by Ludovico Ariosto
edited and translated by Dennis Looney and D. Mark Possanza
Harvard University Press, 2018
Cloth: 978-0-674-97717-4
Library of Congress Classification PA8125.I6A75 2018
Dewey Decimal Classification 871.04

ABOUT THIS BOOK | REVIEWS
ABOUT THIS BOOK
Ludovico Ariosto (1474–1533), one of Italy’s greatest poets, was a leading figure of sixteenth-century Italian humanism. After some years working in the household of Cardinal Ippolito d’Este, to whom he dedicated his dazzling romance epic Orlando Furioso (1516), Ariosto settled in Ferrara under the patronage of Ippolito’s brother Alfonso. He continued to write throughout his life, publishing 214 letters, five plays, seven satires in verse, and dozens of lyric poems in Italian and Latin. Ariosto’s Latin poems, translated into English for the first time in this volume, are remarkable for their erudition, technical virtuosity, and playfulness. This edition provides a new Latin text, the first to be based on a collation of the autograph manuscript and editio princeps, and offers a unique insight into the Latin formation of one of the Renaissance’s foremost vernacular writers.