Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-2plfb Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-20T18:35:01.101Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Bibliography

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 September 2019

L. B. T. Houghton
Affiliation:
Rugby School
Get access

Summary

Image of the first page of this content. For PDF version, please use the ‘Save PDF’ preceeding this image.'
Type
Chapter
Information
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2019

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

[Anon.] (1810) Observations in Illustration of Virgil’s Celebrated Fourth Eclogue. London.Google Scholar
Ady, C. M. (1937) The Bentivoglio of Bologna: A Study in Despotism. London.Google Scholar
Alimonti, T. (1976) Struttura, ideologia ed imitazione virgiliana nel “De mortibus boum” di Endelechio. Turin.Google Scholar
Allegri, E. and Cecchi, A. (1980) Palazzo Vecchio e i Medici: guida storica. Florence.Google Scholar
Allen, D. C. (1970) Mysteriously Meant: The Rediscovery of Pagan Symbolism and Allegorical Interpretation in the Renaissance. Baltimore and London.Google Scholar
Allen, M. J. B. and Rees, V., with Davies, M. (eds.) (2001) Marsilio Ficino: His Theology, His Philosophy, His Legacy. Leiden, Boston, and Cologne.Google Scholar
Allen, P. (1985–2016) The Concept of Woman, 3 vols. Grand Rapids and Cambridge.Google Scholar
Allen, P. S., with Allen, H. M. and Garrod, H. W. (eds.) (1906–58) Opus epistolarum Des. Erasmi Roterodami, 12 vols. Oxford.Google Scholar
Alonso Asenjo, J. (1996) ‘Optimates lætificare: la Egloga in Nativitate Christi de Joan Baptista Anyés o Agnesio’, Criticón 66–67: 307–68Google Scholar
Amadeo, C. (1974) Il Santuario della Madonna dell’Olmo in Verdellino. Gorlago.Google Scholar
Amalteo, G., Amalteo, G. B. and Amalteo, C. (1627) Trium fratrum Amaltheorum, Hieronimi, Io. Baptistae, Cornelii carmina. Accessere Hieronymi Aleandri iunioris Amaltheorum cognati poëmatia. Venice.Google Scholar
Ames, C. R. (1988) ‘False Advertising: The Influence of Virgil and Isaiah on Pope’s Messiah, Studies in English Literature 28: 401–26Google Scholar
Angelini, L. (1946) I Baschenis, 2nd ed. Bergamo.Google Scholar
Angelini, L. (1965) ‘Baschenis, Cristoforo, il Vecchio’, in Dizionario biografico degli italiani, vol. 7, 60–1. Rome.Google Scholar
Apostol, R. A. (2009) Rome’s Bucolic Landscapes: Place, Prophecy, and Power in Aeneid VIII, PhD diss., University of Michigan.Google Scholar
Archambault, P. (1966) ‘The Ages of Man and the Ages of the World: A study of two traditions’, Revue des études augustiniennes 12: 193228CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Armstrong, D. (1986) ‘Stylistics and the date of Calpurnius Siculus’, Philologus 130: 113–36Google Scholar
Armstrong, E. (1968) Ronsard and the Age of Gold. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Arnaldi, F., Gualdo Rosa, L. and Monti Sabia, L. (eds.) (1964) Poeti latini del Quattrocento. Milan and Naples.Google Scholar
Arnold, B. (1994–5) ‘The literary experience of Vergil’s fourth Eclogue’, The Classical Journal 90: 143–60Google Scholar
Arslan, W. (1926) ‘Di Giovanni Marchiori, scultore Veneziano del Settecento’, Cronache d’arte 3: 301–8Google Scholar
Austin, H. D. (1933) ‘Aurea Justitia: A Note on Purgatorio, XXII, 40 f.’, Modern Language Notes 48: 327–30Google Scholar
Austin, R. G. (1927) ‘Virgil and the Sibyl’, Classical Quarterly 21: 100–5Google Scholar
Austin, R. G. (1968) ‘Ille ego qui quondam … ’, Classical Quarterly n.s. 18: 107–15Google Scholar
Avesani, R. (1968) ‘Epaeneticorum ad Pium II Pont. Max. libri V’, in Maffei, D. (ed.), Enea Silvio Piccolomini, papa Pio II. Atti del Convegno per il quinto centenario della morte e altri scritti, 1597. Siena.Google Scholar
Baca, A. R. (ed./trans.) (1990) Aeneas Silvius Piccolomini: Epistola ad Mahomatem II (Epistle to Mohammed II). New York, Bern, Frankfurt am Main and Paris.Google Scholar
Baker, P. (2015) Italian Renaissance Humanism in the Mirror. Cambridge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Baldissera, A. (2003) ‘“¡Oh Musas de Sicilia!”. Traduzioni e imitazioni castigliane della IV egloga virgiliana, tra XV e XVII secolo’, in Secchi Tarugi 2003: 287314Google Scholar
Baldry, H. C. (1952) ‘Who invented the Golden Age?’, Classical Quarterly n.s. 2: 8392Google Scholar
Baldwin, B. (1995) ‘Better late than early: Reflections on the date of Calpurnius Siculus’, Illinois Classical Studies 20: 157–67Google Scholar
Barberis, W. (ed.) (1998) Baldassare Castiglione: Il libro del Cortegiano. Turin.Google Scholar
Barker, D. (1996) ‘“The Golden Age is proclaimed”? The Carmen Saeculare and the renascence of the Golden Race’, Classical Quarterly n.s. 46: 434–46Google Scholar
Barker, S. (2010) ‘Pasquinades and propaganda: The reception of Urban VIII’, in Corkery, J. and Worcester, T. (eds.), The Papacy since 1500: From Italian Prince to Universal Pastor, 6989. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Barolini, T. (1984) Dante’s Poets: Textuality and Truth in the Comedy. Princeton.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Barolsky, P. (1990) Michelangelo’s Nose: A Myth and its Maker. University Park and London.Google Scholar
Barton, M. (2000) Spätantike Bukolik zwischen paganer Tradition und christlicher Verkündigung: Das Carmen de Mortibus Boum des Endelechius. Trier.Google Scholar
Basile, B. (1984) Bentivolorum magnificentia: Principe e cultura a Bologna nel Rinascimento. Rome.Google Scholar
Bastiaensen, A. A. R. (1993) ‘Prudentius in recent literary criticism’, in den Boeft, J. and Hilhorst, A. (eds.), Early Christian Poetry: A Collection of Essays, 101–34. Leiden, New York and Cologne.Google Scholar
Battaglia, F. (1936) Enea Silvio Piccolomini e Francesco Patrizi: Due politici senesi del Quattrocento. Florence.Google Scholar
Battera, F. (1981) ‘Le redazioni dei “Pastoralia” del Boiardo e il modello virgiliano’, Studi e problemi di critica testuale 31: 6378Google Scholar
Battera, F. (1990) ‘L’edizione Miscomini (1482) delle “Bucoliche elegantissimamente composte”’, Studi e problemi di critica testuale 40: 149–85Google Scholar
Bauer, S. (2006) The Censorship and Fortuna of Platina’s Lives of the Popes in the Sixteenth Century. Turnhout.Google Scholar
Bausi, F. (ed.) (1996) Angelo Poliziano: Silvae. Florence.Google Scholar
Bausi, F. (ed.) (1998) Ugolino Verino: Epigrammi. Messina.Google Scholar
Bayo, M. J. (1970) Virgilio y la pastoral española del Renacimiento (1480–1550), 2nd ed. Madrid.Google Scholar
Becker, M. (2003) ‘Iam nova progenies caelo demittitur alto: Ein Beitrag zur Vergil-Erklärung (Ecl. 4, 7)’, Hermes 131: 456–63Google Scholar
Bédoyère, G. de la (1998) ‘Carausius and the marks RSR and INPCDA’, The Numismatic Chronicle 158: 7988Google Scholar
Béhar, R. (2009) ‘Virgilio, san Agustín y el problema del poema heroico cristiano (1520–1530)’, Criticón 107: 5792Google Scholar
Bejczy, I. (2001) Erasmus and the Middle Ages: The Historical Consciousness of a Christian Humanist. Leiden.Google Scholar
Belda Navarro, C. (1985) ‘Sibilas virgilianas en el Renacimiento español: La Sibila de Cumas de El Salvador de Ubeda (Jaén)’, Imafronte 1: 521Google Scholar
Bellitto, C. M. (2001) Nicolas de Clamanges: Spirituality, Personal Reform, and Pastoral Renewal on the Eve of the Reformations. Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Belvederi, R. (1967) ‘I Bentivoglio e i Malvezzi a Bologna negli anni 1463-1506’, Annali della Facoltà di Magistero dell’Università di Bari 6: 3578Google Scholar
Bembo, P. et al. (1753) Carmina quinque illustrium poetarum. Bergamo.Google Scholar
Beneš, C. E. (2011) Urban Legends: Civic Identity and the Classical Past in Northern Italy, 1250–1350. University Park.Google Scholar
Benko, S. (1980) ‘Virgil’s Fourth Eclogue in Christian interpretation’, Aufstieg und Niedergang der römischen Welt II.31.1: 646705Google Scholar
Benziger, W. (1996) Zur Theorie von Krieg und Frieden in der italienischen Renaissance: Die Disputatio de pace et bello zwischen Bartolomeo Platina und Rodrigo Sánchez de Arévalo und andere anlässlich der Pax Paolina (Rom 1468) entstandene Schriften, 3 vols in 1. Frankfurt am Main.Google Scholar
Berg, W. (1974) Early Virgil. London.Google Scholar
Bernardi Perini, G. (1999–2000) ‘Virgilio, il Cristo, la Sibilla: Sulla lettura “messianica” della quarta egloga’, Atti e Memorie dell’Accademia Galileiana di scienze, lettere ed arti in Padova 102: 115–24Google Scholar
Bernardi Perini, G. (2012) ‘“My hedge-schoolmaster Virgil”: Dall’egloga messianica alla Bann Valley Eclogue’, in Passalacqua, M., De Nonno, M. and Morelli, A. M. (eds.), Venuste noster: Scritti offerti a Leopoldo Gamberale, 697709. Hildesheim.Google Scholar
Bernsdorff, H. (2011) ‘Der Schluss von Theokrits “Herakliskos” und Vergils vierter Ekloge’, Archiv für Papyrusforschung 57: 187–94Google Scholar
Bersuire, P. (1684) Petri Berchorii pictaviensis ordinis S. Benedicti opera omnia, 6 vols. Cologne.Google Scholar
Bettarini, R. and Barocchi, P. (eds.) (1966–87) Giorgio Vasari: Le vite de’ più eccellenti pittori, scultori ed architettori, 6 vols. Florence.Google Scholar
Bietenholz, P. G. (1994) Historia and Fabula: Myths and Legends in Historical Thought from Antiquity to the Modern Age. Leiden, New York and Cologne.Google Scholar
Binder, G. (2010) ‘Goldene Zeiten: Immer wieder wird ein Messias geboren … Beispiele neuzeitlicher Aneignung der 4. Ekloge Vergils’, in Burkard et al. 2010: 5172Google Scholar
Binns, J. W. (1990) Intellectual Culture in Elizabethan and Jacobean England: The Latin Writings of the Age. Leeds.Google Scholar
Bisson, M. (2012) ‘Precisazioni sulla decorazione dell’organo cinquecentesco di Santa Maria del Giglio a Venezia: una proposta di ricostruzione’, Arte in Friuli, arte a Trieste 31: 3140Google Scholar
Black, R. (2001) Humanism and Education in Medieval and Renaissance Italy. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Blondel, D. (1649) Des Sibylles célébrées tant par l’antiquité payenne que par les saincts Pères … Paris.Google Scholar
Blondel, D. (1661) A Treatise of the Sibyls, So Highly Celebrated, As well by the Antient HEATHENS, as the Holy FATHERS of the CHURCH; …, trans. J. D. [John Davies]. London.Google Scholar
Boas, G. (1948) Primitivism and Related Ideas in the Middle Ages. Baltimore and London.Google Scholar
Bolton, B. (1995) ‘Rome as a setting for God’s grace’, in Bolton, B., Innocent III: Studies on Papal Authority and Pastoral Care, 117. Aldershot and Brookfield.Google Scholar
Bonnefons, J. (1720) Johannis Bonefonii Arverni carmina. London.Google Scholar
Bottari, G. G. (ed.) (1719–26) Carmina illustrium poetarum Italorum, 11 vols. Florence.Google Scholar
Bordini, G. F. (1588) De rebus praeclare gestis a Sisto V. Pon. Max. Rome.Google Scholar
Borgia, G. (1666) Hieronymi Borgiae Massae Lubrensis episcopi carmina lyrica et heroica quae extant. Venice.Google Scholar
Borsook, E. and Offerhaus, J. (1981) Francesco Sassetti and Ghirlandaio at Santa Trinita, Florence: History and Legend in a Renaissance Chapel. Doornspijk.Google Scholar
Borzelli, A. (1923) Torquato Tasso a Napoli nel 1592 in casa del principe di Conca. Naples.Google Scholar
Bourne, E. (1916) ‘The Messianic Prophecy in Vergil’s Fourth Eclogue’, The Classical Journal 11: 390400Google Scholar
Branca, V. (ed.) (1994) Tutte le opere di Giovanni Boccaccio, 10 vols. Milan.Google Scholar
Braund, D. (1983) ‘Four notes on the Herods’, Classical Quarterly n.s. 33: 239–42Google Scholar
Bredekamp, H. (2009) Sandro Botticelli: Primavera. Florenz als Garten der Venus, 6th ed. Berlin.Google Scholar
Breidbach, J. K. (1577) Panegyris in electionem Serenissimi Principis, ac Domini Sebastiani Venerii, inclytae Venetorum Reipublicae Ducis, anno a Christo nato 1577, die quidem 11 Junij electi et creati … Venice.Google Scholar
Briggs, W. W. Jr (1981) ‘A bibliography of Virgil’s Eclogues (1927–1977)’, Aufstieg und Niedergang der römischen Welt II.31.2: 12651357Google Scholar
Brisson, L. (1992) Rome et l’âge d’or: de Catulle à Ovide, vie et mort d’un mythe. Paris.Google Scholar
Brown, A. M. (1961) ‘The humanist portrait of Cosimo de’ Medici, pater patriae’, Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 24: 186221Google Scholar
Brown, P. F. (1996) Venice and Antiquity: The Venetian Sense of the Past. New Haven and London.Google Scholar
Brown, V. and Kallendorf, C. (1987) ‘Two humanist annotators of Virgil: Coluccio Salutati and Giovanni Tortelli’, in Hankins, J., Monfasani, J. and Purnell, F., Jr (eds.), Supplementum Festivum: Studies in Honor of Paul Oskar Kristeller, 65148. Binghamton.Google Scholar
Brugnoli, G. (ed.) (1984) Foca: Vita di Virgilio. Pisa.Google Scholar
Bruscagli, R. (1996) ‘Matteo Maria Boiardo’, in Malato, E. (ed.), Storia della letteratura italiana, vol. III: Il Quattrocento, 635708. Rome.Google Scholar
Buchheit, V. (1990) ‘Cicero inspiratus – Vergilius propheta? Zur Wertung paganer Autoren bei Laktanz’, Hermes 118: 357–72Google Scholar
Buck, A. (ed.) (1969) Zu Begriff und Problem der Renaissance. Darmstadt.Google Scholar
Buhlmann, J. A. and Gilman, D. (eds.) (1986) Louis Le Caron: Dialogues. Geneva.Google Scholar
Burckhardt, J. (1860) Die Cultur der Renaissance in Italien. Basel.Google Scholar
Burckhardt, J. (1929) The Civilization of the Renaissance in Italy, trans. Middlemore, S. G. C.. London (often reprinted).Google Scholar
Burdach, K. and Piur, P. (eds.) (1912–29) Briefwechsel des Cola di Rienzo, 5 vols. Berlin.Google Scholar
Burkard, T., Schauer, M. and Wiener, C. (eds.) (2010) Vestigia vergiliana: Vergil-Rezeption in der Neuzeit. Berlin and New York.Google Scholar
Burke, J. (ed.) (2012a) Rethinking the High Renaissance: The Culture of the Visual Arts in Early Sixteenth-Century Rome. Farnham and Burlington.Google Scholar
Burke, J. (2012b) ‘Inventing the High Renaissance, from Winckelmann to Wikipedia: An introductory essay’, in Burke 2012a: 123Google Scholar
Burke, P. (1981) ‘Donec auferatur luna: The Facade of S. Maria della Pace’, Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 44: 238–9Google Scholar
Burke, P. (1995a) ‘Concepts of the “Golden Age” in the Renaissance’, in Kunt, M. and Woodhead, C. (eds.), Süleyman the Magnificent and His Age: The Ottoman Empire in the Early Modern World, 154–63. London and New York.Google Scholar
Burke, P. (1995b) The Fortunes of the Courtier: The European Reception of Castiglione’s Cortegiano. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Burlon, A. and Pontin, L. (2008) Rettori veneti a Feltre (II) (con note araldiche): Stemmi e opere dei rettori della città. Belluno.Google Scholar
Butt, J. (ed.) (1963) The Poems of Alexander Pope. Abingdon.Google Scholar
Caciorgna, M. and Guerrini, R. (2004) Il pavimento del Duomo di Siena: L’arte della tarsia marmorea dal XIV al XIX secolo. Fonti e simbologia. Milan.Google Scholar
Cadogan, J. K. (2000) Domenico Ghirlandaio: Artist and Artisan. New Haven and London.Google Scholar
Caferro, W. (1998) Mercenary Companies and the Decline of Siena. Baltimore and London.Google Scholar
Califf, D. J. (2002) A Guide to Latin Meter and Verse Composition. London.Google Scholar
Calisti, G. (1926) Il De partu Virginis di Jacopo Sannazzaro: Saggio sul poema sacro nel Rinascimento. Città di Castello.Google Scholar
Calvesi, M. (1989) ‘Il gaio classicismo. Pinturicchio e Francesco Colonna nella Roma di Alessandro VI’, in Danesi Squarzina 1989: 70101Google Scholar
Camille, M. (1989) The Gothic Idol: Ideology and Image-Making in Medieval Art. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Campbell, M. (1977) Pietro da Cortona at the Pitti Palace: A Study of the Planetary Rooms and Related Projects. Princeton.Google Scholar
Canova-Green, M.-C. (1993) ‘Le mythe de l’Age d’Or dans les divertissements à la cour des Bourbons et des premiers Stuarts’, in Béhar, P. (ed.), Image et spectacle: Actes du XXXIIe Colloque International d’Etudes Humanistes du Centre d’Etudes Supérieures de la Renaissance (Tours, 29 juin–8 juillet 1989), 2545. Amsterdam.Google Scholar
Carcopino, J. (1930) Virgile et le mystère de la IVe Églogue. Paris.Google Scholar
Carey, J. (ed.) (1999) The Faber Book of Utopias. London.Google Scholar
Carlsmith, C. (2010) A Renaissance Education: Schooling in Bergamo and the Venetian Republic, 1500–1650. Toronto, Buffalo and London.Google Scholar
Carlsmith, C. (2013) ‘A Roman poet in the Venetian Republic: The reception of Horace in sixteenth-century Bergamo’, The Sixteenth Century Journal 44: 963–84Google Scholar
Carrai, S. (ed./trans.) (1996) Matteo Maria Boiardo: Pastoralia. Padua.Google Scholar
Carrai, S. (1998) ‘Dai Pastoralia alle Pastorale: l’incontro con i modelli toscani’, in Anceschi, G. and Matarrese, T. (eds.), Il Boiardo e il mondo estense nel Quattrocento: Atti del convegno internazionale di studi, 2 vols., 2.647–61. Padua.Google Scholar
Carrai, S. (ed.) (2005) Matteo Maria Boiardo: Pastorali. Parma.Google Scholar
Carrara, E. (1909) La poesia pastorale. Milan.Google Scholar
Carraud, C. (trans.) (2000) Pétrarque: Le repos religieux. Grenoble.Google Scholar
Caruso, C. (2013) Adonis: The Myth of the Dying God in the Italian Renaissance. London and New York.Google Scholar
Cassarino, E. (1996) La Cappella Sassetti nella chiesa di Santa Trinita. Lucca.Google Scholar
Cassell, A. K. (2000) ‘Veltro’, in Lansing, R. (ed.), The Dante Encyclopedia, 851–4. New York.Google Scholar
Castelli, P. (1998) ‘Fonte ed immagini: le dieci Sibille ovvero l’ideologia del potere politico-religioso tra Medioevo e Rinascimento’, in Chirassi Colombo, I. and Seppilli, T. (eds.), Sibille e linguaggi oracolari: Mito, storia, tradizione, 709–39. Pisa and Rome.Google Scholar
Cavallaro, A. (2004) ‘La chiesa nel primo Rinascimento’, in Zuccari, A. (ed.), La Spagna sul Gianicolo, volume 1: San Pietro in Montorio, 1955. Rome.Google Scholar
Cazes, H. (1999) ‘Verbum inuisibile palpabitur: The Sibyls in the second half of the fifteenth century. Repetition as oracular poetics’, in Sutherland, C. M. and Sutcliffe, R. (eds.), The Changing Tradition: Women in the History of Rhetoric, 8596, Calgary.Google Scholar
Celenza, C. S. (2001) Piety and Pythagoras in Renaissance Florence: The Symbolum Nesianum. Leiden, Boston and Cologne.Google Scholar
Celenza, C. S. (2004) The Lost Italian Renaissance: Humanists, Historians, and Latin’s Legacy. Baltimore and London.Google Scholar
Celenza, C. S. (2018) The Intellectual World of the Italian Renaissance: Language, Philosophy, and the Search for Meaning. New York.Google Scholar
Celle, M. G. (1933) ‘Iacopo Bracelli e l’Ecloga IV di Virgilio’, Giornale storico e letterario della Liguria n.s. 9: 173–9Google Scholar
Cerati, G. (2012) ‘La quarta egloga nella “Laus Sancti Iohannis” di Paolino di Nola e una possibile mediazione gerominiana’, Acme: Annali della Facoltà di Lettere e Filosofia dell’Università degli Studi di Milano 65: 5387Google Scholar
Cervelli, I. (2011) Questioni sibylline. Venice.Google Scholar
Chambers, D. S. (1992) A Renaissance Cardinal and His Worldly Goods: The Will and Inventory of Francesco Gonzaga (1444–1483). London.Google Scholar
Chambers, D. S. and Pullan, B., with Fletcher, J. (eds.) (2001) Venice: A Documentary History, 1450–1630. Toronto, Buffalo and London.Google Scholar
Champlin, E. (1978) ‘The life and times of Calpurnius Siculus’, Journal of Roman Studies 68: 95110Google Scholar
Chapman, R. W. (ed.) (1998) James Boswell: Life of Johnson. Oxford.Google Scholar
Charlet-Mesdjian, B. (2003) ‘Le mythe de l’âge d’or dans l’œuvre élégiaque de T. V. Strozzi’, in Secchi Tarugi 2003: 117–25Google Scholar
Chatfield, M. P. (ed./trans.) (2005) Pietro Bembo: Lyric Poetry; Etna. Cambridge, MA and London.Google Scholar
Chatfield, M. P. (trans.) (2008) Cristoforo Landino: Poems. Cambridge, MA and London.Google Scholar
Chaudhuri, S. (1989) Renaissance Pastoral and Its English Developments. Oxford.Google Scholar
Chiabrera, G. (1731) Delle opere di Gabbriello Chiabrera tomo quarto, contenente le poesie liriche. Venice.Google Scholar
Chiodo, D. (1998) Torquato Tasso poeta gentile. Bergamo.Google Scholar
Christian, K. W. (2010) Empire without End: Antiquities Collections in Renaissance Rome, c. 1350–1527. New Haven and London.Google Scholar
Cian, V. (1897) Review of L. Pastor, Geschichte der Päpste seit dem Ausgang des Mittelalters. III Band, Giornale storico della letteratura italiana 29: 403–52Google Scholar
Cicogna, E. A. (ed.) (1827) Delle inscrizioni veneziane raccolte ed illustrate da Emmanuele Antonio Cigogna [sic], cittadino veneto, 2 vols. Venice.Google Scholar
Cicogna, E. A. (1866) ‘Cenni intorno la vita e le opere di Pietro Michiel, poeta del secolo XVII’, Memorie dell’ I. R. Istituto Veneto di Scienze, Lettere ed Arti 13: 387400Google Scholar
Cieri Via, C. (1989) Sacrae effigies e signa arcana: la decorazione di Pinturicchio e scuola nell’appartamento Borgia in Vaticano’, in Danesi Squarzina 1989: 185200Google Scholar
Cioffari, V. (ed.) (1989) Anonymous Latin Commentary on Dante’s Commedia: Reconstructed Text. Spoleto.Google Scholar
Clark, E. A. and Hatch, D. F. (1981) ‘Jesus as hero in the Vergilian Cento of Faltonia Betitia Proba’, Vergilius 27: 31–9Google Scholar
Clausen, W. V. (ed.) (1994) Virgil: Eclogues. Oxford.Google Scholar
Clements, R. J. (1960) Picta poesis: Literary and Humanistic Theory in Renaissance Emblem Books. Rome.Google Scholar
Clough, C. H. (1990) ‘Chivalry and Magnificence in the Golden Age of the Italian Renaissance’, in Anglo, S. (ed.), Chivalry in the Renaissance, 2547. Woodbridge.Google Scholar
Coleiro, E. (1979) An Introduction to Vergil’s Bucolics with a Critical Edition of the Text. Amsterdam.Google Scholar
Coleman, R. (ed.) (1977) Vergil: Eclogues. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Collins, J. J. (1997) Seers, Sibyls and Sages in Hellenistic–Roman Judaism. Leiden.Google Scholar
Comparetti, D. (1872) Virgilio nel medio evo, 2 vols. Livorno.Google Scholar
Comparetti, D. (1895) Vergil in the Middle Ages, trans. Benecke, E. F. M.. London [repr. Princeton, 1997].Google Scholar
Constable, G. (1995) Three Studies in Medieval Religious and Social Thought: The Interpretation of Mary and Martha, the Ideal of the Imitation of Christ, the Orders of Society. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Conway, R. S. (1907) ‘The Messianic Idea in Virgil’, in Mayor et al. 1907: 1148Google Scholar
Cooper, H. (1977) Pastoral: Mediaeval into Renaissance. Ipswich.Google Scholar
Cornish, A. (2011) Vernacular Translation in Dante’s Italy: Illiterate Literature. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Coroleu, A. (2004) ‘On the Awareness of the Renaissance’, in Bernardi Perini, G. (ed.), Il latino nell’età dell’Umanesimo: Atti del convegno di Mantova, 26–27 ottobre 2001, 315. Florence.Google Scholar
Cortese, D. (ed.) (1971) Alessandro Cortese (1459–1490): Carmen in laudem pontificatus Sixti IV (1475). n.p.Google Scholar
Cortesi Bosco, F. (1976) ‘Gerolamo Colleoni’, in I pittori bergamaschi dal XIII al XIX secolo: Il Cinquecento II, 129–43. Bergamo.Google Scholar
Cosenza, M. E. (1913) Francesco Petrarca and the Revolution of Cola di Rienzo. Chicago [2nd ed. New York, 1986].Google Scholar
Costa, D. (2003) ‘“ … per far gli uomini felici”: l’attesa dell’età dell’oro nel quarto libro del Cortegiano’, in Secchi Tarugi 2003: 109–16Google Scholar
Costa, G. (1972) La leggenda dei secoli d’oro nella letteratura italiana. Bari.Google Scholar
Courcelle, P. (1957) ‘Les exégèses chrétiennes de la quatrième Églogue’, Revue des études anciennes 59: 294319Google Scholar
Courcelle, P. and Courcelle, J. (1984–9) Lecteurs païens et lecteurs chrétiens de l’Énéide, 2 vols. Paris.Google Scholar
Courtney, E. (1987) ‘Imitation, chronologie littéraire et Calpurnius Siculus’, Revue des Études Latines 65: 148–57Google Scholar
Courtney, E. (2010) ‘A basic approach to the Fourth Eclogue’, Vergilius 56: 2738Google Scholar
Coville, A. (ed.) (1936) Le traité de la ruine de l’Église de Nicolas de Clamanges, et la traduction française de 1564. Paris.Google Scholar
Cox-Rearick, J. (1984) Dynasty and Destiny in Medici Art: Pontormo, Leo X, and the Two Cosimos. Princeton.Google Scholar
Crasset, J. (1684) Dissertation sur les oracles des Sibylles, augmentée d’une réponse à la critique de Marckius. Paris.Google Scholar
Creizenach, T (1864) Die Aeneis, die vierte Ecloge und die Pharsalia im Mittelalter. Frankfurt am Main.Google Scholar
Cucchiarelli, A. (ed.) (2012) Publio Virgilio Marone: Le Bucoliche. Rome.Google Scholar
Cumming, J. E. (1992) ‘Music for the Doge in Early Renaissance Venice’, Speculum 67: 324–64Google Scholar
Cummings, A. M. (2004) The Maecenas and the Madrigalist: Patrons, Patronage, and the Origins of the Italian Madrigal. Philadelphia.Google Scholar
Curran, B. A. (2012) ‘Teaching (and Thinking About) the High Renaissance: With Some Observations on its Relationship to Classical Antiquity’, in Burke 2012a: 2755Google Scholar
Czapla, R. G. (2013) Das Bibelepos in der Frühen Neuzeit: Zur deutschen Geschichte einer europäischen Gattung. Berlin and Boston.Google Scholar
Daintree, D. and Geymonat, M. (1988) ‘Scholia non Serviana’, in Della Corte, F. (ed.), Enciclopedia virgiliana, 6 vols., 4.706–20. Rome.Google Scholar
Dalla Pietà, G. (2016) ‘Francesco Mauri’s Franciscias: A preparatory work’, Latinitas n.s. 4: 103–13Google Scholar
Danesi Squarzina, S. (ed.) (1989) Roma, centro ideale della cultura dell’Antico nei secoli XV e XVI: da Martino V al Sacco di Roma 1417–1527. Milan.Google Scholar
D’Anna, N. (1989) Virgilio e le rivelazioni divine. Genoa.Google Scholar
D’Anna, N. (2007) Mistero e profezia: La IV egloga di Virgilio e il rinnovamento del mondo. Cosenza.Google Scholar
da Schio, G. (1858) Sulla vita e sugli scritti di Antonio Loschi vicentino, uomo di lettere e di stato. Padua.Google Scholar
D’Ascia, L. (ed.) (2001) Il Corano e la tiara: l’epistola a Maometto di Enea Silvio Piccolomini (papa Pio II). Bologna.Google Scholar
Daub, S. (2003) ‘Vergil und die Bibel als verschränkte Prätexte – ein poetisches Experiment’, Rheinisches Museum für Philologie n.s. 146: 85102Google Scholar
Davis, C. T. (1976) ‘Veltro’, in Bosco, U. (ed.), Enciclopedia dantesca, 6 vols., 5.908–12. Rome.Google Scholar
Davis, P. (2004) ‘Dryden and the invention of Augustan culture’, in Zwicker, S. N. (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to John Dryden, 7591. Cambridge.Google Scholar
de Armas, F. A. (1986) The Return of Astraea: An Astral–Imperial Myth in Calderón. Lexington.Google Scholar
de Callataÿ, G. (1996) Annus Platonicus: A Study of World Cycles in Greek, Latin and Arabic Sources. Leuven.Google Scholar
de Clercq, C. (1978–9) ‘Quelques séries italiennes de Sibylles’, Bulletin de l’Institut historique belge de Rome 48–9: 105–27Google Scholar
Decock, P. B. (1988) ‘The eclipse and rediscovery of eschatology’, Neotestamentica 22: 516Google Scholar
De Grassi, M. (1997) ‘Giovanni Marchiori, appunti per una lettura critica’, Saggi e memorie di storia dell’arte 21: 125–55Google Scholar
De Keyser, J. (ed.) (2015) Francesco Filelfo and Francesco Sforza: Critical Edition of Filelfo’s Sphortias, De Genuensium deditione, Oratio parentalis, and his Polemical Exchange with Galeotto Marzio. Hildesheim, Zürich and New York.Google Scholar
Delbeke, M. (2005) ‘The revelatory function of the image-text: The prophecies of S. Malachy during and after the papacy of Alexander VII’, Studi secenteschi 46: 229–57Google Scholar
D’Elia, A. F. (2009) A Sudden Terror: The Plot to Murder the Pope in Renaissance Rome. Cambridge, MA and London.Google Scholar
della Corte, F. (1982) ‘La “proanafonesi” della IV egloga’, Maia n.s. 34: 311Google Scholar
Della Guardia, A. (ed.) (1916) T. Vespasiano Strozzi: Poesie latine tratte dall’Aldina e confrontate coi codici. Modena.Google Scholar
De Michelis, C. and Pizzamiglio, G. (eds.) (1982) Vico e Venezia. Florence.Google Scholar
Dempsey, C. (2012) The Early Renaissance and Vernacular Culture. Cambridge, MA and London.Google Scholar
De Nichilo, M. (1976–7) ‘Un carme inedito di Matteo Canale per le nozze di Ercole I d’Este con Eleonora d’Aragona’, Annali della Facoltà di Lettere e Filosofia (Bari) 19–20: 239–92Google Scholar
Deramaix, M. (1990) ‘La genèse du De partu Virginis de Jacopo Sannazaro et trois églogues inédites de Gilles de Viterbe’, Mélanges de l’École Française de Rome: Moyen Âge 102: 173276Google Scholar
de’ Rossi, B. (1585) Descrizione del magnificentiss. apparato, e de’ maravigliosi intermedi fatti per la commedia rappresentata in Firenze nelle felicissime nozze degl’ illustrissimi, ed eccellentissimi signori il Signor Don Cesare d’Este, e la Signora Donna Virginia Medici. Florence.Google Scholar
Desjardins Daude, J. (ed./trans.) (2008) Pacifico Massimi: Hecatelegium II. Les cent nouvelles élégies. Paris.Google Scholar
De Tolnay, C. (1949) Michelangelo, volume 2: The Sistine Ceiling. Princeton.Google Scholar
De Vecchi, P. (1996) La Cappella Sistina: Il restauro degli affreschi di Michelangelo. Milan.Google Scholar
Di Cesare, M. A. (1964) Vida’s Christiad and Vergilian Epic. New York and London.Google Scholar
Dickens, A. G., Gombrich, E. H., Hale, J. R., Pattison, B. and Trapp, J. B. (1974) Background to the English Renaissance: Introductory Lectures. London.Google Scholar
Di Florio, R. (1909) Girolamo Borgia, poeta e storico. Salerno.Google Scholar
Dimmock, M. (ed.) (2006) William Percy’s Mahomet and His Heaven: A Critical Edition. Aldershot and Burlington.Google Scholar
Dionisotti, C. (1958) ‘Lavinia venit litora”: Polemica virgiliana di M. Filetico’, Italia medioevale e umanistica 1: 283315 [repr. in Dionisotti, C., Scritti di storia della letteratura italiana, eds. T. Basile, V. Fera and S. Villari, 1.239–66 (Rome, 2008)]Google Scholar
Dotson, E. G. (1979) ‘An Augustinian interpretation of Michelangelo’s Sistine Ceiling, Part II’, The Art Bulletin 61: 405–29Google Scholar
Du Méril, E. (1849) Origines latines du théatre moderne. Paris.Google Scholar
Dümmler, E. et al. (eds.) (1881–1939) Monumenta Germaniae Historica: Poetae latini aevi Carolini, 5 vols. Berlin.Google Scholar
Du Quesnay, I. M. Le M. (1977) ‘Vergil’s fourth Eclogue’, Papers of the Liverpool Latin Seminar 1: 2599Google Scholar
Durant, W. (1953) The Renaissance: A History of Civilization in Italy from 1304–1576 A.D. New York.Google Scholar
Ecker, U. and Zintzen, C. (eds.) (1997) Saeculum tamquam aureum: Internationales Symposion zur italienischen Renaissance des 14.–16. Jahrhunderts am 17./18. September 1996 in Mainz. Hildesheim.Google Scholar
Edelheit, A. (2008) Ficino, Pico and Savonarola: The Evolution of Humanist Theology 1461/2–1498. Leiden and Boston.Google Scholar
Ehrle, F. and Stevenson, E. (1897) Gli affreschi del Pinturicchio nell’Appartamento Borgia del Palazzo Apostolico Vaticano. Rome.Google Scholar
Eisenbichler, K. and Zorzi Pugliese, O. (eds.) (1986) Ficino and Renaissance Neoplatonism. Toronto.Google Scholar
Eisner, M. (2013) Boccaccio and the Invention of Italian Literature. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Elet, Y. (2017) Architectural Invention in Renaissance Rome: Artists, Humanists, and the Planning of Raphael’s Villa Madama. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Eliade, M. (1954) The Myth of the Eternal Return, trans. Trask, W. R.. New York.Google Scholar
Erdmann, G. (1932) Die Vorgeschichten des Lukas- und Matthäus-Evangeliums und Vergils vierte Ekloge. Göttingen.Google Scholar
Espositi, M. (2005) Conformitas, sequela e imitatio Christi negli Actus beati Francisci et sociorum eius’, Franciscana 7: 127–47Google Scholar
Esteban, L. (2002) Cultura y prehumanismo en la curia pontificia del Papa Luna (1394–1423). Valencia.Google Scholar
Ettlinger, L. D. (1961) ‘A note on Raphael’s Sibyls in S. Maria della Pace’, Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 24: 322–3Google Scholar
Evans, R. (2008) Utopia Antiqua: Readings of the Golden Age and Decline at Rome. London and New York.Google Scholar
Everson, J. E. (2001) The Italian Romance Epic in the Age of Humanism: The Matter of Italy and the World of Rome. Oxford.Google Scholar
Fabrini, G. and Venuti, F. (eds.) (1576) L’Eneide di Virgilio mantuano, commentata in lingua volgare Toscana. Venice.Google Scholar
Fagiolo, M. (ed.) (1981) Virgilio nell’arte e nella cultura europea. Rome.Google Scholar
Falls, T. B. (trans.) (1948) Saint Justin Martyr: The First Apology, the Second Apology, Dialogue with Trypho, Exhortation to the Greeks, Discourse to the Greeks, the Monarchy or the Rule of God. Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Fanfani, P. (ed.) (1876–8) Le rime di Bernardo Bellincioni riscontrate sui manoscritti, 2 vols. Bologna.Google Scholar
Fantazzi, C. (1986) ‘The Making of the De partu virginis’, in McFarlane, I. D. (ed.), Acta Conventus Neo-Latini Sanctandreani/Proceedings of the Fifth International Congress of Neo-Latin Studies, 127–34. Binghamton.Google Scholar
Fantazzi, C. (1997) ‘Poetry and Religion in Sannazaro’s De partu virginis’, in Tournoy and Sacré 1997: 231–48Google Scholar
Fantazzi, C. (ed./trans.) (2004) Angelo Poliziano: Silvae. Cambridge, MA and London.Google Scholar
Fantazzi, C. (ed.) (2008) A Companion to Juan Luis Vives. Leiden and Boston.Google Scholar
Fantazzi, C. and Perosa, A. (eds.) (1988) Iacopo Sannazaro: De partu Virginis.Florence.Google Scholar
Fantham, E. (trans.) (2017) Francesco Petrarca: Selected Letters, 2 vols. Cambridge, MA and London.Google Scholar
Farrell, J. and Putnam, M. C. J. (eds.) (2010) A Companion to Vergil’s Aeneid and its Tradition. Malden and Oxford.Google Scholar
Fascetti, F. (2007) ‘Sequela Christi, imitatio e conformitas nelle opere di Bonaventura da Bagnoregio su san Francesco’, Franciscana 9: 1341Google Scholar
Feeney, D. (2007) Caesar’s Calendar: Ancient Time and the Beginnings of History. Berkeley and Los Angeles.Google Scholar
Feldman, L. H. (1953) ‘Asinius Pollio and his Jewish interests’, Transactions of the American Philological Association 84: 7380 [repr. in Feldman, 1996: 3744]Google Scholar
Feldman, L. H. (1985) ‘Asinius Pollio and Herod’s sons’, Classical Quarterly n.s. 35: 240–3 [repr. in Feldman, 1996: 52–6]Google Scholar
Feldman, L. H. (1996) Studies in Hellenistic Judaism. Leiden, New York and Cologne.Google Scholar
Ferguson, J. (1975) Utopias of the Classical World. London.Google Scholar
Ferguson, W. K. (1948) The Renaissance in Historical Thought: Five Centuries of Interpretation. Boston, New York etc. [repr. Toronto, Buffalo and London, 2006].Google Scholar
Ferrario, G. (ed.) (1808) Poesie pastorali e rusticali. Milan.Google Scholar
Ferri, F. (ed.) (1925) Le poesie liriche di Basinio (Isottaeus, Cyrus, carmina varia). Turin.Google Scholar
Ficino, M. (1576) Marsilii Ficini opera omnia, 2 vols. Basel [repr. Turin, 1959].Google Scholar
Filipic, M.-N. (1997) Les représentations de la paix dans les fêtes européennes de 1550 à 1600. Villeneuve d’Ascq.Google Scholar
Filippini, E. (ed.) (1914) Federico Frezzi: Il Quadriregio. Bari.Google Scholar
Fiorani, F. (2005) The Marvel of Maps: Art, Cartography and Politics in Renaissance Italy. New Haven and London.Google Scholar
Fisher, E. (1982) ‘Greek translations of Latin literature in the fourth century A.D.’, Yale Classical Studies 27: 173215Google Scholar
FitzGerald, B. (2017) Inspiration and Authority in the Middle Ages: Prophets and Their Critics from Scholasticism to Humanism. Oxford.Google Scholar
Flower, H. I. (2006) The Art of Forgetting: Disgrace and Oblivion in Roman Political Culture. Chapel Hill.Google Scholar
Floyd, E. D. (2001) ‘Eusebius’ Greek Version of Vergil’s Fourth Eclogue’, in Blumenfeld-Kosinski, R., von Flotow, L., and Russell, D. (eds.), The Politics of Translation in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance, 5767. Ottawa.Google Scholar
Fógel, I. and Juhász, L. (eds.) (1932) Bartholomaeus Fontius: Carmina. Leipzig.Google Scholar
Foley, A. T. (2018) ‘Aeneas Interpres: Landino’s earliest allegory of the Aeneid and Ficino’s first ten Dialogues’, in Houghton and Sgarbi 2018: 139–57Google Scholar
Fontana, D. (1590) Della trasportazione dell’obelisco Vaticano e delle fabriche di Nostro Signore Papa Sisto V. Rome.Google Scholar
Ford, P., Bloemendal, J., and Fantazzi, C. (eds.) (2014) Brill’s Encyclopaedia of the Neo-Latin World, 2 vols. Leiden and Boston.Google Scholar
Fordoński, K. and Urbański, P. (eds.) (2010) Casimir Britannicus: English Translations, Paraphrases, and Emulations of the Poetry of Maciej Kazimierz Sarbiewski, revised ed. London.Google Scholar
Franceschini, C. (2010) ‘The nudes in Limbo: Michelangelo’s Doni Tondo reconsidered’, Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 73: 137–80Google Scholar
Francolini, R. (ed.) (1833) Francisci Mauri Hispellatis minoritae Francisciados libri XIII. Fano.Google Scholar
Franzoi, A. (1984) ‘Battista Guarino e il Poema Divo Herculi, in Salmons, J. and Moretti, W. (eds.), The Renaissance in Ferrara and its European horizons/Il Rinascimento a Ferrara e i suoi orizzonti europei, 191–8. Ravenna.Google Scholar
Frati, L. (1892–3) Vite di uomini illustri del secolo XV scritte da Vespasiano da Bisticci, 3 vols. Bologna.Google Scholar
Freiberg, J. (2014) Bramante’s Tempietto, the Roman Renaissance, and the Spanish Crown. New York.Google Scholar
Freund, L. (1936) Studien zur Bildgeschichte der Sybillen in der neueren Kunst. Hamburg.Google Scholar
Freund, S. (2003) Vergil im frühen Christentum: Untersuchungen zu den Vergilzitaten bei Tertullian, Minucius Felix, Novatian, Cyprian und Arnobius, 2nd ed. Paderborn.Google Scholar
Freyburger, G. (2006) ‘Le Carmen Seculare de Sarbiewski comparé au Carmen Saeculare et à l’ode I, 35 d’Horace: imitatio, aemulatio, contaminatio’, in Schäfer 2006: 3947.Google Scholar
Frittelli, U. (1900) Giannantonio dei Pandoni, detto il Porcellio. Florence.Google Scholar
Frommel, C. L. (1967–8) Baldassare Peruzzi als Maler und Zeichner. Vienna and Munich.Google Scholar
Früh, M. (2005) Antonio Geraldini (†1488): Leben, Dichtung und soziales Beziehungsnetz eines italienischen Humanisten am aragonesischen Königshof. Münster.Google Scholar
Gaisser, J. H. (1995) ‘The rise and fall of Goritz’s feasts’, Renaissance Quarterly 48: 4157Google Scholar
Gaisser, J. H. (2002) ‘The reception of classical texts in the Renaissance’, in Grieco, A. J., Rocke, M. and Gioffredi Superbi, F. (eds.), The Italian Renaissance in the Twentieth Century, 387400. Florence.Google Scholar
Galinsky, K. (1996) Augustan Culture: An Interpretive Introduction. Princeton.Google Scholar
Galley, M. (2010) La Sibylle: De l’antiquité à nos jours. Paris.Google Scholar
Gambino Longo, S. (2016) Sine moribus errantes: Les discours sur les temps premiers à la Renaissance italienne. Geneva.Google Scholar
Gardner, E. G. (1904) Dukes and Poets in Ferrara: A Study in the Poetry, Religion and Politics of the Fifteenth and Sixteenth Centuries. London [repr. New York, 1968].Google Scholar
Gardner, J. (trans.) (2009) Marco Girolamo Vida: Christiad. Cambridge, MA and London.Google Scholar
Gardner, J. (trans.) (2013) Girolamo Fracastoro: Latin Poetry. Cambridge, MA and London.Google Scholar
Garfagnini, G. C. (1986) Marsilio Ficino e il ritorno di Platone: studi e documenti, 2 vols. Florence.Google Scholar
Gargha, I. B. (s.a. [1514?]) Oratio in Octaua Sessione Lateranensis Concilii, una cum Obedientia magni Magistri Rhodi. s.l. [Rome].Google Scholar
Garrod, H. W. (1905) ‘Note on the messianic character of the Fourth Eclogue’, Classical Review 19: 37–8Google Scholar
Garrod, H. W. (1908) ‘Virgil’s Messianic Eclogue’, Classical Review 22: 149–51Google Scholar
Gärtner, T. (2004) ‘Gott und Götter bei Jacopo Sannazaro und Statius’, Humanistica Lovaniensia 53: 191–8Google Scholar
Gatz, B. (1967) Weltalter, goldene Zeit und sinnverwandte Vorstellungen. Hildesheim.Google Scholar
Gee, E. (2013) Aratus and the Astronomical Tradition. Oxford and New York.Google Scholar
Geiger, G. L. (1986) Filippino Lippi’s Carafa Chapel: Renaissance Art in Rome. Kirksville.Google Scholar
Gentili, A. (2010–12) Alberico Gentili (San Ginesio 1552–Londra 1608): Atti dei convegni nel quarto centenario della morte, 3 vols. Milan.Google Scholar
Gentili, S. (1581) Paraphrasis aliquot Psalmorum Dauidis carmine heroico. London.Google Scholar
George, J. (1992) Venantius Fortunatus: A Latin Poet in Merovingian Gaul. Oxford.Google Scholar
Geue, T. (2013) ‘Princeps “avant la lettre”: The foundations of Augustus in pre-Augustan poetry’, in Labate, M. and Rosati, G. (eds.), La costruzione del mito augusteo, 4967. Heidelberg.Google Scholar
Ghinassi, G. (ed.) (1968) La seconda redazione del Cortegiano di Baldassarre Castiglione. Florence.Google Scholar
Giambullari, P. F. (1539) Apparato et feste nelle noze dello illustrissimo signor Duca di Firenze, et della Duchessa sua consorte: con le sue stanze, madriali, comedia, & intermedii, in quelle recitati. Florence.Google Scholar
Gibbes, J. A. (1655) Astraea regnans sub auspiciis sanctissimi D.N. Alexandri VII Pont. Opt. Max. Rome.Google Scholar
Gill, M. J. (2005) Augustine in the Italian Renaissance: Art and Philosophy from Petrarch to Michelangelo. New York.Google Scholar
Gilson, S. A. (2005) Dante and Renaissance Florence. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Gittes, T. F. (2008) Boccaccio’s Naked Muse: Eros, Culture, and the Mythopoeic Imagination. Toronto, Buffalo and London.Google Scholar
Glei, R. F. and Köhler, M. (eds./trans.) (2001) Pius II. Papa: Epistola ad Mahumetem. Einleitung, kritische Edition, Übersetzung. Trier.Google Scholar
Glodzik, J. A. (2009) Vergil and Vergilianism in High Renaissance Rome, PhD diss., State University of New York at Buffalo.Google Scholar
Glodzik, J. A. (2014) ‘Vergilianism in early cinquecento Rome: Egidio Gallo and the vision of Roman destiny’, The Sixteenth Century Journal 45: 7398Google Scholar
Goez, W. (1958) Translatio Imperii: Ein Beitrag zur Geschichte des Geschichtsdenkens und der politischen Theorien im Mittelalter und in der frühen Neuzeit. Tübingen.Google Scholar
Gombrich, E. H. (1961) ‘Renaissance and Golden Age’, Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 24: 306–9 [repr. in E. H. Gombrich, Norm and Form: Studies in the Art of the Renaissance (London, 1966), 29–34]Google Scholar
Gombrich, E. H. (1974) ‘The Renaissance – Period or Movement?’, in Dickens et al. 1974: 930Google Scholar
Gombrich, E. H. (1997) ‘The Sassetti Chapel Revisited: Santa Trinita and Lorenzo de’ Medici’, I Tatti Studies in the Italian Renaissance 7: 1135Google Scholar
Goodyear, F. R. D. (ed.) (1965) Aetna. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Gotoff, H. C. (1967) ‘On the Fourth Eclogue of Virgil’, Philologus 111: 6679Google Scholar
Gould, C. (1992) ‘Raphael at S. Maria della Pace’, Gazette des Beaux-Arts 120: 7888Google Scholar
Gouwens, K. (1998) Remembering the Renaissance: Humanist Narratives of the Sack of Rome. Leiden, Boston and Cologne.Google Scholar
Gozzadini, G. (1839) Memorie per la vita di Giovanni II. Bentivoglio. Bologna.Google Scholar
Graf, A. (1915) Roma nella memoria e nelle immaginazioni del medio evo. Turin.Google Scholar
Graham, V. E. and McAllister Johnson, W. (1979)The Royal Tour of France by Charles IX and Catherine de’ Medici: Festivals and Entries, 1564–6. Toronto.Google Scholar
Grant, J. N. (ed./trans.) (2011) Lilio Gregorio Giraldi: Modern Poets. Cambridge, MA and London.Google Scholar
Grant, W. L. (1957a) ‘New Forms of Neo-Latin Pastoral’, Studies in the Renaissance 4: 71100Google Scholar
Grant, W. L. (1957b) ‘A Classical Theme in Neo-Latin’, Latomus 16: 690706Google Scholar
Grant, W. L. (1961) ‘Neo-Latin Biblical Pastorals’, Studies in Philology 58: 2543Google Scholar
Grant, W. L. (1965) Neo-Latin Literature and the Pastoral. Chapel Hill.Google Scholar
Grant, W. L. (ed.) (1974) Naldi Naldii Florentini Bucolica, Volaterrais, Hastiludium, Carmina varia. Florence.Google Scholar
Greco, A. (1991) ‘Papa Niccolò V “Aurea qui dederat saecula Roma tibi”’, in Perić, R. (ed.), Homo imago et amicus Dei: Miscellanea in honorem Ioannis Golub, 305–10. Rome.Google Scholar
Green, R. P. H. (1980) Seven Versions of Carolingian Pastoral. Reading.Google Scholar
Green, R. P. H. (2006) Latin Epics of the New Testament: Juvencus, Sedulius, Arator. Oxford.Google Scholar
Greenblatt, S. (2011) The Swerve: How the Renaissance Began. London.Google Scholar
Greene, T. M. (1963) The Descent from Heaven: A Study in Epic Continuity. New Haven and London.Google Scholar
Greene, T. M. (1982) The Light in Troy: Imitation and Discovery in Renaissance Poetry. New Haven and London.Google Scholar
Greenfield, C. C. (1981) Humanist and Scholastic Poetics, 1250–1500. Lewisburg, London and Toronto.Google Scholar
Gregorovius, F. (1909–12) History of the City of Rome in the Middle Ages, trans. Hamilton, A., 8 vols. London [repr. New York, 2004].Google Scholar
Gregory, T. (2006) From Many Gods to One: Divine Action in Renaissance Epic. Chicago and London.Google Scholar
Grendler, P. F. (1989) Schooling in Renaissance Italy: Literacy and Learning, 1300–1600. Baltimore and London.Google Scholar
Grimm, H. (1865) Über Künstler und Kunstwerke: erster Jahrgang. Berlin.Google Scholar
Grudin, M. P. and Grudin, R. (2012) Boccaccio’s Decameron and the Ciceronian Renaissance. New York.Google Scholar
Guadagno, C. (2007) ‘Riflessioni su Verg. ecl. 4, 60-63’, Vichiana ser. 4, 9: 4153Google Scholar
Guarino, B. (1496) Battistae Guarini Poema Diuo Herculi Ferrariensium Duci Dicatum. Modena.Google Scholar
Guerrini, R. (1992–3) ‘Le Divinae Institutiones di Lattanzio nelle epigrafi del Rinascimento: Il Collegio del Cambio di Perugia ed il Pavimento del Duomo di Siena (Erme Trismegisto e Sibille)’, Annuario dell’Istituto Storico Diocesano di Siena 1: 538Google Scholar
Gwynne, P. (2012) Poets and Princes: The Panegyric Poetry of Johannes Michael Nagonius. Turnhout.Google Scholar
Gwynne, P. (2015) Patterns of Patronage in Renaissance Rome. Francesco Sperulo: Poet, Prelate, Soldier, Spy, 2 vols. Oxford, Bern, Berlin et al.Google Scholar
Gwynne, P. and Schirg, B. (2015) ‘“The economics of poetry”: Fast production as a crucial skill in Neo-Latin encomiastic poetry’, Studi rinascimentali 13: 1132Google Scholar
Gwynne, P. and Schirg, B. (eds.) (2018) The Economics of Poetry: The Efficient Production of Neo-Latin Verse, 1400–1720. Oxford, Bern et al.Google Scholar
Haan, E. (1993a) ‘“Heaven’s purest light”: Milton’s Paradise Lost 3 and Vida’, Comparative Literature Studies 30: 115–36Google Scholar
Haan, E. (1993b) ‘From Helicon to Heaven: Milton’s Urania and Vida’, Renaissance Studies 7: 86107Google Scholar
Hadas, D. (2013) ‘Christians, Sibyls and Eclogue 4’, Recherches augustiniennes et patristiques 37: 51129Google Scholar
Haecker, T. (1934) Virgil, Father of the West, trans. Wheen, A. W.. London.Google Scholar
Hagen, H. (ed.) (1867) Scholia Bernensia ad Vergili Bucolica atque Georgica. Leipzig.Google Scholar
Hagendahl, H. (1967) Augustine and the Latin Classics, 2 vols. Stockholm.Google Scholar
Hale, J. R. (1974) ‘The Renaissance Label’, in Dickens et al. 1974: 3142Google Scholar
Hall, R. A. Jr (1942) The Italian questione della lingua: An Interpretative Essay. Chapel Hill.Google Scholar
Hammond, P. (2006) The Making of Restoration Poetry. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Hankins, J. (1990) Plato in the Italian Renaissance, 2 vols. Leiden, New York, Copenhagen and Cologne.Google Scholar
Hankins, J. (1993) ‘The Popes and Humanism’, in Grafton, A. (ed.), Rome Reborn: The Vatican Library and Renaissance Culture, 4785. Washington, DC, New Haven, London and Vatican City.Google Scholar
Hankins, J. (1997) ‘From the New Athens to the New Jerusalem: Florence between Lorenzo de’ Medici and Savonarola’, in Kanter, L., Goldfarb, H. T., and Hankins, J. (eds.), Botticelli’s Witness: Changing Style in a Changing Florence, 1320. Boston.Google Scholar
Hankins, J. (2003) Humanism and Platonism in the Italian Renaissance, 2 vols. Rome.Google Scholar
Hansen, P. A. (1972) ‘Ille ego qui quondam … once again’, Classical Quarterly, n.s. 22: 139–49Google Scholar
Hardie, P. R. (1993a) ‘After Rome: Renaissance epic’, in Boyle, A. J. (ed.), Roman Epic, 294313. London and New York.Google Scholar
Hardie, P. R. (1993b) The Epic Successors of Virgil: A Study in the Dynamics of a Tradition. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Hardie, P. R. (2005) ‘The Hesiodic Catalogue of Women and Latin poetry’, in Hunter, R. (ed.), The Hesiodic Catalogue of Women: Constructions and Reconstructions, 287–98. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Hardie, P. R. (2009) Lucretian Receptions: History, The Sublime, Knowledge. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Hardie, P. R. (2013) ‘Shepherds’ songs: generic variation in Renaissance Latin epic’, in Papanghelis, T. D., Harrison, S. J. and Frangoulidis, S. (eds.), Generic Interfaces in Latin Literature: Encounters, Interactions and Transformations, 193202. Berlin and Boston.Google Scholar
Hardie, P. R. (2014) The Last Trojan Hero: A Cultural History of Virgil’s Aeneid. London.Google Scholar
Harness, K. (2006) Echoes of Women’s Voices: Music, Art, and Female Patronage in Early Modern Florence. Chicago and London.Google Scholar
Harrison, S. J. (2002) ‘Virgil and the conspiracy theorists’, Classical Review n.s. 52: 292–4Google Scholar
Harrison, S. J. (2007) Generic Enrichment in Vergil and Horace. Oxford.Google Scholar
Harrison, S. J. (2008) ‘Virgilian contexts’, in Hardwick, L. and Stray, C. (eds.), A Companion to Classical Receptions, 113–26. Malden, Oxford and Chichester.Google Scholar
Harth, H. (ed.) (1984–7) Poggio Bracciolini: Lettere, 3 vols. Florence.Google Scholar
Hatfield, R. (1995) ‘Botticelli’s Mystic Nativity, Savonarola and the Millennium’, Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 58: 88114Google Scholar
Hawkins, P. S. (1999) Dante’s Testaments: Essays in Scriptural Imagination. Stanford.Google Scholar
Hay, D. (1977a) The Italian Renaissance in Its Historical Background, 2nd ed. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Hay, D. (1977b) The Church in Italy in the Fifteenth Century. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Haye, T. (2009) Päpste und Poeten: Die mittelalterliche Kurie als Objekt und Förderer panegyrischer Dichtung. Berlin and New York.Google Scholar
Hayes, A. M. and Laughlin, J. (eds.) (2008). Christmas Poems. New York.Google Scholar
Heaney, S. (2001) Electric Light. London.Google Scholar
Heinz, C. (2007) Mehrfache Intertextualität bei Prudentius. Frankfurt am Main.Google Scholar
Hejduk, J. D. (2018) ‘Was Vergil reading the Bible? Original Sin and an astonishing acrostic in the Orpheus and Eurydice’, Vergilius 64: 71102.Google Scholar
Heyworth, S. J. (2015) ‘Notes on the text and interpretation of Vergil’s Eclogues and Georgics’, in Günther, H.-C. (ed.), Virgilian Studies: A Miscellany Dedicated to the Memory of Mario Geymonat (26.1.1941–17.2.2012), 195249. Nordhausen.Google Scholar
Highet, G. (1949) The Classical Tradition: Greek and Roman Influences on Western Literature. New York and London.Google Scholar
Hind, A. M. (1938–48) Early Italian Engraving, 7 vols. London.Google Scholar
Hinds, S. (1998) Allusion and Intertext: Dynamics of Appropriation in Roman Poetry. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Hirst, M. (1961) ‘The Chigi Chapel in S. Maria della Pace’, Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 24: 161–85Google Scholar
Hobart Cust, R. H. (1901) The Pavement Masters of Siena (1369–1562). London.Google Scholar
Hofmann, H. (2001) ‘Von Africa über Bethlehem nach America: Das Epos in der neulateinischen Literatur’, in Rüpke, J. (ed.), Von Göttern und Menschen erzählen: Formkonstanzen und Funktionswandel vormoderner Epik, 130–82. Stuttgart.Google Scholar
Hofmann, H. (2008) ‘Literary culture at the court of Urbino during the reign of Federico da Montefeltro’, Humanistica Lovaniensia 57: 559Google Scholar
Holberton, P. R. J. (1989) Poetry and Painting in the Time of Giorgione, PhD diss., Warburg Institute, London.Google Scholar
Holdenried, A. (2006) The Sibyl and Her Scribes: Manuscripts and Interpretation of the Latin Sibylla Tiburtina c. 1050–1500. Aldershot and Burlington.Google Scholar
Hollander, R. (1983) Il Virgilio dantesco: tragedia nella “Commedia”. Florence.Google Scholar
Hollander, R. (1991) ‘Dante’s Misreadings of the Aeneid in Inferno 20’, in Jacoff, R. and Schnapp, J. T. (eds.), The Poetry of Allusion: Virgil and Ovid in Dante’s Commedia, 7793. Stanford.Google Scholar
Hooker, M. A. (2007) The Use of Sibyls and Sibylline Oracles in Early Christian Writers, PhD diss., Cincinnati.Google Scholar
Hope, C. (1985) ‘Veronese and the Venetian tradition of allegory’, Proceedings of the British Academy 71: 389428Google Scholar
Horsfall, N. (1997) ‘Criteria for the dating of Calpurnius Siculus’, Rivista di filologia e di istruzione classica 125: 166–96Google Scholar
Horsfall, N. (2012) ‘Virgil and the Jews’, Vergilius 58: 6780Google Scholar
Houghton, L. B. T. (2015) ‘Virgil’s fourth Eclogue and the visual arts’, Papers of the British School at Rome 83: 175220Google Scholar
Houghton, L. B. T. (2017a) ‘The Scottish fourth Eclogue’, in Reid, S. J. and McOmish, D. M. (eds.), Neo-Latin Literature and Literary Culture in Early Modern Scotland, 7499. Leiden.Google Scholar
Houghton, L. B. T. (2017b) Nova progenies: Virgil’s fourth Eclogue and the tradition of Christian neo-Latin pastoral’, Humanistica Lovaniensia 66: 57118Google Scholar
Houghton, L. B. T. (2018) ‘Early responses to Virgil’s fourth Eclogue, Greece & Rome 65: 189204Google Scholar
Houghton, L. B. T. and Sgarbi, M. (eds.) (2018) Virgil and Renaissance Culture. Tempe.Google Scholar
Howard, L. H. (2010) Virgil the Blind Guide: Marking the Way through the Divine Comedy. Montreal and Kingston, ON, London and Ithaca, NY.Google Scholar
Hubbard, T. K. (1998) The Pipes of Pan: Intertextuality and Literary Filiation in the Pastoral Tradition from Theocritus to Milton. Ann Arbor.Google Scholar
Hugenroth, H. (ed.) (1999) Fabio Chigi: Philomathi Musae Juveniles. Des Philomathus Jugendgedichte, 2 vols. Cologne, Weimar and Vienna.Google Scholar
Hui, A. (2015) ‘The birth of ruins in quattrocento Adoration paintings’, I Tatti Studies in the Italian Renaissance 18: 319–48Google Scholar
Hulubei, A. (1938) L’Eglogue en France au XVIe siècle: Époque des Valois (1515–1589). Paris.Google Scholar
Hunt, J. M., Smith, R. A., and Stok, F. (2017) Classics from Papyrus to the Internet: An Introduction to Transmission and Reception. Austin.Google Scholar
Hunter, R. L. (2001) ‘Virgil and Theocritus: A note on the reception of the Encomium to Ptolemy Philadelphus’, Seminari romani di cultura greca 4: 159–63 [repr. in R. L. Hunter, On Coming After: Studies in Post-Classical Greek Literature and Its Reception, 2 vols. (Berlin and New York, 2008), 1.378–83]Google Scholar
Hutton, J. (1984) Themes of Peace in Renaissance Poetry, ed. Guerlac., R. Ithaca, NY and London.Google Scholar
Hyde, J. K. (1966) Padua in the Age of Dante. Manchester.Google Scholar
IJsewijn, J. (1978) ‘Vivès et Virgile’, in Chevallier, R. (ed.), Présence de Virgile: Actes du colloque des 9, 11 et 12 Décembre 1976, 313–21. Paris.Google Scholar
IJsewijn, J. (1990) ‘Poetry in a Roman garden: The Coryciana’, in Godman, P. and Murray, O. (eds.), Latin Poetry and the Classical Tradition: Essays in Medieval and Renaissance Literature, 211–31. Oxford.Google Scholar
IJsewijn, J. (ed.) (1997) Coryciana. Rome.Google Scholar
IJsewijn, J. and Sacré, D. (1990–8) Companion to Neo-Latin Studies, 2nd ed., 2 vols. Leuven.Google Scholar
Innocenti, S. (1998) ‘La Cappella Sassetti a Santa Trinita’, in Bellini, M. et al., Cappelle del Rinascimento a Firenze, 7988. Florence.Google Scholar
Irvine, M. (1994) The Making of Textual Culture: ‘Grammatica’ and Literary Theory 350–1100. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Irwin, M. E. (1989) ‘Colourful sheep in the Golden Age: Vergil, Eclogues 4.42-45’, Échos du monde classique/Classical Views 33: 2337Google Scholar
Jachmann, G. (1952) ‘Die vierte Ekloge Vergils’, Annali della Scuola Normale Superiore di Pisa, ser. 2, 21: 1362Google Scholar
Jacks, P. J. (1990) ‘The Simulachrum of Fabio Calvo: A view of Roman architecture all’antica in 1527’, The Art Bulletin 72: 453–81Google Scholar
Jacobsen, P. C. (ed.) (1965) Die Quirinalien des Metellus von Tegernsee: Untersuchungen zur Dichtkunst und kritische Textausgabe. Leiden and Cologne.Google Scholar
James, P. (1998) ‘Taceat superata vetustas: Living Legends in Claudian’s In Rufinum 1’, in Whitby, M. (ed.), The Propaganda of Power: The Role of Panegyric in Late Antiquity, 151–76. Leiden, Boston and Cologne.Google Scholar
Jeanmaire, H. (1939) La Sibylle et le retour de l’âge d’or. Paris.Google Scholar
Jenkyns, R. (1998) Virgil’s Experience. Nature and History: Times, Names and Places. Oxford.Google Scholar
Johnson, C. D. (2012) Memory, Metaphor, and Aby Warburg’s Atlas of Images. Ithaca, NY.Google Scholar
Johnston, P. A. (1980) Vergil’s Agricultural Golden Age: A Study of the Georgics. Leiden.Google Scholar
Jordan, C. (1986) Pulci’s Morgante: Poetry and History in Fifteenth-century Florence. Washington, DC and London.Google Scholar
Juhász, L. (ed.) (1934) Naldus de Naldis Florentinus, Elegiarum libri III ad Laurentium Medicen. Leipzig.Google Scholar
Kablitz, A. (1997) ‘Renaissance – Wiedergeburt: Zur Archäologie eines Epochennamens (Giorgio Vasari – Jules Michelet)’, in Ecker and Zintzen 1997: 59108Google Scholar
Kallendorf, C. W. (1988) ‘Virgil, Dante, and empire in Italian thought, 1300–1500’, Vergilius 34: 4469 [repr. in C. W. Kallendorf, The Virgilian Tradition: Book History and the History of Reading in Early Modern Europe (Aldershot, 2007)]Google Scholar
Kallendorf, C. W. (1989) In Praise of Aeneas: Virgil and Epideictic Rhetoric in the Early Italian Renaissance. Hanover and London.Google Scholar
Kallendorf, C. W. (1991) A Bibliography of Venetian Editions of Virgil, 1470–1599. Florence.Google Scholar
Kallendorf, C. W. (1994) A Bibliography of Renaissance Italian Translations of Virgil. Florence.Google Scholar
Kallendorf, C. W. (1995) ‘From Virgil to Vida: The poeta theologus in Italian Renaissance commentary’, Journal of the History of Ideas 56: 4162Google Scholar
Kallendorf, C. W. (1999) Virgil and the Myth of Venice: Books and Readers in the Italian Renaissance. Oxford.Google Scholar
Kallendorf, C. W. (ed./trans.) (2002) Humanist Educational Treatises. Cambridge, MA and London.Google Scholar
Kallendorf, C. W. (2007) The Other Virgil: ‘Pessimistic’ Readings of the Aeneid in Early Modern Culture. Oxford.Google Scholar
Kallendorf, C. W. (2009) ‘Epic and tragedy – Virgil, La Cerda, Milton’, in Sacré, D. and Papy, J. (eds.), Syntagmatia: Essays on Neo-Latin Literature in Honour of Monique Mund-Dopchie and Gilbert Tournoy, 579–93. Leuven.Google Scholar
Kallendorf, C. W. (2013) ‘Virgil in the Renaissance classroom: From Toscanella’s Osservationi … sopra l’opere di Virgilio to the Exercitationes rhetoricae’, in Feros Ruys, J., Ward, J. O. and Heyworth, M. (eds.), The Classics in the Medieval and Renaissance Classroom: The Role of Ancient Texts in the Arts Curriculum as Revealed by Surviving Manuscripts and Early Printed Books, 309–28. Turnhout.Google Scholar
Kallendorf, C. W. (2015) The Protean Virgil: Material Form and the Reception of the Classics. Oxford.Google Scholar
Kamen, H. (1974) ‘Golden Age, Iron Age: A conflict of concepts in the Renaissance’, Journal of Medieval and Renaissance Studies 4: 135–55Google Scholar
Kantorowicz, E. H. (1957) The King’s Two Bodies: A Study in Mediaeval Political Theology. Princeton.Google Scholar
Karakasis, E. (2016) T. Calpurnius Siculus: A Pastoral Poet in Neronian Rome. Berlin and Boston.Google Scholar
Kayachev, B. (2011) Ille ego qui quondam: Genre, date, and authorship’, Vergilius 57: 7582Google Scholar
Kecks, R. G. (2000) Domenico Ghirlandaio und die Malerei der Florentiner Renaissance. Munich.Google Scholar
Kegel-Brinkgreve, E. (1990) The Echoing Woods: Bucolic and Pastoral from Theocritus to Wordsworth. Amsterdam.Google Scholar
Kempkens, K. (1972) Joseph und Aeneas: Untersuchungen zum ‘Joseph’ des Girolamo Fracastoro, einem Bibelepos Italiens aus dem 16. Jahrhundert, PhD diss., Rheinische Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität, Bonn.Google Scholar
Kennedy, W. J. (1983) Jacopo Sannazaro and the Uses of Pastoral. Hanover and London.Google Scholar
Kennedy, W. J. (1985) ‘The Virgilian legacies of Petrarch’s Bucolicum Carmen and Spenser’s Shepheardes Calender’, in Pellegrini, A. L. (ed.), The Early Renaissance: Virgil and the Classical Tradition, 79106. Binghamton.Google Scholar
Kent, F. W. (1996) ‘The Young Lorenzo, 1449–1469’, in Mallett, M. and Mann, N. (eds.), Lorenzo the Magnificent: Culture and Politics (Warburg Institute Colloquia 3), 122. London.Google Scholar
Kerlin, R. T. (1908) ‘Virgil’s fourth Eclogue – an overlooked source’, American Journal of Philology 29: 449–60Google Scholar
Kerrigan, W. and Braden, G. (1989) The Idea of the Renaissance. Baltimore and London.Google Scholar
Kilinski, K. II (2013) Greek Myth and Western Art: The Presence of the Past. New York.Google Scholar
Kingsbury, B. and Straumann, B. (eds.) (2010) The Roman Foundations of the Law of Nations: Alberico Gentili and the Justice of Empire. Oxford.Google Scholar
Kinter, W. L. and Keller, J. R. (1967) The Sibyl: Prophetess of Antiquity and Medieval Fay. Philadelphia.Google Scholar
Klecker, E. (1994) Dichtung über Dichtung: Homer und Vergil in lateinischen Gedichten italienischer Humanisten des 15. und 16. Jahrhunderts. Vienna.Google Scholar
Kleiner, J. (1994) Mismapping the Underworld: Daring and Error in Dante’s ‘Comedy’. Stanford.Google Scholar
Knight, S. and Tilg, S. (eds.) (2015) The Oxford Handbook of Neo-Latin. Oxford and New York.Google Scholar
Korenjak, M. (2003) ‘Tityri sub persona: Der antike Biographismus und die bukolische Tradition’, Antike und Abendland 49: 5879Google Scholar
Koster, S. (1988) Ille ego qui: Dichter zwischen Wort und Macht. Erlangen.Google Scholar
Kraggerud, E. (2017) Vergiliana: Critical Studies on the Texts of Publius Vergilius Maro. London and New York.Google Scholar
Kraszewski, C. S. (2006) ‘Maciej Kazimierz Sarbiewski – the Christian Horace in England’, The Polish Review 51: 1540Google Scholar
Kristeller, P. O. (1987) Marsilio Ficino and His Work after Five Hundred Years. Florence.Google Scholar
Kubusch, K. (1986) Aurea Saecula: Mythos und Geschichte. Untersuchung eines Motivs in der antiken Literatur bis Ovid. Frankfurt, Berlin and New York.Google Scholar
Kuhn-Forte, B. (1997) Handbuch der Kirchen Roms IV: Die Kirchen innerhalb der Mauern Roms/Die Kirchen von Trastevere. Vienna.Google Scholar
Kurfess, A. (1954a) ‘Vergils vierte Ekloge bei Hieronymus und Augustinus: “Iam nova progenies caelo demittitur alto” in christlicher Deutung’, Sacris erudiri 6: 513Google Scholar
Kurfess, A. (1954b) ‘Vergils vierte Ekloge und die Oracula Sibyllina’, Historisches Jahrbuch 73: 120–7Google Scholar
Labande-Jeanroy, T. (1925) La question de la langue en Italie. Strasbourg and Paris.Google Scholar
Lacaita, J. P. (ed.) (1887) Benvenuti de Rambaldis de Imola comentum super Dantis Aldigherij comoediam, 5 vols. Florence.Google Scholar
la Cerda, J. L. de (ed.) (1619) P. Virgilii Maronis Bucolica et Georgica argumentis, explicationibus, notis illustrata. Lyons.Google Scholar
Ladewig, T. and Schaper, C. (eds.) (1876) Vergil’s Gedichte, erstes Bændchen: Bucolica und Georgica, 6th ed. Berlin.Google Scholar
Ladner, G. B. (1961) ‘Vegetation symbolism and the concept of Renaissance’, in Meiss, M. (ed.), De artibus opuscula XL: Essays in Honor of Erwin Panofsky, 2 vols., 1.303–22. New York [repr. in G. B. Ladner, Images and Ideas in the Middle Ages: Selected Studies in History and Art, vol. II (Rome, 1983), 727–63].Google Scholar
Laird, A. (2002) ‘Juan Luis de la Cerda and the predicament of commentary’, in Gibson, R. K. and Kraus, C. S. (eds.), The Classical Commentary: Histories, Practices, Theory, 171204. Leiden, Boston and Cologne.Google Scholar
Lang, B. (2009) Joseph in Egypt: A Cultural Icon from Grotius to Goethe. New Haven and London.Google Scholar
Laureti, E. (2007) Il Quadriregio di Federico Frezzi da Foligno: Un viaggio nei quattro regni. Foligno.Google Scholar
Lee, A. (2012) Petrarch and St. Augustine: Classical Scholarship, Christian Theology and the Origins of the Renaissance in Italy. Leiden and Boston.Google Scholar
Lefèvre, E. (2000) ‘Catulls Parzenlied und Vergils vierte Ekloge’, Philologus 144: 6280Google Scholar
Leistritz, S. (ed.) (2004) Das “Carmen Bucolicum” des Antonio Geraldini: Einleitung, Edition, Übersetzung, Analyse ausgewählter Eklogen. Trier.Google Scholar
Leone, S. C. (2008) The Palazzo Pamphilj in Piazza Navona: Constructing Identity in Early Modern Rome. London.Google Scholar
Leônij, L. (1858) Vita di Bartolommeo di Alviano. Todi.Google Scholar
Lessig, D. (1962) Ursprung und Entwicklung der spanischen Ekloge bis 1650. Geneva and Paris.Google Scholar
Leuker, T. (2007) Bausteine eines Mythos: Die Medici in Dichtung und Kunst des 15. Jahrhunderts. Cologne.Google Scholar
Levin, H. (1970) The Myth of the Golden Age in the Renaissance. London.Google Scholar
Levy, H. L. (ed.) (1971) Claudian’s In Rufinum: An Exegetical Commentary. Detroit.Google Scholar
Lippincott, K. (1989) ‘The neo-Latin historical epics of the north Italian courts: An examination of “courtly culture” in the fifteenth century’, Renaissance Studies 3: 415–28Google Scholar
Lipsker, E. (1933) Der Mythos vom goldenen Zeitalter in den Schäferdichtungen Italiens, Spaniens und Frankreichs zur Zeit der Renaissance, diss., Berlin.Google Scholar
Lobrichon, G. (1985) ‘Saint Virgile auxerrois et les avatars de la IVe Églogue’, in Lectures médiévales de Virgile: Actes du Colloque organisé par l’École française de Rome (Rome, 25–28 octobre 1982), ed. Tilliette, J.-Y., 375–93. Rome.Google Scholar
Lohe, P. (ed.) (1980) Cristoforo Landino: Disputationes Camaldulenses. Florence.Google Scholar
Lokaj, R. (2015) Two Renaissance Friends: Baldassarre Castiglione, Domizio Falcone, and their Neo-Latin Poetry. Tempe.Google Scholar
Looney, D. (2010) ‘Marvelous Vergil in the Ferrarese Renaissance’, in Farrell and Putnam 2010: 158–72.Google Scholar
Lowe, D. (2010) ‘The symbolic value of grafting in ancient Rome’, Transactions of the American Philological Association 140: 461–88Google Scholar
Ludwig, W. (ed.) (1977) Die Borsias des Tito Strozzi: ein lateinisches Epos der Renaissance. Munich.Google Scholar
Ludwig, W. (1978) ‘Lorenzo Strozzi’s Epigrams on Borso and Ercole d’Este’, Res Publica Litterarum 1: 171–6 [repr. in W. Ludwig, Litterae Neolatinae: Schriften zur neulateinischen Literatur (Munich, 1989), 195–9]Google Scholar
Luiselli, B. (1983–4) ‘Il profetismo virgiliano nella cultura veterocristiana’, Sandalion 6–7: 133–49Google Scholar
MacCormack, S. (1998) The Shadows of Poetry: Vergil in the Mind of Augustine. Berkeley, Los Angeles and London.Google Scholar
MacDonald, A. A., von Martels, Z. R. W. M. and Veenstra, J. R. (eds.) (2009) Christian Humanism: Essays in Honour of Arjo Vanderjagt. Leiden and Boston.Google Scholar
Macek, J. (1965) ‘Pétrarque et Cola di Rienzo’, Historica 11: 551Google Scholar
Magner, C. (1998) Imperium sine fine – Virgil, Augustus and Frederick Barbarossa’, Proceedings of the Virgil Society 23: 73100Google Scholar
Maier, B. (ed.) (1963–5) Torquato Tasso: Opere, 5 vols. Milan.Google Scholar
Mâle, E. (1899) Quomodo Sibyllas recentiores artifices repraesentaverint, diss., Paris.Google Scholar
Mâle, E. (1908) L’art religieux de la fin du Moyen Âge en France (7th ed., 1995). Paris.Google Scholar
Mallett, M. E. and Hale, J. R. (1984) The Military Organization of a Renaissance State: Venice c.1400 to 1617. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Mandel, C. (1988) ‘Golden Age and the good works of Sixtus V: Classical and Christian typology in the art of a Counter-Reformation Pope’, Storia dell’arte 62: 2952 [repr. in C. Mandel, Sixtus V and the Lateran Palace (Rome, 1994), 7391]Google Scholar
Manning, P. J. (1983) ‘Wordsworth’s Intimations ode and its epigraphs, Journal of English and Germanic Philology 82: 526–40Google Scholar
Manuwald, G. (2006) ‘Fürstenlob und Dichterwettstreit. Zu Sarbiewskis Maecenas-Figur Papst Urban VIII.’, in Schäfer 2006: 2138.Google Scholar
Manzini, L. (ed.) (1628) Le Muse di Bologna Tributarie de gl’ Ill.mi Sig.ri Nicolò Barbarigo & Marco Trivisano gli amici. All’Illustriss. Signore Lonardo [sic] Pisani. n.p.Google Scholar
Marinčič, M. (2001) ‘Der Weltaltermythos in Catulls Peleus-Epos (C. 64), der Kleine Herakles (Theokr. Id. 24) und der Römische “Messianismus” Vergils’, Hermes 129: 484504Google Scholar
Marino, G. (1616) Della Lira del Cavalier Marino, parte terza. Venice.Google Scholar
Marković, M. (ed.) (1958) Pesme Franja Božičevića Natalisa/Francisci Natalis Carmina. Belgrade.Google Scholar
Marletta, F. (1940) ‘Per la biografia di Porcelio dei Pandoni’, La Rinascita 16: 842–81Google Scholar
Martindale, C. (1993) Redeeming the Text: Latin Poetry and the Hermeneutics of Reception. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Massèra, A. F. (ed.) (1928) Giovanni Boccaccio: Opere latine minori. Bari.Google Scholar
Massimo, L. (1915–16) ‘Ilarione da Verona e la sua “Crisias”’, Roma e l’Oriente 10: 106–20, 11: 6775Google Scholar
Mastronardi, M. A. (1998) ‘“ … Redeunt Saturnia regna”: Città ideale ed età dell’oro nella Ferrara estense’, Annali della Facoltà di Lettere e Filosofia dell’Università degli studi della Basilicata 8: 153–81Google Scholar
Mastronardi, M. A. (2000) ‘L’immagine di Ferrara nella letteratura estense’, in Schnur, R. et al. (eds.), Acta Conventus Neo-Latini Abulensis/Proceedings of the Tenth International Congress of Neo-Latin Studies, Avila 4–9 August 1997, 423–30. Tempe.Google Scholar
Mattingly, H. (1934) ‘Virgil’s Golden Age: Sixth Aeneid and Fourth Eclogue’, Classical Review 48: 161–5Google Scholar
Mattingly, H. (1947) ‘Virgil’s Fourth Eclogue’, Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 10: 1419Google Scholar
Mayer, K. (2002) ‘The golden line: Ancient and medieval lists of special hexameters and modern scholarship’, in Lanham, C. D. (ed.), Latin Grammar and Rhetoric: Classical Theory and Medieval Practice, 139–79. London.Google Scholar
Mayer, R. (1980) ‘Calpurnius Siculus: Technique and date’, Journal of Roman Studies 70: 175–6Google Scholar
Mayor, J. B. (1907) ‘Sources of the Fourth Eclogue’, in Mayor et al. 1907: 87138Google Scholar
Mayor, J. B., Warde Fowler, W. and Conway, R. S. (1907) Virgil’s Messianic Eclogue: Its Meaning, Occasion, and Sources. London.Google Scholar
Mazzocco, A. (1993) Linguistic Theories in Dante and the Humanists: Studies of Language and Intellectual History in Late Medieval and Early Renaissance Italy. Leiden, New York and Cologne.Google Scholar
McGill, S. (2001) Poeta arte christianus: Pomponius’s cento Versus ad Gratiam Domini as an early example of Christian bucolic’, Traditio 56: 1526Google Scholar
McGill, S. (2007) ‘Virgil, Christianity, and the Cento Probae’, in Scourfield, J. H. D. (ed.), Texts and Culture in Late Antiquity: Inheritance, Authority and Change, 173–94. Swansea.Google Scholar
McLaughlin, M. L. (1988) ‘Humanist concepts of Renaissance and Middle Ages in the Tre- and Quattrocento’, Renaissance Studies 2: 131–42Google Scholar
McLaughlin, M. L. (1995) Literary Imitation in the Italian Renaissance: The Theory and Practice of Literary Imitation in Italy from Dante to Bembo. Oxford.Google Scholar
Mebane, J. S. (1989) Renaissance Magic and the Return of the Golden Age: The Occult Tradition and Marlowe, Jonson, and Shakespeare. Lincoln.Google Scholar
Melve, L. (2006) ‘“The Revolt of the Medievalists”: Directions in recent research on the twelfth-century Renaissance’, Journal of Medieval History 32: 231–52Google Scholar
Menestò, E. and Brufani, S. (eds.) (1995) Fontes Franciscani. Assisi.Google Scholar
Mertz, J. J. and Murphy, J. P., with IJsewijn, J. (eds.) (1989) Jesuit Latin Poets of the 17th and 18th Centuries: An Anthology of Neo-Latin Poets. Wauconda, IL.Google Scholar
Michiel, P. (s.a.) Lidio, et Elpino: Ecloga di Pietro Michiele. s.l.Google Scholar
Miglio, M. (1975) Storiografia pontificia del Quattrocento. Bologna.Google Scholar
Milchner, H. J. (2004) Nachfolge Jesu und Imitatio Christi: Die theologische Entfaltung der Nachfolgethematik seit den Anfängen der Christenheit bis in die Zeit der devotio moderna – unter besonderer Berücksichtigung religionspädagogischer Ansätze. Münster.Google Scholar
Miller, J. F. (1993) ‘Ovidian allusion and the vocabulary of memory’, Materiali e Discussioni per l’analisi dei testi classici, 30: 153–64Google Scholar
Miller, J. F. (2009) Apollo, Augustus, and the Poets. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Miller, P. N. (2001) ‘Friendship and conversation in seventeenth-century Venice’, Journal of Modern History 73: 131Google Scholar
Minois, G. (2009) L’Âge d’or: Histoire de la poursuite du bonheur. Villeneuve-d’Ascq.Google Scholar
Minor, A. C. and Mitchell, B. (eds.) (1968) A Renaissance Entertainment: Festivities for the Marriage of Cosimo I, Duke of Florence, in 1539. Columbia.Google Scholar
Modestino, C. (1859–63) Della dimora di Torquato Tasso in Napoli negli anni 1588, 1592, 1594, 2 vols. Naples.Google Scholar
Momigliano, A. (1970) ‘J. G. Droysen between Greeks and Jews’, History and Theory 9: 139–53 [repr. in A. Momigliano, Essays in Ancient and Modern Historiography (Oxford, 1977), 307–23]Google Scholar
Money, D. K. (2004) ‘Gibbes, James Alban’, in Matthew, H. C. G. and Harrison, B. (eds.), Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, volume 22, 24. Oxford.Google Scholar
Moore, O. H. (1918) ‘The Infernal Council’, Modern Philology 16: 169–93Google Scholar
Moore, O. H. (1921) ‘The Infernal Council’, Modern Philology 19: 4764Google Scholar
Morales Folguera, J. M. (2007) Las sibilas en el arte de la edad moderna, Europa mediterránea y Nueva España. Málaga.Google Scholar
Morganti, P. and Rota, T. (1992) Arte e Storia nella Chiesa di S. Bernardino in Lallio. Bergamo.Google Scholar
Moudarres, A. (2012) ‘The geography of the enemy: Old and new empires between humanist debates and Tasso’s Gerusalemme liberata’, in Moudarres, A. and Moudarres, C. P. (eds.), New Worlds and the Italian Renaissance: Contributions to the History of European Intellectual Culture, 291332. Leiden and Boston.Google Scholar
Moul, V. (ed.) (2017) A Guide to Neo-Latin Literature. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Mourlot, E. (1977) ‘“Artifice naturelle” ou “nature artificielle”: Les grottes médicéennes dans la Florence du XVIe siècle’, in Boillet, D. et al., Ville et campagne dans la littérature italienne de la Renaissance, vol. 2: 303–42. Paris.Google Scholar
Müller, G. A. (2003) Formen und Funktionen der Vergilzitate und -anspielungen bei Augustin von Hippo. Paderborn, Munich, Vienna and Zürich.Google Scholar
Mund, H. (2015) Das Goldene Zeitalter: ein Topos in der Herrscherpanegyrik der Medici und der französischen Könige im 16. und 17. Jahrhundert. Munich.Google Scholar
Mundt, L. (2001) ‘Die sizilischen Musen in Wittenberg – Zur religiösen Funktionalisierung der neulateinischen Bukolik im deutschen Protestantismus des 16. Jahrhunderts’, in Ludwig, W. (ed.), Die Musen im Reformationszeitalter, 265–88. Leipzig.Google Scholar
Mundt, L. (2010) ‘Simon Dach als neulateinischer Bukoliker: Seine Eklogen zum Weihnachts- und Osterfest (1651/1652)’, in Burkard et al. 2010: 211250Google Scholar
Mustard, W. P. (ed.) (1924) The Eclogues of Antonio Geraldini. Baltimore.Google Scholar
Musto, R. G. (2003) Apocalypse in Rome: Cola di Rienzo and the Politics of the New Age. Berkeley and Los Angeles.Google Scholar
Musumeci, A. (2003) ‘Aminta ovvero del sentimento del tempo’, in Secchi Tarugi 2003: 7582Google Scholar
Nash, R. (trans.) (1996) The Major Latin Poems of Jacopo Sannazaro. Detroit.Google Scholar
Nederman, C. J. (2009) Lineages of European Political Thought. Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Nesi, G. (1497) Iohannis Nesii Florentini Oraculum de nouo saeculo. Florence.Google Scholar
Newman, J. H. (1870) An Essay in Aid of a Grammar of Assent. London.Google Scholar
Nicastri, L. (1989) ‘La quarta ecloga di Virgilio e la profezia dell’Emmanuele’, Vichiana n.s. 18: 221–71Google Scholar
Nicastri, L. (1992) ‘II Cymaeum Carmen di Virgilio (ecl. IV, 4)’, in Gigante, M. (ed.), Civiltà dei Campi Flegrei: Atti del convegno internazionale, 4178. Naples.Google Scholar
Nicastri, L. (2005) ‘Il puer di Virgilio e l’Emmanuele di Isaia’, in Placella, V. (ed.), Memoria biblica e letteratura, 3952. Naples.Google Scholar
Niccoli, G. (1989) Cupid, Satyr, and the Golden Age: Pastoral Dramatic Scenes of the Late Renaissance. New York.Google Scholar
Niccoli, O. (1990) Prophecy and People in Renaissance Italy, trans. Cochrane, L. G.. Princeton.Google Scholar
Nisbet, R. G. M. (1978) ‘Virgil’s fourth Eclogue: Easterners and Westerners’, Bulletin of the Institute of Classical Studies 25: 5978 [repr. in Nisbet, 1995: 4775]Google Scholar
Nisbet, R. G. M. (1991) ‘The style of Virgil’s Eclogues, Proceedings of the Virgil Society 20: 114 [repr. in Nisbet 1995: 325–37]Google Scholar
Nisbet, R. G. M. (1993) ‘Adolescens puer (Virgil, Eclogues 4.28–30)’, in Jocelyn, H. D. with Hurt, H. (eds.), Tria Lustra: Essays and Notes Presented to John Pinsent, 265–7. Liverpool [repr. in Nisbet 1995: 381–5].Google Scholar
Nisbet, R. G. M. (1995) Collected Papers on Latin Literature, ed. Harrison., S. J. Oxford.Google Scholar
Nixon, C. E. V., and Rodgers, B. S. (eds./trans.) (1994) In Praise of Later Roman Emperors: The Panegyrici Latini. Berkeley, Los Angeles and Oxford.Google Scholar
Norden, E. (1924) Die Geburt des Kindes: Geschichte einer religiösen Idee. Leipzig and Berlin.Google Scholar
Noreña, C. G. (1970) Juan Luis Vives. The Hague.Google Scholar
Northrup, M. D. (1983) ‘Vergil on the birth of poetry: A reading of the Fourth Eclogue’, in Deroux, C. (ed.), Studies in Latin Literature and Roman History III, 111–25. Brussels.Google Scholar
Nosow, R. (2012) Ritual Meanings in the Fifteenth-century Motet. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Nota, E. (ed.) (2002–13) Pétrarque: Lettres de la Vieillesse, 5 vols. Paris.Google Scholar
Novati, F. (ed.) (1891–1916) Epistolario di Coluccio Salutati, 4 vols. Rome.Google Scholar
Novotný, F. (1977) The Posthumous Life of Plato. The Hague.Google Scholar
Oberhuber, K. (1999) Raphael: The Paintings. Munich, London and New York.Google Scholar
O’Daly, G. (2012) Days Linked by Song: Prudentius’ Cathemerinon. Oxford.Google Scholar
O’Hogan, C. (2016) Prudentius and the Landscapes of Late Antiquity. Oxford.Google Scholar
O’Malley, J. W. (1968) Giles of Viterbo on Church and Reform: A Study in Renaissance Thought. Leiden.Google Scholar
O’Malley, J. W. (1969) ‘Fulfillment of the Christian Golden Age under Pope Julius II: Text of a discourse of Giles of Viterbo, 1507’, Traditio 25: 265338Google Scholar
Onofri, L. (1979) ‘Sacralità, immaginazione e proposte politiche: La Vita di Niccolo V di Giannozzo Manetti’, Humanistica Lovaniensia 28: 2777Google Scholar
Osgood, J. (2006) Caesar’s Legacy: Civil War and the Emergence of the Roman Empire. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Orvieto, P. (ed.) (1986) Luigi Pulci: Opere minori. Milan.Google Scholar
Padoan, G. (1977) Il pio Enea, l’empio Ulisse: Tradizione classica e intendimento medievale in Dante. Ravenna.Google Scholar
Pallant, A. (1983) The Printed Poems of Scipione Gentili, MA diss., Birmingham.Google Scholar
Pallant, A. (1984–5) ‘Scipione Gentili: A sixteenth century jurist’, The Kingston Law Review 14–15: 97125Google Scholar
Palmer, J. T. (2013) ‘The ordering of time’, in Wieser, V., Zolles, C., Feik, C., Zolles, M. and Schlöndorff, L. (eds.), Abendländische Apokalyptik: Kompendium zur Genealogie der Endzeit, 605–18. Berlin.Google Scholar
Panizza, D. (1981) Alberico Gentili, giurista ideologo nell’Inghilterra elisabettiana. Padua.Google Scholar
Panofsky, E. (1960) Renaissance and Renascences in Western Art. Stockholm [repr. New York, 1972].Google Scholar
Parlato, E. (1989) ‘La decorazione della cappella Carafa: Allegoria ed emblematica negli affreschi di Filippino Lippi alla Minerva’, in Danesi Squarzina 1989: 169–84Google Scholar
Parry, G. (1981) The Golden Age Restor’d: The Culture of the Stuart Court, 1603–42. Manchester.Google Scholar
Pascucci, G. (1985) ‘I versi finali della IV ecloga di Virgilio nell’interpretazione degli umanisti’, in Cardini, R. et al., Tradizione classica e letteratura umanistica: Per Alessandro Perosa, 507–23. Rome.Google Scholar
Pasquini, E. (ed.) (1965) Simone Serdini da Siena detto il Saviozzo: Rime. Bologna.Google Scholar
Passamani, B. (1978) ‘Cristoforo Baschenis il Vecchio’, in I pittori bergamaschi dal XIII al XIX secolo: Il Cinquecento IV, 4967. Bergamo.Google Scholar
Pastor, L. (1891–1961) The History of the Popes from the Close of the Middle Ages, trans. Antrobus, F. I. et al., 40 vols. London.Google Scholar
Patetta, F. (1950) Venturino de Prioribus, umanista ligure del secolo XV. Vatican City.Google Scholar
Patterson, A. (1987) Pastoral and Ideology: Virgil to Valéry. Berkeley and Los Angeles.Google Scholar
Patterson, A. (2007) ‘Too much Virgil? Too much talk? Wordsworth’s anxiety of influence’, in Paschalis, M. (ed.), Pastoral Palimpsests: Essays in the Reception of Theocritus and Virgil, 101–17. Heraklion.Google Scholar
Pecci, B. (1890) ‘Contributo per la storia degli Umanisti nel Lazio’, Archivio della R. Società Romana di Storia Patria 13: 451526Google Scholar
Pecoraro, M. (1959) Per la storia dei carmi del Bembo: Una redazione non vulgata. Venice and Rome.Google Scholar
Peebles, B. M. (1964) ‘The Ad Maronis Mausoleum: Petrarch’s Virgil and two fifteenth-century manuscripts’, in Henderson, C. Jr. (ed.), Classical, Mediaeval and Renaissance Studies in Honor of Berthold Louis Ullman, 2 vols., 2.169–98. Rome.Google Scholar
Peeters, F. (1933) A Bibliography of Vergil. New York.Google Scholar
Peirano, I. (2013) ‘Ille ego qui quondam: On authorial (an)onymity’, in Marmodoro, A. and Hill, J. (eds.), The Author’s Voice in Classical and Late Antiquity, 251–85. Oxford.Google Scholar
Perosa, A. (ed.) (1943) Naldus Naldius Florentinus, Epigrammaton liber. Budapest.Google Scholar
Perosa, A. (ed.) (1951) Michaelis Marulli carmina. Zürich.Google Scholar
Perosa, A. and Sparrow, J. (eds.) (1979) Renaissance Latin Verse: An Anthology. London.Google Scholar
Perutelli, A. (2001) ‘Bucolics’, in Horsfall, N. (ed.), A Companion to the Study of Virgil, 2nd ed., 2762. Leiden, Boston and Cologne.Google Scholar
Pesenti, G, (1922) ‘L’autore e la data del poema “Crisias”’, Athenaeum 10: 123–5Google Scholar
Petoletti, M. (2003) ‘Età dell’oro e profezia nella poesia encomiastica del tardo Trecento a Milano: Giovanni de Bonis e le sue lodi viscontee’, in Secchi Tarugi 2003: 411–31Google Scholar
Petriconi, H. (1930) ‘Über die Idee des Goldenen Zeitalters als Ursprung der Schäferdichtungen Sannazaros und Tassos’, Die neueren Sprachen 38: 265–83Google Scholar
Pettinelli, R. A. (1999) ‘Francesco Arsilli e i “poetae urbani”’, in Pettinelli, R. A. (ed.), L’umana compagnia: Studi in onore di Gennaro Savarese, 2735. Rome.Google Scholar
Petrioli, A. M. (ed.) (1966) Mostra di disegni vasariani: Carri trionfali e costumi per la genealogia degli dei (1565). Florence.Google Scholar
Pfättisch, J. M. (1907) ‘Der prophetische Charakter der vierten Ekloge Vergils bis Dante’, Historisch-Politische Blätter für das katholische Deutschland 139: 637–46, 734–51Google Scholar
Pieper, C. (2008) Elegos redolere Vergiliosque sapere: Cristoforo Landinos ‘Xandra’ zwischen Liebe und Gesellschaft. Hildesheim, Zürich and New York.Google Scholar
Pieri, M. and Salvarani, L (eds.) (2007) G. B. Marino: L’Adone. Lavis.Google Scholar
Pighi, G. B. (1944) ‘“De visitatione Virginis” e “Laus Argi” d’Alessandro Zappata’, Aevum 18: 7999Google Scholar
Pignatti, T. (1966) Le pitture di Paolo Veronese nella Chiesa di S. Sebastiano in Venezia. Milan.Google Scholar
Pirovano, D. (ed.) (2006) Alessandro Vellutello: La ‘Comedia’ di Dante Alighieri con la nova esposizione, 3 vols. Rome.Google Scholar
Pizzi, G. (1990) Storia degli Amaltei. Oderzo.Google Scholar
Placella, A. (2014) ‘Io non Enëa, io non Paulo sono’. Il Profetismo di Dante tra Isaia, Virgilio e Paolo, PhD diss., Università Roma Tre.Google Scholar
Placella, V. (1990) ‘S. Francesco e il francescanesimo in un poema epico in latino del Cinquecento’, in Pasquazi, S. (ed.), San Francesco e il francescanesimo nella letteratura italiana dal Rinascimento al Romanticismo: Atti del Convegno Nazionale (Assisi, 18–20 maggio 1989), 115–62. Rome.Google Scholar
Pocock, J. G. A. (1999–2015) Barbarism and Religion, 6 vols. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Poggioli, R. (1975) The Oaten Flute: Essays on Pastoral Poetry and the Pastoral Ideal. Cambridge, MA.Google Scholar
Polverini Fosi, I. (1993) ‘Justice and its image: Political propaganda and judicial reality in the pontificate of Sixtus V’, The Sixteenth Century Journal 24: 7595Google Scholar
Porçal, P. (1984) ‘La Cappella Sassetti in S. Trinita a Firenze: Osservazioni sull’iconografia’, Antichità Viva 23: 2636Google Scholar
Preimesberger, R. (1974) ‘Obeliscus Pamphilius: Beiträge zu Vorgeschichte und Ikonographie des Vierströmebrunnens auf Piazza Navona’, Münchner Jahrbuch der bildenden Kunst ser. 3, 25: 77162Google Scholar
Preimesberger, R. (1976) ‘Pontifex Romanus per Aeneam praesignatus: Die Galleria Pamphilj und ihre Fresken’, Römisches Jahrbuch für Kunstgeschichte 16: 221–87Google Scholar
Prete, S. (ed.) (1968) Some Unknown Poems by Tito Vespasiano Strozzi. Fano [repr. in Prete, S. (1978) Studies in Latin Poets of the Quattrocento, 51–102. Lawrence].Google Scholar
Prümm, K. (1929) ‘Das Prophetenamt der Sibyllen in kirchlicher Literatur, mit besonderer Rücksicht auf die Deutung der 4. Ekloge Virgils’, Scholastik 4: 5477, 221–46, 498533Google Scholar
Pugh, S. (2016) Spenser and Virgil: The Pastoral Poems. Manchester.Google Scholar
Pulci, B. (1482) Bucoliche elegantissimamente composte da Bernardo Pulci fiorentino et da Francesco de Arsochi senese et da Hieronymo Benivieni fiorentino et da Iacopo Fiorino de Boninsegni senese. Florence.Google Scholar
Putnam, M. C. J. (trans.) (2009) Jacopo Sannazaro: Latin Poetry. Cambridge, MA and London.Google Scholar
Putnam, M. C. J. (2010) ‘Vergil and Seamus Heaney’, Vergilius 56: 316Google Scholar
Puttfarken, T. (1980) ‘Golden Age and Justice in sixteenth-century Florentine political thought and imagery: Observations on three pictures by Jacopo Zucchi’, Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 43: 130–49Google Scholar
Quednau, R. (1979) Die Sala di Constantino im Vatikanischen Palast: Zur Dekoration der beiden Medici-Päpste Leo X. und Clemens VII. Hildesheim and New York.Google Scholar
Quillen, C. E. (1998) Rereading the Renaissance: Petrarch, Augustine, and the Language of Humanism. Ann Arbor.Google Scholar
Quint, D. (trans.) (1979) The Stanze of Angelo Poliziano. Amherst.Google Scholar
Quint, D. (1983) Origin and Originality in Renaissance Literature: Versions of the Source. New Haven and London.Google Scholar
Raby, F. J. E. (1957) A History of Secular Latin Poetry in the Middle Ages, 2 vols. Oxford.Google Scholar
Radke, G. (1959) ‘Vergils Cumaeum carmen’, Gymnasium 66: 217–46Google Scholar
Raggi, L. (1636) Seculum Barberinum, siue Aetas Aurea, ad Musicos nomeros decantata. Rome.Google Scholar
Ramsay, W. M. (1907) The Cities of St. Paul: Their Influence on his Life and Thought. The Cities of Eastern Asia Minor. London.Google Scholar
Raybould, R. (2016) The Sibyl Series of the Fifteenth Century. Leiden and Boston.Google Scholar
Reckford, K. J. (1958) ‘Some appearances of the Golden Age’, The Classical Journal 54: 7987Google Scholar
Rees, R. (2004) ‘Introduction’, in Rees, R. (ed.), Romane memento: Vergil in the Fourth Century, 116. London.Google Scholar
Reeve, M. D. (1975) ‘The textual tradition of Aetna, Ciris and Catalepton, Maia 27: 231–47Google Scholar
Reeve, M. D. (1996) ‘Classical Scholarship’, in Kraye, J. (ed.) The Cambridge Companion to Renaissance Humanism, 2046. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Regini, I. (2014–15) L’esegesi cristiana dell’Ecloga IV di Virgilio tra Medioevo e Umanesimo: Con edizione critica, traduzione e commento dell’epistola di Iacopo Bracelli a Raffaele da Pornassio, diss. (tesi di laurea), Università di Pisa.Google Scholar
Reinach, S. (1900) ‘L’orphisme dans la IVe églogue de Virgile’, Revue de l’histoire des religions 42: 365–83Google Scholar
Reineke, I. (1996) ‘C. Silvani Germanici in pontificatum Clementis Septimi Pont. Opt. Max. Panegyris prima. In Leonis Decimi Pont. Max. statuam Sylva. Text mit Einleitung’, Humanistica Lovaniensia 45: 245318Google Scholar
Reinhold, M. (1984) Classica Americana: The Greek and Roman Heritage in the United States. Detroit.Google Scholar
Reynolds, A. (1983) ‘The private and public emblems of Cardinal Oliviero Carafa’, Bibliothèque d’Humanisme et Renaissance 45: 273–84Google Scholar
Reynolds, A. (1985) ‘Cardinal Oliviero Carafa and the early Cinquecento tradition of the Feast of Pasquino’, Humanistica Lovaniensia 34: 178208Google Scholar
Ricci, C. (1924) Il Tempio Malatestiano. Milan and Rome.Google Scholar
Richard, P. (1989) ‘Rouen and the Golden Age: The entry of Francis I, 2 August 1517’, in Allmand, C. (ed.), Power, Culture and Religion in France, c.1350–c.1550, 117–30. Woodbridge.Google Scholar
Richardson, B. (1999) ‘The Cinquecento: Prose’, in Brand, P. and Pertile, L. (eds.), The Cambridge History of Italian Literature, revised ed., 181232. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Richardson, N. (trans.) (2016) Prudentius’ Hymns for Hours and Seasons: Liber Cathemerinon. Abingdon and New York.Google Scholar
Riedlberger, P. (ed.) (2010) Philologischer, historischer und liturgischer Kommentar zum 8. Buch der Johannis des Goripp nebst kritischer Edition und Übersetzung. Groningen.Google Scholar
Rietbergen, P. (2006) Power and Religion in Baroque Rome: Barberini Cultural Policies. Leiden.Google Scholar
Rigg, A. G. (1992) A History of Anglo-Latin Literature 1066–1422. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Rigo, P. (1994) Memoria classica e memoria biblica in Dante. Florence.Google Scholar
Rijser, D. (2012) Raphael’s Poetics: Art and Poetry in High Renaissance Rome. Amsterdam.Google Scholar
Rinaldi, R. (2005) ‘Princes and culture in the fifteenth-century Italian Po Valley courts’, in Gosman, M., MacDonald, A. and Vanderjagt, A. (eds.), Princes and Princely Culture 1450–1650, 2 vols., 2.2342. Leiden.Google Scholar
Ring, J. (1820) A Translation of the Works of Virgil: Partly Original, and Partly Altered from Dryden and Pitt, 2 vols. London.Google Scholar
Rinuccini, C. (1608) Descrizione delle feste fatte nelle reali nozze de’ serenissimi principi di Toscana d. Cosimo De’ Medici, e Maria Maddalena Arciduchessa d’Austria. Florence.Google Scholar
Rivers, I. (1994) Classical and Christian Ideas in English Renaissance Poetry: A Students’ Guide, 2nd ed. London and New York.Google Scholar
Roberts, J. M. (1996) A History of Europe. Harmondsworth.Google Scholar
Roberts, M. (2009) The Humblest Sparrow: The Poetry of Venantius Fortunatus. Ann Arbor.Google Scholar
Robson, E. I. (1928) ‘Virgil, Eclogue IV. 18-20’, Classical Review 42: 123–4Google Scholar
Rodríguez Peregrina, J. M. (1991) ‘La Égloga IV de Virgilio a través de la Interpretatio allegorica de Luis Vives’, Florentia Iliberritana 2: 455–66Google Scholar
Roessli, J.-M. (2003) ‘Augustin, les sibylles et les Oracles sibyllins’, in Fux, P.-Y., Roessli, J.-M. and Wermelinger, O. (eds.), Augustinus Afer, 263–86. Fribourg.Google Scholar
Rogers, G. A. J. and Schuhmann, K. (eds.) (2003) Thomas Hobbes: Leviathan, 2 vols. Bristol.Google Scholar
Romaldo, A. M. (1992–3) ‘Corpus titulorum senensium: Le Divinae Institutiones di Lattanzio e il pavimento del Duomo di Siena’, Annuario dell’Istituto Storico Diocesano di Siena 1: 5181Google Scholar
Romanelli, S. (2005) Sequela, imitatio e conformitas in fonti francescane “non ufficiali”’, Franciscana 7: 89126Google Scholar
Romani, F. (1902) Poesia pagana e arte cristiana. Florence.Google Scholar
Rosand, D. (2001) Myths of Venice: The Figuration of a State. Chapel Hill and London.Google Scholar
Roscoe, W. (1796) The Life of Lorenzo de’ Medici, Called The Magnificent, 2 vols. Liverpool.Google Scholar
Roscoe, W. (1805) The Life and Pontificate of Leo the Tenth, 4 vols. Liverpool.Google Scholar
Roscoe, W. (1806) The Life and Pontificate of Leo the Tenth, 2nd ed., 6 vols. London.Google Scholar
Roscoe, W. (1846) The Life and Pontificate of Leo the Tenth, 4th ed., rev. Roscoe, T., 2 vols. London.Google Scholar
Rose, H. J. (1942) The Eclogues of Vergil. Berkeley and Los Angeles.Google Scholar
Rossi, A. (1915) ‘Le Sibille nelle arti figurative italiane’, L’Arte 18: 209–21, 272–85, 427–58Google Scholar
Rossi, F. (1979) ‘Pittura anonima bergamasca del primo Cinquecento’, in I pittori bergamaschi dal XIII al XIX secolo: Il Cinquecento III, 27–77. Bergamo.Google Scholar
Rossi, V. and Bosco, U. (eds.) (1933–42) Francesco Petrarca: Le familiari, 4 vols. Florence.Google Scholar
Rota, E. (ed.) (1904) Petri Ansolini de Ebulo de rebus Siculis carmen. Città di Castello.Google Scholar
Rowland, I. D. (1986) ‘Render unto Caesar the things which are Caesar’s: Humanism and the arts in the patronage of Agostino Chigi’, Renaissance Quarterly 39: 673730Google Scholar
Rowland, I. D. (2010) ‘Vergil and the Pamphili Family in Piazza Navona, Rome’, in Farrell and Putnam 2010: 253–69Google Scholar
Royds, T. F. (1918) Virgil and Isaiah: A Study of the Pollio. Oxford.Google Scholar
Rudd, N. (ed./trans.) (2005) Samuel Johnson: The Latin Poems. Lewisburg.Google Scholar
Ruffini, F. (1982) ‘Linee rette e intrichi: il Vitruvio di Cesariano e la Ferrara teatrale di Ercole I’, in Papagno, G. and Quondam, A. (eds.), La Corte e lo spazio: Ferrara estense, 3 vols., 2.365429. Rome.Google Scholar
Rumpf, L. (1999) ‘Bukolische Nomina bei Vergil und Theokrit: Zur poetischen Technik des Eklogenbuchs’, Rheinisches Museum n.s. 142: 157–75Google Scholar
Rundle, D. (1995) ‘A New Golden Age? More, Skelton and the accession verses of 1509’, Renaissance Studies 95876Google Scholar
Ryan, L. V. (1981) ‘Milton’s Epitaphium Damonis and B. Zanchi’s elegy on Baldassare Castiglione’, Humanistica Lovaniensia 30: 108–23Google Scholar
Sabbadini, R. (ed.) (1915–19) Epistolario di Guarino Veronese, 3 vols. Turin.Google Scholar
Sakamoto, K. (2016) Julius Caesar Scaliger, Renaissance Reformer of Aristotelianism. Leiden and Boston.Google Scholar
Salvarani, L. (ed.) (2006) Francesco Bracciolini: L’elettione di Urbano Papa VIII; Maffeo Barberini: Poesie Toscane; Hieronymus Kapsberger: Poematia et Carmina. Trento.Google Scholar
Sampieri, T. (1978) ‘La cultura letteraria di Pietro da Eboli’, in Studi su Pietro da Eboli, 6787. Rome.Google Scholar
Sandys, J. E. (1903) A History of Classical Scholarship, vol. 1: From the Sixth Century B.C. to the End of the Middle Ages. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Sansovino, F. (ed.) (1562) Delle orationi recitate a Principi di Venetia nella loro creatione da gli ambasciadori di diverse città, Libro primo. Venice.Google Scholar
Santi, B. (1982) The Marble Pavement of the Cathedral of Siena. Florence.Google Scholar
Sanz, D. F. (ed./trans.) (2003) Eneas Silvio Piccolomini: Epístola a Mehmet II. Madrid.Google Scholar
Sarbiewski, M. K. (1632) Lyricorum libri IV, Epodon liber unus alterque epigrammatum. Antwerp.Google Scholar
Sarrazin, P. (trans.) (2007) Luigi Pulci: La joute et autres œuvres poétiques, augmentées de pièces composées dans le cercle de Laurent le Magnifique. Turnhout.Google Scholar
Saslow, J. M. (1996) The Medici Wedding of 1589: Florentine Festival as Theatrum Mundi. New Haven and London.Google Scholar
Savarese, G. (1993) La cultura a Roma tra umanesimo ed ermetismo (1480–1540). Rome.Google Scholar
Saward, S. (1982) The Golden Age of Marie de’ Medici. Ann Arbor.Google Scholar
Sawyer, J. F. A. (1996) The Fifth Gospel: Isaiah in the History of Christianity. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Saxl, F. (1940–1) ‘The Classical Inscription in Renaissance Art and Politics. Bartholomaeus Fontius: Liber monumentorum Romanae urbis et aliorum locorum’, Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 4: 1946Google Scholar
Saxl, F. (1957) ‘The Appartamento Borgia’, in Saxl, F., Lectures, 2 vols., 1.174–88. London.Google Scholar
Scafoglio, G. (2013) ‘Since the child smiles: A note on Virg. Ecl. 4.62-3’, The Classical Journal 109: 7387Google Scholar
Schäfer, E. (ed.) (2006) Sarbiewski: Der polnische Horaz. Tübingen.Google Scholar
Schaper, C. (1864) ‘Ueber die Entstehungszeit der Vergilischen Eclogen’, Jahnsche Jahrbücher für Philologie und Paedagogik 89: 633–57, 768–94Google Scholar
Schelkle, K. H. (1939) Virgil in der Deutung Augustins. Stuttgart and Berlin.Google Scholar
Schier, R. (2008) ‘Giorgione’s Tempesta: A Virgilian pastoral’, Renaissance Studies 22: 476506Google Scholar
Schirg, B. (2016) Die Ökonomie der Dichtung: Pietro Lazzaronis Lobgedicht an den Borgia-Papst Alexander VI. (1497). Hildesheim, Zürich and New York.Google Scholar
Schmid, W. (1953) ‘Tityrus Christianus: Probleme religiöser Hirtendichtung an der Wende vom vierten zum fünften Jahrhundert’, Rheinisches Museum 96: 101–65Google Scholar
Schmidt, P. G. (1975) ‘Jodocus Badius Ascensius als Kommentator’, in Buck, A. and Herding, O. (eds.), Der Kommentar in der Renaissance, 6371. Bad Godesberg.Google Scholar
Schmidt, P. G. (1997) ‘Die Crisias des Hilarion von Verona’, in Tournoy and Sacré 1997: 5386Google Scholar
Schmidt, V. (1977) Redeunt Saturnia Regna: Studien zu Vergils vierter Ecloga, diss., Groningen.Google Scholar
Schröter, E. (1980) ‘Der Vatikan als Hügel Apollons und der Musen: Kunst und Panegyrik von Nikolaus V. bis Julius II.’, Römische Quartalschrift 75: 208–40Google Scholar
Schulze Roberg, M. (2011) ‘Mary as a heroine: Jesus’ mother in Renaissance epic’, Graeco-Latina Brunensia 16: 171–86Google Scholar
Scolari, F. (trans.) (1845) Del trionfo di Cristo, carme eroico di Macario Muzio. Venice.Google Scholar
Scorsone, M. (ed.) (1993) Marcantonio Flaminio: Carmina. Turin.Google Scholar
Scorsone, M. and Sodano, R. (eds.) (1999) Francesco Maria Molza: Elegiae et alia. Turin.Google Scholar
Scott, J. B. (1991) Images of Nepotism: The Painted Ceilings of Palazzo Barberini. Princeton.Google Scholar
Scott, J. B. (1997) ‘Strumento di potere: Pietro da Cortona tra Barberini e Pamphilj’, in Lo Bianco, A. (ed.), Pietro da Cortona 1597–1669, 8798. Milan.Google Scholar
Scott, V. and Sturm-Maddox, S. (2007) Performance, Poetry and Politics on the Queen’s Day: Catherine de Médicis and Pierre de Ronsard at Fontainebleau. Aldershot and Burlington.Google Scholar
Scott Baker, N. (2010) ‘Medicean metamorphoses: Carnival in Florence, 1513’, Renaissance Studies 25: 491510Google Scholar
Secchi Tarugi, L. (ed.) (2003) Millenarismo ed età dell’oro nel Rinascimento: Atti del XIII Convegno internazionale (Chianciano–Montepulciano–Pienza 16–19 luglio 2001 ). Florence.Google Scholar
Secret, F. (1977) ‘Virgile de Viterbe’, Augustiniana 27: 218–23Google Scholar
Segal, C. (1977) ‘Pastoral realism and the Golden Age: Correspondence and contrast between Virgil’s third and fourth Eclogues, Philologus 121: 158–63 [repr. in C. Segal, Poetry and Myth in Ancient Pastoral: Essays on Theocritus and Virgil (Princeton, 1981), 265–70]Google Scholar
Seider, A. M. (2013) Memory in Vergil’s Aeneid: Creating the Past. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Sellar, W. Y. (1877) The Roman Poets of the Augustan Age: Virgil. Oxford.Google Scholar
Setton, K. M. (1976–84) The Papacy and the Levant (1204–1571), 4 vols. Philadelphia.Google Scholar
Sforza, M. (1585) Oratione del Sig. Mutio Sforza fatta al Ser.mo Paschal Cicogna nella sua Assontione al Principato di Venetia. Venice.Google Scholar
Shaw, P. (ed./trans.) (1995) Dante, Monarchia. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Shoaf, R. A. (1978) ‘“Auri sacra fames” and the Age of Gold (Purg. XXII, 40–41 and 148–150)’, Dante Studies 96: 195–9Google Scholar
Shoemaker, I. H. (1997) ‘Filippino and his antique sources’, in Goldner, G. R. and Bambach, C. C. (eds.), The Drawings of Filippino Lippi and his Circle, 2936. New York.Google Scholar
Sidwell, K. (2017) ‘Editing Neo-Latin Literature’, in Moul 2017: 394407Google Scholar
Simone, F. (1939–40) ‘La coscienza della rinascità negli umanisti’, La Rinascità 2: 838–71, 3: 163–86Google Scholar
Simone, F. (1949) La coscienza della rinascità negli umanisti francesi. Rome.Google Scholar
Singleton, C. S. (ed.) (1936) Canti carnascialeschi del rinascimento. Bari.Google Scholar
Siragusa, G. B. (ed.) (1906) Il Liber ad honorem Augusti di Pietro da Eboli. Rome.Google Scholar
Slater, D. A. (1912) ‘Was the Fourth Eclogue written to celebrate the marriage of Octavia to Mark Antony? – A literary parallel’, Classical Review 26: 114–19Google Scholar
Slavitt, D. R. (trans.) (2010) Giovanni Boccaccio: The Latin Eclogues. Baltimore.Google Scholar
Smarr, J. L. (trans.) (1987) Boccaccio: Eclogues. New York and London.Google Scholar
Smeesters, A. (2011) Aux rives de la lumière: La poésie de la naissance chez les auteurs néo-latins des anciens Pays-Bas entre la fin du XVe siècle et le milieu du XVIIe siècle. Leuven.Google Scholar
Smith, E. M. (1930) ‘Echoes of Catullus in the Messianic Eclogue of Vergil’, The Classical Journal 26: 141–3Google Scholar
Smith, L. F. (1962) ‘Lodrisio Crivelli of Milan and Aeneas Silvius, 1457–1464’, Studies in the Renaissance 9: 3163Google Scholar
Smith, M. (1983) ‘On the history of Apokalyptō and Apokalypsis’, in Hellholm, D. (ed.), Apocalypticism in the Mediterranean World and the Near East, 920. Tübingen.Google Scholar
Smith, R. A. (2011) Virgil. Malden, Oxford and Chichester.Google Scholar
Song, E. B. (2016) Paradise Lost and the poetics of delay: Virgil, Vida, Milton’, Milton Quarterly 50: 137–56Google Scholar
Springer, C. P. E. (1988) The Gospel as Epic in Late Antiquity: The Paschale Carmen of Sedulius. Leiden.Google Scholar
Springer, C. P. E. (1991) ‘Macarius Mutius’s De triumpho Christi: Christian epic theory and practice in the late Quattrocento’, in Dalzell, A., Fantazzi, C. and Schoeck, R. J. (eds.), Acta Conventus Neo-Latini Torontonensis/Proceedings of the Seventh International Congress of Neo-Latin Studies, 739–46. Binghamton.Google Scholar
Springer, C. P. E. (2003a) ‘Arms and the theologian: Martin Luther’s Adversus Armatum Virum Cochlaeum, International Journal of the Classical Tradition 10: 3853Google Scholar
Springer, C. P. E. (2003b) ‘The Biblical epic in late antiquity and the early modern period: The poetics of tradition’, in von Martels, Z. and Schmidt, V. M. (eds.), Antiquity Renewed: Late Classical and Early Modern Themes, 103–26. Leuven, Paris and Dudley, MA.Google Scholar
Springer, C. P. E. (2018) Cicero in Heaven: The Roman Rhetor and Luther’s Reformation. Leiden and Boston.Google Scholar
Stäuble, A. (1999) ‘Principe e cortigiano dalla seconda alla terza redazione del “Cortegiano”: Criteri e ragioni di una riscrittura (IV, IV–XLVIII)’, Bibliothèque d’Humanisme et Renaissance 61: 641–68Google Scholar
Stefaniak, R. (2008) Mysterium magnum: Michelangelo’s Tondo Doni. Leiden and Boston.Google Scholar
Steppich, C. J. (2002) Numine afflatur: Die Inspiration des Dichters im Denken der Renaissance. Wiesbaden.Google Scholar
Stinger, C. L. (1990) ‘The Campidoglio as the locus of renovatio imperii in Renaissance Rome’, in Rosenberg, C. M. (ed.), Art and Politics in Late Medieval and Early Renaissance Italy, 1250–1500, 135–56. Notre Dame.Google Scholar
Stinger, C. L. (1998) The Renaissance in Rome, 2nd ed. Bloomington and Indianapolis.Google Scholar
Stok, F. (2018) ‘Virgil in the Renaissance Court’, in Houghton and Sgarbi 2018: 3147Google Scholar
Stover, J. (2015) ‘Olybrius and the Einsiedeln Eclogues, Journal of Roman Studies 105: 288321Google Scholar
Strecker, K. (1932) ‘“Iam nova progenies caelo demittitur alto”’, Studi medievali n.s. 5: 167186Google Scholar
Strobl, W. (ed.) (2002) Das Epos Crisias des Hilarion v. Verona (Nicolò Fontanelli): Kritische Ausgabe und Übersetzung. Frankfurt am Main.Google Scholar
Stroppini de Focara, G. (2010) Virgile et l’amour: Les Bucoliques. Paris.Google Scholar
Stumpfe, W. (2005) Sibyllendarstellung im Italien der frühen Neuzeit: Über die Identität und den Bedeutungsgehalt einer heidnisch-christlichen Figur, PhD diss., Trier.Google Scholar
Supple, J. J. (1984) Arms versus Letters: The Military and Literary Ideals in the ‘Essais’ of Montaigne. Oxford.Google Scholar
Swift, L. J. (1968) ‘Lactantius and the Golden Age’, American Journal of Philology 89: 144–56Google Scholar
Syme, R. (2016) ‘Virgil’s first patron’, in Syme, R., Approaching the Roman Revolution: Papers on Republican History, ed. Santangelo, F., 212–29. Oxford.Google Scholar
Szövérffy, J. (1957–8) ‘Virgil and a Latin Christmas carol’, Medium Ævum 26: 111–13Google Scholar
Szövérffy, J. (1962) ‘Klassische Anspielungen und antike Elemente in mittelalterlichen Hymnen’, Archiv für Kulturgeschichte 44: 148–92Google Scholar
Szövérffy, J. (1971) ‘An echo of the Servius commentary in a Christmas song around 1400’, Traditio 27: 491–4Google Scholar
Tafuri, M. (2006) Interpreting the Renaissance: Princes, Cities, Architects. New Haven and London.Google Scholar
Tagliaferro, G. (2005) ‘Le forme della Vergine: la personificazione di Venezia nel processo creativo di Paolo Veronese’, Venezia Cinquecento 30: 5158Google Scholar
Tanner, M. (1993) The Last Descendant of Aeneas: The Hapsburgs and the Mythic Image of the Emperor. New Haven and London.Google Scholar
Tarabochia Canavero, A. (2003) ‘Marsilio Ficino e l’età dell’oro: saeculum aureum ab ingeniis aureis’, in Secchi Tarugi 2003: 207–20Google Scholar
Tarn, W. W. (1932) ‘Alexander Helios and the Golden Age’, Journal of Roman Studies 22: 135–60Google Scholar
Tenneroni, A. and M. (1937) Vita di Bartolomeo d’Alviano. Todi.Google Scholar
Thill, A. (ed./trans.) (1995) Matthias Casimir Sarbiewski: Choix de poèmes lyriques. Paris.Google Scholar
Thill, A. and Banderier, G. (eds.) (1999) La lyre Jésuite: Anthologie de poèmes latins (1620–1730). Geneva.Google Scholar
Thomas, R. F. (2001) Virgil and the Augustan Reception. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Thornton, B. (1988) ‘A note on Vergil Eclogue 4.42–45’, American Journal of Philology 109: 226–8Google Scholar
Thummer, E. (1983) ‘Vergilius ludens: Erwägungen zur vierten Ekloge’, in Händel, P. and Meid, W. (eds.), Festschrift für Robert Muth zum 65. Geburtstag am 1. Januar 1981, 531–40. Innsbruck.Google Scholar
Tilley, A. A. (1918) The Dawn of the French Renaissance. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Toppani, I. (1977) ‘Petrarca, Cola di Rienzo e il mito di Roma’, Atti dell’Istituto Veneto di Scienze Lettere ed Arti 135: 155–72Google Scholar
Toscanella, O. (1577) Oratione di Oratio Toscanella nella Creatione del Serenissimo Principe di Venetia Sebastiano Veniero. Venice.Google Scholar
Tournoy, G. and Sacré, D. (eds.) (1997) Ut granum sinapis: Essays on Neo-Latin Literature in Honour of Jozef IJsewijn. Leuven.Google Scholar
Tournoy-Thoen, G. (1977) ‘Le manuscrit 1010 de la Biblioteca de Cataluña et l’humanisme italien à la cour de France vers 1500 (II)’, Humanistica Lovaniensia 26: 182Google Scholar
Townend, G. B. (1980) ‘Calpurnius Siculus and the munus Neronis, Journal of Roman Studies 70: 166–74Google Scholar
Toynbee, A. J. (1946) A Study of History: Abridgement of Volumes I–VI by D. C. Somervell. New York and Oxford.Google Scholar
Toynbee, P. (ed.) (1966) Dantis Alagherii epistolae/The Letters of Dante. Oxford.Google Scholar
Trembinski, D. C. (2005) Non alter Christus: Early Dominican Lives of Saint Francis’, Franciscan Studies 63: 69105Google Scholar
Trimble, G. C. (2013) ‘Catullus 64 and the prophetic voice in Virgil’s fourth Eclogue’, in Farrell, J. and Nelis, D. P. (eds.), Augustan Poetry and the Roman Republic, 263–77. Oxford.Google Scholar
Trompf, G. W. (1973) ‘The concept of the Carolingian Renaissance’, Journal of the History of Ideas 34: 326Google Scholar
Trompf, G. W. (1979) The Idea of Historical Recurrence in Western Thought: From Antiquity to the Reformation. Berkeley, Los Angeles and London.Google Scholar
Trott, N. (2010) ‘Wordworth’s career prospects: “Peculiar language” and public epigraphs’, in Hardie, P. and Moore, H. (eds.), Classical Literary Careers and Their Reception, 275–86. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Turchini, A. (2000) Il Tempio Malatestiano, Sigismondo Malatesta e Leon Battista Alberti. Cesena.Google Scholar
Tusiani, J. (trans.) (1998) Luigi Pulci, Morgante: The Epic Adventures of Orlando and His Giant Friend. Bloomington.Google Scholar
Ullman, B. L. (1952) ‘Renaissance – The word and the underlying concept’, Studies in Philology 49: 105–18 [repr. in B. L. Ullman, Studies in the Italian Renaissance, 2nd ed. (Rome, 1973), 11–26]Google Scholar
Ullman, B. L. (1963) The Humanism of Coluccio Salutati. Padua.Google Scholar
Usher, J. (2005) ‘Metempsychosis and “Renaissance” between Petrarch and Boccaccio’, Italian Studies 60: 121–33Google Scholar
Usher, P. J. and Fernbach, I (eds.) (2012) Virgilian Identities in the French Renaissance. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Valeri, E. (2007) Italia dilacerata: Girolamo Borgia nella cultura storica del Rinascimento. Milan.Google Scholar
Vance, N. (1997) The Victorians and Ancient Rome. Oxford and Cambridge, MA.Google Scholar
van Herwaarden, J. (2003) Between Saint James and Erasmus: Studies in Late-medieval Religious Life. Devotion and Pilgrimage in the Netherlands. Leiden.Google Scholar
Van Sickle, J. (1992) A Reading of Virgil’s Messianic Eclogue. New York and London.Google Scholar
Vasoli, C. (1973) ‘Giovanni Nesi tra Donato Acciaiuoli e Girolamo Savonarola: Testi editi e inediti’, Memorie domenicane n.s. 4: 103–79 [repr. in C. Vasoli, I miti e gli astri (Naples, 1977), 51–128]Google Scholar
Vasoli, C. (1997) ‘Il concetto di Renascentia nelle prime generazioni umanistiche’, in Ecker and Zintzen 1997: 3957Google Scholar
Veit, W. (1961) Studien zur Geschichte des Topos der Goldenen Zeit von der Antike bis zum 18. Jahrhundert, diss., Cologne.Google Scholar
Venier, M. (2006) ‘Poesia latina degli Amalteo’, Aevum 80: 687716Google Scholar
Ventrone, P. (1992) ‘Feste e spettacoli nella Firenze di Lorenzo il Magnifico’, in Le tems revient, ’l tempo si rinuova: Feste e spettacoli nella Firenze di Lorenzo il Magnifico, 2153. Florence.Google Scholar
Venturini, G. (1970) Un umanista modenese nella Ferrara di Borso d’Este: Gaspare Tribraco. Ravenna.Google Scholar
Verdon, T. (1990) ‘Christianity, the Renaissance, and the Study of History: Environments of Experience and Imagination’, in Verdon, T. and Henderson, J. (eds.), Christianity and the Renaissance: Image and Religious Imagination in the Quattrocento, 137. Syracuse.Google Scholar
Versnel, H. S. (1993) Inconsistencies in Greek and Roman Religion II: Transition and Reversal in Myth and Ritual. Leiden, New York and Cologne.Google Scholar
Vidienus, F. et al. (1503) Francisci Vidieni Panaegyricus Leonardo Lauretano serenissimo principi dictus. Venice.Google Scholar
Virgil, (1492) Vergilius cum quinque commentariis. Venice.Google Scholar
Virgil, (1544) P. Virgilii Maronis opera, nunc recens accuratissime castigata, 2 vols. Venice [repr. New York and London, 1976].Google Scholar
Virgil, (1558) P. Virgilii Maronis, poetae mantuani, uniuersum poema. Venice.Google Scholar
Viroli, M. (2010) Machiavelli’s God, trans. Shugaar, A.. Princeton and Oxford.Google Scholar
Vitale, M. (1978) La questione della lingua, 2nd ed. Palermo.Google Scholar
Vitzthum, W. and Campbell, M. (1962) ‘Correspondence: Pietro da Cortona’s Camera della Stufa’, The Burlington Magazine 104: 120–5Google Scholar
Vives, J. L. (1555) Io. Lodouici Viuis ualentini opera, 2 vols. Basel.Google Scholar
Voci Roth, A. M. (ed.) (1990) Egidio da Viterbo OSA: Lettere familiari, 2 vols. Rome.Google Scholar
Vogt-Spira, G. (2007) ‘“The Classics” as potential for the future: The “High Period” of ancient Latin literature’, in Verbaal, W., Maes, Y. and Papy, J. (eds.), Latinitas Perennis, Volume I: The Continuity of Latin Literature, 6592. Leiden and Boston.Google Scholar
von Contzen, E., Glei, R. F., Polleichtner, W. and Schulze Roberg, M. (eds.) (2013) Marcus Hieronymus Vida: Christias, 2 vols. Trier.Google Scholar
von Reydeburg, C. (ed.) (1654) Thesaurus Thesaurorum, sive Fontes Consolationum. Leipzig.Google Scholar
Vredeveld, H. (ed./trans.) (2012) The Poetic Works of Helius Eobanus Hessus. Volume 3: King of Poets, 1514–1517. Leiden and Boston.Google Scholar
Wagner, A. (2012) ‘Lessons of imperialism and of the law of nations: Alberico Gentili’s early modern appeal to Roman law’, European Journal of International Law 23: 873–86Google Scholar
Walker, D. P. (1972) The Ancient Theology: Studies in Christian Platonism from the Fifteenth to the Eighteenth century. London.Google Scholar
Wallace, A. (2010) Virgil’s Schoolboys: The Poetics of Pedagogy in Renaissance England. Oxford.Google Scholar
Wallace-Hadrill, A. (1982) ‘The Golden Age and sin in Augustan ideology’, Past & Present 95: 1936 [repr. in R. Osborne (ed.), Studies in Ancient Greek and Roman Society (Cambridge, 2004), 159–76]Google Scholar
Warburg, A. (1999) The Renewal of Pagan Antiquity, trans. Britt, D.. Los Angeles.Google Scholar
Warde Fowler, W. (1907) ‘The child of the poem’, in Mayor et al. 1907: 4985Google Scholar
Ware, C. (2017) ‘Speaking of kings and battle: Virgil as prose panegyrist in late antiquity’, Proceedings of the Virgil Society 29: 129Google Scholar
Warner, J. C. (2005) The Augustinian Epic, Petrarch to Milton. Ann Arbor.Google Scholar
Weinstein, D. (1970) Savonarola and Florence: Prophecy and Patriotism in the Renaissance. Princeton.Google Scholar
Weinstein, D. (2011) Savonarola: The Rise and Fall of a Renaissance Prophet. New Haven and London.Google Scholar
Weiss, R. (1950) ‘Barbato da Sulmona, il Petrarca e la rivoluzione di Cola di Rienzo’, Studi petrarcheschi 3: 1322Google Scholar
Weiss, R. (1958) Un umanista veneziano: Papa Paolo II. Venice.Google Scholar
Weiss, R. (1959) ‘Andrea Fulvio antiquario romano (c. 1470–1527)’, Annali della Scuola Normale Superiore di Pisa, ser. 2, 28: 144Google Scholar
Weiss, R. (1969) The Renaissance Discovery of Classical Antiquity. Oxford.Google Scholar
Wenzel, A. (2010) Die Xandra-Gedichte des Cristoforo Landino. Heidelberg.Google Scholar
White, E. W. (1983) Benjamin Britten: His Life and Operas, 2nd ed., ed. Evans., J. Berkeley and Los Angeles.Google Scholar
White, P. (2013) Jodocus Badius Ascensius: Commentary, Commerce and Print in the Renaissance. Oxford.Google Scholar
Whittaker, H. (2007) ‘Virgil’s Fourth Eclogue and the Eleusinian Mysteries’, Symbolae Osloenses 82: 6586Google Scholar
Wiendlocha, J. (2006) ‘Ad divam Elisabetham: Maciej Kazimierz Sarbiewski, Urban VIII. und die Brevierreform’, in Schäfer 2006: 919.Google Scholar
Wiegand, H. (2002) ‘Laudes Francisci poeticae: Der Poverello in neulateinischen Dichtungen’, in Walz, D. (ed.), Scripturus vitam: Lateinische Biographie von der Antike bis in die Gegenwart. Festgabe für Walter Berschin zum 65. Geburtstag, 553–65. Heidelberg.Google Scholar
Wilkinson, L. P. (1963) Golden Latin Artistry. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Williams, G. (1968) Tradition and Originality in Roman Poetry. Oxford.Google Scholar
Williams, G. (1974) ‘A version of pastoral: Virgil, Eclogue 4’, in Woodman, T. and West, D. (eds.), Quality and Pleasure in Latin Poetry, 3146. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Williams, R. (2017) Raphael and the Redefinition of Art in Renaissance Italy. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Wilson, A. E. (ed.) (1973) Andrea Navagero: Lusus. Nieuwkoop.Google Scholar
Wilson, A. M. (ed./trans.) (2016) Ugolino Verino: Fiammetta, Paradise. Cambridge, MA and London.Google Scholar
Wilson, R. (2008) Prophecies and Prophecy in Dante’s Commedia. Florence.Google Scholar
Wilson-Okamura, D. S. (2010) Virgil in the Renaissance. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Winbolt, S. E. (1903) Latin Hexameter Verse. London.Google Scholar
Wind, E. (2000) The Religious Symbolism of Michelangelo: The Sistine Ceiling, ed. Sears., E. Oxford.Google Scholar
Winterbottom, M. (1976) ‘Virgil and the Confiscations’, Greece & Rome 23: 55–9 [repr. in I. McAuslan and P. Walcot (eds.), Virgil (Oxford, 1990), 65–8]Google Scholar
Wiseman, T. P. (1982) ‘Calpurnius Siculus and the Claudian civil war’, Journal of Roman Studies 72: 5767Google Scholar
Wistreich, R. (2007) Warrior, Courtier, Singer: Giulio Cesare Brancaccio and the Performance of Identity in the Late Renaissance. Aldershot.Google Scholar
Witt, R. G. (1976) Coluccio Salutati and His Public Letters. Geneva.Google Scholar
Witt, R. G. (1977) ‘Coluccio Salutati and the conception of the poeta theologus in the fourteenth century’, Renaissance Quarterly 30: 538–63Google Scholar
Witt, R. G. (1983) Hercules at the Crossroads: The Life, Works, and Thought of Coluccio Salutati. Durham.Google Scholar
Witt, R. G. (2000) In the Footsteps of the Ancients: The Origins of Humanism from Lovato to Bruni. Leiden and Boston.Google Scholar
Wlosok, A. (1975) ‘“Cumaeum carmen” (Verg., Ecl. 4,4): Sibyllenorakel oder Hesiodgedicht?’, in Forma futuri: Studi in onore del cardinale Michele Pellegrino, 693711. Turin [repr. in Wlosok, 1990: 302–19].Google Scholar
Wlosok, A. (1983) ‘Zwei Beispiele frühchristlicher “Vergilrezeption”: Polemik (Lact., div. inst. 5, 10) und Usurpation (Or. Const. 19–21)’, in Pöschl, V. (ed.), 2000 Jahre Vergil: Ein Symposion, 6386. Wiesbaden [repr. in Wlosok, 1990: 437–59].Google Scholar
Wlosok, A. (1990) Res humanae – Res divinae: Kleine Schriften, ed. Heck, E. and Schmidt., E. A. Heidelberg.Google Scholar
Wolkan, R. (ed.) (1909–18) Der Briefwechsel des Enea Silvio Piccolomini, 3 vols. Vienna.Google Scholar
Wolters, W. (1983) Der Bilderschmuck des Dogenpalastes: Untersuchungen zur Selbstdarstellung der Republik Venedig im 16. Jahrhundert. Wiesbaden.Google Scholar
Wright, E. R., Spence, S. and Lemons, A. (eds.) (2014) The Battle of Lepanto. Cambridge, MA and London.Google Scholar
Wyss, E. (1996) The Myth of Apollo and Marsyas in the Art of the Italian Renaissance: An Inquiry into the Meaning of Images. Cranbury, London and Mississauga.Google Scholar
Yates, F. A. (1975) Astraea: The Imperial Theme in the Sixteenth Century. London and Boston.Google Scholar
Young, K. (1933) The Drama of the Medieval Church, 2 vols. Oxford.Google Scholar
Zabughin, V. (1921–3) Vergilio nel Rinascimento italiano, da Dante a Torquato Tasso, 2 vols. Bologna [repr. Trento, 2000].Google Scholar
Zaccaria, V. (1975) ‘Le epistole e i carmi di Antonio Loschi durante il cancelleriato visconteo (con tredici inediti)’, Accademia nazionale dei Lincei: Atti e memorie 18: 369443Google Scholar
Zanker, A. T. (2010) ‘Late Horatian lyric and the Virgilian Golden Age’, American Journal of Philology 131: 495516Google Scholar
Zanker, A. T. (2017) ‘The Golden Age’, in Zajko, V. and Hoyle, H. (eds.), A Handbook to the Reception of Classical Mythology, 193211. Hoboken and Malden.Google Scholar
Zannoni, G. (1895) ‘Porcellio Pandoni ed i Montefeltro’, Rendiconti della R. Accademia dei Lincei, ser. 5, 4: 104–22, 489507Google Scholar
Zanzarri, R. (ed.) (2005) Marsilio Ficino: La religione cristiana. Rome.Google Scholar
Ziolkowski, J. M. and Putnam, M. C. J. (eds.) (2008) The Virgilian Tradition: The First Fifteen Hundred Years. New Haven and London.Google Scholar
Zorzi Pugliese, O. (2008) Castiglione’s The Book of the Courtier (Il libro del Cortegiano): A Classic in the Making. Naples.Google Scholar
Zottoli, A. (ed.) (1944) Tutte le opere di Matteo M. Boiardo, 2 vols. Milan.Google Scholar
Zuccolo, L. (1629) Il Secolo dell’Oro rinascente nella amicizia fra Nicolò Barbarigo, e Marco Trivisano, Nobili Venetiani gli Amici Heroi … Venice.Google Scholar

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure [email protected] is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

  • Bibliography
  • L. B. T. Houghton
  • Book: Virgil's Fourth Eclogue in the Italian Renaissance
  • Online publication: 02 September 2019
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108582094.013
Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

  • Bibliography
  • L. B. T. Houghton
  • Book: Virgil's Fourth Eclogue in the Italian Renaissance
  • Online publication: 02 September 2019
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108582094.013
Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

  • Bibliography
  • L. B. T. Houghton
  • Book: Virgil's Fourth Eclogue in the Italian Renaissance
  • Online publication: 02 September 2019
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108582094.013
Available formats
×