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Roman and German Humanism: 1450-1550.


The twelve articles that make up this book provide an overview of D'Amico's research and insights into Roman humanism, the major schools of Latin prose in late fifteenth- and sixteenth-century Italy, humanists Paolo Cortesi and Raffaele Maffei, humanist theology in the pre-reformation era, and German humanism.

The pieces on Roman humanism summarize concepts D'Amico had earlier treated with the exception of an article that comprises an important edited text by Sigismondo de Conti Conti (kôNtē`), cadet branch of the French royal house of Bourbon. Although the title of prince of Conti was created in the 16th cent.  on the attributes and role of the apostolic secretary at the papal court. Although D'Amico's reconstruction of Roman humanism is solid and illuminating, there is one aspect of this reconstruction that needs elaboration. D'Amico argues that, especially in the early Quattrocento quat·tro·cen·to  
n.
The 15th-century period of Italian art and literature.



[Italian, short for (mil) quattrocento, one thousand four hundred : quattro, four (from Latin
, the humanists felt extraneous to Rome - a statement which may be applied to the Tuscans but not to the majority of humanists who joined the papal court and did develop a strong allegiance to Rome. The allegiance of these humanists, however, was directed not to contemporary Rome, which they saw as a pale image of its ancient counterpart, but to classical Rome. A result of this allegiance was the ambitious program of renovatio Romae which they sought to realize through the papal court. Weak at first, this renovatio achieved full force in the second half of the Quattrocento and early Cinquecento cin·que·cen·to  
n.
The 16th century, especially in Italian art and literature.



[Italian, from (mil) cinquecento, (one thousand) five hundred : cinque, five (from Latin
 when it led to socio-theological turmoil.

D'Amico's objective in the piece on schools of Latin prose in the Renaissance is to uncover the reasons behind a humanist's selection of one school over another. This piece is of value to the student of Renaissance prose, for it treats not only the better known schools of eclecticism eclecticism, in art
eclecticism (ĭklĕk`tĭsĭz'əm), art style in which features are borrowed from various styles.
 and Ciceronianism, but also the less known and often overlooked archaizing school, or Apuleianism.

Studies on the humanist Paolo Cortesi are somewhat limited in scope, dealing with Cortesi's rehabilitation of Giovanni Pico della Mirandola Giovanni Pico della Mirandola (February 24, 1463 -November 17, 1494) was an Italian Renaissance philosopher.[1] He was celebrated for the events of 1486, when at the age of twenty-three, he proposed to defend 900 theses on religion, philosophy, natural philosophy and  and with his attack on astrology; however, the three articles discussing the humanist Raffaele Maffei are, on the whole, far-reaching and comprehensive. These articles deal with Maffei's Breuis Historia of Julius II Julius II, 1443–1513, pope (1503–13), an Italian named Giuliano della Rovere, b. Savona; successor of Pius III. His uncle Sixtus IV gave him many offices and created him cardinal.  and Leo X Leo X, pope
Leo X, 1475–1521, pope (1513–21), a Florentine named Giovanni de' Medici; successor of Julius II. He was the son of Lorenzo de' Medici, was made a cardinal in his boyhood, and was head of his family before he was 30 (see Medici).
 (including an edited text of the Historia deduced from Vatican Library, Ottob. Lat (Local Area Transport) A communications protocol from Digital for controlling terminal traffic in a DECnet environment.

LAT - Local Area Transport
. 2377), with the construction of his monument in Volterra, and with his Apologeticus, one of humanism's first responses to Martin Luther. The study of Maffei's Apologeticus provides a forceful and perceptive analysis of a highly valuable but almost unknown document. This piece by D'Amico captures the anxiety and frustration that bedeviled the Roman Curia and the curialists at the outset of the Reformation.

The thesis expounded in the article on Maffei's Apologeticus is complemented and reinforced by the piece on the humanists' approach to theology in the pre-Reformation era. Here D'Amico provides an effective overview of the humanists' treatment of theology from Petrarch to Gianfrancesco Pico della Mirandola Pi·co del·la Mi·ran·do·la   , Count Giovanni 1463-1494.

Italian Neo-Platonist philosopher and humanist famous for his 900 theses on a variety of scholarly subjects (1486).
, and to the northern humanists Erasmus and Jacques Lefevre d'Etaples.

German humanism encompasses the last three articles of the book. The first two of these articles deal respectively with Beatus Rhenanus' interaction with Italian humanism and with "the annotations Beatus provided for his three editions of Tertullian" (XI, 38). The last of these articles, possibly the most important in the collection, explores Ulrich von Hutten Ulrich von Hutten (April 21 1488-August 29 1523), was an outspoken critic of the Roman Catholic Church and adherent of the Lutheran Reformation. Von Hutten studied theology at the University of Greifswald.  and Beatus Rhenanus' propagandist policies in the early Reformation. D'Amico notes that Beatus' annotations of Tertullian, together with his editing of Marsilius of Padua's Defensor Pacis, made it possible for him to partake in the religious controversies raging in Germany at the time: the denial of Christian tradition, the papacy's exploitation of Germany, and the questionable origin and use of private penance. According to D'Amico, Beatus at first "responded positively to Luther's patriotic call against the Italian papacy's exploitation of Germany" (XI, 57). But as the Reformation became more radical, Beatus moved further away from Luther. Such was not the case with Hutten, however, who went on to become one of the major challengers of papal primacy and one of the key proponents of German nationalism.

As one reads D'Amico's study on Maffei's Apologeticus and the three pieces on German humanism, it becomes clear that the Reformation was instigated by both German theology and a political mode of thinking that had European resonances. In fact, I would argue that Hutten and Luther's challenge to the temporal/political power of the papacy, a challenge fueled largely by the humanists' renovatio Romae, as noted above, was shared by all the major European powers, including Spain, the bulwark of European Catholicism. This challenge led to the calamity of the Sack of Rome The city of Rome has been sacked on several occasions. Among the most famous:
  • Sack of Rome (387 BC) - Rome is sacked by the Gauls after the Battle of the Allia
  • Sack of Rome (410) - Rome is sacked by Alaric, King of the Visigoths
 of 1527 and to the eventual demise of the renovatio Romae in Rome.

As expected in a collection of this nature, the work suffers from some repetitions (the recurring sketch of Maffei, for example) and from some technical remisses (references to pagination (1) Page numbering.

(2) Laying out printed pages, which includes setting up and printing columns, rules and borders. Although pagination is used synonymously with page makeup, the term often refers to the printing of long manuscripts rather than ads and brochures.
 of volumes where the articles were first published). On the whole, however, the collection does provide an insight into D'Amico's professional interests and scholarly activities, as Paul Grendler maintains in his introduction. As such, it is a worthy tribute to a highly competent young scholar whose career was cut short by an untimely death.

ANGELO MAZZOCCO Mount Holyoke College Mount Holyoke College (hōl`yōk), at South Hadley, Mass.; for women; chartered 1836, opened 1837 as Mount Holyoke Female Seminary under Mary Lyon, rechartered as Mount Holyoke College 1893. There is a noteworthy art museum on campus.  
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Author:Mazzocco, Angelo
Publication:Renaissance Quarterly
Article Type:Book Review
Date:Sep 22, 1997
Words:845
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