Jump to content

Marco Publio Fontana

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Draft:Marco Publio Fontana)
Marco Publio Fontana
Born18 January 1548 Edit this on Wikidata
Palosco Edit this on Wikidata
Died10 November 1609 Edit this on Wikidata (aged 61)
Desenzano del Garda Edit this on Wikidata
OccupationWriter, poet, Latin Catholic priest Edit this on Wikidata
MovementRenaissance humanism

Marco Publio Fontana (1548–1609) was an Italian humanist and poet, fellow townsman and friend of Torquato Tasso. He wrote the Apotheosis of Tasso, a poem which extended his reputation through all Italy. His most popular work is Delphinis, a Latin poem (1582).[1]

Biography

[edit]

Marco Publio Fontana was born at Palosco, in the diocese of Brescia, in 1548.[1] He was carefully educated by his father, Gianfrancesco, and by Pietro Rossi, receiving a most thorough training in Greek and Latin literature, especially in the poets (above all, Virgil). For mathematics, philosophy, and eventually medicine, he was sent to Brescia, but continued to study the poets, as he did after transferring his interest to theology and the Church Fathers.

The first collected edition of his Latin poems (Bergamo, 1752) runs to well over three hundred pages. The chief work is the Delphinis in three books, a mythological epic of very little but historical interest today. This is followed by five books of Heroica carmina (verse epistles, epicedia, and the like). Besides Horatian lyrics, hendecasyllabics, and a hexameter poem on the birth of Christ, there is also the Pastoralia carmina — six eclogues and three lusus pastorales.

The fifth eclogue (Doris et Alcon; 78 hexameters) is a love-story. The sixth eclogue (Caprea, "The She-Goat"; 103 hexameters) was a pastoral elegy composed on the death of a friend's pet goat.[2]

Marco Publio Fontana died on November 10, 1609. After his death the treatise Del proprio et ultimato fine del poeta was published (Bergamo 1615). His Latin poems, collected by Marco Antonio Foppa, were published with the title Poëmata omnia, by Pierantonio Serassi in Bergamo in 1752, together with a Vita di Marco Publio Fontana by cardinal Giuseppe Alessandro Furietti.[3]

“Fontana is one of the modern poets," says Gian Vittorio Rossi, "who have approached nearest to Virgil in beauty of imagery and harmony of diction."[1]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c Thomas 1892, p. 1010.
  2. ^ Ellen Zetzel Lambert (1976). Placing Sorrow: A Study of the Pastoral Elegy Convention from Theocritus to Milton. University of North Carolina Press. p. 85. ISBN 9780807870600.
  3. ^ Formichetti 1997.

Bibliography

[edit]