Resultados de búsqueda (1)
Filtros aplicados:
-
Resultado número:1
Estudio crítico
- Título:
-
Humanism in Spain / Ottavio Di Camillo - Registro bibliográfico
- Autor:
-
Di Camillo, Ottavio, 1938-
- Portal:
-
Alfonso de Cartagena
Visitar sitio web
- Materia:
-
Humanismo -- España -- Siglo 15º
- Mat. aut.:
-
Cartagena, Alfonso de, aproximadamente 1385-1456 -- Crítica e interpretación
- Fragmentos
'diego hurtado de mendoza poet and diplomat' en la obra
: (20
coincidencias encontradas)
-
-
Divine Comedy for the marquis of Santillana, Iñigo López de
Mendoza.38 It is obvious that Villena did
-
career by succeeding his
father as bishop of Burgos, he distinguished himself more as an effective
diplomat
-
who lived during the first half of the fifteenth
century, the marquis of Santillana, Iñigo López de Mendoza
-
To Gómez Manrique, another poet and nobleman, Santillana was
indeed “the first in our time who combined
-
responsible for altering the course
of Castilian intellectual life was reiterated by his secretary, Diego
-
According to Diego de Burgos, these works, which Santillana and his
associates brought to the attention
-
men, were instru
mental in ushering in the revival of learning they were at present en
joying.7'
Diego
-
It was precisely this situation, Diego de Burgos contended, that prompted
Santillana to restore Spain
-
and to talk to each other
not only from distant places but across the centuries.73
The novelty in Diego
-
Although a copy of Palmieri’s work
appears in Santillana’s library,75 it is unlikely that Diego de Burgos
-
Judging
from Diego de Burgos’s account, the study of the classics did not replace
any rival teaching.
-
Nader, in The Mendoza Family in
the Spanish Renaissance, 1350-1550 (New Brunswick, NJ, 1979), oddly
enough
-
Trame, Rodrigo Sánchez de Arévalo, 1404-1470: Span
ish Diplomat and Champion of the Papacy (Washington
-
Penna, Exposición de la biblioteca de los Mendoza del Infantado
(Madrid, 1958).
-
In the letter to his son, Pero González de Mendoza, asking him to translate
into Spanish Decembrio’s
-
See Obras de Don Iñigo López de Mendoza, ed. J. Amador de los Riós
(Madrid, 1852), 481—82.
-
For Gómez Manrique’s eulogy for Santillana, see Obras de Don Iñigo Ló
pez de Mendoza, clii ff.
70.
-
Yet Diego de Valera, a fifteenth-century au
thor widely read at home and abroad, states that the Spanish
-
Diego de Burgos, Triunfo del marqués, in Schiff, La bibliothèque, 461.
72. Ibid., 462.
73.
-
Spivakovsky, Son of the Alhambra: Diego Hurtado de
Mendoza, 1504-1575 (Austin, TX, 1970); a translation
- Formatos:
-
Filtros de la búsqueda
- Humanismo -- España -- Siglo 15º 1 [Eliminar filtro]
Filtros aplicados:
-
Resultado número:1 Estudio crítico
- Título:
- Humanism in Spain / Ottavio Di Camillo - Registro bibliográfico
- Autor:
- Di Camillo, Ottavio, 1938-
- Portal:
- Alfonso de Cartagena Visitar sitio web
- Materia:
- Humanismo -- España -- Siglo 15º
- Mat. aut.:
- Cartagena, Alfonso de, aproximadamente 1385-1456 -- Crítica e interpretación
- Fragmentos 'diego hurtado de mendoza poet and diplomat' en la obra : (20 coincidencias encontradas)
-
- Divine Comedy for the marquis of Santillana, Iñigo López de Mendoza.38 It is obvious that Villena did
- career by succeeding his father as bishop of Burgos, he distinguished himself more as an effective diplomat
- who lived during the first half of the fifteenth century, the marquis of Santillana, Iñigo López de Mendoza
- To Gómez Manrique, another poet and nobleman, Santillana was indeed “the first in our time who combined
- responsible for altering the course of Castilian intellectual life was reiterated by his secretary, Diego
- According to Diego de Burgos, these works, which Santillana and his associates brought to the attention
- men, were instru mental in ushering in the revival of learning they were at present en joying.7' Diego
- It was precisely this situation, Diego de Burgos contended, that prompted Santillana to restore Spain
- and to talk to each other not only from distant places but across the centuries.73 The novelty in Diego
- Although a copy of Palmieri’s work appears in Santillana’s library,75 it is unlikely that Diego de Burgos
- Judging from Diego de Burgos’s account, the study of the classics did not replace any rival teaching.
- Nader, in The Mendoza Family in the Spanish Renaissance, 1350-1550 (New Brunswick, NJ, 1979), oddly enough
- Trame, Rodrigo Sánchez de Arévalo, 1404-1470: Span ish Diplomat and Champion of the Papacy (Washington
- Penna, Exposición de la biblioteca de los Mendoza del Infantado (Madrid, 1958).
- In the letter to his son, Pero González de Mendoza, asking him to translate into Spanish Decembrio’s
- See Obras de Don Iñigo López de Mendoza, ed. J. Amador de los Riós (Madrid, 1852), 481—82.
- For Gómez Manrique’s eulogy for Santillana, see Obras de Don Iñigo Ló pez de Mendoza, clii ff. 70.
- Yet Diego de Valera, a fifteenth-century au thor widely read at home and abroad, states that the Spanish
- Diego de Burgos, Triunfo del marqués, in Schiff, La bibliothèque, 461. 72. Ibid., 462. 73.
- Spivakovsky, Son of the Alhambra: Diego Hurtado de Mendoza, 1504-1575 (Austin, TX, 1970); a translation
- Formatos:
Filtros de la búsqueda
- Humanismo -- España -- Siglo 15º 1 [Eliminar filtro]