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SFC Joe S. Davis Jr., MSM, DSL
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SGT (Join to see) thanks for the read/share of Francesco Petrarch, Italian poet, died at the age of 69.
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Thank you my friend SGT (Join to see) for making us aware that on July 18 or 19, 1374, Italian scholar and poet Francesco Petrarca [anglicized Petrarch] died at the age of 69.

Renaissance Discoveries: Petrarch
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yT-kugLTy1A

Images:
1. Petrarch by Andrea di Bartolo di Bargill
2. A medallion with Petrarca's love, Laura de Noves (1310-1348), alludes to the Triumph of Love and Chastity
3. An episode of the Canzoniere, Petrarch's collection of poems, is represented by the Roman sword sunk in a tangle of snakes, referring to 'Africa home from the Italian swords
4. Portrait of Petrarch (Francesco Petrarca)

Background from {[ http://www.hellenicaworld.com/Italy/Person/en/Petrarch.html]}
Francesco Petrarch
From the Cycle of Famous Men and Women. c. 1450. Detached fresco. 247 x 153 cm. Galleria degli Uffizi, Florence, Italy. Artist: Andrea di Bartolo di Bargilla (c. 1423 - 1457)
Francesco Petrarca or Petrarch (1304 – July 19, 1374) was an Italian scholar, poet, and early humanist. Petrarch and Dante are considered the fathers of the Renaissance.

Biography
Petrarch was born in Arezzo the son of a notary, and spent his early childhood in the village of Incisa, near Florence. His father, Ser Petracco, had been exiled from Florence in 1302 (along with Dante) by the Black Guelphs. Petrarch spent much of his early life at Avignon and nearby Carpentras, where his family moved to follow Pope Clement V who moved there in 1309 during the papal schism. He studied at Montpelier (1316-20) and Bologna (1320-26), where his father insisted he study the law. However, Petrarch was primarily interested in writing and Latin literature.

When his father died in 1326, Petrarch returned to Avignon, where he worked in numerous different clerical offices. This work gave him much time to devote to his writing. With his first large scale work, Africa; an epic in Latin about the great Roman general Scipio Africanus; Petrarch emerged as a European celebrity. In 1341 he was crowned poet laureate in Rome, the first man since antiquity to be given this honor. He traveled widely in Europe and served as an ambassador. He was a prolific letter writer, and counted Giovanni Boccaccio among his notable friends. During his travels, he collected crumbling Latin manuscripts and was a prime mover in the recovery of knowledge from writers of Rome and Greece. Among other accomplishments, he commissioned the first Latin translation of Homer and personally discovered a collection of Cicero's letters not previously known to have existed. He remarked, "Each famous author of antiquity whom I recover places a new offence and another cause of dishonor to the charge of earlier generations, who, not satisfied with their own disgraceful barrenness, permitted the fruit of other minds, and the writings that their ancestors had produced by toil and application, to perish through insufferable neglect. Although they had nothing of their own to hand down to those who were to come after, they robbed posterity of its ancestral heritage." Disdaining the ignorance of the era in which he lived, Petrarch created the concept of the Dark Ages.
On April 26th, 1336 Petrarch together with his brother and two other companions climbed to the top of Mont Ventoux (1,909 m; 6,263 ft). He wrote an account of the trip, composed considerably later as a letter to his friend Francesco Dionigi. At the time, it was unusual to climb a mountain for no other reason than the experience itself. Therefore, April 26th, 1336 is regarded as the "birthday of alpinism", and Petrarch (Petrarca alpinista) as the "father of alpinism".
The latter part of his life he spent in journeying through northern Italy as an international scholar and poet-diplomat. Petrarch's career in the Church did not allow him to marry, but he did father two children by a woman or women unknown to posterity. A son, Giovanni, was born in Avignon in 1337 and a daughter, Francesca, was born in Vaucluse in 1343. Giovanni died of the plague in 1361. Francesca married Francescuolo da Brossano (who was later named executor of Petrarch's testament). In 1362, shortly after the birth of a daughter, Eletta, they joined Petrarch in Venice, to flee the plague then ravaging parts of Europe. A second grandchild, Francesco, was born in 1366, but died before his second birthday.
Petrarch settled about 1367 in Padua, where he passed his remaining years in religious contemplation. He died in Arquà in the Euganean Hills on July 18, 1374.

Laura and poetry
In 1327, the sight of a woman called Laura in the church of Sainte-Claire d'Avignon awoke in him a lasting passion, celebrated in the Rime sparse ("Scattered rhymes"). Later Renaissance poets who copied Petrarch's style named this collection of 366 poems the Canzoniere ("Song Book"). She may have been Laure de Noves, the wife of Hugues de Sade and an ancestor of the Marquis de Sade. While it is possible she was an idealized or pseudonymous character - particularly since the name "Laura" has a linguistic connection to the poetic "laurels" Petrarch coveted - Petrarch himself always denied it. Her realistic presentation in his poems contrasts with the clichés of troubadours and courtly love. Her presence causes him unspeakable joy, but his unrequited love creates unendurable desires. There is little definite information in Petrarch's work concerning Laura, except that she is lovely to look at, fair-haired, with a modest, dignified bearing.

Laura and Petrarch had little or no personal contact. According to his "Secretum", she refused him for the very proper reason that she was already married to another man. He channeled his feelings into love poems that were exclamatory rather than persuasive, and wrote prose that showed his contempt for men who pursue women. Upon her death in 1348, the poet finds that his grief is as difficult to live with as was his former despair. Later in his "Letter to Posterity," Petrarch wrote: "In my younger days I struggled constantly with an overwhelming but pure love affair - my only one, and I would have struggled with it longer had not premature death, bitter but salutary for me, extinguished the cooling flames. I certainly wish I could say that I have always been entirely free from desires of the flesh, but I would be lying if I did."

Petrarch polished and perfected the hitherto unknown sonnet form for his poems to Laura, and the Petrarchan sonnet still bears his name. Romantic composer Franz Liszt set three of Petrarch's Sonnets (47, 104, and 123) to music for voice, Tre sonetti del Petrarca, which he later would transcribed for solo piano for inclusion in the suite Années de Pélerinage.

Works
Petrarch is best known for his Italian poetry: notably the Canzoniere and the Trionfi ("Triumphs"). However, Petrarch was an enthusiastic Latin scholar and did most of his writing in this language. His Latin writings are quite varied and include scholarly works, introspective essays, letters, and more poetry. Among them are Secretum ("My Secret Book"), an intensely personal guilt-ridden dialogue with St. Augustine; De Viris Illustribus ("On Famous Men"), a series of moral biographies; Rerum Memorandarum Libri, an incomplete treatise on the cardinal virtues; De Otio Religiosorum ("On Religious Leisure") and De Vita Solitaria ("On the Solitary Life"), which praise the contemplative life; De Remediis Utriusque Fortunae ("Remedies for Fortune"), a self-help book which remained popular for hundreds of years; Itinerarium ("Petrarch's Guide to the Holy Land"), a distant ancestor of Fodors and Lonely Planet; a number of invectives against opponents such as doctors, scholastics, and the French; the Carmen Bucolicum, a collection of twelve pastoral poems; and the unfinished epic Africa. Petrarch also published many volumes of his letters, including a few written to his long-dead friends from history like Cicero and Virgil. Unfortunately most of his Latin writings are difficult to find today. It is difficult to assign any precise dates to his writings because he tended to revise them throughout his life.

Philosophy
Petrarch's contributions to philosophy should be noted. The contributions he made to the Renaissance were great as he in some sense formed the "backbone" of humanism. He believed in the immense moral and practical value of the study of ancient history and literature - that is, the study of human thought and action. While humanism later became associated with secularism, Petrarch was a devout Christian and did not see a conflict between realizing humanity's potential and having religious faith. Petrarch was a highly introspective man, and many of his own internal conflicts, such as the relative place of the active life and the contemplative life, would be seized upon by Renaissance humanist philosophers and argued continually for the next two hundred years. For example, while Petrarch tended to emphasize the importance of the contemplative life, later politician and thinker Leonardo Bruni argued for the active life, or "civic humanism." The result was that a surprising number of political, military, and religious leaders during the Renaissance were inculcated with the notion that their pursuit of personal glory should be grounded in classical example and philosophical contemplation.
Legacy
In November of 2003, it was announced that pathological anatomists would be exhuming Petrarch's body from his casket in Arquà Petrarca, in order to verify 19th century reports that he had stood 1.83 meters, which would have made him very tall for his period. The team also hoped to reconstruct his cranium in order to obtain a computerized image of his features. Unfortunately, DNA testing in 2004 revealed that the skull found in the casket was not his, prompting calls for the return of Petrarch's skull.

Reference
Bishop, Morris. (1961). Petrarch. In J. H. Plumb (Ed.), Renaissance Profiles, pp. 1-17. New York: Harper & Row. ISBN [login to see] .
External links
Petrarch and Laura (http://petrarch.petersadlon.com/) Wonderful multi-lingual site including many translated works (letters, poems, books) in the public domain and biography, pictures, music.
Petrarch (http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/11778a.htm) from the Catholic Encyclopedia.'

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The Theological Origins of Modernity, Part 2: Petrarch and the Beginnings of Humanism
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EG8Xued6mtY

Images:
1. Raphael's painting Parnassus - Francesco Petrarcha is tihrd from lower left between Berni at right and Corinna at his left.
2. Francesco Petrarca atop a massive sculptural group, including a busy and eclectic collection of elements drawn from his life and poetry in Arezzo, Toscana
3. Key to Raphael' painting Parnassus, Francesco Petrarca is position #17 between Berni 16 and Corinna 18.
4. Statue of Francesco Petrarca on the Uffizi Palace, in Florence.

Background from {[https://www.worldhistory.org/Petrarch/]}
Francesco Petrarca biography by Mark Cartwright published on 22 October 2020
Petrarch (1304-1374 CE), full name Francesco Petrarca, was an Italian scholar and poet who is credited as one of the founders of the Renaissance movement in art, thought, and literature. Petrarch actively searched for 'lost' ancient manuscripts hidden away in forgotten corners of medieval libraries; Cicero (106-43 BCE) was one particular beneficiary of Petrarch's diligence but there were many others besides. He not only found, edited, and collected these ancient works together but also wrote a vast catalogue of his own poems, texts, and letters. Petrarch's most famous work today is his Canzoniere, a collection of love poems written in the vernacular which revolve around an unknown and unobtainable woman called Laura. Through his discoveries, scholarship, and original works, Petrarch spearheaded a revival in ancient ideals and secular intellectual studies which focussed on human affairs rather than religious matters, even if, paradoxically, he himself remained very much interested in Christian studies. Consequently, Petrarch is, in this respect, considered the father of what became known as Renaissance humanism.

Early Life
Petrarch was born in Arezzo, Italy on 20 July 1304 CE to parents who were exiles from the city of Florence. Around 1311 CE the family moved again, this time to Avignon in southern France, home of the now-exiled popes. His father was a notary and so Petrarch, too, studied law, first in Montpellier in France in 1316 CE and then back in Italy in Bologna in 1320 CE. The dry legal studies were not to his taste, though, and Petrarch decided to abandon law following his father's death in 1326 CE to instead focus on his first love: literature. He needed a patron for such activities but struggled to find a lasting one throughout his career. In his early working life, he had to settle for trivial clerk duties until something better came along and so he took minor orders and worked for Cardinal Giovanni Colonna in Avignon until 1337 CE. His required commitment to celibacy did not stop him fathering two illegitimate children, Giovanni in 1337 CE and Francesca in 1343 CE.
PETRARCH DEPLORED THE CORRUPTION & DUPLICITY OF COURT LIFE IN THE CITIES WHICH GAVE HIM EMPLOYMENT.

Public Life
In his search for more meaningful employment, Petrarch shifted about various courts of French and Italian city-states, notably those at Naples, Padua, and Milan. He also travelled for scholarly purposes, visiting men of learning and monastery libraries in France, Flanders, and the Rhineland. Throughout, he maintained a property in the hills of Vaucluse near Avignon, which he returned to sporadically as he deplored what he saw as the corruption and duplicity of court life in the cities which gave him employment. This nomadic lifestyle is reflected in such works as the 1346 CE De Vita Solitaria (On the Solitary Life) and the 1347 CE De Otio Religioso (On Holy Retreat).
Nevertheless, Petrarch did try and involve himself in practical politics, albeit with indifferent results. Unable to promote the reforms he hoped would make politics and rulers less hypocritical and corrupt, his greatest disappointment was seeing the popular leader Cola di Rienzo (1313-1354 CE) fail to revive the government of Rome as capital of a 'sacred Italy' in 1347 CE.
The high point of Petrarch's public career was perhaps his coronation as Poet Laureate in Rome on 8 April 1341 CE. He was by then internationally famous as a poet and scholar and was the first to receive this award, which was revived from antiquity. Petrarch had long lobbied the Pope to have the title, and it symbolised for him the possibility that poets and scholars could lead Italy and Europe back to the glory days of the Pax Romana of the Roman Empire. This would be a rebirth, a renaissance. From then on, he concentrated on literature, both studying the past and creating new works for the future.

Retreat into Scholarship
Petrarch seems to have adopted Cicero's approach to life, the Roman scholar whose works he rediscovered as he searched Europe's libraries for ancient texts. This approach was otium cum dignitate or 'leisure spent properly', that is, a man of learning should find the right balance between a fully active public life and a reclusive private life devoted to study. Indeed, never abandoning his religious beliefs despite his interest in the pagan past, Petrarch was, too, a keen student of the works of Saint Augustine of Hippo (354-430 CE), whom he thought more significant than Aristotle (384-322 BCE), a figure who then greatly preoccupied scholars. Petrarch considered the medieval church as a source of continuity from antiquity through the centuries to his own times, but he was against the scholasticism which had bogged down thinkers with endless circular arguments on dogma. He continued to search out the works of Latin and Greek authors. Even if he could not read Greek himself (although he tried to learn), he accumulated manuscripts in that language such as the Iliad by Homer (c. 750 BCE). He most famously rediscovered copies of letters and speeches by the Roman statesman and author Cicero; in 1333 CE in Liège, he found Pro Archia and, in 1345 CE in Verona, his Letters to Atticus.

Petrarch continued to write for the next 25 years building up an impressive catalogue of scholarship. He even rejected an offer from his great friend the poet and scholar Giovanni Boccaccio (1313-1375 CE) of a post at the University of Florence. Still travelling around, Petrarch had fallen out with the Pope at Avignon and so moved on to Milan. Eight years later he moved to Padua but left after a year in 1361 CE. Trying to avoid the Black Death and ending up in Venice, the poet was at least given a house in exchange for leaving in his will his personal library to the city. In 1367 CE he moved for the last time to the seclusion of Arquà in the hills just outside Padua.
PETRARCH REVISED HIS POEMS, EVEN HIS VERY EARLIEST ONES, THROUGHOUT HIS LIFE RIGHT UP TO HIS DEATH.
Later works by Petrarch focussed on philosophical themes such as moral perfection, and he was especially interested in the ancient Roman idea of virtus (virtue or excellence) and civic duty. Petrarch suffered a stroke in 1370 CE in Ferrara while travelling on his way to Rome. He recovered and continued to write but died in July 1374 CE at his home outside Padua, appropriately enough, while working at his desk. When his body was discovered his head was resting on a manuscript by the Roman author Virgil (70-19 BCE). Petrarch was buried at Arquà.

Romantic Poetry
Petrarch's interest in classical literature was reflected in his own Latin verse and sonnets. His earliest poems, written while he was a law student, were on the theme of the death of his mother. Petrarch's most famous work is his collection of poems written on the theme of love for an unattainable woman called 'Laura', his Canzoniere (Sonnets). The poet met this woman in church in Avignon in 1327 CE, but he never revealed who she was, and she has never been successfully identified by scholars ever since. Laura died of the Black Death plague in 1348 CE. These 366 love poems, sonnets, and songs, which are also collectively known as the Rerum Fragmentum Vulgarium (Vernacular Pieces), were written in the Tuscan vernacular with extra vocabulary from other Italian dialects. They cover the themes of unrequited love, lost love, and regret, amongst others. Petrarch revised his poems, even his very earliest ones, throughout his life right up to his death.
Breeze, blowing that blonde curling hair,
stirring it, and being softly stirred in turn,
scattering that sweet gold about, then
gathering it, in a lovely knot of curls again,
you linger around bright eyes whose loving sting
pierces me so, till I feel it and weep,
and I wander searching for my treasure,
like a creature that often shies and kicks:
now I seem to find her, now I realise
she's far away, now I'm comforted, now despair,
now longing for her, now truly seeing her.
Happy air, remain here with your
living rays: and you, clear running stream,
why can't I exchange my path for yours?
(Sonnet, 227, A. S. Kline translation)

Other Major Works
Petrarch wrote many works, mostly in Latin, in a long writing career and here below only some of his most important are considered. He edited the most complete version yet of the History of Rome by the Roman author Livy (59 BCE - 17 CE). Petrarch covered history himself when he composed an epic poem on the Second Punic War (218-201 BCE) between Rome and Carthage called Africa. The epic focuses on the life of the great Roman general Scipio Africanus the Elder (236-183 BCE). In 1336 CE he produced a collection of works by Virgil. Petrarch's De viris illustribus (On Illustrious Men) was a series of biographies on famous figures from the past, including the Old Testament's Adam and many Roman figures. The work was extensive but never completed. Yet another historical collection was the Rerum memorandarum libri (Of Memorable Things), also never completed.
Religious questions continued to interest the author. The Secretum meum (c. 1343 CE) has Petrarch in conversation with Saint Augustine while Truth looks on. The work confirms the author retained his religious beliefs which he believed were compatible with a life of scholarship in secular matters. The allegorical poem Trionfi (Triumphs) was worked on between 1351 and 1374 CE but never finished. It tells of the passage of the human soul towards enlightenment and knowledge of God. Philosophical works like De remediis utriusque fortunae (Remedies for Fortune Fair and Foul) helped revive an interest in Stoicism. Finally, aware of his own fame, Petrarch wrote a series of autobiographical texts collected as the Posteritati (Letter to Posterity) in the mid-1350s CE.

Influence on the Renaissance
The consideration of themes like virtue in civic life, his study of ancient texts, the rediscovery of lost ancient manuscripts, and his rejection of scholasticism are all reasons why Petrarch is considered one of the early founders of the Renaissance movement. During the early Renaissance, looking back at antiquity for inspiration was considered the best way to move forward in thought, art, and architecture. Petrarch was, then, one of the earliest to have done this. The poet even went so far as to imitate Cicero's letters in his own works as he wrote pieces addressed to famous ancient scholars of the past, as well as contemporary ones and civic leaders.

Petrarch believed himself that a new golden age of thought and politics could be achieved by returning to the ideals of antiquity. His idea that the period in which he lived was an intermediary period between antiquity and this new dawn, what he called disparagingly media tempestas, media aetas, or media tempora ('the in-between period') or, in one poem, a 'slumber', was latched onto by later Renaissance thinkers and did much to foster the idea that the Middle Ages was somehow a period of cultural darkness. It is an inaccurate view that many medievalist scholars have long sought to correct, but it has proven a stubborn misconception to shift, especially in popular culture.
In addition, in such works as Contra Medicum (c. 1353 CE), Petrarch criticised the Christian medieval Church for demonising pagan antiquity and its achievements. Although not rejecting religious studies himself, Petrarch's work with ancient manuscripts encouraged the scholarship of non-religious subjects with humanity at its centre, and this became a legitimate activity for intellectuals. Consequently, Petrarch is often cited as the founder of humanism. So, too, Petrarch's use of letters as a form and medium of scholarship would have lasting consequences, making this format popular and creating a whole new secular community of scholars who had no connection with the Church or religious studies and who corresponded with each other in a geographically widespread community of ideas.
Lombardo della Seta (d. 1390 CE) was Petrarch's literary executor, and he created the first manuscript version of Petrarch's On Illustrious Men in 1379 CE. There was then a revival in interest in Petrarch when his works were edited and republished by the Venetian scholar Pietro Bembo (1470-1547 CE) in pocket-sized format in 1501 CE. Petrarch's literary style, known as Petrarchism, and his preference for Latin in scholarship helped continue the use of that language through the Renaissance. In contrast, Petrarch's preference for using the vernacular in romantic poetry and his use of sonnets influenced poets across Europe, deeply affecting Renaissance literature. Even artists strove to capture the classical beauty of Petrarch's elusive Laura with her blonde hair and alabaster skin in their paintings. Petrarch's shadow on the Renaissance was, then, long, even if it was not entirely in keeping with how he himself viewed this life and the next.
EDITORIAL REVIEW This article has been reviewed for accuracy, reliability and adherence to academic standards prior to publication.
Bibliography
• Bauer, Susan Wise. The History of the Renaissance World. W. W. Norton & Company, 2013.
• Campbell, Gordon. The Oxford Illustrated History of the Renaissance. Oxford University Press, 2019.
• Celenza, Christopher S. The Intellectual World of the Italian Renaissance. Cambridge University Press, 2020.
• Eugene F. Rice Jr. & Anthony Grafton. The Foundations of Early Modern Europe, 1460-1559. W. W. Norton & Company, 1994.
• Hale, J.R. (ed). The Thames & Hudson Dictionary of the Italian Renaissance. Thames & Hudson, 2020.
• Holmes, George. The Oxford History Of Medieval Europe. Oxford University Press, U.S.A., 2001.
• John Humphreys Whitfield - PetrarchAccessed 21 Oct 2020.
• Rundle, David. The Hutchinson Encyclopedia of the Renaissance. Hodder Arnold, 2000.
• Wyatt, Michael. The Cambridge Companion to the Italian Renaissance. Cambridge University Press, 2014.

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The Classical Tradition #08 - Petrarch
Petrarch. How he was influenced by the classics, and how he influenced the classical tradition down the centuries.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BV7_CMTNKes

Images:
1. Giorgio Vasari Six Tuscan Poets Dante is seated, Francesco Petrarca is to his right
The painting’s central figure, seated on a Savonarola chair and shown in his distinct, aquiline profile, is Dante Alighieri (c. 1265-1321), author of the Divine Comedy. To his immediate right is Francesco Petrarca, known in English as Petrarch (1304-74), who is dressed in clerical garb and holds in his hand a copy of his own Scattered Rhymes, identifiable by the cameo of Laura on its cover. Behind Dante stands Guido Cavalcanti (c. 1255-1300), author of a body of Italian love poems, who in the image can be seen pointing to the book in Dante’s hand, and Giovanni Boccaccio (1313-75), author of the Decameron. A little removed from the conversation, stand Cino di Pistoia (1270-1336) and Guittone d’Arezzo (c. 1230-1294), both likewise Tuscan poets of the dolce stil novo, the new vernacular poetry.
2. Statue Francesco Petrarca in Arezzo, Toscana
3. Francesco Petraca left and his muse Laura de Noves
4. Petrarch by Justus of Ghent

Biographies
1. poets.org/poet/petrarch
2.brbl-archive.library.yale.edu/exhibitions/petrarch/about.html

1. Background from {[https://poets.org/poet/petrarch]}
Francesco Petrarca [anglicized Petrarch] [1304–1374]
Known in English as Petrarch, Francesco Petrarca was born at dawn on July 20, 1304, in the city of Arezzo, in central Italy, just south of Florence. The son of Ser Petracco, a merchant and notary public, Petrarch studied law with his brother in Montpellier, France, in 1316, and later in Bologna, Italy. His primary interest, however, was Latin literature and writing. After the death of his father in 1326, Petrarch abandoned law altogether, later asserting, "I couldn't face making a merchandise of my mind." Instead, he served in various clerical positions, which granted him adequate time for his writing and literary studies.
In 1327, in Avignon, Petrarch allegedly encountered Laura de Noves, a woman he fixated on for the rest of his life. From 1327 to 1368, Petrarch wrote 366 poems as part of a sequence, centered on the theme of his love for Laura. The sequence—collected in a canzoniere or song-book, usually called Rime Sparse, or Scattered Rhymes in English—includes 317 sonnets, a form based on rules established by the 13th-century Italian poet Guittone of Arezzo. The earliest major practitioner of the sonnet, Petrarch is credited with the development and popularization of the Italian sonnet, thus called the Petrarchan sonnet.
In 1333, Petrarch connected with fellow Italian poet Giovanni Boccaccio, with whom he engaged in regular correspondence, including an exchange of their writing. After his first visit to Rome in 1337, Petrarch began composing Africa, an epic poem concerning the Second Punic War, which he dedicated to Robert of Naples, king of Sicily, though it was not published until three decades after Petrarch's death.
He was renowned as a poet and scholar and, on April 8, 1341 (Easter Sunday), he travelled to Rome to accept the crown as poet laureate. During the ceremony, which had not been performed since ancient times, Petrarch delivered his "Coronation Oration," considered the first manifesto of the Renaissance, in which he recalled: "there was a time, there was an age, that was happier for poets, an age when they were held in the highest honor, first in Greece and then in Italy, and especially when Caesar Augustus held imperial sway, under whom there flourished excellent poets: Virgil, Varius, Ovid, Horace, and many others."
A celebrity throughout Europe, Petrarch travelled widely for pleasure, and is sometimes called "the first tourist." Known for his work reviving interest in classical literature, Petrarch is considered the "father of Humanism," an attitude associated with the flourishing of the Renaissance.
Petrarch's considerable influence in England, and therefore in English, began with Chaucer, who incorporated elements and translations of Petrarch's work into his own. Petrarch's influence in English lasted at least through the 19th century and can be found in the work of many famous English poets, such as Sir Thomas Wyatt and Percy Bysshe Shelley.
About Petrarch's legacy, the poet J. D. McClatchy has said, "True love—or rather, the truest—is always obsessive and unrequited. No one has better dramatized how it scorches the heart and fires the imagination than Petrarch did, centuries ago. He dipped his pen in tears and wrote the poems that have shaped our sense of love—its extremes of longing and loss—ever since."
Petrarch died on July 19, 1374.


2. Background from {[https://brbl-archive.library.yale.edu/exhibitions/petrarch/about.html]}
FRANCESCO PETRARCA
1304-74
Petrarch is most readily remembered as a lyric poet, the author of 366 poems collected in his Canzoniere or song book. It would be difficult to imagine the fate of the sonnet, even for Shakespeare, without the masterful examples of Petrarch’s poems about the love of his life, Laura. Petrarch’s other major collection of poetry, the Trionfi, takes the poet from his intense worldly love for Laura, joined by loves and lovers throughout the ages, to the contemplation of the successive victories of Love, Chastity, Death, Fame, Time, and Eternity. The poet becomes the moralist and philosopher who searches for meaning, as life passes from one stage to the next. Beyond earthly bonds, Petrarch envisions eternal bliss, but not one without his great love. In the final verse, he hopes to see Laura again in a form even more beautiful than on earth: “Now how will it be to see her again in heaven.”

Ironically, Petrarch did not seek fame with his lyric poems in Italian, which he called little triflings, but instead with his Latin epic poem, Africa. Even beginning in the 15th century, Africa was little read and less loved than the Canzoniere. Today, our reading of Africa is often reduced to a single dramatic episode, the few verses that describe the death of Hannibal’s younger brother Mago.

Petrarch was a prolific writer. From his pen flowed not only poetry in Italian and Latin, but also hundreds of letters as well as essays and histories on such topics as good and ill fortune, the religious and solitary life, famous people, self-assessment, the nature of ignorance. In his writings we find the stuff of life expressed in all its human variety and vitality.

Not only was Petrarch a poet, philosopher, and moralist, he was above all a scholar of exceptional intellectual curiosity and competence. Beginning as a child, he dedicated his life passionately to the pursuit of knowledge, especially from the classical world of ancient Greece and Rome. As an adult he brought the past to life, collecting the words of ancient thinkers and writers and passing them on to later generations. He collected books, discovered long-lost writings, and edited texts, especially those of his favorite authors Cicero, Livy, and Virgil. By the end of his life, he owned one of the largest private libraries in the world, which he gave to the city of Venice in exchange for a house there.

Petrarch’s library was intended to become the first public library in the western world. Instead his books were dispersed, and many now reside in libraries and collections throughout the world, including the United States. Together with manuscripts and books by and about Petrarch, they form a formidable collection of Petrarch’s powerful words.

As Ernest Hatch Wilkins writes in his Life of Petrarch, “Petrarch was the most remarkable man of his time; and he is one of the most remarkable men of all time.” Petrarch’s legacy encourages us to study the human condition of the past, enabling us in turn to engage in the present more fully and to prepare more wisely for the future. It is this heritage that we celebrate 700 years later.

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PVT Mark Zehner
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Very interesting!
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