
Lettera Di Poggio Bracciolini 1380 1459 A Guarino Veronese
Gian Francesco Poggio Bracciolini (11 February 1380 – 30 October 1459), usually referred to. A statue by Donatello and a portrait by Antonio del Pollaiuolo remain to commemorate a citizen. In a long letter to Niccoli (p. Carlo Marsuppini ('Carlo Aretino'), Guarino Veronese, Ambrogio Traversari, Francesco Barbaro,.
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Primary Literature
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Secondary Literature

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Tertiary Literature
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AbstractPoggio, like many other humanists of his generation, was not a systematic philosopher, and his works contain many apparent contradictions. This is all the more so since he wrote few expository tracts, but rather dialogues, a history, numerous letters, and a collection of jokes. He was a humanist who sometimes ranked the Church Fathers above the classics, denied the exemplary value of the ancient world, yet balked at the suggestion that the moderns could surpass antiquity or that modernity be judged by other standards than the classical past. An almost lifelong papal employee, he agitated against hypocritical clergy, yet fathered 14 children with his common-law wife. If there was one unifying factor in Poggio’s outlook, it lay in his unflinching observation of human foibles and frailty, met with good-humored laughter, biting sarcasm, and sometimes deep despair.