Lodovico Sergardi

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Lodovico Sergardi (b. at Siena, 1660; d. at Spoleto, 7 November 1726) was an Italian Roman Catholic priest and poet, chiefly known for his vivid latin satires against the jurist Giovanni Vincenzo Gravina, models of composition, which for nearly a decade kept the Roman public in an uproar.[1]

Biography[]

Caricature of Giovanni Vincenzo Gravina by Pier Leone Ghezzi

Sergardi was born at Siena on 27 March 1660. As a youth he studied painting, literature, and philosophy, and showed a passionate inclination toward poetry. In October 1684 he went to Rome to study jurisprudence. Soon after his arrival at Rome he began to make acquaintances among the literati of the city, and soon became the protégé of Prince Chigi. He befriended cardinal Pietro Ottoboni, and served him as Prefect of St. Peter's Basilica when he was elected pope as Alexander VIII in 1689. An active member of the Republic of Letters, Sergardi soon became friends with such eminent scholars as Jean Mabillon[2] and Francesco Bianchini, the keeper of the Ottoboni Library. In 1691 Sergardi became a member of the Academy of Arcadia under the pseudonym of  “Licone”. During the seances of the Academy, Sergardi began a spirited debate with the famed jurist Giovanni Vincenzo Gravina. The hatred between them soon split the academy into supporting factions. Sergardi attacked Gravina in a series of bitter latin satires published under the pseudonym of Quintus Sectanus (1694).[3] Sergardi's satires appeared in five editions between 1694 and 1701. They have the force, the poetical expression, and the freedom or, rather, licentiousness, of Juvenal.[4] The Satires were translated into Terza rima as it is believed by the author himself. The latter part of the fourteenth is particularly fine.[4] The Spanish scholar Manuel Martí published his Satyromastix in defence of Gravina.[5]

Sergardi died in Spoleto in November 1726.

References[]

  1. ^ Garnett, Richard (1912). A History of Italian Literature. D. Appleton. p. 286.
  2. ^ Ludovico Sergardi, Orationes dissertationes prolusiones epistolae et cum Cl. Joannes Mabillonio epistolarum commercium, t. IV, Lucca, Bonsignori, 1783, pp. 285-367.
  3. ^ Sandys, John Edwin (1908). A History of Classical Scholarship. 2. Cambridge University Press. p. 281.
  4. ^ Jump up to: a b Cary, Henry Francis (1847). Memoir of the Rev. Henry Francis Cary; with his Literary Journal and Letters. 1. Edward Moxon. p. 288.
  5. ^ Borello 2018.

Bibliography[]

  • Amedeo Quondam, Le satire di Ludovico Sergardi. Contributo ad una storia della cultura romana tra Sei e Settecento, in «La Rassegna della letteratura italiana» LXIII (1969), pp. 206-272
  • Pepin, Ronald E. (1996). "Lodovico Sergardi and the Roman satirical tradition". International Journal of the Classical Tradition. 2 (4): 555–559. doi:10.1007/BF02677890. S2CID 162272588.
  • The Satires of Lodovico Sergardi. An English Translation and Introduction by Ronald E. Pepin (Seventeenth-Century Texts and Studies 4) (New York, San Francisco, Bern, etc., 1994), Introduction pp. 1–13 and notes to each of the fourteen satires.
  • Pepin, Ronald E. (1990). "The Satires of "Sectanus" and the Spinelli archive". The Yale University Library Gazette. 65 (1/2): 20–25. JSTOR 40859610.
  • Borello, Benedetta (2018). "SERGARDI, Lodovico". Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani, Volume 92: Semino–Sisto IV (in Italian). Rome: Istituto dell'Enciclopedia Italiana.
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