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Agostino Mascardi

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Agostino Mascardi
Bernini, Portrait of Agostino Mascardi
Born(1590-09-02)September 2, 1590
Died1640(1640-00-00) (aged 49–50)
NationalityItalian
Occupations
Parent(s)Alderano Mascardi and Faustina Mascardi (née de’ Nobili)
Academic background
Alma materPontifical Gregorian University
Academic work
DisciplineRhetoric, Latin literature, Historiography
School or traditionBaroque
InstitutionsSapienza University of Rome
Notable worksDell'arte historica (1636)
Siluarum libri IV (1622)

Agostino Mascardi (2 September 1590 – 1640) was an Italian rhetorician, historian and poet.

Expelled from the Jesuit Order by his superiors, Mascardi pursued a successful career as a secretary for various important figures, and became a renowned writer and professor of rhetoric at the Sapienza University of Rome. He was a member of several learned societies and wrote a seminal treatise, "Dell'arte historica" (1636) advocating history as a powerful instrument of ethical and religious persuasion and largely focusing on the interplay between truth and believability.

Biography

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Born in Sarzana in Liguria, Mascardi studied in Rome and was ordained a Jesuit, but was expelled from the Order in 1617.[1] According to Mascardi, “the principal reason of such calamity has been my employment with the House of Este,” which his Jesuit superiors saw as a sign that Mascardi had decided to put his personal ambitions before the interests of the Jesuit order.[2]

His fruitful career continued, however, with a degree in jurisprudence and several posts as secretary to important political and religious personalities including Cardinals Alessandro d'Este and Maurice of Savoy.[1] Mascardi's writing attracted the attention of Pope Urban VIII who appointed him chamberlain and in 1628 gave him the position of Professor of Rhetoric at the University of Rome in the College of the Sapienza.[3]

He was a member and later principe of the Accademia degli Umoristi and sopraintendente of the Accademia dei Desiosi, which started to be assembled by Prince Maurice of Savoy in 1625 and was officially founded in 1626, and which became one of the most intellectually vivacious venues in early seventeenth-century Rome.[4][5]

In 1640, four years after the publication of his masterpiece Dell'arte historica, Mascardi decided to leave Rome and move back to his native Liguria. Old and sick, he died shortly after his arrival there.[6]

Gian Lorenzo Bernini realized two portraits of Mascardi. One is a painting, now lost, which once belonged to Cassiano dal Pozzo. The other is a drawing of 1630, known through another conserved in Paris at the l'École des Beaux-Arts.[7]

Dell'arte historica

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Mascardi was a foremost theorist for the new historiography, which grew out of the Counter-Reformation need to assimilate the goals of history with those of religious propaganda. He and Francesco Sforza Pallavicino promoted history as a major instrument of ethical and religious persuasion. Mascardi's treatise Dell'arte historica (1636) covers the origins, the ancient sources, the material and the goals of history. Much of the second and third books of the treatise investigate the relationship between truth (“vero”) and verisimilar (“verisimile”). The fourth and fifth books deal with technical matters, including a long discussion of style (“stile”). Mascardi taught his readers that history was essentially a problem of style and considered history as a branch of oratory – the opus oratorium maxime.[8] Accordingly, at the beginning of Book V, Mascardi asserts the “convenienza dell'istoria con la poesia e con l'oratoria.” Underlying the entire work is the premise that history, using the methodology of rhetoric, can be a powerful persuasive means.[9]

Gabriel Naudé lauds Mascardi's treatise on the art of history for its “matchless elegance in language and for its judicious treatment of its subject.”[10]

Siluarum libri IV

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Silvarum libri IV, 1st edition, Antwerp: ex officina Plantiniana, 1622, engraved allegorical title-page after Peter Paul Rubens by Theodoor Galle

The title of Mascardi's publication was very likely inspired by the Silvae of Publius Papinius Statius (ca. 45-96 A.D.) which is a collection of topical poems (epigrams, letters, satires, poems for weddings, odes, funeral poems, etc. ) partly based on Virgil. Mascardi's Silvae also contained poems concerned with a variety of themes, and his publication is divided into four Books. Book I, De Rebus Heroicis (On heroic events), consists of poems honouring victories in battle, the achieving of peace, various heroic figures from antiquity (Romulus, Hannibal, Clelia, Cleopatra, etc.) and modern history (Cardinals Alessandro d'Este, Maffeo Barberini, Aloysius Capponius, etc.). The second Book has no subtitle and includes three elegies on Queen Dido, three poems on the seasons, two on poverty and others on varied subjects. Book III, De Rebus Tristibus (On mournful events), has several poems concerning funerals. For example, there is an eclogue which contains a dialogue between two shepherds who discuss the death of Margaret of Austria. Still other poems are devoted to the funerals of famous contemporaries or are concerned with the fugacity of time. The volume closes with Book IV, De Rebus Sacris (On sacred matters), which presents a variety of poems dealing with religious themes.[citation needed]

Mascardi's Silvae was the “first book [of] contemporary poetry illustrated with a title-page by Rubens”.[11]

Works

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Title page of Agostino Mascardi's Orationi, Genoa, Giuseppe Pavoni, 1622. Engraving by Johann Friedrich Greuter after Luciano Borzone
  • Agostino Mascardi (1622). Orationi (in Italian). Genua: Giuseppe Pavoni. Retrieved 13 October 2019.
  • Agostino Mascardi (1622). Augustini Mascardi Siluarum libri IV: ad Alexandrum principem Estensem S.R.E. Cardinalem (in Latin). Antwerp: ex Officina Plantiniana. Retrieved 7 March 2019.
  • Le pompe del Campidoglio per la Santità di Nostro Signore Urbano VIII quando pigliò il possesso, Rome, Erede di Bartolomeo Zannetti 1624.
  • Agostino Mascardi (1625). Prose vulgari. Venice: per Bartolomeo Fontana. Retrieved 7 March 2019.
  • Agostino Mascardi (1627). Discorsi morali di Agostino Mascardi su la tauola di Cebete Tebano. Venice: ad instanza di Girolamo Pelagallo. Retrieved 7 March 2019.
  • Agostino Mascardi (1637). La congiura del conte Giovanni Luigi Fieschi. Venice: appresso Le Scaglie. Retrieved 7 March 2019. Mascardi's Narrative was translated into English by Hugh Hare in 1693.[12] It has been always regarded as very accurate in detail but lacking in impartiality. This unsuccessful conspiracy against Andrea Doria (Jan. 2, 1547), the restorer of Genoese Liberty, is the subject of one of Schiller's Tragedies.
  • Agostino Mascardi (1630). Oppositioni, e difesa alla Congiura del conte Gio. Luigi de' Fieschi. Venice: appresso Domenico Ventura. Retrieved 7 March 2019.
  • Agostino Mascardi; Claudio Achillini (1631). Due lettere l'una del Mascardi all'Achillini, l'altra dell'Achillini al Mascardi sopra le presenti calamità. Rome: per Lodouico Grignani.
  • Agostino Mascardi (1636). Dell'arte historica. Rome: appresso Giacomo Facciotti. Retrieved 7 March 2019.
  • Agostino Mascardi (1859). Dell'arte historica. Florence: Le Monnier. Retrieved 7 March 2019.
  • Agostino Mascardi (1639). Romanae dissertationes de affectibus, sive perturbationibus animi, earumque characteribus (in Latin). Paris: apud Sebastianum Cramoisy, typographum regis ordinarium. Retrieved 31 May 2019.
  • Agostino Mascardi (1639). Ethicae prolusiones (in Latin). Paris: apud Sebastianum Cramoisy, typographum regis ordinarium. Retrieved 31 May 2019.

Notes

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  1. ^ a b Bellini 2008.
  2. ^ Tutino 2014, p. 42.
  3. ^ Ludwig Freiherr von Pastor (1906). The History of the Popes: From the Close of the Middle Ages. Drawn from the Secret Archives of the Vatican and Other Original Sources. Vol. 29. K. Paul, Trench, Trübner & Company, Limited. p. 454.
  4. ^ Tutino 2014, p. 43.
  5. ^ For Agostino Mascardi's activity in courtly academies during the first half of the seventeenth century, see Biagioli, Galileo Courtier, 263–65.
  6. ^ Tutino 2014, p. 51.
  7. ^ Bellini 2006, pp. 277–8.
  8. ^ John Renaldo, “A Seventeenth-Century Jesuit Historian: Daniello Bartoli,” Annali dell’Istituto italiano per gli studi storici 2 (1969): 209.
  9. ^ Vasillov 1979–1980, p. 25.
  10. ^ Robert A. Schneider (2019). Dignified Retreat: Writers and Intellectuals in the Age of Richelieu. Oxford University Press. p. 274. ISBN 9780192560810.
  11. ^ Gitta Bertram, Rubens as a Designer of Title-Pages, pp. 184 & 60.
  12. ^ An Historical Relation of the Conspiracy of John Lewis Count de Fieschi, against the City and Republick of Genouà in the year 1547: done into English by the Hon. Hugh Hare Esq. (1693) 1886. 124 pp.

Bibliography

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  • «Agostino Mascardi Genovese». In : Le glorie de gli Incogniti: o vero, Gli huomini illustri dell'Accademia de' signori Incogniti di Venetia, In Venetia : appresso Francesco Valuasense stampator dell'Accademia, 1647, pp. 2–5 (on-line).
  • Agostino Mascardi entry (in Italian) by Vito Antonio Vitale in the Enciclopedia Treccani, 1934