- Francesco Matarazzo
Francesco Matarazzo, (1443 – August 21, 1518) was an Italian historian of the European
Rennaisance . His fame rests largely on his masterwork "Chronicles of the City of Perugia 1492-1503" which has become aprimary source for many later historians of theItalian Renaissance and in particular the city ofPerugia .Life
Although the exact date of his birth in unknown, it is believed that Matarazzo was born about the year 1443 in the small town of
Deruta , near Perugia. Little is known of his family, but he is said to have been of noble descent, which would have guaranteed him an extensive education. As a teenager he was chosen to compose the Latin inscriptions that were inscribed beneath the portraits of famous citizens of Perugia thatBraccio Baglione had painted to decorate his palace in the city. In 1464 he was teaching in theUniversity of Ferrara and three years later he was assistant to the celebrated humanist teacherOgnibene da Lonigo atVicenza .In 1472, he traveled to Greece and settled in
Rhodes to study the Greek language. Writing to a friend he reported, "I already speak the language with such fluency that you might think I had been born and brought up in Greece." After wide-ranging travels in the Mediterrean, he settled in Perugia circa 1475 where we find him designated as "reverendi domini Perusinae civitatis secretarius dignissimus". The next seventeen years of his life were spent in his native city, and in 1486 he was appointed Professor of Rhetoric in the University. In 1492 he succeeded Ognibene as Professor of the Humanities at Vicenza, where he spent four or five years.The magistrates of Perugia ordered his return to the city under penalties and upon his return Matarazzo, contrary to his own expectations, was given a warm reception. "Men do me honour; as I pass through the streets I am saluted; I am loved by the Baglioni, and by all other citizens besides." The following year he was appointed Professor in the University of Perugia at a salary of 110 ducats, guaranteed by the taxes of two villages which were assigned to him.
The rest of his life was spent in Perugia in an honourable position, in which, according to the usage of the time,political and literary employment were assigned to him in turns. He was frequently charged with the composition offuneral orations over distinguished citizens. In 1503 he became the State Chancellor; he went as ambassador toRome and Florence and to other States, and continued in active service of the State till 1513.
Concerning his death we have the chronicle of his friend Teseo Alfani, which reads: "On this Friday morning, August 20, 1518, beforedawn, died the most excellent Francesco Matarazzo, who had been down with fever for about a month. All the city was sore at heart, for the man had great qualities, and stood indeed above all others, not only in our city, but almost in the whole of Italy. May God have pardoned his sins. He was about seventy-five years old."
Chronicles of the City of Perugia 1492-1503
At the time this chronicle was written, the city of Perugia was one of the many Renaissance centers of political strife, moral outrage and ruthless violence. The book relates the story of two rival families, the Oddi and the Baglioni, who are locked in a deadly struggle for possession of the city. In 1492 the victorious Baglioni are the reigning overlords of the Republic. The Oddi family and its attendant army live in exile in the valley between Perugia and Assisi where they conduct a long and oppressive guerrilla war against their rivals; and in the process devastate the Umbrian land and impoverish the common citizen.
Considering that Matarazzo wrote under the patronage of the Baglione, many critics regard the author as biased in his selection and presentation of historical material. ["What is the value of a source like Matarazzo's chronicles? Was he not a partisan himself, bent upon building up a heroic reputation for the Baglione...?" Heller, p. 40.]
Several sheets of the manuscript have been lost and the story begins and ends abruptly.
Influence on Historians
Notes & References
*cite book|last=Burckhardt|first=Jacob|authorlink=Jacob Burckhardt|others=Trans. S. G. C. Middlemore|title=The Civilization of the Renaissance in Italy|publisher=The Macmillan company|date=1904|url=http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/The_Civilization_of_the_Renaissance_in_Italy
*cite book | last = Heller | first = Erich | authorlink = Erich Heller | title = The Importance of Nietzsche: Ten Essays | publisher = University of Chicago Press | date = 1988 | location = Chicago, Il. | chapter = Burckhardt and Nietzsche | pages = 39-40 | isbn = 0-226-32637-3
*cite book | last = Matarazzo | first = Francesco | title = Chronicles of the City of Perugia 1492-1503 | others = Trans. Edward Strachan Morgan | publisher = J. M. Dent & Co. | location = London | date = 1905
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