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[Triumphi with Orlandi’s canzone on Triumphi]

Overview

Current Location

Biblioteca Classense
Ravenna
Italy

Shelfmark
89
Date
late-fifteenth century / early-sixteenth century
Mode of exegesis
Related to Petrarch's

Triumphi + Mortis Ia, Fame Ia

Description

Physical Description: Format

168x115 mm; I + 77 + I fols.

Physical Description: Textblock

paper; various scripts: cursive humanistic script for the Triumphi, sixteenth-century cursive script for Orlandi’s canzone; Petrarch’s poems with one verse per line.

Title Page

<inc> Gioua[n]zel ma[n]sueto & fiero ueglio

Internal Description

fols. 1r-51r: Triumphi (order: Amoris I.79-160, Amoris III, Amoris IV, Amoris II, Pudicitie, Mortis Ia, Mortis I, Mortis II, Fame Ia, Fame I, Fame II, Fame III, Temporis; Eternitatis);
 
fol. 57r-59v: Alberto Orlandi’s canzone on Triumphi (‘Cantilena alberti Orlandi’; <inc> Beato elprego to [sic] cortese & almo);
 
Other contents:
 
The ms. includes a collection of four canzoni and one sonnet by Alberto Orlandi, two poems by Jacopo Corsi, one canzone by Simone Serdini, and three sonnets and one canzone by anonymous author. A series of four sonnets of political subject and two Latin carmina might be attributed to Panfilo Sasso according to Bettarelli (2001, 25-28); a third Latin poem can be attributed to Benedetto da Cingoli (Bettarelli 2001, 27). At fol. 75r-75v are four recipes for producing different coloured pigments in painting. For a complete list of the works, see Bettarelli 2001.

Material Copy

Location

Biblioteca Classense
Ravenna
Italy

Shelfmark
89
Copy seen by
Lorenzo
Sacchini
Notes

Orlandi’s canzone summarizes the content of the Triumphi. In the second stanza Orlandi states that he will illustrate the five subjects of Petrarch’s work (‘Ue contaro i cinquj s[u]o subiecti’). The text of the canzone makes precise references to Petrarch’s work, with a particular focus on mythological figures (such as Jupiter, Mars, Proserpine) mentioned in the Triumphi; few maniculae.
 
According to Bettarelli (2001, 5-6), the first section of the ms. containing the Triumphi is the oldest, and was copied in the closing decades of the fifteenth century.

Bibliography

Mazzatinti, IV, 22
 
***
 
Bettarelli 2001