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BALDASSARE See also: Italian diplomatist and See also: man of letters, was See also: born at Casanatico near See also: Mantua, and was educated at Milan under the famous professors See also: Merula and Chalcondyles
.
In 1496 he entered the service of Lodovico See also: Sforza, duke of Milan, returning to Mantua in 15o -when Lodovico wascarried prisoner into See also: France
.
In 1504 he was attached to the See also: court of Guidobaldo Malatesta, duke of See also: Urbino, and in 'so(' he was sent by that See also: prince on a See also: mission to See also: Henry VII. of
See also: England, who had before conferred on Federigo Malatesta, " the See also: Good Duke," the most famous mercenary of his age, the See also: order of the Garter
.
Guidobaldo dying childless in 1508, the duchy of Urbino was given to See also: Francesco Maria della Rovere, for whom See also: Castiglione, See also: envoy at the court of See also: Leo X
.
(See also: Medici), obtained the office of generalissimo of the Papal troops
.
Charged with the arrangement of the dispute between See also: Clement VII
.
(Medici) and See also: Charles V., Castiglione crossed, in 1524, into
See also: Spain, where he was received with highest honours, being afterwards naturalized, and made See also: bishop of Avila
.
In 1527, however, See also: Rome was seized and sacked by the Imperialists under Bourbon, and in See also: July of the same See also: year the surrender of the See also: castle of Sant' Angelo placed Clement in their hands
.
Castiglione had been tricked by the emperor, but there were not wanting accusations of treachery against himself
.
He had, however, placed fidelity highest among the virtues of his ideal " courtier," and when he died at Toledo in 1529rit was said that he had died of grief and shame at the imputation
.
The emperor mourned him as " one of the See also: world's best cavaliers." A portrait of him, now at the Louvre, was painted by See also: Raphael, who disdained neither his opinion nor his advice
.
Castiglione wrote little, but that little is of rare merit
.
His verses, in Latin and Italian, are elegant in the extreme; his letters ( See also: Padua, 1769–1771) are full of See also: grace and finesse
.
But the See also: book by which he is best remembered is the famous See also: treatise, Il Cortegiano, written in 1514, published at Venice by Aldus in '.528, and translated into See also: English by See also: Thomas
See also: Hoby as early as 1561
.
This book, called by the Italians Il Libro d'oro, and remarkable for its easy force and undemonstrativq elegance of See also: style no less than for the See also: nobility and manliness of its theories (see the edition by V
.
Cian, Florence, 1894), describes the Italian gentleman of the See also: Renaissance under his brightest and fairest aspect, and gives a charming picture of the court of Guidobaldo da Montefeltre, duke of Urbino, " confessedly the purest and most elevated court in See also: Italy." In the See also: form of a discussion held in the duchess's See also: drawing-room—with Elizabetta Gonzaga, Pietro See also: Bembo, Bernardo Bibbiena, Giuliano de' Medici, See also: Emilia Pia, and Ceretino the Unique among the speakers—the question, What constitutes a perfect courtier? is debated
.
With but few differences, the type determined on is the ideal gentleman of the See also: present See also: day
.
See P
.
L
.
Ginguene, Histoire litteraire de l'Italie, vi., vii
.
; J
.
A
.
See also: Symonds, The Renaissance in Italy (See also: London, 1875) ; C
.
See also: Hare, Courts and Camps of the Italian Renaissance (1908); Julia See also: Cartwright, B
.
Castiglione, the Perfect Courtier (1908), with good bibliography . |
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