




Libros antiguos y modernos
PITTORIO, Lodovico (Ludovico o Luigi Bigi, 1454-1525)
Epigrammata moralia
Domenico Rococciola, 1 July 1506
3800,00 €
Govi Libreria Antiquaria
(Modena, Italia)
Los gastos de envío correctos se calculan una vez añadida la dirección de envío durante la creación del pedido. El vendedor puede elegir uno o varios métodos de envío: standard, express, economy o in store pick-up.
Condiciones de envío de la Librería:
Para los productos con un precio superior a 300 euros, es posible solicitar un plan de pago a plazos al Maremagnum. El pago puede efectuarse con Carta del Docente, Carta della cultura giovani e del merito, Administración Pública.
Los plazos de entrega se estiman en función de los plazos de envío de la librería y del transportista. En caso de retención aduanera, pueden producirse retrasos en la entrega. Los posibles gastos de aduana corren a cargo del destinatario.
Pulsa para saber másFormas de Pago
- PayPal
- Tarjeta de crédito
- Transferencia Bancaria
-
-
Descubre cómo utilizar
tu Carta del Docente -
Descubre cómo utilizar
tu Carta della cultura giovani e del merito
Detalles
Descripción
Rare first edition of Lodovico Pittorio's four books of moralizing classical epigrams, dedicated by him to Ercole d'Este's son Alfonso I, who in 1501 married Lucrezia Borgia and in 1505, upon his father's death, became duke of Ferrara. On the verso of the title is an epigram by Ercole d'Este to his daughter-in-law Lucrezia Borgia.
Originally from Ferrara, Pittorio was a poet, humanist, and a leading intellectual in the Este court. He was a pupil of Battista Guarini and was on friendly terms with Giovanni Pico della Mirandola, Pellegrino Prisciani, Matteo Maria Boiardo, Alberto Pio, Ercole Strozzi, Antonio Tebaldeo, and especially Giovanni Francesco Pico, of whom he became the tutor. Pittorio also collaborated with the painter Cosmè Tura on the famous Roverella Altarpiece: his are the Latin verses inscribed on the wooden base of the instrument at the bottom of the painting played by the two angels, verses that were later included in his poem collection Carmina tumultuaria printed in Modena in 1492 (cf. J. Manca, Cosmè Tura: The Life and Art of a Painter in Estense Ferrara, Oxford, 2000, p. 114).
In his youth, Pittorio was an author of licentious verses that he later repudiated under the influence of his pupil G.F. Pico. Pittorio then devoted himself to works of a more philosophical and devotional inclination. He wrote homilies and sermons and translated biblical psalms into the vernacular. In 1516, he published the Hippolyta Epigrammaton per dialogos opus libri sex and in 1520 the poem Gorricia (cf. S. Pasquazi, ed., Poeti estensi del Rinascimento, Florence, 1966, pp. XXXII-XLII; see also G. Andenna, Pittorio, Ludovico, in: “Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani”, vol. 84, Rome, 2015, s.v.).
Edit 16, CNCE40210; USTC, 849040.