Giovanni della Casa

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Pontormo, Monsignor Giovanni della Casa, 1541-44, National Gallery of Art, Washington D.C.
Pontormo, Monsignor Giovanni della Casa, 1541-44, National Gallery of Art, Washington D.C.

Giovanni della Casa (28 June 1503 - 14 November 1556) was an Italian poet.

He was born in the Mugello district, in Tuscany. He studied at Bologna, Florence and Rome, and by his learning attracted the patronage of Alexander Farnese, who, as Pope Paul III, made him nuncio to Florence, where he received the honour of being elected a member of the celebrated academy, and then to Naples, where his oratorical ability brought him considerable success. His reward was the archbishopric of Benevento, and it was believed that it was only his openly licentious poem, Capitoli del forno, and the fact that the French court seemed to desire his elevation, which prevented him from being raised to a still higher dignity. He died in 1556 and is buried in Sant'Andrea della Valle.

Casa is chiefly remarkable as the leader of a reaction in lyric poetry against the universal imitation of Petrarch, and as the originator of a style, which, if less soft and elegant, was more nervous and majestic than that which it replaced.

His prose writings gained great reputation in their own day, and long afterwards, but are disfigured by apparent straining after effect, and by frequent puerility and circumlocution. The principal are in Italian, the famous Il Galateo (1558), a treatise of manners, which has been translated into several languages, and in Latin, De officiis, and translations from Thucydides, Plato and Aristotle. Il Galateo was translated into 'Anglo-Latin' by Nicholas Fitzherbert under the title Ioannis Casae Galathaeus sive de moribus liber Italicus and first published at Rome in 1595.[1] He is also credited as the first person to use the phrase "ragion di Stato", or "reason of state," in his Oration to Carlo V in 1549.[2]

A complete edition of his works was published at Florence in 1707, to which is prefixed a life by Casotti. The best edition is that of Venice, 1752.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Bibliotheca Craesseliana at uni-graz.at (accessed 22 February 2008): Ioannis Casae Galathaeus sive de moribus liber Italicus. A Nicolao Fierberto Anglo latine expressus
  2. ^ De Mattei, Rodolfo, La 'Ragion di Stato' (Milan and Naples: Riccardo Ricciardi Editore), 1979