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See also: anonymous)
Ravennese in See also: Petrarch's letters, lived at the end of the 14th and the beginning of the 15th century
.
1
.
A See also: young Ravennese See also: born about 1347, who in 1364 went to live with Petrarch as secretary
.
In 1367 he set out to see the See also: world and make a name for himself, returned in a See also: state of destitution, but, growing restless again, See also: left his employer for, See also: good in 1368
.
He is not mentioned again in Petrarch's corre-' spondence, unless a letter " to a certain wanderer " (vago cuidam),
congratulating him on his arrival at See also: Rome in 1373, is addressed to him
.
2
.
Son of Conversanus (Conversinus, Convertinus)
.
He is first heard of (Nov
.
17, 1368) as appointed to the professor-See also: ship of rhetoric at Florence, where he had for some See also: time held the See also: post of See also: notary at the courts of See also: justice
.
This differentiates him from M
.
He entered (c
.
1370) the service of the ducal See also: house of See also: Padua, the Carraras, in which he continued at least until 1404, although the whole of that See also: period was not spent in Padua
.
From 1375 to 1379 he was a schoolmaster at See also: Belluno, and was dismissed as too good for his post and not adapted for teaching boys
.
On the 22nd of See also: March 1382, he was appointed professor of rhetoric at Padua
.
During the struggle between the Carraras and Viscontis, he spent five years at
See also: Udine (1387–1392)
.
From 1395–1404 he was chancellor of See also: Francis of See also: Carrara, and is heard of for the last time in 1406 as living at Venice
.
His See also: history of the Carraras, a tasteless production in barbarous Latin, says little for his See also: literary capacity; but as a teacher he enjoyed a See also: great
reputation, amongst his pupils being Vittorino da Feltre and Guarino of See also: Verona
.
3
.
Malpaghini (De Malpaghinis), the most important
.
Born about 1356, he was a pupil of Petrarch from a very early age to 1374
.
On the 19th of See also: September 1397 he was appointed professor of rhetoric and eloquence at Florence
.
On the 9th of See also: June 1412, on the re-opening of the studio, which had been shut from 1405 to 1411 owing to the plague, his See also: appointment was renewed for five years, before the expiration of which period he died (May 1417)
.
Although Malpaghini left nothing behind him, he did
much to encourage the study of Latin; among his pupils was See also: Poggio See also: Bracciolini
.
The See also: local documents and other authorities on the subject will be found in E
.
T
.
Klette, Beitrage zur Geschichte tsnd Litteratur der italienischen Gelehrtenrenaissance, vol. i
.
(1888); see also G
.
Voigt, Die Wiederbelebung See also: des klassischen Altertums, who, however, identifies (I) and (2)
.
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