- Piero Valeriano Bolzani
Piero Valeriano Bolzani, born Giampietro Valeriano Bolzani (1477–1558), was an Italian
Renaissance humanist , favored by theMedici .Life
Bolzani was born in
Belluno . His family was poor, and he did not learn to read until age 15. An uncle invited him toVenice , but he instead went into the service of a noble for support, and was tutored in various languages. He studied philosophy at theUniversity of Padua at age 23. He returned to Belluno later, but fled toRome in 1509 to escape the occupation of the city by theHoly Roman Empire during theWar of the League of Cambrai .cite encyclopedia | title = Piero Valeriano Bolzani | encyclopedia = A New Universal Biography | editor = John Platts | year = 1826 | volume = 4 | pages = pp. 289–290 | url = http://books.google.com/books?id=iS54bfglA7oC&pg=PA289]In Rome, he became acquainted with Cardinal Giovanni de' Medici, who would become
Pope Leo X in 1513. Upon Leo X's elevation, Bolzani frequented the papal court, and was provided for until the Pope's death in 1521. After Leo X's death, Bolzani went toNaples , but returned to Rome upon the accession of Leo X's cousin,Pope Clement VII , in 1523. He tookholy orders and was given a number of positions and titles, being made chair of eloquence,protonotary apostolic , private chamberlain, and given acanonry in Belluno. He also became private tutor to Alessandro de' Medici andIppolito de' Medici . He accompanied Alessandro and Ippolito toFlorence , but fled with them in 1527 when the Medici were expelled from the city in favor of a Republic; he returned along with them in 1530. After their deaths (Ippolito in 1535 and Alessandro in 1537), he moved to Belluno, and then to Padua, where he wrote a number of works, and died in 1558.Works
Among his books, "De Infelicitate Literatorum" and "Hieroglyphica sive de sacris Aegyptiorum litteris commentarii" are notable. "De Infelicitate Literatorum" is a treatise on the misfortunes of learned men, containing a number of anecodotes of misfortunes and poverty attending them, though some of the stories are of dubious authenticity. His "Hieroglyphica", written during a frenzy of popularity surrounding the rediscovered "Hieroglyphica" of
Horapollo , was a nearly thousand-page folio that constituted the first Renaissance dictionary ofsymbol s, which would become a popular genre. It was published inBasel in 1556, reprinted seven times through 1678, and translated into French in 1576 and 1615 and Italian in 1602. [cite book | author = Luc Brisson | title = How Philosophers Saved Myths | publisher = University of Chicago Press | year = 2004 | id = ISBN 0226075354 | pages = pp. 142, 193] He also wrote Latinpoetry , which was well-known at the time. In particular, a 1549 poem of his, "Pierus", written in the shape of apear , is an early example ofconcrete poetry ; it was famous enough to be known inEngland , where it was attacked byGabriel Harvey . [cite book | author = Dick Higgins | title = Pattern Poetry: Guide to an Unknown Literature | publisher = SUNY Press | year = 1987 | id = ISBN 0887064132 | pages = p. 98]References
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