ABSTRACT

Leon Battista Alberti (1404-1472) was the most versatile humanist of the fifteenth century: author of numerous compositions in both Latin and Italian, and a groundbreaking theorist of painting, sculpture, and architecture. His Latin writings owe much to the model of Petrarch (1304-1374), the famed poet of the Italian Canzoniere, but also a prolific author of Latin epistles, biographies, and poems that sparked the revival of classical culture in the early Italian Renaissance. The essays collected here reflect some thirty years of research into these pioneers of Humanism, and offer important insights into forms of Renaissance 'self-fashioning' such as allegory and autobiography.

chapter I|9 pages

Alberti, Leon Battista*

chapter IV|13 pages

Petrach and Alberti

chapter V|19 pages

Petrarch and Jerome*

chapter VIII|216 pages

The Burning Question

• Crisis and Cosmology in the Secret • Secretum

chapter X|22 pages

Alberti and Apuleius

Comic Violence and Vehemence in the Intercenales and Momus *

chapter XII|20 pages

Visualizing Virtue

Alberti and the Early Renaissance Emblem *

chapter XIV|10 pages

L’Alberti, il Pisanello e Gli Este

Devises e Medaglie Umanistiche Nel Primo Quattrocento

chapter XVI|30 pages

Poggio and Alberti

Three Notes

chapter XIX|11 pages

Textual Problems in the Intercenales*