De viris illustribus (Petrarch)
De viris illustribus (English: On Illustrious Men) is an unfinished collection of biographies, written in Latin, by the 14th century Italian author Francesco Petrarca. These biographies are a set of Lives similar in idea to Plutarch's Parallel Lives. The works were unfinished. However he was famous enough for these and other works to receive two invitations to be crowned poet laureate. He received these invitations on exactly the same day, April 8, 1341, one being from the Paris University and the other from the Roman Senate.[1] He accepted the Roman invitation.[2]
It is composed of two books:
- Liber I includes 24 to 36 moral biographies (depending on version) of heroes of Greek and Roman antiquity (much like Polybius The Histories and Plutarch's figures in his Lives).[1]
- Liber II includes 12 moral biographies of Biblical and mythical figures (much like that found in the Hebrew Bible, Greek mythology, and Islamic prophets).[1]
There is as yet no English translation. Harvard University has it under contract to appear in the I Tatti Renaissance Library sometime in the future.
Liber I
These are 36 biographies of Petrarch's subjects starting with Romulus, the mythological founder of Rome, and going through Trajan.[3] All of these are mentioned in Petrarch's epic poem Africa. He revised the list many times over the years in different "plans." Some "Illustrious Romans" ended with Titus.[4] Another plan of "Illustrious Romans" added Julius Caesar as the twenty-fourth biography.[5] The adjacent 1476 Table of Contents introduction is old Italian and says something to the effect: Repository of the book here present where will be shown the chapters on 36 "illustrious men" whose deeds are extensively described by the honorable poet, Sir Francesco Petrarca, and beginning as appears below. Listed among these are Titus, Pompey, Scipio Africanus and Julius Caesar.
Subjects of De Viris Illustribus in Latin[3] | Subjects of De Viris Illustribus appearing in Africa [1] | Page references in Africa translation[6] |
---|---|---|
Romulo primo Romanorum rege | Romulus | 19, 20, 80, 116, 144, 232, 253, 270 |
Numa Pompilio secundo Romanorum rege . | Numa Pompilius | 244 |
Tullo Hostilio tertio Romanorum rege | Tullus Hostilius | 245 |
Anco Marzio quarter Romanorum rege | Ancus Marcius | 245 |
Iunio Bruto primo Romanorum consule | Lucius Junius Brutus | 66, 67, 68, 254, 269 |
Horatio Cocle | Horatius Cocles | 214, 269 |
Lucius Quintus Cincinnatus | Cincinnatus | 253 |
Marco Furio Camillo | Marcus Furius Camillus | 213, 246, 247, 259 |
Tito Manlio Torquato | Titus Manlius Torquatus | 248 |
Marco Valerio Corvo | Marcus Valerius Corvus | 253 |
Publius Decius | Publius Decius Mus | 253 |
Lucio Papirius Cursor | Lucius Papirius Cursor | 253 |
Marco Curio Dentato | Curius Dentatus | 253 |
Fabritio Lucino | Gaius Fabricius Luscinus | 253, 270 |
Alexandro Macedonian | Alexander III of Macedon | 27, 185, 187, 252, 266, 267, 271 |
rege Pyrro Epyrotarum | Pyrrhus of Epirus | 152, 185, 190, 253, 264 |
Hanibal Carthaginensium Duce | Hannibal of Carthage | 123-129, 131-134, 142-145, 149-154 |
Quinto Fabio Maximo Cuntator | Quintus Fabius Maximus Cunctator ("the Delayer") | 14, 15, 144, 217, 244, 255, 263 |
Marco Claudio Marcello | Marcus Claudius Marcellus | 14, 130, 147, 244, 253, 261 |
Claudius Nero | Gaius Claudius Nero | 200-204, 246, 260, 268 |
Livius Salinatore | Marcus Livius Salinator | 135 |
Publius Cornelius Scipio Africanus Maiore | Publius Cornelius Scipio Africanus | 134-138, 163-164, 182, 189, 204 |
Marco Porta Cato Censors | Cato the Elder | 28, 59, 246, 253 |
Cesare Vlio dementflimor | Julius Caesar | 242, 246, 247 |
Tito Quinto Flimmio | Titus Quinctius Flamininus | 248 |
Anthiocore de Asiae | Antiochus XIII Asiaticus | 27, 193, 245, 246, 259, 267 |
Scipionenasiae | Publius Cornelius Scipio Nasica | 246 |
Pavlo Emilio | Lucius Aemilius Paullus Macedonicus | 14, 244, 265 |
Quinto Caecilo Metello | Quintus Caecilius Metellus | 135, 246, 254, 262 |
Scipioneafricano emilianae | Scipio Aemilianus | 204, 246, 249, 269 |
Mario Arpinater | Gaius Marius | 213, 246, 247, 259 |
Pompeo Magno | Pompey | 246, 247 |
Octaviano Augustos | Augustus | 136, 195, 197 |
Vespasiano | Vespasian | 247 |
Tito Vespasiano | Titus | 248 |
Traiano | Trajan | 248 |
Liber II
These are the subjects of Petrarch's 12 biographies starting with the first person of the Bible. Petrarch influenced Giovanni Boccaccio Lives On Famous Women of 106 biographies which starts with the first woman of the Bible. Below is the first person of the Bible and above in Liber I is the first mythical figures that started Rome.[1]
Composition
Petrarch was working on De viris illustribus at the same time he was working on his epic poem Africa with Scipio Africanus being the center figure for both.[7] The Africa was conceived as a poetic parallel of De Viris Illustribus.[8] Petrarch conceived his first plan for De viris illustribus of biographies of illustrious men of Jewish, oriental, Greek and Roman famous figures in 1337-38. He wrote up his list of "Illustrious Men" from Adam to Hercules and Romulus to Titus in 1337-38 about the same time as he was writing up the Africa.[9] Petrarch's earliest reference to writing a series of biographies of Lives can be found in the third book of his work Secretum which was originally written up around 1337.[4] St. Augustine speaks to Petrarch
...thus, putting your hand to even greater works, you have tied yourself to a book of histories from the time of king Romulus to the emperor Titus, a task of immense duration and of very great labor.[5]
Petrarch went from these Lives of "Illustrious Men" into his work on the Africa using the research of De viris illustribus as the bases.[5][10] Petrarch was preoccupied with this idea of a series of biographies of Lives of ancient heroes of generals and statesmen for almost forty years.[4] There were several plans of De viris illustribus.[4] In 1348-49 Petrarch made a larger version of Lives.[5] Petrarch writes a letter to Luca Cristiani in 1349 concerning these Lives for De viris illustribus that he was doing in the valley at Vaucluse in France;
...no place had afforded me more leisure or more exciting stimulation: that solitude has permitted me to collect in one scheme outstanding men from all lands and from all ages.[5]
Petrarch mentions in letters from Vaucluse around 1350 that he was working on a De viris illustribus that was wholly committed to those who were illustrious "from every country" and that he was "bringing together illustrious men from all lands and centuries." This is known to scholars as an "all-ages" plan.[11] Petrarch added the "bio" of Julius Caesar, De gestis Cesaris ("On the Deeds of Caesar"), later as the twenty-fourth and last character of the Roman version finished about 1364 (fourteenth reigning year of John the Good) as an afterthought to his original "Famous Men."[5][12] He wanted to depict events that were controlled by the Roman leaders, not events that happened by luck or fortune.[13] He wanted to be a critical historian and convey these illustrious men in dignity.[13] For these reasons he is considered the first historian of the Renaissance.[14]
Plans
Petrarch worked on various "plans" and versions of De viris illustribus. He was not only influenced by ancient historians like Livy and Valerius Maximus, but by other historians of his time period that were working on similar ideas.[15] In the early part of the fourteenth century in northern Italy it was fairly commonplace among historians to write a series of biographies on famous men.[16] A friend of Petrarch's, Giovanni Colonna, authorized his version of a De viris illustribus before he left Avignon for Rome in 1338.[17] Another of Petrarch's friends, Guglielmo Pastrengo, had two works on lives of famous men, De viris illustribus and De originibus.[18] Petrarch's friend, Pastrengo, also wrote a work on De viris illustribus and De originibus.[19] The previous historian's works of De originibus are about the origins and definitions of geographical sites, peoples, and certain stone structures.[18]
Historian Kohl says that there was at least three different "plans" that Petrarch devised for his De viris illustribus. The first plan, prior to his famous epic poem Africa, was written around 1337. It is known as the "republican Rome" plan. The second plan started in 1350 entered in Christian figures, similar in style to Jerome's De viris illustribus and his "Church Fathers." It was finished around 1351-53 and called the "all-ages" plan. Petrarch enjoyed both the writings of ancient writers before the Christian era for their history of famous men and that of Jerome's Latin "Church Fathers" for their Christian viewpoints. He viewed both as a world being in decline. The third plan was a series of biographies of Romulus to Trajan and is referred to as "ancient secular heroes." In this plan most biographies are considered lengthy, while others are considered massive. For example, the biography of Cornelius Scipio is 20,000 words and that of the newly entered Julius Caesar is 70,000 words long. Petrarch's characters were of military heroes and civic leaders, while other authors wrote on most any notable men. Petrarch's overall goal attitude was to convey antiquity and history balanced with the Christian tradition. He presented a moral aim of doing the right thing compared to actions of the past. He saw Jerome's "Church Fathers" as presenting moral virtues through Christian traditional viewpoints. He felt that by close examination of the ancient Roman leaders the reader could gain their virtues.[20][21]
AIM | PURPOSE | SOURCE |
---|---|---|
morals | virtues | Livy, Jerome |
aesthetic | dignity | Valerius Maximus, Cicero |
critical | truth | Cicero |
Petrarch intended his work to be instructional for teaching moral righteousness. He found comfort in the misfortunes of Old Testament figures such as Jacob and Joseph. He showed to his fourteenth century readers the lessons of common sense morality that could be learned from the ancient Roman leaders and Old Testament figures. He stressed these points over that of victories on the battlegrounds, which he considered as mere luck and incompetence of the enemies. He saw his duty of his work to be "describing illustrious men, not lucky ones."[20]
Footnotes
- "Francesco Petrarch (1304-1374)". Retrieved 2009-01-03.
- "Petrarch". Archived from the original on 2009-01-29. Retrieved 2009-01-03.
- De viris illustribus / Francesco Petrarca ; edited by Silvano Ferrone
- Kohl, p. 133
- Kohl, p. 134
- Bergin and Wilson
- Kirkham, pp. 113, 385
- Kirkham, pp. 114, 385
- Warner, p. 221
- Kirkham, p. 106
- Kirkham, p. 107
- Kirkham, p. 110
- Kohl, p. 136
- Kohl, p. 137
- Witt, p. 282
- Witt, p. 283
- Witt, p. 284
- Kirkham, p. 104
- Witt, p. 285
- Kohl, pp. 133-36
- Witt, pp. 282-289
References
- The Histories (Polybius)
- The Histories of Herodotus
- Petrarch.freeservers.com, The Petrarchan Grotto
- Petrarch.petersadlon.com, Francesco Petrarch and Laura deNoves
- Plutarch's Lives of the Noble Greeks and Romans
- The Histories or The Rise of the Roman Empire by Polybius:
- At Perseus Project: Perseus.tufts.edu, English & Greek version
- At "LacusCurtius": Penelope.uchicago.edu, Translation by W. R. Paton
- Preface to Petrarch's de Viris Illustribus by JSTOR
- Works by Livy at Project Gutenberg that have subjects of Liber I at Gutenberg.org
- Original displays of Petrarch's works at Cornell University Library Exhibition.
- The Catholic Encyclopedia, Published 1910 in New York by Robert Appleton Company.
- Made possible by support from the National Italian American Foundation Library.upenn.edu, Petrarch at 700.
- Polybius, Perseus.tufts.edu, Histories of Lives, Evelyn S. Shuckburgh (translator), London - New York, (1889)
- Both Liber I and Liber II of Petrarch's De Viris Illustribus in Latin only is located at Bibliotecaitaliana.it.
- Smith, William; Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology, Ancientlibrary.com, "Logbasis", Boston, (1867)
- Kirkham, Victoria, Petrarch: a critical guide to the complete works, University of Chicago, 2009, ISBN 0-226-43741-8
- Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 21 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 315.
- The New Testament has 27 books and the Old Testament has 39 books for a total of 66 books known as the Christian Bible.
- Warner, James Christopher, The Augustinian epic, Petrarch to Milton, University of Michigan Press, 2005, ISBN 0-472-11518-9
- Witt, Ronald G., In the footsteps of the ancients: the origins of humanism from Lovato to Bruni, Brill Publishers, 2003, ISBN 0-391-04202-5
- Kohl, Benjamin (1974). "Petrarch's Prefaces to de Viris Illustribus". History and Theory. 13 (2): 132–144. doi:10.2307/2504856. JSTOR 2504856.
- Petrarch in Print display at the University of Pennsylvania Library of De Viris illustribus translated into Italian by Library.upenn.edu, Donato degli Albanazi.
- Bergin, Thomas G. and Wilson, Alice S., Petrarch's Africa English translation. New Haven. Yale University Press 1977. ISBN 0-300-02062-7
- Francis Petrarch Six Centuries Later: A Symposium. Studies in Romance Languages at Chapel Hill, North Carolina. Duke.edu, Petrarch: The German Connection.