Artigo Revisado por pares

Reading Marsilio Ficino in Quattrocento Italy. The Case of Aragonese Naples

2012; Cambridge University Press; Volume: 32; Issue: 2 Linguagem: Inglês

10.33137/q.i..v32i2.16307

ISSN

2293-7382

Autores

Matteo Soranzo,

Tópico(s)

Renaissance Literature and Culture

Resumo

This essay focuses on the reception of Marsilio Ficino’s works and ideas in Naples at the time of the Aragonese domination, and it offers a preliminary discussion of this neglected area of Renaissance Neoplatonism. Based on a contextualization of Ficino’s letters to Giovanni d’Aragona, four manuscripts produced at the Aragonese library and other pieces of evidence such as Pierantonio Caracciolo’s Farsa de l’Imagico and Giovanni Pontano’s dialogue Actius, it argues that the works and ideas of Marsilio Ficino did circulate at king Ferrante’s court, but were criticized by Giovanni Pontano and his elite of followers. In particular, the essay provides new evidence about the existence of a Ficinian workshop based at the King’s library, and about some of its protagonists such as the scribe and scholar Ippolito Lunense.

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