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PIETRO DELLA VIGNA, or PIER DELLE See also: Frederick II., was See also: born at See also: Capua in humble circumstances
.
He studied See also: law at See also: Padua, and through his classical See also: education, his ability to speak Latin and his poetic gifts, he gained the favour of Frederick II., who made him his secretary, and afterwards judex magnae curiae, councillor, governor of Apulia, prothonotary and chancellor
.
The emperor, " of whose See also: heart he held the keys," as See also: Dante says, sent him to See also: Rome in 1232 and 1237 to negotiate with the See also: pope, to Padua in 1239 to induce the citizens to accept imperial See also: protection, to See also: England in 1234–1235 to arrange a See also: marriage between Frederick and Isabella, See also: sister of See also: King
See also: Henry III
.
He proved a skilful and trustworthy diplomat, and he persistently defended the emperor against his traducers and against the pope's menaces
.
But at the Council of
See also: Lyons, which had been summoned by Pope Innocent IV., Pietro della Vigna entrusted the defence of his master to the celebrated jurist Taddeo of Suessa, who failed to prevent his condemnation
.
Frederick, whose suspicions had been awakened by the slanders of the envious, had him imprisoned and blinded without giving him a chance to rebut his accusers
.
Unable to bear his disgrace, he committed suicide in his prison at See also: Pisa in 1249
.
The exact date, place and manner of his See also: death are, however, subject to controversy, and Flaminio del Borgo states that it occurred in the See also: church of S
.
See also: Andrea, at Pisa, in 1256
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The tragic See also: fate of this See also: man gave rise to many legends
.
The Guelphic tradition accuses Pietro della Vigna, as well as the emperor and the See also: court, of See also: heresy; it was even stated, probably without any foundation, that they were the authors of the famous See also: work, De tribus impostoribus, wherein Moses, Christ and Mahomet are blasphemed
.
Pietro della Vigna was a man of See also: great culture; he encouraged science and the See also: fine arts, and contributed much to the welfare of See also: Italy by wise legislative reforms
.
He was the author of some delicate verse in the vernacularSee also: tongue, of which two canzoni and a sonnet are still extant
.
His letters, mostly written in the name of the emperor and published by Iselin (Epistolarumlibri vi., 2 vols., See also: Basel, 1740), contain much valuable information on the See also: history and culture of the 13th century
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A collection of the See also: laws of See also: Sicily, a Tractatus de potestate imperiali, and another See also: treatise, " On See also: Consolation," in the See also: style of Boethius, are also attributed to him
.
See Huillard-Breholles, See also: Vie et correspondance de See also: Pierre de la See also: Vigne (See also: Paris, 1864) ; Presta, Pier delle Vigne (Milan, 188o) ; Capasso and Ianelli, Pier delle Vigne (See also: Caserta, 1882) ; also FREDERICK H
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