Historical Dictionary of Renaissance

SANNAZARO, JACOPO

(1458-1530)
Neapolitanhumanistand poet. During his youth atNaples, he was a member of a circle of lo-cal humanists led byGiovanni Pontano. During the 1480s and 1490s he developed a reputation as a poet in both Italian and Latin. When his patron, King Frederick of Aragon, was dethroned and ex-iled to France, he shared the exile until the king's death in 1504 and then returned home to his rural villa, where he spent the rest of his life, busy writing but removed from court life and politics. In Latin he wrote Virgilian-stylePiscatorial Ecloguesand a Christian epic on the birth of Christ,De partu Virginis(1526). His most important po-etry, however, was his vernacular pastoral poetry, especially the lengthyArcadia(1502 and 1504). This work, with its many allusions toclassicalpoets and modern ones likeDanteandPetrarch, de-scribes an imaginary society of cultivated shepherd-poets and pro-vides an allegorical account of his own romantic quest for the woman he loved. Arcadian pastoral poetry had great influence on later Re-naissance literature, not only in Italy but also in England, in the work of SirPhilip Sidney; in Spain, in the romances ofJorge de Mon-temayorandMiguel de Cervantes Saavedra; and in France, in the pastoral poetry ofHonore d'Urfé.

  1. sannazaro, jacopoSannazaro Jacopo Italian and Latin poet b. at Naples July d. at Rome in Aug. dd Catholic Encyclopedia.Kevin Knight...Catholic encyclopedia
  2. sannazaro, jacopoc. Jacopo Sannazaro was a Renaissance humanist and poet who wrote in Italian and Latin. He is most famous for the poem Arcadiaem which established the literary tradition...Renaissance and Reformation 1500-1620_ A Biographical Dictionary