Italian Renaissance - Italy - 3-9 Antiquity as Common Source...
Share travel photos on the Exploitz.com website, the leading travel photography site on the Internet!
exploitz.com


Italy Hotels
Italy Hostels
Italy Sights

Recommended Italy Pictures:

San Michelle Fiesole Italy
Pisa Italy
View to The Amalfi Coast picture
Italian Memorabilia
Verona Italy
Santa Maria Della Salute
Rialto picture
Rome Italy Colliseum picture

Other picture lists:

Italy Posters
Italy Posters, Page 2
Italy Posters, Page 3
Italy Posters, Page 4
Italy Posters, Page 5
Italy Posters, Page 6
Spain Posters
Spain Posters, Page 2
Egypt Posters
Portugal Posters
Denmark Posters



Arezzo Hotels
Bergamo Hotels
Bologna Hotels
Brescia Hotels
Capri Hotels
Catania Hotels
Como Hotels
Cortona Hotels
Ferrara Hotels
Firenze Hotels
Florence Hotels
Forte Dei Marmi Hotels
Genova Hotels
Ischia Hotels
Lucca Hotels
Merano Hotels
Messina Hotels
Milan Hotels
Milano Hotels
Montecatini Terme Hotels
Motta Anastasia Hotels
Naples Hotels
Padova Hotels
Paestum Hotels
Palermo Hotels
Palinuro Hotels
Parma Hotels
Perugia Hotels
Piacenza Hotels
Pisa Hotels
Positano Hotels
Rapallo Hotels
Ravenna Hotels
Ricadi Hotels
Rimini Hotels
Riva Del Garda Hotels
Roma Hotels
Rome Hotels
San Remo Hotels
Sardinia Hotels
Siena Hotels
Siracusa Hotels
Sorrento Hotels
Taormina Hotels
Torino Hotels
Trieste Hotels
Turin Hotels
Venezia Hotels
Venice Hotels
Verona Hotels
Vicenza Hotels
Vieste Hotels


History: The Civilization of the Renaissance in Italy by Jacob Burckhardt

Index | pg. 87 |Previous Page - Next Page

3-9 Antiquity as Common Source ...

Antiquity as the Common Source

We cannot attempt to trace the influence of humanism in the special sciences. Each has its own history, in which the Italian investigators of this period, chiefly through their rediscovery of the results attained by antiquity, mark a new epoch, with which the modern period of the science in question begins with more or less distinctness. With regard to philosophy, too, we must refer the reader to the special historical works on the subject. The influence of the old philosophers on Italian culture will appear at times immense, at times inconsiderable; the former, when we consider how the doctrines of Aristotle, chiefly drawn from the Ethics and Politics--both widely diffused at an early period--became the common property of educated Italians, and how the whole method of abstract thought was governed by him; the latter, when we remember how slight was the dogmatic influence of the old philosophies, and even of the enthusiastic Florentine Platonists, on the spirit of the people at large. What looks like such an influence is generally no more than a consequence of the new culture in general, and of the special growth and development of the Italian mind. When we come to speak of religion, we shall have more to say on this head. But in by far the greater number of cases, we have to do, not with the general culture of the people with the utterances of individuals or of learned circles; and here, too, a distinction must be drawn between the true assimilation of ancient doctrines and fashionable make-believe. For with many, antiquity was only a fashion, even among very learned people.

Nevertheless, all that looks like affectation to our age, need not then have actually been so. The giving of Greek and Latin names to children, for example, is better and more respectable than the present practice of taking them, especially the female names, from novels. When the enthusiasm for the ancient world was greater than for the saints, it was simple and natural enough that noble families called their sons Agamemnon, Tydeus, and Achilles, and that a painter named his son Apelles and his daughter Minerva.58 Nor will it appear unreasonable that, instead of a family name, which people were often glad to get rid of, a well-sounding ancient name was chosen. A local name, shared by all residents in the place, and not yet transformed into a family name, was willingly given up, especially when its religious associations made it inconvenient. Filippo da San Gimignano called himself Callimachus. The man, mis- understood and insulted by his family, who made his fortune as a scholar in foreign cities, could afford, even if he were a Sanseverino, to change his name to Julius Pomponius Laetus. Even the simple translation of a name into Latin or Greek, as was almost uniformly the custom in Germany, may be excused to a generation which spoke and wrote Latin, and which needed names that could be not only declined, but used with facility in verse and prose. What was blameworthy and ridiculous was the change of half a name, baptismal or family, to give it a classical sound and a new sense. Thus Giovanni was turned into Jovianus or Janus, Pietro to Petreius or Pierius, Antonio to Aoniuss Sannazaro to Syncerus, Luca Grasso to Lucius Crassus. Ariosto, who speaks with such derision of all this, lived to see children called after his own heroes and heroines.

Nor must we judge too severely the latinization of many usages of social life, such as the titles of officials, of cere monies, and the like, in the writers of the period. As long as people were satisfied with a simple, fluent Latin style, as was the case with most writers from Petrarch to, Aeneas Sylvius, this practice was not so frequent and striking; it became inevitable when a faultless, Ciceronian Latin was demanded. Modern names and things no longer harmonized with the style, unless they were first artificially changed. Pedants found a pleasure in addressing municipal counsellors as 'Patres Conscripti,' nuns as 'Virgines Vestales,' and entitling every saint 'Divus' or 'Deus'; but men of better taste, such as Paolo Giovio, only did so when and because they could not help it. But as Giovio does it naturally, and lays no special stress upon it, we are not offended if, in his melodious language, the cardinals appear as 'Senatores,' their dean as 'Princeps Senatus,' excommunication as 'Dirae,' and the carnival as 'Lupercalia.' The example of this author alone is enough to warn us against drawing a hasty inference from these peculiarities of style as to the writer's whole mode of thinking.



Index | pg. 87 |Previous Page - Next Page

Italy Hotels - Italy Hostels - Italy Sights

................................................................

Other popular Italy book pages:

Mythology: Apollo and Daphne
Mythology: Prometheus and Pandora
Mythology: Callisto
Mythology: Venus and Adonis
Mythology: Apollo and Hyacinthus
Mythology: Cupid and Psyche
Mythology: Nisus, Scylla, Echo
Mythology: Sphinx
Mythology: Pegasus,Chimera
Mythology: Centaurs


Online Italy Books

Italian Renaissance
Italian Recipes
Italian Poetry
Roman Mythology






Italy Travel Guide
A good starting point for researching Italy for travel or reference.

Venice - Piazza St. Marco (St. Mark's Square)
Venice - Gondola along the Grand Canal
Venice - Walking around Venice Streets
Venice - Pictures from the Venice canals
Venice - From the Train Station to St. Mark's 1
Venice - From the Train Station to St. Mark's 2
Ceasar's European Discovery Pictures. Italy Pg.1
Breathtaking Italy and France
Ceasar's European Discovery Pictures. Italy Pg. 2
Florence and Venice
Arno River in Florence
Campania