life from his own family, especially jealousy and fear from the less favored. We will allude to his work in context, but our focus is more a time-line of Boiardo's placement with the ruling family of Ferrara, the D'Estensi. We will begin with the grandfather, Feltrino Boiardo, who was a companion on Crusades to Niccolo I D'Este, then touch on influences to the growing MM Boiardo, and major events of his adult years, associated with Duke Borso and more extensively with the successor to the Ducal Crown, Ercole. Over time, topics might be developed by members of the working group into essay format.



(The contents of the page are done by the cooperation of the members of the Boiardo group: Jane Cocker, Mari Hoshizaki, Raimondo Luberti, Ross Gregory Caldwell, autorbis)   
« Last Edit: July 28, 2007, 12:10:32 am by Bianca2001 » Report Spam   Logged

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