Libros antiguos y modernos
BONCIARI, Marco Antonio (1555-1616)
Oratio M. Antonii Bonciarii. Perusiae in Seminario habita XV. Kal. Quint. M.D.LXXXVII. Cum ibi Humaniores litteras profiteri inciperet
Andrea Bresciano, 1587
480,00 €
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
First edition of this academic oration held at the Perugia seminary in 1587 on the occasion of the renewal of the chair of humanities first awarded to Bonciari in 1576.
Marco Antonio Bonciari was born in the castle of Antria, near Perugia, in 1555. In 1567 Cardinal Fulvio della Cornia welcomed him to the newly established seminary in Perugia. After completing his studies in literature and philosophy, at the age of nineteen the cardinal sent him to Rome for two years to perfect his Latin under Muretus, before entrusting him with teaching at the same seminary: a position later confirmed by Cardinal Antonio Maria Gallo in 1587, after a five-year suspension following the death of Della Cornia. Having become completely blind, in 1592 the bishop of Perugia, Napoleone Comitoli, called him to the international college of St. Bernard (now the Benedictine monastery of St. Catherine) which he had founded, and Bonciari held a chair there until his death in Perugia in 1616. A staunch follower of Cicero, he maintained a dense network of correspondence with numerous leading figures of the time, including Cardinals Baronio, Bellarmino, and Federico Borromeo, as well as Bernardino Baldi, Giusto Lipsio, Aldo Manuzio il Giovane, Fulvio Orsini, Gian Vincenzo Pinelli, Luigi Alamanni, Belisario Bulgarini, Giambattista Marino, and others. He was a member of the Accademia degli Insensati in Perugia and the Accademia degli Umoristi in Rome (cf. R. Negri, Bonciari, Marco Antonio, in: “Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani”, vol. 11, Rome, 1969, s.v.).
Edit 16, CNCE6940; USTC, 816161.