Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-8448b6f56d-sxzjt Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-23T07:25:48.373Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Bibliography

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  31 October 2019

Blake Wilson
Affiliation:
Dickinson College, Pennsylvania
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
Singing to the Lyre in Renaissance Italy
Memory, Performance, and Oral Poetry
, pp. 423 - 460
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

Abramov-van Rijk, Elena. Parlar Cantando: The Practice of Reciting Verses in Italy from 1300 to 1600. Bern: Peter Lang, 2009.Google Scholar
Abramov-van Rijk, Elena. “Corresponding Through Music: Three Examples from the Trecento.” Acta Musicologica 83 (2011): 337.Google Scholar
Abramov-van Rijk, Elena. “Mysterious Amphion: A Trecento Musician, His Admirers and His Critics.” Studi musicali 5, nuova serie (2014): 242271.Google Scholar
Abramov-van Rijk, Elena. Singing Dante: The Literary Origins of Cinquecento Monody. Farnham: Ashgate, 2014.Google Scholar
Abramov-van Rijk, Elena.“Il canta senza suono: Giovanni Boccaccio e la destinazione musicale della sua lirica.” Cultura Neolatina 76 (2016): 6788.Google Scholar
Addesso, Cristiana Anna. Teatro e festività nella Napoli aragonese. Florence: Olschki, 2012.Google Scholar
Addesso, Cristiana Anna. “‘Portano i patron pieni i lor saini’: elementi nella teatralità aragonese nella produzione egloghistica e farsesca di Serafino Aquilano e Antonio Ricco.” Rivista di letteratura teatrale 6 (2013): 1022.Google Scholar
Agamennone, Maurizio, ed. Cantar Ottave: Per una storia culturale dell’intonazione cantata in ottava rima. Lucca: Libreria Musicale Italiana, 2017.Google Scholar
Ageno, Franca Brambilla. “Una nuova lettera di Luigi Pulci a Lorenzo de’ Medici.” Giornale storico della letteratura italiana 141 (1964): 103110.Google Scholar
Ahern, John. “Singing the Book: Orality in the Reception of Dante’s Comedy.” Annals of Scholarship 2 (1981): 1740.Google Scholar
Ahern, John. “Dioneo’s Repertory: Performance and Writing in Boccaccio’s Decameron,” in Performing Medieval Narrative, ed. Vitz, E. B., Regalado, N. F., and Lawrence, M.. Cambridge: D. S. Brewer, 2005, 4158.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Alberti, Leon Battista. On the Art of Building in Ten Books. Translated by J. Rykwert, N. Leach, and R. Tavernor. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1988.Google Scholar
Allaire, Gloria. Andrea da Barberino and the Language of Chivalry. Gainesville: University Press of Florida, 1997.Google Scholar
Allaire, Gloria. “A Fifteenth-century Florentine Community of Readers and the Romances of Chivalry.” Essays in Medieval Studies 15 (1998): 18.Google Scholar
Allaire, Gloria. “The Narrative World of Andrea da Barberino,” in Firenze all vigilia del Rinascimento: Antonio Pucci e i suoi contemporanei, ed. Predelli, M. B.. Fiesole: Edizione Cadmo, 2006, 1120.Google Scholar
Allen, Michael J. B. The Platonism of Marsilio Ficino: A Study of His Phaedrum Commentary, Its Sources and Genesis. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1984.Google Scholar
Allen, Michael J. B. Rees, Valery, and Davies, Martin, eds. Marsilio Ficino: His Theology, His Philosophy, His Legacy. Brill’s Studies in Intellectual History, 108. Leiden: Brill, 2002.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Altamura, AntonioAffreschi e sonetti del ‘300 in Castelnuovo.” Il Fuidoro 1 (1954): 174175.Google Scholar
Anselmi, Gian-Mario, Pezzarossa, Fulvio, and Avellini, Luisa. La ‘Memoria’ dei Mercatores: Tendenze ideologiche, ricordanze, artigianato in versi nella Firenze del Quattrocento. Bologna: Pàtron, 1980.Google Scholar
Ferrara, Antonio da. Le rime di Maestro Antonio da Ferrara (Antonio Beccari). Edited by Bellucci, L.. Bologna: Riccardo Pàtron, 1972.Google Scholar
Arasse, Daniel, De Vecchi, Pierluigi, and Nelson, Jonathan Katz. Botticelli and Filippino: Passion and Grace in Fifteenth-Century Florentine Painting. Milan: Skira, 2004.Google Scholar
Archibald, Elizabeth. Apollonius of Tyre: Medieval and Renaissance Themes and Variations. Cambridge: D.S. Brewer, 1991.Google Scholar
Aretino, Pietro. Il quinto libro delle lettere. Venice: Andrea Arrivabene, 1550.Google Scholar
Ariosto, Pietro. Orlando furioso. Ferrara: Rosso, 1532.Google Scholar
Aron, Pietro. Lucidario in musica. Venice: Scotto, 1545; repr. Bologna: Forni, 1969.Google Scholar
Atkinson, Neill. The Noisy Renaissance: Sound, Architecture, and Florentine Urban Life. University Park: Pennsylvania State University Press, 2016.Google Scholar
Atlas, Allan. Music at the Aragonese Court of Naples. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1985.Google Scholar
Atwell, Adrienne. “Ritual Trading at the Florentine Wool-Cloth Botteghe,” in Crum, R and Paoletti, J, Renaissance Florence: A Social History, 182215.Google Scholar
Bacci, Orazio. “Appunti su Gano di Lapo da Colle.” Miscellanea Storica della Valdelsa 18 (1909): 5759.Google Scholar
Baird, Joseph L. and Baglivi, Giuseppe. “Salimbene and il bel motto.” American Benedictine Review 28 (1977): 201209.Google Scholar
Stefano Ugo, Baldassari, and Saiber, Arielle, eds. Images of Quattrocento Florence: Selected Writings in Literature, History, and Art. New Haven, CN: Yale University Press, 2000.Google Scholar
Balduino, Armando. Cantari del trecento. Milan: Marzorati, 1970.Google Scholar
Balduino, Armando. “Pater semper incertus. Ancora sulla origini dell’ottava rima.” Metrica 3 (1982): 107158.Google Scholar
Balduino, Armando. Boccaccio, Petrarca e altri poeti del Trecento. Florence: Olschki, 1984.Google Scholar
Bandello, Matteo. Le novella. Edited by Brognoligo, G. Rome-Bari: Laterza, 1911.Google Scholar
Barozzi, Luciano and Sabbadini, Remigio. Studi sul Panormita e sul Valla. Florence: Le Monnier, 1891.Google Scholar
Bausi, Francesco. “Imitar col canto chi parla: verso sciolto e Recitar cantando nell’estetica cinquecentesca.” Bibliothèque d’Humanisme et Renaissance 51 (1989): 553568.Google Scholar
Bausi, Francesco. “Due schede su Poliziano professore,” in Nel cantiere degli umanisti, per Mariangelo Regoliosi, ed. Bertolini, L., Coppini, D., and Marisco, C.. Florence: Edizioni Polistampa, 2014, 91111.Google Scholar
Bec, Christian. Les livres des florentins (1403–1608). Florence: Olschki, 1984.Google Scholar
Becherini, Bianca. “Una canta in panca Fiorentino, Antonio di Guido.” Rivista musicale italiana 50 (1948): 84112.Google Scholar
Beer, Marina. “Alcune osservazioni su oralità e novella italiana in versi (XIV–XV secolo) e sul ‘Sollazzo’ di Simone de’ Prodenzani.” Schifanoia 13–14 (1994): 217233.Google Scholar
Beer, Susanna de. The Poetics of Patronage: Poetry as Self Advancement in Giannantonio Campano. Proteus: Studies in Early Modern Identity Formation, 6. Turnhout: Brepols, 2013.Google Scholar
Bembo, Pietro. Opere in volgare. Edited by Marti, M.. Florence: Sansoni, 1961.Google Scholar
Bembo, Pietro. Prose della volgar lingua. Venice, 1525.Google Scholar
Benedetti, Stefano. “Roma, Settembre 1513: spettacolo, poesia, e satira in Theatro Capitolino,” in Poésie latine à haute voix (1500–1700), ed. Isebaert, L. and Smeesters., A. Turnhout: Brepols, 2013, 111131.Google Scholar
Bent, Margaret. “Humanists and Music, Music and Humanities,” in Tendenze e metodi nella ricerca musicologica: atti del convegno internazionale (Latina 27–29 Settembre 1990), ed. Pozzi, R.. Historiae musicae cultores, 71. Florence: Olschki, 1995, 2938.Google Scholar
Bent, Margaret. “Songs without Music in Dante’s De vulgari eloquentia: Cantio and Related Terms,” in Et facciam dolzi canti. Studi in onore di Agostino Ziino in occasione del suo 65 compleanno, ed. Antolini, B. M., Gialdroni, T. M., and Pugliese, A.. Lucca: LIM, 2003, I, 161182.Google Scholar
Bentley, Jerry H. Politics and Culture in Renaissance Naples. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2016.Google Scholar
Berger, Harry Jr.. “Sprezzatura and the Absence of Grace,” in Castiglione, The Book of the Courtier, ed. Javitch, D., 295307.Google Scholar
Bersani, Mauro. “Alla ricerca dello specifico testuale nelle ‘Farse’ del Sannazaro.” Lettere italiane 34 (1982): 506529.Google Scholar
Bersani, Mauro. “Farsa, intermezzo, gliommero. Appunti sul teatro del regno aragonese di Napoli.” Studi e problemi di critica testuale 26 (1983): 5977.Google Scholar
Bertoli, Gustavo. “Librai, cartolai e ambulanti immatricolati nell’Arte dei medici e speziali di Firenze dal 1490 al 1600.” La Bibliofilia 94 (1992): 125–164, 227–262.Google Scholar
Bertolini, Lucia. “Michele di Nofri del Giogante e il Certame Coronario.” Rivista di letteratura italiana 5 (1987): 467477.Google Scholar
Bertoni, Giulio. “Il Cieco di Ferrara e altri improvvisatori alla corte d’Este.” Giornale storico della letteratura italiana 94 (1929): 271278.Google Scholar
Bertoni, Giulio. “Giovanni Cieco da Parma a Ferrara.” Giornale storico della letteratura italiana 97 (1931): 378379.Google Scholar
Bessi, Rosella. “Politica e poesia nel Quattrocento fiorentino: Antonio Araldo e Papa Eugenio IV.” Interpres 10 (1990): 736.Google Scholar
Bessi, Rosella. “Lo spettacolo e la scrittura,” in Le tems revient ‘l tempo si rinuova: feste e spettacoli nella Firenze de Lorenzo il Magnifico, ed. Ventrone, P.. Milan: Silvana Editoriale, 1992, 103117.Google Scholar
Bessi, Rosella. “Eugenio IV e Antonio de Matteo de Meglio,” in Firenze e il Consilio del 1439, ed. Viti, P., 2 vols. Florence: Olschki, 1994, II, 737750.Google Scholar
Berta Maracchi, Biagiarelli. “L’Armadiaccio di Padre Stradino.” Bibliofilia 84 (1982): 5157.Google Scholar
Black, Robert. Humanism and Education in Medieval and Renaissance Italy: Tradition and Innovation in Latin Schools from the Twelfth to the Fifteenth Century. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2007.Google Scholar
Blackburn, Bonnie. “Music and Festivities at the Court of Leo X: A Venetian View.” Early Music History 11 (1992): 137.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Blackburn, Bonnie. “Leonardo and Gaffurio on Harmony and the Pulse of Music,” in Essays on Music and Culture in Honor of Herbert Kellman, ed. Haggh, B.. Paris and Tours: Minerve-Centre d’Études Supérieures de la Renaissance, 2001, 128149.Google Scholar
Blackburn, Bonnie. “‘The Foremost Lutenist in the World’: Pietrobono dal Chitarino and his Repertory.Journal of the Lute Society of America 51 (2018): 171.Google Scholar
Blackburn, Bonnie. “Fortunato Martinengo and His Musical Tour around Lake Garda: The Place of Music and Poetry in Silvan Cattaneo’s Dodici giornate,” in Fortunato Martinengo: un gentiluomo del Rinascimento tra arti, lettere e musica, ed. Selmi, E. and Bizzarini, M.. Brescia: Morcelliana, 2018, 179209.Google Scholar
Phyllis Pray, Bober. “The Coryciana and the Nymph Corycia.” Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 40 (1977): 223239.Google Scholar
Boccaccio, Giovanni. Boccaccio on Poetry. Translated by Osgood, C. G.. Princeton NJ: Princeton University Press, 1930.Google Scholar
Boccaccio, Giovanni. Opere latine minori. Edited by Massèra, A. F.. Bari: Laterza, 1928.Google Scholar
Boccaccio, Giovanni. Trattatello in laude di Dante. Edited by Ricci, P. G.. Tutte le opere di Giovanni Boccaccio, vol. 3. Milan: Mondadori, 1974.Google Scholar
Bologna, Alessio, ed. ‘Collettanee’ in morte di Serafino Aquilano. Documenti di storia musicale abruzzese, vol. 5. Lucca: Libreria Musicale Italiana, 2009.Google Scholar
Bologna, Ferdinando. I pittori della corte angioina di Napoli e un riesame dell’arte nell’età fridericiana. Rome: Ugo Bozzi, 1969.Google Scholar
Bologna, Pietro. “La stamperia fiorentina del monastero di S. Jacopo di Ripoli e le sue edizioni.” Giornale storico della letteratura italiana 20 (1892): 349378.Google Scholar
Bolzoni, Lina. The Gallery of Memory: Literary and Iconographic Models in the Age of the Printing Press. Translated by J. Parzen. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2001.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bonaria, Mario. “La musica conviviale dal mondo Latino antico al medioevo.” Spettacoli conviviali dall’antichità classica alle corti italiane del ’400, atti del VII Convegno di studi, Viterbo, 27–30 maggio 1982. Viterbo: Agnesotti, 1983, 119147.Google Scholar
Bonaventura, Arnaldo. “Il Poliziano e la musica.” La Bibliofilia 44 (1942): 114131.Google Scholar
Signa, Boncompagno da, Rhetorica novissima. Edited by Gaudenzi, A.. Biblioteca Iuridica Medii Aevi, 3 vols. Bologna: Piero Virano, 1892, II, 251297.Google Scholar
Bonifacio, Gaetano. Giullari e uomini di corte nel 200. Naples: Cav. A. Tocco, 1907.Google Scholar
Böninger, Lorenz. “Notes on the Last Years of Luigi Pulci (1477–1484).” Rinascimento 27 (1987): 259271.Google Scholar
Böninger, Lorenz. “Ricerche sugli inizi della stampa fiorentina (1471–1473).” La Bibliofilia 105 (2003): 225248.Google Scholar
Bortoletti, Francesca. Egloga e spettacolo nel primo Rinascimento: da Firenze alle corte. Culture teatrali, 9. Rome: Bulzoni, 2008.Google Scholar
Bortoletti, Francesca. ed. L’Attore del Parnaso: Profili di attori-musici e drammaturgie d’occasione. Milan: Mimesis, 2012.Google Scholar
Bortoletti, Francesca. “La voce dei poeti all corte Aragonese: la festa e il teatro.” Quaderni d’italianistica 36 (2015): 1362.Google Scholar
Bortoletti, Francesca. “Serafino Aquilano and the Mask of poeta: A Denunciation in the Eclogue of Tyrinto e Menandro (1490),” in Dall’Aglio, , et al. Voices and Texts in Early Modern Italian Society, 139152.Google Scholar
Bortoletti, Francesca. “Arcadia, Festa e Performance alla Corte dei Re D’Aragona (1442–1503). The Italianist 36 (2016): 128.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bosisio, Matteo. “Scipinione a corte: Il Certamen inter Hannibalem et Alexandrum ac Scipionem Aphricanum di Filippo Lapaccini.” Carte Romanze 2 (2014): 125165.Google Scholar
Bosisio, Matteo. “Proposte per la Fabula di Orfeo di Poliziano: Datazione, Letture Tematica, Occasione di Rappresentazione.” Rivista di studi italiani 33 (2015): 112151.Google Scholar
Bottiglioni, Gino. La lirica latina in Firenze nella 2.a metà del secolo XV. Pisa: Nistri, 1913; repr. Rome: A. Polla [1977].Google Scholar
Bowen, William R. “Ficino’s Analysis of Musical Harmonia” in Ficino and Renaissance Neoplatonism, ed. Eisenbichler, K. and Pugliese, O. Z.. Ottawa: Dovehouse Editions, 1986, 1727.Google Scholar
Bowen, William R. “Love the Master of All the Arts: Marsilio Ficino on Love and Music,” in Love and Death in the Renaissance, ed. Bartlett, K. R., Eisenbichler, K., and Liedl, J.. Ottawa: Dovehouse Editions, 1991, 5160.Google Scholar
Bowles, Edmund A. Musical Ensembles in Festival Books, 1500–1800: An Iconographical and Documentary Survey. Ann Arbor: University Michigan Research Press, 1989.Google Scholar
Bracciolini, Poggio. Facezie. Edited and translated by Ciccuto, M. Milan: Rizzoli, 1983.Google Scholar
Branca, Vittore. “Un poemetto inedito di Andrea da Barberino.” Lettere italiane 42 (1990): 8990.Google Scholar
Branca, Vittore. “Una schermaglia attribuibile a Andrea da Barberino.” Italianistica 42 (1992): 637650.Google Scholar
Branciforte, Suzanne. “Antonio di Meglio, Dante, and Cosimo de’ Medici.” Italian Studies 50 (1995): 923.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Branciforte, Suzanne. “Ars Poetica Rei Publicae: The Herald of the Florentine Signoria.” PhD diss., University of California at Los Angeles, 1990.Google Scholar
Brand, Peter and Pertile, Lino, eds. The Cambridge History of Italian Literature. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1996.Google Scholar
Brandolini, Aurelio. De comparatione reipublicae et regni. Edited and translated by Hankins, J., Aurelio Lippo Brandolini. Republics and Kingdoms Compared. The I Tatti Renaissance Library, 40. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2009.Google Scholar
Brandolini, Raffaele. De Musica et poetica (1513). Edited and translated by Moyer, A. E. with Laureys, M., On Music and Poetry. Medieval and Renaissance Texts and Studies, 232. Tempe: Arizona Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies, 2001.Google Scholar
Giovanni Battista, Bronzini. Tradizione di stile aedico dai cantari al “Furioso.” Florence: Olschki, 1966.Google Scholar
Giovanni Battista, Bronzini. “Scambi e ricambi di letteratura popolare tra le corti in età laurenziana,” in La Toscana al tempo di Lorenzo il Magnifico: politica, economia, cultura, arte, ed. Fubini, R.. 3 vols. Pisa: Pacini, 1996, II, 681706.Google Scholar
Brook, Rosalind B. Scripta Leonis, Rufini, et Angeli: sociorum S. Franscisci. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1970.Google Scholar
Brown, Howard M. Sixteenth-Century Instrumentation: Music for the Florentine Intermedii. [Dallas?]: American Institute of Musicology, 1973.Google Scholar
Brown, Howard M. “A Cook’s Tour of Ferrara in 1529.” Rivista Italiana di Musicologia 10 (1975): 216241.Google Scholar
Brown, Howard M. “Fantasia on a Theme by Boccaccio.” Early Music 5 (1977): 324339.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brown, Howard M. “The Geography of Florentine Monody: Caccini at Home and Abroad.” Early Music 9 (1981): 147168.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brown, Howard M. A Florentine Chansonnier from the Time of Lorenzo the Magnificent. 2 vols. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1983.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brown, Howard M. “Petrarch in Naples: Notes on the Formation of Giaches de Wert’s Style,” in Essays on Italian Music of the Cinquecento, ed. Charteris, R.. Sydney: May Foundation, 1990, 1650.Google Scholar
Brown, Howard M. “Songs after Supper: How the Aristocracy Entertained Themselves in the Fifteenth Century,” in Musica Privata: Die Rolle der Musik im privaten Leben: Festschrift zum 65. Geburtstage von Walter Salmen, ed. Fink, M., Gstrein, R., and Mössmer, G.. Innsbruck: Helbling, 1991, 3752.Google Scholar
Brucurelli da Narni, Cassio. La morte del Danese. Milan: Agostino di Vimercato, 1522.Google Scholar
Biancamaria, Brumana and Ciliberti, Galliano. “Nuovi documenti sui canterini a Perugia nel XV secolo.” Nuova rivista musicale italiana 23 (1989): 579591.Google Scholar
Brunamonti, Luigi Tarulli. “Una scuola di canto a Perugia nella prima metà del secolo XIV.” Bollettiino della Regia Deputazione di storia patria per l’Umbria 27 (1924): 339394.Google Scholar
Bruni, Anna Bettarini. “Intorno ai cantari di Antonio Pucci,” in I cantari: struttura e tradizione, ed. Picone, M. and Predelli, M. B.. Florence: Olschki, 1984, 143160.Google Scholar
Bryce, Judith. “The Oral World of the Early Accademia Fiorentina.” Renaissance Studies 9 (1995): 77103.Google Scholar
Burke, Peter. “Oral Culture and Print Culture in Renaissance Italy.” Proceedings of the British Academy 54 (1998): 718.Google Scholar
Burke, Peter. Popular Culture in Early Modern Europe. 3rd ed. Surrey: Ashgate, 2009.Google Scholar
Buser, B. Die Beziehungen der Mediceer zu Frankreich während der Jahre 1434–1494. Leipzig: Duncker & Humblot, 1879.Google Scholar
Busse Berger, Anna Maria. Medieval Music and the Art of Memory. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2005.Google Scholar
Busse Berger, Anna Maria, and Rodin, Jesse, eds. The Cambridge History of Fifteenth-Century Music. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2015.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cabani, Maria Cristina. “Narratore e pubblico nel cantare cavalleresco: I modi della partecipazione emotiva.” Giornale storico della letteratura italiana 157 (1980): 142.Google Scholar
Caccini, Giulio. Le nuove musiche. Edited by Hitchcock, H. W.. Recent Researches in Music of the Baroque Era, 9. Middleton, WI: A-R Editions, 2009.Google Scholar
Calmeta, Vincenzo. Prose e lettere edite o inedite. Edited by Grayson, C.. Bologna: Commissione per i testi di lingua, 1959.Google Scholar
Campani, Niccolò. Lo Strascino da Siena e la sua opera poetica e teatrale. Edited by Pieri, M.. Biblioteca senese, 3. Pisa: ETS, 2010.Google Scholar
Campbell, Lorne. Renaissance Portraits. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1990.Google Scholar
Canguilhem, Philippe. “Naissance et décadence de la lira da braccio.” Pallas 57 (2001): 4157.Google Scholar
Canguilhem, Philippe. Monodia e contrappunto a Firenze nel Cinquecento: dal canto alla lira al canto alla bastarda,” in La monodia in Toscana alle soglie del XVII secolo. ed. Menchelli-Buttini, F.. Pisa: ETS, 2007, 2542.Google Scholar
Canguilhem, Philippe. “I musici convivi di Roma (1530–1540) e la dimensione sonora del banchetto nel Rinascimento.” Predella 33 (2013): 117132.Google Scholar
Canguilhem, Philippe. “Singing Poetry in compagnia in Sixteenth-Century Italy,” in Dall’Aglio, , et al., Voices and Texts in Early Modern Italian Society, 113123.Google Scholar
Canguilhem, Philippe. “Improvisation as Concept and Musical Practice in the Fifteenth Century,” in Busse Berger, A. M. and Rodin, J., eds. The Cambridge History of Fifteenth-Century Music, 149163.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cardamone, Donna G. “The Prince of Salerno and the Dynamics of Oral Transmission in Songs of Political Exile.” Acta Musicologica 67 (1995): 77108.Google Scholar
Cardini, Franco. “Alla ricerca dei ‘carrateri scenici’ del cantare cavalleresco fiorentino del Tre- Quattrocento,” in Rappresentazioni arcaiche della tradizione popolare: Atti del VI convegno del Centro di Studi sul Teatro Medioevale e Rinscimentale. Viterbo: Union Printing, 1982, 197212.Google Scholar
Giorgio Raimondo, Cardona. I linguaggi del sapere. Rome: Laterza, 1990.Google Scholar
Carew-Reid, Nicole. Les Fêtes Florentines au temps de Lorenzo il Magnifico. Florence: Olschki, 1995.Google Scholar
Carnelos, Laura. “Street Voices: The Role of Blind Performers in Early Modern Italy.” Italian Studies 71 (2016): 184196.Google Scholar
Carrai, Stefano. “Il leggere, il cantare e il trovare.” Lingua nostra 46 (1985): 9799.Google Scholar
Carruthers, Mary. The Book of Memory: A Study of Memory in Medieval Culture. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1990.Google Scholar
Carruthers, Mary. The Craft of Thought: Meditation, Rhetoric, and the Making of Images, 400–1200. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1998.Google Scholar
Carruthers, Mary. and Ziolkowski, Jan, eds. The Medieval Craft of Memory: An Anthology of Texts and Pictures. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2002.Google Scholar
Casagrande, Carla and Vecchio, Silvana. “L’interdizione del giullare nel vocabolario clericale del XII e del XIII secolo,” in Il contributo dei giullari alla drammaturgia italiana delle origini: atti del convvegno di studio, Viterbo, 17–19 giugno 1977. Rome: Bulzoni, 1978, 207258.Google Scholar
Castiglione, Baldassar. The Book of the Courtier. Translated by G. Bull. London: Penguin, 1967.Google Scholar
Castiglione, Baldassar. Lettere inedite e rare. Edited by Gorni, G.. Milano: Ricciardi, 1969.Google Scholar
Castiglione, Baldassar.Le Lettere. Edited by Rocca, G. La. Verona: Mondadori, 1978.Google Scholar
Castiglione, Baldassar. Il libro di cortegiano con una scelta delle opere minori. Edited by Maier, B.. Turin: UTET, 1981.Google Scholar
Castiglione, Baldassar. The Book of the Courtier: The Singleton Translation: An Authoritative Text Criticism. Edited by Javitch, D.. Norton Critical Edition. New York: Norton, 2002.Google Scholar
Castiglione, Baldassar. The Book of the Courtier. Edited by Opkycke, L.. Mineola NY: Dover Publications, 2003.Google Scholar
Cattin, Giulio. “Le rime del Poliziano nelle fonti musicali,” in Umanesimo e rinascimento a Firenze e Venezia: Miscellanea di studi in onore di Vittore Branca. 3 vols. Florence: Olschki, 1983, III, 379396.Google Scholar
Cavallini, Ivano. “Sugli improvvisatori del Cinque-Seicento: persistenze, nuovi repertori e qualche riconoscimento.” Riceercare 1 (1989): 2340.Google Scholar
Cavallo, Guglielmo and Chartier, Roger, eds. A History of Reading in the West, trans. L. G. Cochrane. Studies in Print Culture and the History of the Book. Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press, 1999.Google Scholar
Cavicchi, Camilla. “Musica, consenso e ordine in piazza: alcune considerazioni,” in Actes du colloque Les Vecteurs de l’idéel I. Marquer la ville. Signes, empreintes et traces du pouvoir dans les espaces ubrains (XIIIe-XVIIesiècle. Rome, 10–12 décembre 2009), ed. Genet, J.-P. and Boucheron, P.. Paris: Publications de la Sorbonne, 2013, 419437.Google Scholar
Cavicchi, Camilla. “Musici, cantori e ‘cantimbanchi’ a corte al tempo dell’Orlando Furioso,” in L’uno e l’altro Ariosto in corte e nelle delizie, ed. Venturi, G.. Florence: Olschki, 2011, 263289.Google Scholar
Ceci, Marta. Francesco Cei: Il canzoniere. Rome: Zauli Arti Grafiche, 1994.Google Scholar
Cellesi, Luigi. “Documenti per la storia musicale di Firenze.” Rivista musicale italiana 34 (1927): 579602; 35 (1928): 553582.Google Scholar
Ceruti Burgio, Anna. “La cultura fiorentina ai tempi del Magnifico: Echi della poesia di Lorenzo nelle rime di Jacopo Corsi.” Lettere italiane 26 (1974): 338348.Google Scholar
Ceruti Burgio, Anna. “Per una edizione delle poesie di G. C. Parmense.” Aurea Parma: rivista di storia, letteratura e arte 67 (1983): 314.Google Scholar
Ceruti Burgio, Anna. “Francesco II Gonzaga, Isabella d’Este e altri personaggi storici della poesia di G.C.” Aurea Parma: rivista di storia, letteratura e arte 59 (1985): 147156.Google Scholar
Chartier, Roger. “Orality Lost: Text and Voice in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries,” in Across Boundaries: The Book in Culture and Commerce, ed. Bell, B., Bennett, P., and Bevan, J.. New Castle, DE: Oak Knoll Press, 2000, 128.Google Scholar
Chiarelli, Caterina. Le attività artistiche e il patrimonio librario della Certosa di Firenze (dalle origini all metà del XVI secolo). Salzburg: Alalecta Cartusiana, 1984.Google Scholar
Christiansen, Keith and Weppelmann, Stefan, eds. The Renaissance Portrait from Donatello to Bellini. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2011.Google Scholar
Ciabbatoni, Francesco. Dante’s Journey to Polyphony. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2010.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cian, Vittorio. Un decennio della vita di M. Pietro Bembo. Turin: Loescher, 1885.Google Scholar
Cian, Vittorio. “Per Bernardo Bembo. Le relazioni letterarie, i codici e gli scritti.” Giornale storico della letteratura italiana 31 (1898): 4981.Google Scholar
Cicero, M. Tullius. Pro Archia Poeta. Edited and translated by Watts, N. H.. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1923.Google Scholar
Cicero, M. Tullius. [Cicero], Rhetorica ad Herennium. Edited and translated by Caplan, H.. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1954.Google Scholar
Ciliberti, Galliano. Musica e società in Umbria tra Medioevo e Rinascimento. Turnhout: Brepols, 1999.Google Scholar
Cocchi, Arnaldo. Le chiese di Firenze dal secolo IV al secolo XX. Florence: Pellas, 1903.Google Scholar
Coelho, Victor. “Raffaello Cavalcanti’s Lute Book (1590) and the Ideal of Singing and Playing,” in Les concerts des voix et des instruments à la Renaissance: Actes du XXXIVe Colloque International d’Études Humanistes Tours, 1991, ed. Vaccaro, J.M.. Tours: CNRS Éditions, 1995, 423442.Google Scholar
Cole, Howard C. “Bernardo Accolti’s Virginia: The Uniqueness of the Unico Aretino.” Renaissance Drama 10 (1979): 332.Google Scholar
Comanducci, Rita. “Vasari’s Painters and the Lute,” in Renaissance Then and Now: danza, musica e teatro per un nuovo Rinascimento: Atti del convegno internazionale di studi ISI Florence, Palazzo Rucellai, 7–9 maggio 2013, ed. Baldassarri, S.U.. Pisa: Edizioni ETS, 2014, 6580.Google Scholar
Condivi, Ascanio. Vita di Michelangelo Buonarroti. Rome: Antonio Blado, 1553.Google Scholar
Consolo, Rino. “Il libro di Endimione: Modelli classici, inventio ed elocutio nel canzoniere del Cariteo.” Filologia e critica 3 (1978): 1994.Google Scholar
Conway, Melissa. The ‘Diario’ of the Printing Press of San Jacopo da Ripoli, 1476–1484: Commentary and Transcription. Florence: Olschki, 1999.Google Scholar
Copenhaver, Brian. Magic in Western Culture from Antiquity to the Enlightenment. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2015.Google Scholar
Corsi, Giuseppe. Rimatori del Trecento. Turin: UTET, 1969.Google Scholar
Corso, Cosimo. “Araldi e canterini nella repubblica senese del Quattrocento.” Bullettino senese di storia patria 62 (1955): 140160.Google Scholar
Corvisieri, Constantino. “Il trionfo romano di Eleonora d’Aragona nel giugno del 1473.” Archivio della società romana di storia patria 1 (1878): 475491, and 10 (1887): 629687.Google Scholar
John Hill, Cotton. “Alessandro Sarti e il Poliziano.” Bibliofilia 44 (1962): 225246.Google Scholar
Cox, Virginia. “Ciceronian Rhetorical Theory in the Volgare: A Fourteenth-Century Text and Its Fifteenth-Century Readers,” in Rhetoric and Renewal in the Latin West 1100–1540, ed. Mews, C., Nederman, C., and Thomson, R.. Turnhout: Brepols, 2003, 201225.Google Scholar
Cox, Virginia.“Ciceronian Rhetoric in Late Medieval Italy,” in The Rhetoric of Cicero in Its Medieval and Early Renaissance Commentary Tradition, ed. Cox, V. and Ward, J. O. Leiden: Brill, 2011, 111143.Google Scholar
Crimi, Giuseppe. “Il presto legittimato: la poesia all’improvviso,” in Festina lente: il tempo della scrittura nella letteratura del cinquecento, ed. Cassiani, C. and Figorilli, M. C. Rome: Edizioni di storia e letteratura, 2014, 205223.Google Scholar
Fiorentino detto, CristoforoL’Altissimo.” Il primo libro de’ Reali de M. Cristoforo Fiorentino detto Altissimo poeta laureato cantato da lui all’improvviso. Venice: Giovanni Antonio de Nicolini da Sabio, 1533.Google Scholar
Fiorentino detto, Cristoforo. Strombotti e sonetti dell’Altissimo. Edited by Renier, R.. Turin: Loescher, 1886.Google Scholar
Crosby, Ruth. “Oral Delivery in the Middle Ages.” Speculum 11 (1936): 88110.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cruciani, Fabrizio. Il teatro del Campidoglio e le feste romane del 1513. Milan: Polifilo, 1968.Google Scholar
Cruciani, Fabrizio. Teatro nel Rinascimento Roma, 1450–1550. Rome: Bulzoni, 1983.Google Scholar
Crum, Roger and Paoletti, John T., eds. Renaissance Florence: A Social History. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2006.Google Scholar
Cummings, Anthony M. The Politicized Muse: Music of Medici Festivals, 1512–1537. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1992.Google Scholar
Cummings, Anthony M. “The Sacred Academy of the Medici and Florentine Musical Life of the Early Cinquecento,” in Musica Franca: Essays in Honor of Frank A. D’Accone, ed. Alm, I., McLamore, A., and Reardon, C.. Stuyvesant, NY: Pendragon, 1996, 4577.Google Scholar
Cummings, Anthony M. The Maecenas and the Madrigalist: Patrons, Patronage, and the Origins of the Italian Madrigal. Philadelphia, PA: American Philosophical Society, 2004.Google Scholar
Cummings, Anthony M. “Leo’s Jesters.” Revue Belge de Musicologie 63 (2009): 3165.Google Scholar
Cummings, Anthony M. “Informal Academies and Music in Pope Leo X’s Rome.” Italica 86 (2009): 583601.Google Scholar
Cummings, Anthony M. “Musical References in Brucioli’s Dialogi and Their Classical and Medieval Antecedents.” Journal of the History of Ideas 71 (2010): 169190.Google Scholar
Cummings, Anthony M. The Lion’s Ear: Pope Leo X, the Renaissance Papacy, and Music. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 2012.Google Scholar
Cummings, Anthony M. “Music and Feasts in the Fifteenth Century,” in Busse Berger, and Rodin, , eds. The Cambridge History of Fifteenth-Century Music, 361373.Google Scholar
Curti, Alessandra. “Le rime di Baccio Ugolini.” Rinascimento 38 (1998): 163203.Google Scholar
DBI = Dizionario biografico degli italiani. Rome: Istituto della Enciclopedia Italiana, 1960–. [http://www.treccani.it/biografie/]Google Scholar
DCLI = Dizionario critico della letteratura italiana, 2nd ed., ed. Branca, V.. 4 vols. Turin: UTET, 1999.Google Scholar
D’Accone, Frank A., ed. Music of the Florentine Renaissance. Corpus Mensurabilis Musicae, xxxii/2. Rome: American Institute of Musicology, 1967.Google Scholar
D’Accone, Frank A. Lorenzo de’ Medici and Music,” in Lorenzo il Magnifico e il suo mondo, ed. Garfagnini, G. C.. Florence: Olschki, 1994, 259290.Google Scholar
D’Accone, Frank A. The Civic Muse: Music and Musicians in Siena during the Middle Ages and Renaissance. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1997.Google Scholar
D’Agostino, Gianluca. “Sul rapporto tra l’umanesimo e la musica.” Annali dell’Istituto italiano per gli studi storici 15 (1998): 6791.Google Scholar
D’Agostino, Gianluca. “Nuove annotazioni su Leonardo e la musica.” Studi musicali 30 (2001): 282320.Google Scholar
D’Agostino, Gianluca. “Reading Theorists for Recovering ‘Ghost’ Repertories: Tinctoris, Gaffurio and the Neapolitan Context.” Studi Musicali 34 (2005): 2650.Google Scholar
Dall’Aglio, Stefano, Richardson, Brian, and Rospocher, Massimo, eds. Voices and Texts in Early Modern Italian Society. London: Routledge, 2016.Google Scholar
D’Amico, John F. Renaissance Humanism in Papal Rome: Humanists and Churchmen on the Eve of the Reformation. Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1983.Google Scholar
D’Ancona, Alessandro. Una poesia ed una prosa di Antonio Pucci. Bologna: Fava e Garagnani, 1870.Google Scholar
D’Ancona, Alessandro. “I canterini dell’antico comune di Perugia.” Varietà storice e letterarie I (1883): 3973.Google Scholar
D’Ancona, Alessandro. La poesia popolare italiana. Livorno: Giusti, 1906; repr. Bologna: Forni, 1974.Google Scholar
Davidsohn, Robert. Storia di Firenze. 8 vols. Florence: Sansoni, 1956–1968.Google Scholar
Davies, Jonathan. Florence and Its University during the Early Renaissance. Education and Society in the Middle Ages and Renaissance, 8. Leiden: Brill, 1998.Google Scholar
De Angelis, Laura, et al., eds. La civiltà fiorentino del Quattrocento. Florence: Vallecchi, 1993.Google Scholar
De Blasiis, Giuseppe. “Immagini di uomini famosi.” Napoli nobilissima 9 (1900): 6567.Google Scholar
Degl’Innocenti, Luca. I ‘Reali’ dell’Altissimo: un ciclo di cantari fra oralità e scrittura. Florence: Società Editrice Fiorentina, 2008.Google Scholar
Degl’Innocenti, Luca. “Il poeta, la viola e l’incanto.: Note sull’iconografia del canterino nel primo Cinquecento.” Paragone Letteratura 93–95 (2011): 141156. Repr. in Degl’Innocenti, Al suon di questa cetra, 65–77.Google Scholar
Degl’Innocenti, Luca. “Verba manent. Precisazioni e supplementi d’indagine sulla trascrizione dell’oralità nei cantari dell’Altissimo.” Rassegna Europea di Letteratura Italiana 39 (2012): 109134. Repr. in Degl’Innocenti, Al suon di questa cetra, 35–63.Google Scholar
Degl’Innocenti, Luca. “The Singing Voice and the Printing Press. Itineraries of the Altissimo’s Performed Texts in Renaissance Italy,” in Oral Culture in Early Modern Italy: Performance, Language, Religion, special issue of The Italianist 34 (2014): 318335.Google Scholar
Degl’Innocenti, Luca. “Machiavelli canterino?Nuova rivista de letteratura italiana 18 (2015): 1167. Repr. in Degl’Innocenti, Al suon di questa cetra, 101–151.Google Scholar
Degl’Innocenti, Luca. “Al suon di questa cetra”: Ricerche sulla poesia orale del Rinascimento. Florence: Società Editrice Fiorentina, 2016.Google Scholar
Degl’Innocenti, Luca, Richardson, Brian, and Sbordoni, Chiara, eds. Interactions between Orality and Writing in Early Modern Italian Culture. London: Routledge, 2016.Google Scholar
Degl’Innocenti, Luca. “I cantari in ottava rima tra Medio Evo e primo Rinascimento: i cantimpanca e la piazza,” in Agamennone, ed., Cantar ottave, 324.Google Scholar
Dei, Benedetto. La Cronica dall’anno 1400 all’anno 1500, ed. Barducci, R.. Florence: Francesco Papafava, 1984.Google Scholar
del Badia, Iodoco. Diario fiorentino dal 1450 al 1516 di Luca Landucci. Florence: Sansoni, 1883.Google Scholar
Delcorno, Carlo. “Professionisti della parola: pedicatori, giullari, concionatori,” in Tra storia e simbolo: Studi dedicati a Ezio Raimondi. Florence: Olschki, 1994, 121.Google Scholar
Delcorno Branca, Daniele. “Da Poliziano a Serafino,” in Miscellanea di studi in onore di Vittore Branca. 5 vols. Florence: Olschki, 1984, III/2, 423450.Google Scholar
Delcorno Branca, Daniele. “Il laboratorio del Poliziano: Per una lettura delle ‘Rime’.” Lettere italiane 39 (1987): 153206.Google Scholar
Della Neva, JoAnn. “Reflecting Lesser Lights: The Imitation of Minor Writers in the Renaissance.” Renaissance Quarterly 42 (1989): 449479.Google Scholar
Della Torre, Arnaldo. Storia dell’Accademia platonica di Firenze. Florence: Carnesecchi, 1902.Google Scholar
Del Lungo, Isidoro. Florentia. Uomini e cose del Quattrocento. Florence: G. Barbèra, 1897.Google Scholar
de Luca, Giuseppe. “Un umanista fiorentino e la Roma rinnovata da Sisto IV.” La rinascita 1 (1938): 7490.Google Scholar
Dempsey, Charles. The Early Renaissance and Vernacular Culture. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2012.Google Scholar
de Robertis, Domenico, “L’experienza poetica del quattrocento,” in Storia della letteratura italiana. Vol. 2, Il quattrocento e l’Ariosto, ed. Cecchi, E. and Sapegno., N. Milan: Garzanti, 1966.Google Scholar
de Vivo, Filippo. Information and Communication in Venice: Rethinking Early Modern Politics. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2007.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Di Maria, Salvatore, “Procedimenti canterini nella Vita di Benvenuto Cellini.” Studi e problemi di critica testuale 29 (1984): 3152.Google Scholar
Dionisotti, Carlo. Gli umanisti e il volgare fra Quattro e Cinquecento. Florence: F. Le Monnier, 1968.Google Scholar
Dolcibene de’ Tori. Rime pie edite e inedite di messer Dolcibene. Edited by Tortoli, G.. Florence: Passerini, 1904.Google Scholar
Dornetti, Vittorio. Aspetti e figure della poesia minore trecentesca. Padua: Piccin-Nuova Libraria, 1984.Google Scholar
Eckstein, Nicholas. The District of the Green Dragon: Neighbourhood Life and Social Change in Renaissance Florence. Florence: Olschki, 1995.Google Scholar
Elias, Cathy Ann. “Musical Performance in 16th-Century Italian Literature: Straparola’s Le piacevoli notti.” Early Music 17 (1989): 161173.Google Scholar
Elmi, Elizabeth G. “Singing Lyric in Late Quattrocento Naples: The Case of a Neapolitan Songbook.” Historical Performance 1 (2018): 730.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Elmi, Elizabeth G. “Singing Lyric among Local Aristocratic Networks in the Aragonese-Ruled Kingdom of Naples: Aesthetic and Political Meaning in the Written Records of an Oral Practice.” PhD diss., Indiana University, 2019.Google Scholar
Enciclopedia dantesca, ed. Bosco, U.. 6 vols. Rome: Istituto della Enciclopedia Italiana [1970–1978]. [http://www.treccani.it/enciclopedia/elenco-opere/Enciclopedia_Dantesca]Google Scholar
Elsheikh, Mahmoud Salem. “I musicisti di Dante (Casella, Lippo, Scochetto) in Niccolò di’ Rossi.” Studi danteschi 48 (1971): 153166.Google Scholar
Eschrich, Gabriella Scarlatta. “Cariteo’s ‘Aragonia’: The Language of Power at the Aragonese Court.” Forum Italicum 37 (2003): 329344.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Everson, Jane. “The Identity of Francesco Cieco da Ferrara.” Bibliothèque d’Humanisme et Renaissance 45 (1983): 487502.Google Scholar
Everson, Jane.“Sulla composizione e la datazione del Mambriano.” Giornale storico della letteratura italiana 160 (1983): 249271.Google Scholar
Everson, Jane. The Italian Romance Epic in the Age of Humanism: The Matter of Italy and the World of Rome. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2001.Google Scholar
Facchin, Francesco and Zanovello, Giovanni, eds. Frottole libro nono. Ottaviano Petrucci, Venezia 1508 [1509]. Padua: CLEUP, 1999.Google Scholar
Falletti, Clelia. “Le feste per Eleonora d’Aragona da Napoli a Ferrara (1473),” in Spettacoli conviviali dall’antichità classica alle corti italiane del ’400, ed. Chiabò, M. and Doglio, F.. Viterbo: Agnesotti, 1983, 269289.Google Scholar
Fanelli, Giovanni. Firenze architettura e città. 2 vols. Florence: Vallecchi, 1973.Google Scholar
Fanning, Maria Walburg. Maphei Vegii Laudensis: De educatione liberorum et eorum claris moribus libri sex. Studies in medieval and Renaissance Latin, 1. Washington, DC: Catholic University of America, 1933.Google Scholar
Fanti, Claudia. “L’elegia properziana nella lirica amorosa del Cariteo.” Italianistica 14 (1985): 2244.Google Scholar
Farago, Claire J., ed. Leonardo da Vinci’s Paragone: A Critical Interpretation with a New Edition of the Text in the Codex Urbinas. Brill’s Studies in Intellectual History, 25. Leiden: Brill, 1992.Google Scholar
Fenlon, Iain. “Orality and Print: Singing in the Street in Early Modern Venice,” in Degl’Innocenti, , et al., eds. Interactions between Orality and Writing, 8198.Google Scholar
Fenzi, Enrico. “La lingua e lo stile del Cariteo dalla prima alla seconda redazione dell’Endimione.” Studi di filologia e letteratura 1 (1970): 983.Google Scholar
Ferrajoli, Alessandro. Il ruolo della corte di Leone X (1514–1516). Edited by De Caprio, V.. Rome: R. Società Romana di Storia Patria, 1911; repr. Rome: Bulzoni, 1984.Google Scholar
Ferrara, Mario. “Il codice Venturi Ginori di rime antiche.” La Bibliofilia 52 (1950): 41102.Google Scholar
Ferrarini, Girolamo. Memoriale estense: 1476–1489. Edited by Griguolo, P.. Collana Cronache e cronisti polesani, 11. Rovigo: Minelliana, 2006.Google Scholar
Ferroni, Giulio. “Appunti sulla politica festiva di Pietro Riario,” in Umanesimo a Roma nel Quattrocento, ed. Brezzi, P. and de Panizza Lorch, M.. Rome: Istituto di Studi Romani, 1984, 4765.Google Scholar
Ficino, Marsilio. Supplementum Ficinianum: Marsilii Ficini Florentini philosophi Platonici opuscula inedita et dispersa primum collegit et ex fontibus plerumque manuscriptis. Edited by Kristeller, P. O.. 2 vols. Florence: Olschki, 1937.Google Scholar
Ficino, Marsilio. Opera Omnia. Basle: Petri, 1576; facs. reprint edited by Sancipriano, M.. Turin: Bottega d’Erasmo, 1959.Google Scholar
Ficino, Marsilio. The Letters of Marsilio Ficino. Translated by members of the Language Department, School of Economic Science, London. 10 vols. London: Shepheard-Walwyn, 1975.Google Scholar
Ficino, Marsilio. Three Books on Life/De triplici vita. Edited and translated by Kaske, C and Clark, J. R.. Medieval and Renaissance Studies and Texts, vol. 57. Binghamton, NY: Center for Medieval and Early Renaissance Studies, 1989.Google Scholar
Ficino, Marsilio. Le divine lettere del gran Marsilio Ficino, trans. Figliucci, F.. Venice: Gabriel Giolito, 1546; repr. Rome: Edizione di Storia e Letteratura, 2001.Google Scholar
Ficino, Marsilio. On the Nature of Love: Ficino on Plato’s Symposium. Translated by Farndell, A.. London: Shepheard-Walwyn, 2016.Google Scholar
Field, Arthur. The Origins of the Platonic Academy of Florence. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1988.Google Scholar
Finnegan, Ruth. Oral Poetry: Its Nature, Significance, and Social Context. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1977; repr. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press, 1992.Google Scholar
Fiori, Alessandra. “Discorsi sulla musica nei commenti medievali alla commedia dantesca.” Studi e problemi di critica testuale 59 (1999): 67102.Google Scholar
Fiori, Alessandra. “Alcune Rime dei secc. XIV e XV presso l’ASB.” Studi e problem di critica testuale 45 (1992): 4758.Google Scholar
Flamini, Francesco. La lirica toscana del Rinascimento anteriore ai tempi del Magnifico. Pisa: T. Nistri, 1891; repr. Florence: Le Lettere, 1977.Google Scholar
Flamini, Francesco. “Jacopo Corsi e il Tebaldeo.” Giornale storico della letteratura italiana 17 (1891): 391399.Google Scholar
Bartolomeo, Fonzio. Letters to Friends. Edited by Daneloni, A. and translated by M. Davies. The I Tatti Renaisssance Library 47. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2011.Google Scholar
Vannozzo, Francesco di. Le rime di Francesco di Vannozzo. Edited by Medin, A.. Bologna: Commissione per i testi di lingua, 1928.Google Scholar
Frasso, Giuseppe. “Un poeta improvvisatore nella ‘familia’ del Cardinale Francesco Gonzaga: Francesco Cieco da Firenze.” Italia medioevale e umanistica 20 (1977): 395400.Google Scholar
Frati, Ludovico. “Cantari e sonetti ricordati nella Cronaca di B. Dei.” Giornale storico della letteratura italiana 4 (1884): 162202.Google Scholar
French, Reginald Foster. “The Identity of Francesco Cieco da Ferrara.” Proceedings of the Modern Language Association 52 (1937): 9921004.Google Scholar
Julia Haig, Gaisser. “The Rise and Fall of Goritz’s Feasts.” Renaissance Quarterly 48 (1995): 4157.Google Scholar
Julia Haig, Gaisser. Pierio Valeriano on the Ill Fortune of Learned Men: A Renaissance Humanist and His World. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1999.Google Scholar
Gaiter, Luigi. Il ‘Tesoro’ di Brunetto Latini volgarizzato da Bono Giamboni. 4 vols. Bologna: Romagnoli, 1878–1883.Google Scholar
Gallico, Claudio. “Musica nella Ca’ Giocosa,” in Vittorino da Feltre e la sua scuola: umanesimo, pedagogia, arti, ed. Giannetto, N.. Florence: Olschki, 1981, 189198.Google Scholar
Gallo, F. Alberto. Music in the Castle: Troubadours, Books & Orators in Italian Courts of the Thirteenth, Fourteenth, and Fifteenth Centuries. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1995.Google Scholar
Gallo, F. Alberto. “La tradizione orale della teoria musicale nel medioevo,” in L’etnomusicologia in Italia, ed. Carpitella, D.. Palermo: S. F. Flaccovio, 1975, 161166.Google Scholar
Gallo, F. Alberto. “Antonio da Ferrara, Lancillotto Anguissola, e il madrigale trecentesco.” Studi e problemi di critica testuale 12 (1976): 4045.Google Scholar
Garibotto, Celestino. “Giullari e cantastorie a Verona.” La Rassegna 36 (1928): 337340.Google Scholar
Garin, Eugenio. Il pensiero pedagogico dello umanesimo. I classici della pedagogia italiana, 2. Florence: Giuntine, 1958.Google Scholar
Garin, Eugenio. “L’ambiente del Poliziano,” in Il Poliziano e il suo tempo, Atti del IV Convegno Internazionale di Studi sul Rinascimento. Florence: Sansoni, 1957, 1739.Google Scholar
Garzoni, Tommaso. La piazza universale di tutte le professioni del mondo. Venice: G.B. Somasco, 1586, ed. Cherchi, P. and Collina, B.. 2 vols. Turin: Einaudi, 1996.Google Scholar
Gavagni, Francesco. L’Unico Aretino (Bernardo Accolti) e la corte dei Duchi d’Urbino. Arezzo: Cagliani, 1906.Google Scholar
Gerbino, Giuseppe. “Il canto di Serafino e il dilemma degli umanisti,” in Bortoletti, , ed. L’Attore del Parnaso, 315344.Google Scholar
Gerbino, Giuseppe. Music and the Myth of Arcadia in Renaissance Italy. New Perspectives in Music History and Criticism, 18. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2014.Google Scholar
Gerbino, Giuseppe. “‘Bringing before the Eyes’: De Rore, Enargeia, and the Power of Visual Imagination.” Journal of the Alamire Foundation 10 (2018): 1125.Google Scholar
Getto, Giovanni. “Sulla poesia del Cariteo.” Giornale storico della letteratura italiana 123 (1946): 5368.Google Scholar
Gherardi da Prato, Giovanni. Il Paradiso degli Alberti. Edited by Lanza, A.. Rome: Salerno, 1975.Google Scholar
Giannetto, Nella. Bernardo Bembo: Umanista e politico veneziano. Florence: Olschki, 1985.Google Scholar
Sommacompagno, Gidino di. Trattato dei ritmi volgari. Edited Giuliari, G. B. C.. Bologna: Romagnoli, 1870.Google Scholar
Ignazio, Giorgi and Sicardi, Enrico. “Abbozzi di rime edite e inedite di F. Petrarca.” Bullettino della Società Filologia Romana 7 (1905): 2746.Google Scholar
Giovanni Fiorentino (di Firenze). Il Pecorone. Edited by Esposito, E.. Ravenna: Longo, 1974.Google Scholar
Giovan Matteo di Meglio. Rime. Edited by Brincat, G.. Florence: Olschki, 1977.Google Scholar
Giovanardi, Claudio. La teoria cortigiana e il dibattito linguistico nel primo Cinquecento. Rome: Bulozoni, 1998.Google Scholar
Giovio, Paolo. An Italian Portrait Gallery [Elogia doctorum virorum]. Translated by F.A. Gragg. Boston: Chapman and Grimes, 1935.Google Scholar
Giovio, Paolo. Notable Men and Women of Our Time. Edited and translated by Gouwens, K. I Tatti Renaissance library, 56. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2013.Google Scholar
Giraldi, Lillio Gregorio. De poetis nostrorum temporum. Edited and translated by Grant, J. N, Lillio Gregorio Giraldi: Modern Poets. I Tatti Renaissance Library, 48. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2011.Google Scholar
Giuliare, Giambattista B.C. “La letteratura veronese al cadere del secolo XV e le sue opere e stampa.” Il Propugnatore 6/1 (1873): 168235.Google Scholar
Giustiniani, Vito R. “Serafino Aquilano e il teatro del Quattrocento.” Rinascimento: rivista dell’Istituto nazionale di studi sul Rinascimento 2, series 5 (1965): 101117.Google Scholar
Gleick, James. Chaos: Making a New Science. New York: Viking, 1987.Google Scholar
Gnoli, Domenico. “Il ‘gran lume aretin, L’Unico Accolti’,” in La Roma de Leon X: Quadri e studi originali. Milan: Hoepli, 1938, 266299.Google Scholar
Gombrich, Otto. “Giotto’s Portrait of Dante?Burlington Magazine 121 (1979): 471483.Google Scholar
Graf, Arturo. “Il Zibaldone attribuito ad Antonio Pucci.” Giornale storico della letteratura italiana 1 (1883): 282300.Google Scholar
Grafton, Anthony, and Jardine, Lisa. From Humanism to the Humanities: Education and the Liberal Arts in Fifteenth-and Sixteenth-Century Europe. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1986.Google Scholar
Grafton, Anthony, and Jardine, Lisa. “The Humanist as Reader,” in A History of Reading in the West, ed. Cavallo, G. and Chartier, R.. Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press, 1999, 179212.Google Scholar
Grafton, Anthony, and Jardine, Lisa. “The Humanist and the Commonplace Book: Education in Practice,” in Music Education in the Middle Ages and Renaissance, ed. Murray, R. E., Weiss, S. F., and Cyrus, C. J.. Bloomington: Press, Indiana University, 2010, 141157.Google Scholar
Grayson, Cecil. “Lorenzo, Machiavelli and the Italian Language,” in Italian Renaissance Studies, ed. Jacob, E. F.. London: Faber and Faber, 1960, 410432.Google Scholar
Greco, Aulo. “L’Apologia delle rime di Serafino Aquilano di Angelo Colocci,” in Atti del Convegno di studi su Angelo Colocci, ed. Fanelli, V.. Città di Castello: Arte Grafiche, 1972, 205217.Google Scholar
Grendler, Paul F. Schooling in Renaissance Italy: Literacy and Learning, 1300–1600. Johns Hopkins University Studies in Historical and Political Science, 107th ser., no. 1. New York: ACLS History E-Book Project, 2005.Google Scholar
Verona, Guarino da. Epistolario di Guarino Veronese 3 vols. Miscellanea di Storia Veneta, ser. 3, t. VIII, XI, XIV. Venice: 1915; repr. Turin: Bottega d’Erasmo, 1959.Google Scholar
Guarino, Raimondo. “Archeologia e spettacolo a Roma nell’ età di Giulio II,” in Metafore di un pontificato: Giulio II (1503–1513), ed. Cantatore, F., et al. Rome: Roma nel Rinascimento, 2010, 345364.Google Scholar
Guarnera, Elvira. Bernardo Accolti: saggio biografico. Palermo: Giannitrapani, 1901.Google Scholar
Guasti, Cesare. “Privilegio concesso dalla Signoria di Firenze all’Altissimo per la stampa della sua Rotta di Ravenna.” Giornale storico degli archivi Toscani 3 (1859): 69.Google Scholar
Guerri, Domenico. La corrente popolare nel Rinascimento: Berte, burle e baie nella Firenze del Brunellescho e del Burchiello. Florence: Sansoni, 1931.Google Scholar
Guest, Clare Lapraik. The Understanding of Ornament in the Renaissance. Leiden: Brill, 2015.Google Scholar
Haar, James, ed. Chanson and Madrigal 1480–1530: Studies in Comparison and Contrast. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1964.Google Scholar
Haar, James. “Notes on the Dialogo della Musica of Antonfrancesco Doni.” Music and Letters 47 (1966): 198244.Google Scholar
Haar, James. “The Frontispiece of Gafori’s Practica Musicae (1496).” Renaissance Quarterly 27 (1974): 722.Google Scholar
Haar, James. “Some Remarks on the Missa La sol fa re mi,” in Josquin des Prez: Proceedings of the International Festival-Conference, Juilliard School at Lincoln Center, New York, 21–25 June 1971, ed. Lowinsky, E. and Blackburn, B.. London/New York: Oxford University Press, 1976, 564588.Google Scholar
Haar, James. “Arie per cantar stanze ariostesche,” in L’Ariosto: La musica, i musicisti, ed. Balsano, M. A.. Florence: Olschki, 1981, 3146.Google Scholar
Haar, James. “The Courtier as Musician: Castiglione’s View of the Science and Art of Music,” in Hanning, and Rosand, , Castiglione: The Ideal and the Real in Renaissance Culture, 165189.Google Scholar
Haar, James. Essays on Italian Music and Poetry 1350–1600. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1986.Google Scholar
Haar, James. “From ‘Cantimbanco’ to Court: The Musical Fortunes of Ariosto in Florentine society,” in L’arme e gli amori: Ariosto, Tasso and Guarini in Late Renaissance Florence, ed. Rossi, M. and Gioffredi Superbi, F.. 2 vols. Florence: Olschki, 2004, II, 179197.Google Scholar
Haar, James. “The Vatican Manuscript Urb. Lat. 1411: An Undervalued Source?” in Manoscritti di polifonia nel quattrocento europeo: Atti del convegno internazionale di studi, Trento, Castello del Buonconsiglio, 18–19 ottobre 2002, ed. Gozzi, M.. Trent: Provincia autonoma di Trento, 2004, 6592.Google Scholar
Haar, James. ed. Città del Vaticano Ms Urbinas latinus 1411. Lucca: LIM, 2006.Google Scholar
Hankey, Teresa. “Salutati’s Epigrams for the Palazzo Vecchio at Florence.” Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 22 (1959): 363365.Google Scholar
Hankins, James. Humanism and Platonism in the Italian Renaissance. Rome: Edizioni di Storia e Letteratura, 2004.Google Scholar
Hankins, James. “Humanist Academies and the ‘Platonic Academy of Florence’,” in On Renaissance Academies: Proceedings of the International Conference ‘From the Roman Academy to the Danish Academy in Rome, Danish Academy in Rome, 11–13 October 2006, ed. Pade, M.. Rome: Quasar, 2011, 3146.Google Scholar
Hankins, James. “Humanism and Music in Italy,” in Berger, Busse and Rodin, , eds. The Cambridge History of Fifteenth-Century Music, 231262.Google Scholar
Hanning, Robert W., and Rosand, David, eds. Castiglione: The Ideal and the Real in Renaissance Culture. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1983.Google Scholar
Haraszti, Emile. “La Technique des improvisateurs de langue vulgaire et de latin au Quattrocento.” Revue belge de musicologie 9 (1955): 1231.Google Scholar
Henry, Chriscinda. “Alter Orpheus: Masks of Virtuosity in Renaissance Portraits of Musical Improvisers.” Italian Studies 71 (2016): 238258.Google Scholar
Hill, John Walter. “Oratory Music in Florence, I: Recitar Cantando, 1583–1655,” Acta Musicologica 51 (1979): 108136.Google Scholar
Howard, Peter. Beyond the Written Word: Preaching and Theology in the Florence of Archbishop Antoninus, 1427–1459. Florence: Olschki, 1995.Google Scholar
Howard, Peter. “The Aural Space of the Sacred in Renaissance Florence,” in Renaissance Florence: A Social History, ed. Crum, and Paoletti, , 376393.Google Scholar
Hughes-Johnson, Samantha. “Early Medici Patronage and the Confraternity of the Buonomini di San Martino.” Confraternitas 22 (2011): 325.Google Scholar
Ianuale, Raffaella. “Per l’edizione delle ‘Rime’ di Bernardo Accolti detto l’Unico Aretino.” Filologia e critica 18 (1993): 153174.Google Scholar
Ianuale, Raffaella. “Bernardo Accolti detto l’Unico Aretino: ‘Sonetti e rispetti’: edizione critica.” Thesis, Università degli Studi Ca’ Foscari, 1991–1992.Google Scholar
Ijsewijn, Jozef. “Poetry in a Roman Garden: The Coryciana,” in Latin Poetry and the Classical Tradition: Essays in Medieval and Renaissance Literature, ed. Godman, P. and Murray, O.. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1990, 211231.Google Scholar
Ijsewijn, Jozef. ed. Coryciana. Rome: Herder, 1997.Google Scholar
Isebaert, Lambert and Smeesters, Aline, eds. Poésie latine à haute voix (1500–1700). Turnhout: Brepols, 2013.Google Scholar
Jackson, Margaret. “Antonio Pucci’s Poems in the Codice Kirkupiano of Wellesley College.” Romania 39 (1910): 315323.Google Scholar
Jeffery, Peter. Re-Envisioning Past Musical Cultures: Ethnomusicology in the Study of Gregorian Chant. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1995.Google Scholar
Jennings, Lauren McGuire. Senza Vestimenta. The Literary Tradition of Trecento Song. Farnham: Ashgate, 2014.Google Scholar
Jervis, Alice de Rosen. A Florentine Diary from 1450 to 1516 by Luca Landucci. London: J. M. Dent, 1927.Google Scholar
Johnson, Steven. Emergence: The Connected Lives of Ants, Brains, Cities, and Software. New York: Scribner, 2001.Google Scholar
Jones, Roger and Penny, Nicholas. Raphael. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1983.Google Scholar
Jones, Sterling. The Lira da Braccio. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1995.Google Scholar
Joost-Gaugier, Christiane L. “Sappho, Apollo, Neopythagorean Musical Theory and Numine Afflatur in Raphael’s Fresco of the Parnassus.” Gazette des beaux-arts 121 (1993): 123134.Google Scholar
Joost-Gaugier, Christiane L. Raphael’s Stanza della Segnatura: Meaning and Invention. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2002.Google Scholar
Kallendorf, Craig W., ed. and trans. Humanist Educational Treatises. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2008.Google Scholar
Katzive, Bonnie L. “Raphael’s Parnassus: The Harmony of the Universe and the Julian Vision of Rome.” Rutgers Art Review 8 (1987): 526.Google Scholar
Kemp, Walter H. “Some Notes on Music in Castiglione’s Il Libro del Cortegiano,” in Cultural Aspects of the Renaissance, ed. Clough, C.. Manchester: Manchester University Press, 1976, 354369.Google Scholar
Keniston, Hayward. “Verse Forms of the Italian Eclogue.” Romantic review 11 (1920): 170186.Google Scholar
Kennedy, William J. “Petrarchan Audiences and Print Technology.” The Journal of Medieval and Renaissance Studies 14 (1984): 120.Google Scholar
Kennedy, William J. “Citing Petrarch in Naples: The Politics of Commentary in Cariteo’s Endimione.” Renaissance Quarterly 55 (2002): 11961221.Google Scholar
Kennedy, William J. The Site of Petrarchism: Early Modern National Sentiment in Italy, France, and England. Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2003.Google Scholar
Kent, Dale. Cosimo de’ Medici and the Florentine Renaissance. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2000.Google Scholar
Kent, Dale. “Michele del Giogante’s House of Memory,” in Society and Individual in Renaissance Florence, ed. Connell, W.. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2002, 110136.Google Scholar
Kidwell, Carol. Pontano: Poet and Prime Minister. London: Duckworth, 1991.Google Scholar
Kolsky, Stephen D. “The Courtier as Critic: Vincenco Calmeta’s ‘Vita del facondo poeta vulgare Serafino Aquilano’.” Italica 67 (1990): 161172.Google Scholar
Kristeller, Paul O. Supplementum ficinianum. 2 vols. Florence: Olschki, 1937.Google Scholar
Kristeller, Paul O. Studies in Renaissance Thought and Letters. Rome: Edizioni di Storia e Letteratura, 1956.Google Scholar
La Face Bianconi, Giuseppina, ed. Gli Strambotti del Codice Estense α.F.9.9. Florence: Olschki, 1990.Google Scholar
La Face Bianconi, Giuseppina. and Rossi, Antonio, “Soffrir non son disposto ogni tormento: Serafino Aquilano, figura letteraria, fantasma musicologico,” in Trasmission e recezione delle forme di cultura musicale, Atti del XIV congresso della Società Internazionale di Musicologia. 3 vols. Turin: EDT, 1990, II, 240254.Google Scholar
La Face Bianconi, Giuseppina. and Rossi, Antonio. and Rossi, Antonio, eds. Le rime di Serafino Aquilano in musica. Florence: Olschki, 1999.Google Scholar
Lansing, Carol. The Florentine Magnates: Lineage and Faction in a Medieval Commune. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1991.Google Scholar
Lanza, Antonio. Firenze contro Milano (1390–1440). Rome: De Rubeis, 1991.Google Scholar
Lanza, Antonio. La letteratura tardogotica: arte e poesia a Firenze e Siena nell’autunno del Medioevo. Rome: De Rubeis, 1994.Google Scholar
Lanza, Antonio. Lirici toscani del Quattrocento. 2 vols. Rome: Bulzoni, 1973–1975.Google Scholar
Lanza, Antonio. Polemiche e berte letterarie nella Firenze del primo Quattrocento. 2nd ed. Rome: Bulzoni, 1989.Google Scholar
Latini, Brunetto. The Book of Treasure, trans. Barrette, P. and Baldwin, S.. Garland Library of Medieval Literature, Series B, vol. 90. New York: Garland, 1993.Google Scholar
Lazzari, Alfonso. Ugolino e Michele Verino: Studii biografici e critici. Turin: Carlo Clausen, 1897.Google Scholar
Lazzeri, Gino. “Sull’autenticità dello Zibaldone attribuito ad Antonio Pucci.” Giornale storico della letteratura italiana 44 (1904): 104116.Google Scholar
Lebano, Edoardo A. “Luigi Pulci and Late Fifteenth-Century Humanism in Florence.” Renaissance Quarterly 27 (1974): 489498.Google Scholar
Vinci, Leonardo da. Treatise on Painting by Leonardo da Vinci. Edited and translated by McMahon, A. P.. 2 vols. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1956.Google Scholar
Vinci, Leonardo da. Leonardo on Painting: An Anthology of Writings by Leonardo da Vinci, with a Selection of Documents Relating to His Career as an Artist. Edited by Kemp, M.. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1989.Google Scholar
Leuker, Tobias. “Ad Alessandro Cortesi rimasto in Italia. Un sonetto fiorentino (e non milanese) di Bernardo Bellincioni.” Interpres 21 (2002): 286290.Google Scholar
Levi, Ezio. “I cantari leggendari del popolo italiano nei secoli XIV e XV.” Giornale storico della letteratura italiana, Suppl. 16 (1914): 1159.Google Scholar
Levi, Ezio. Maestro Antonio da Ferrara, rimatore del secolo XIV. Rome: Rassegna Nazionale, 1920.Google Scholar
Levi, Ezio. Francesco di Vannozzo e la lirica nelle corti lombarde durante the seconda metà del sccolo XIV. Florence, Galletti e Cocci, 1908.Google Scholar
Levi, Ezio. Poesia di popolo e poesia di corte nel trecento. Livorno: Raffaello Giusti, 1915; repr. Bologna: A.M.I.S., 1971.Google Scholar
Levi, Ezio. “L’ultimo Re dei Giullari.” Studi medievali 1 (1928): 173180.Google Scholar
Limburger, Walther. Die Gebäude von Florenz: Architekten, Strassen und Plätze in alphabetischen Verzeichnissen. Leipzig: F. A. Brockhaus, 1910.Google Scholar
Lockwood, Lewis. “A Virtuoso Singer at Ferrara and Rome in the Period of Leo X: The Case of Bidon,” in Papal Music and Musicians in Late Medieval and Renaissance Rome, ed. Sherr, R.. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1998, 226241.Google Scholar
Lockwood, Lewis. Music in Renaissance Ferrara 1400–1505: The Creation of a Musical Center in the Fifteenth Century. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2009.Google Scholar
Looney, Dennis Compromising the Classics: Romance Epic Narrative in the Italian Renaissance. Detroit: Wayne State University Press, 1996.Google Scholar
Lord, Alfred. The Singer of Tales. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1960.Google Scholar
Lord, Alfred. “Memory, Meaning, and Myth in Homer and Other Oral Epic Traditions,” in Oralità: Cultura, lettertatura, discourso. Atti del Covegno Internazionale (Urbino 21–25 luglio 1980), ed. Gentili, B. and Paioni, G.. Rome: Edizioni dell’Ateneo, 1985, 3763.Google Scholar
Lorenzetti, Stefano. “Viola da mano and viola da arco: Terminology in the Cortegiano (1528) of Baldassare Castiglione.” Translated by K. Bosi, in Liuteria, musica e cultura 1996: Essays Dedicated to John Henry van der Meer, ed. Meucci, R.. Cremona: Turris Editrice, 1996, 323.Google Scholar
Lorenzetti, Stefano. Musica e identità nobiliare nell’Italia del rinascimento: educazione, mentalità, immaginario. Florence: Olschki, 2003.Google Scholar
Lorenzetti, Stefano. “‘At Every Gesture from the Lord”: Music at Banquets, A Cornucopia.” Predella 33 (2013): 2142.Google Scholar
Lovato, Antonio. “Appunti sulle preferenze musicali di Angelo Poliziano,” in Poliziano nel suo tempo: Atti del VI Convegno Internazionale (Chianciano-Montepulciano 18–21 luglio 1994, ed. Tarugi, L. S.. Florence: Franco Cesati, 1996, 221237.Google Scholar
Luisi, Francesco. La musica vocale nel rinascimento: Studi sulla musica vocale profana in Italia nei secoli XV e XVI. Turin: ERI, 1977.Google Scholar
Luisi, Francesco. “Minima fiorentina: Sonetti a mente, canzoni a ballo e cantimpanca nel Quattrocento,” in Musica Franca: Essays in Honor of Frank A. D‘Accone, ed. Alm, I., McLamore, A., and Reardon, C.. Stuyvesant, NY: Pendragon Press, 1996, 7995.Google Scholar
Luzio, Alessandro, and Renier, Rodolfo. Mantova e Urbino: Isabella d’Este ed Elisabetta Gonzaga nelle relazioni familiari e nelle vicende politiche. Turin: A. Forni, 1893.Google Scholar
MacCarthy, Evan. “Tinctoris and the Neapolitan Eruditi.” Journal of the Alamire Foundation 5 (2013): 4167.Google Scholar
Macci, Loris, and Orgera, Valeria. Architettura e civiltà delle torri: Torri e famiglie nella Firenze medieval. Florence: Edifir, 1994.Google Scholar
Mack, Charles R. “The Wanton Habits of Venus: Pleasure and Pain at the Renaissance Spa.” Explorations in Renaissance culture 26 (2000): 257276.Google Scholar
Marino, Joseph. “A Renaissance in the Vernacular: Baldassare Castiglione’s Coining of the Aulic,” in Perspectives on Early Modern and Modern Intellectual History: Essays in Honor of Nancy S. Struever, ed. Marino, J. and Schlitt, M.. Rochester: University of Rochester Press, 2000, 145163.Google Scholar
Martelli, Mario. Studi laurenziana. Florence: Olschki, 1965.Google Scholar
Martelli, Mario. “Il mito d’Orfeo nell’età laurenziana.” Interpres: rivista di studi quattrocenteschi 8 (1988): 740.Google Scholar
Martines, Lauro. Power and Imagination: City-States in Renaissance Italy. New York: Knopf, 1979.Google Scholar
Martines, Lauro. Strong Words: Writing and Social Strain in the Italian Renaissance. Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2001.Google Scholar
Mayer, Elisabetta. “Un umanista italiano della corte di Mattia Corvino: Aurelio Brandolini Lippo.” Studi e documenti italo-ungharesi della R. Accademia d’Ungheria di Roma 2 (1938): 120168.Google Scholar
McGee, Timothy J. “Dinner Music for the Signoria, 1350–1450.” Speculum 74 (1999): 94114.Google Scholar
McGee, Timothy J. “Cantare all’improvviso: Improvising to Poetry in Late Medieval Italy,” in Improvisation in the Arts of the Middle Ages and Renaissance, ed. McGee, T.. Early Drama, Art and Music 30. Kalamazoo, MI: Medieval Institute, 2003, 3170.Google Scholar
McGee, Timothy J. “Filippino Lippi and Music.” Renaissance & Reformation 30 (2006): 528.Google Scholar
McGee, Timothy J. The Ceremonial Musicians of Late Medieval Florence. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2009.Google Scholar
McIver, Katherine. “Maniera, Music, and Vasari,” The Sixteenth Century Journal 28 (1997): 4555.Google Scholar
McLaughlin, Martin L. Literary Imitation in the Italian Renaissance: The Theory and Practice of Literary Imitation in Italy from Dante to Bembo. Oxford: Clarendon, 1995.Google Scholar
McManamon, John M. “Renaissance Preaching: Theory and Practice. A Holy Week Thursday Sermon of Aurelio Brandolini.” Viator 10 (1979): 355373.Google Scholar
Medici, Lorenzo de’. Lettere. Florence: Giunti-Barbéra, 1977–.Google Scholar
Medici, Lorenzo de’. Canzoniere: Lorenzo de’ Medici. Edited by Zanato, T.. 2 vols. Studi e testi, 24. Florence: Olschki, 1991.Google Scholar
Medici, Lorenzo de’. Opere. Edited by Zanato, T.. Turin: Einaudi, 1992.Google Scholar
Medici, Lorenzo de’. Tutte le opera. Edited by Orvieto, P.. 2 vols. Testi e documenti di letteratura e di lingua, 14. Rome: Salerno, 1992.Google Scholar
Medici, Lorenzo de’. The Autobiography of Lorenzo de’ Medici the Magnificent: ‘A Commentary on My Sonnets.’ Edited and translated by Cook, J. W. and Zanato, T.. Binghamton, NY: Medieval and Renaissance Texts and Studies, 1995.Google Scholar
Medici, Lorenzo de’. The Complete Literary Works of Lorenzo de’ Medici. Edited and translated by Guarino, G. A.. New York: Italica Press, 2016.Google Scholar
Mengaldo, Pier Vincenzo. “Appunti su Vincenzo Calmeta e la teoria cortigiana.” Rassegna della Letteratura Italiana 64 (1960): 446469.Google Scholar
Mengaldo, Pier Vincenzo. “Serafino Aquilano, gli Strambotti a la rima.” Stilistica e metrica italiana 3 (2003): 305308.Google Scholar
Meyer-Baer, Kathi. “Musical Iconography in Raphael’s Parnassus.” The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 8 (1949): 8796.Google Scholar
Milner, Stephen J. “Citing the Ringhiera: The Politics of Place and Public Address in Trecento Florence.” Italian Studies 55 (2000): 5382.Google Scholar
Milner, Stephen J. “The Florentine Piazza della Signoria as Practiced Place,” in Crum, and Paoletti, , eds. Renaissance Florence: A Social History, 83103.Google Scholar
Milner, Stephen J. “Le sottili cose non si possono bene aprire in volgare: Vernacular Oratory and the Transmission of Classical Rhetorical Theory in the Late Medieval Italian Communes.” Italian Studies 64 (2009): 221244.Google Scholar
Milner, Stephen J. “Fanno bandire, notificare, et expressamente comandare: Town Criers and the Information Economy of Renaissance Florence.” I Tatti Studies in the Italian Renaissance 16 (2013): 107151.Google Scholar
Minor, Andrew C. and Mitchell, Bonner, eds., A Renaissance Entertainment: Festivities for the Marriage of Cosimo I, Duke of Florence, in 1539. Columbia: University of Missouri Press, 1968.Google Scholar
Mitchell, Bonner. Rome in the High Renaissance: The Age of Leo X. The Centers of Civilization Series, 33. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 1973.Google Scholar
Mommsen, Theodor. Medieval and Renaissance Studies. Edited by Rice, E. F., Jr. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1959.Google Scholar
Monti, Gennaro Maria. Le villanelle alla Napolitana e l’antica lirica dialettale a Napoli. Città di Castello: Il Solco, 1925.Google Scholar
Morelli, Arnaldo. “Portraits of Musicians in Sixteenth-Century Italy: A Specific Typology.” Music in Art 26 (2001): 4757.Google Scholar
Motta, Emilio. “Musici alla Corte degli Sforza. Richerche e documenti milanesi.” Archivio storico Lombardo 14 (1887): 2964, 278340, 514561. Repr. Genéva: Minkoff, 1977.Google Scholar
Müntz, Eugène. Les arts à la cour des Papes pendant le XVe et le XVIe siècle. 3 vols. Paris: Ernest Thorin, 1878–1882.Google Scholar
Murata, Magaret. “Cantar ottave, cantar storie,” in Word, Image, and Song I: Essays on Early Modern Italy, ed. Cypess, R., Glixon, B. R., and Link, N.. Rochester, NY: University of Rochester Press, 2013, 287317.Google Scholar
NGD = New Grove Dictionary of Music and MusiciansGoogle Scholar
Najemy, John. “Florentine Politics and Urban Spaces,” in Crum, and Paoletti, , eds. Renaissance Florence: A Social History, 1954.Google Scholar
Naldius Florentinus, Naldus. Epigrammaton Liber. Edited by Perosa, A.. Budapest: K.M. Egyetemi Nyomda, 1943.Google Scholar
Naselli, Carmelina. “L’antica canzone napoletana di Capodanno Io te canto in discanto.” Siculorum Gymnasium: Rassegna della Facoltà di lettere e filosofia dell’Università di Catania 8, no. 2 (1955): 322335.Google Scholar
Nelson, Jonathan Katz. Botticelli and Filippino: Passion and Grace. Milan: Skira, 2004.Google Scholar
Nelson, William. “From ‘Listen, Lordings’ to ‘Dear Reader’.” University of Toronto Quarterly 46 (1976–1977): 110124.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nesi, Emilia. Il diario della Stamperia di Ripoli. Florence: Bernardo Seeber, 1903.Google Scholar
Niccolò da Correggio. Opere: Cefalo-Psiche-Silva-Rime. Edited by Tissoni Benvenuti, A.. Bari: Laterza, 1969.Google Scholar
Noakes, Susan. “The Development of the Book Market in Late Quattrocento Italy: Printers’ Failures and the Role of the Middlemen.” Journal of Medieval and Renaissance Studies 11 (1981): 2355.Google Scholar
Nocita, Teresa. Bibliografia della lirica italiana minore del Trecento. Rome: Salerno, 2008.Google Scholar
Nosow, Robert. “The Debate on Song in the Accademia Fiorentina.” Early Music History 21 (2002): 175221.Google Scholar
Napolitano, Notturno. Opera nova amorosa de Nocturno napolitano ne la qual si contiene Strambotti, Sonetti, Capitoli, Epistole, Et un disperata. Libro Primo. Milan: Gotardo da Ponte, 1518.Google Scholar
Novati, Francesco. “Le poesie sulla natura delle frutte e i canterini del Comune di Firenze nel ‘300.” Giornale storico della letteratura italiana 19 (1892): 5579.Google Scholar
Nuttall, Paula. From Flanders to Florence: The Impact of Netherlandish Painting, 1400–1500. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2004.Google Scholar
Nutter, David. “Ippolito Tromboncino, Cantore al Liuto.” I Tatti Studies: Essays in the Renaissance 3 (1989): 127174.Google Scholar
Olive, Kathleen. “The Codex Rustici and the Fifteenth-century Florentine artisan.” Renaissance Studies 23 (2009): 593608.Google Scholar
O’Malley, John W. Praise and Blame in Renaissance Rome: Rhetoric, Doctrine, and Reform in the Sacred Orators of the Papal Court, c. 1450–1521. Duke monographs in medieval and Renaissance studies, no. 3. Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 1979.Google Scholar
Ong, Walter J. Orality and Literacy: The Technologizing of the Word. London: Methuen, 1982.Google Scholar
Orvieto, Paolo. “Angelo Poliziano, Compare della brigata laurenziana.” Lettere italiane 25 (1973): 301318.Google Scholar
Orvieto, Paolo. Pulci medievale: Studio sulla poesia volgare fiorentina del quattrocento. Rome: Salerno Editrice, 1978.Google Scholar
Orvieto, Paolo. Poesia comico-realistica: dalle origine al Cinquecento. Rome: Carocci, 2000.Google Scholar
Orvieto, Paolo. Poliziano e l’ambiente mediceo. Sestante, 17. Roma: Salerno, 2009.Google Scholar
Walter, Paatz, and Paatz, Elisabeth. Die Kirchen von Florenz. 6 vols. Frankfurt: Klostermann, 1952–1955.Google Scholar
Page, Christopher. Voices and Instruments of the Middle Ages: Instrumental Practice and Songs in France 1100–1300. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1986.Google Scholar
Palisca, Claude V. Humanism in Italian Renaissance Musical Thought. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1985.Google Scholar
Palisca, Claude V. Studies in the History of Italian Music and Music Theory. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1994.Google Scholar
Palisca, Claude V. “Vincenzo Galilei and some Links between ‘Pseudo-Monody’ and Monody,” in Studies in the History of Italian Music and Music Theory. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1994, 346363.Google Scholar
Pantani, Italo. “Padova per Francesco Vannozzo,” in La cultura volgare padovana nell’ età del Petrarca: Atti del convegno Monselice-Padova, 7–8 Maggio 2004, ed. Brugnolo, F. and Verlato, Z. L.. Padua: Il Poligrafo, 2006.Google Scholar
Parenti, Giovanni. Benet Garret detto il Cariteo: Profilo di un poeta. Florence: Olschki, 1993.Google Scholar
Parigi, Luigi. Laurentiana: Lorenzo de’ Medici cultore della musica. Florence: Olschki, 1954.Google Scholar
Pasquini, Emilio. “Il codice di Filippo Scarlatti (Firenze, Biblioteca Venturi Ginori Lisci, 3).” Studi di filologia italiana 22 (1964): 363580.Google Scholar
Pasquini, Emilio. “Letteratura popolareggiante, comica e giocosa, lirica minore e narrativa in volgare del Quattrocento,” in Storia della letteratura italiana, ed. Malato, E. 14 vols. Rome: Salerno, 1996, III, 803911.Google Scholar
Peirone, Claudia. Storia e tradizione della terza rima: poesia e cultura nella Firenze del Quattrocento. Turin: Tirrenia, 1990.Google Scholar
Pèrcopo, Erasmo. Le rime di Benedetto Gareth detto il Chariteo. Biblioteca napoletana di storia e letteratura, 1. Naples: Tip. dell’Accad. delle scienze, 1892.Google Scholar
Petrarca, Francesco. Petrarch’s Lyric Poems: The Rime Sparse and Other Lyrics. Edited by Durling, R. M.. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1976.Google Scholar
Petrarca, Francesco. Letters of Old Age. Translated by A. Bernardo, S. Levin, and R. Bernardo, vol. I. Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1992.Google Scholar
Petrella, Giancarlo. “Ad instantia d’Hippolito Ferrarese: un cantimbanco editore nell’Italia del cinquecento.” Paratesto 8 (2011): 2379.Google Scholar
Petrobelli, Pierluigi. “Un leggiadretto velo’ e altre cose petrarchesche.” Rivista italiana di musicologia 10 (1975): 3245.Google Scholar
Petrucci, Armando. Writers and Readers in Medieval Italy: Studies in the History of Written Culture, trans. C. M. Radding. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1995.Google Scholar
Picotti, Giovanni Battista. La giovinezza de Leone X. Milan: Hoepli, 1928.Google Scholar
Picotti, Giovanni Battista. Ricerche umanistiche. Studi di lettere, storia e filosofia pub. dalla Scuola normale superiore di Pisa, 24. Florence: Nuova Italia, 1955.Google Scholar
Pieri, Marzia. La scena boschereccia nel Rinascimento italiano. Padua: Liviana, 1983.Google Scholar
Pieri, Marzia. Lo Strascino da Siena e la sua opera poetica e teatrale. Pisa: ETS, 2010.Google Scholar
Pieri, Marzia.“Narrare, Cantare, Recitare: Appunti sullo spettatore cinquecentesco,” in “Por tal variedad tiene belleza”: Omaggio a Maria Grazia Profeti, ed. Gallo, A. and Vaiopoulos, K.. Florence: Alinea, 2012, 115126.Google Scholar
Pirrotta, Nino. “Due sonetti musicali del secolo XIV,” in Miscelánea en homenaje a Monseñor Higinio Anglés. Barcelona: Consejo Superior de Investigadones Cientificas, 1958–61, 651662.Google Scholar
Pirrotta, Nino. “Su alcuni testi italiani di coposizioni polifoniche quattrocentesche.” Quadrivium 14 (1973): 133157.Google Scholar
Pirrotta, Nino. Music and Culture in Italy from the Middle Ages to the Baroque: A Collection of Essays. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1984.Google Scholar
Pirrotta, Nino. “Before the Madrigal.” Journal of Musicology 12 (1994): 237252.Google Scholar
Pirrotta, Nino._. and Pavoledo, Elena. Music and Theatre from Poliziano to Monteverdi. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1982.Google Scholar
Plaisance, Michel. Antonfrancesco Grazzini di Lasca (1505–1584): Écrire dans la Florence des Médicis. Manziana: Vecchiarelli, 2005.Google Scholar
Plett, Heinrich. Enargeia in Antiquity and the Early Modern Age: The Aesthetics of Evidence. Leiden: Brill, 2012.Google Scholar
Poliziano, Angelo. Prose volgari inedite e poesie latine e greche edite e inedite, ed Del Lungo, I.. Florence: Barbèra, 1867.Google Scholar
Poliziano, Angelo. Epistole inedite de Angelo Poliziano. Edited by d’Amore, L.. Naples: D’Auria, 1909.Google Scholar
Poliziano, Angelo. Le stanze, l’Orfeo e le Rime di messer Angelo Ambrogini, Poliziano. Edited by Carducci, G.. Bologna: Zanichelli, 1912.Google Scholar
Poliziano, Angelo. Sylva in Scabiem. Edited by Perosa, A.. Rome: Edizioni di Storia e Letteratura, 1954.Google Scholar
Poliziano, Angelo. Opera omnia. Edited by Maïer, I.. 3 vols. Monumenta politica philosophica humanistica rariora, ser. 1, n. 16–18. Turin: Bottega d’Erasmo, 1970.Google Scholar
Poliziano, Angelo. Silvae. Edited and translated by Fantazzi, C.. I Tatti Renaissance Library, 14. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2004.Google Scholar
Pollack, Susanne, ed. Il dolce potere delle corde: Orfeo, Apollo, Arione e Davide nella grafica tra Quattro e Cinquecento. Florence: Olschki, 2012.Google Scholar
Polzer, Joseph. “Ambrogio Lorenzetti’s War and Peace Murals Revisited: Contributions to the Meaning of the “Good Government Allegory.” Artibus et Historiae 23 (2002): 63105.Google Scholar
Pon, Lisa. “Further Musings on Raphael’s Parnassus,” in Imitation, Representation and Printing in the Italian Renaissance, ed. Erikson, R. and Malmanger, M.. Pisa: F. Serra, 2009, 109207.Google Scholar
Pontano, Giovanni Gioviano. I trattati delle virtù sociali: De liberalitate, De beneficentia, De magnificentia, De splendore, De conviventia. Edited by Tateo, F.. Testi di letteratura italiana. Rome: Edizioni dell’Ateneo, 1965.Google Scholar
Pontano, Giovanni Gioviano. Baiae. Translated by R. G. Dennis. The I Tatti Renaissance Library, 22. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2006.Google Scholar
Pontano, Giovanni Gioviano. Dialogues, vol. 1, Charon and Antonius. Edited and translated by Gaisser, J. H.. I Tatti Renaissance Library, 53. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2012.Google Scholar
Pontano, Giovanni Gioviano. Aegidius: dialogo. Edited by Tateo, F.. Rome: Roma nel Rinascimento, 2014.Google Scholar
Pontano, Giovanni Gioviano. De fortitudine. Liber secundus de fortitudine domestica: De cecitate et malis aliis corporis. Naples: Mathiam Moravum, 1490.Google Scholar
Predelli, Maria Bendinelli. “Sulla letteratura popolare nella Toscana del Trecento.” Quaderni medievali 7 (1979): 5774.Google Scholar
Predelli, Maria Bendinelli. “The Textualization of Early Italian Cantari,” in Textual Cultures of Medieval Italy: Essays from the 41st Conference on Editorial Problems, ed. Robins, W. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2011, 145164.Google Scholar
Prier, Raymond A. “Neapolitan Imitationes Propertianiae: Ancient Sound in the Verses of Pontano and Chariteo,” in Reconsidering the Renaissance, ed. Di Cesare, M.. Binghamton, NY: Medieval and Early Renaissance Studies and Texts, 1992, 89108.Google Scholar
Prizer, William. Courtly Pastimes: The Frottole of Marchetto Cara. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Research Press, 1980.Google Scholar
Prizer, William. “Lutenists at the Court of Mantua in the late Fifteenth and Early Sixteenth Centuries.” Journal of the Lute Society of America 13 (1980): 534.Google Scholar
Prizer, William. “Isabella d’Este and Lorenzo da Pavia, ‘Master Instrument-Maker.” Early Music History 2 (1982): 87127.Google Scholar
Prizer, William. “Isabella d’Este and Lucrezia Borgia as Patrons of Music: The Frottola at Mantua and Ferrara.” Journal of the American Musicological Society 38 (1985): 133.Google Scholar
Prizer, William. “The Frottola and the Unwritten Tradition,” Studi musicali 15 (1986): 337.Google Scholar
Prizer, William. “Music at the Court of the Sforza: The Birth and Death of a Musical Center.” Musica Disciplina 43 (1989): 141193.Google Scholar
Prizer, William. “Games of Venus: Secular Vocal Music in the Late Quattrocento and Early Cinquecento.” Journal of Musicology 9 (1991): 356.Google Scholar
Prizer, William. “Una Virtù Molto Conveniente a Madonne: Isabella D’Este as a Musician.” The Journal of Musicology 17 (1999): 1049.Google Scholar
Prizer, William. “Reading Carnival: The Creation of a Florentine Carnival Song.” Early Music History 23 (2004): 185252.Google Scholar
Prosperi, Valentina. “Iliads Without Homer: The Renaissance Aftermath of the Trojan Legend in Italian Poetry (ca. 1400–1600),” in The Trojan Wars and the Making of the Modern World, ed. Goldwyn, A.. Uppsala: Uppsala University, 2015, 1534.Google Scholar
Pucci, Antonio. Il contrasto delle donne. Edited by Pace, A.. Menasha, WI: Banta, 1944.Google Scholar
Pucci, Antonio. Libro di varie storie. Edited by Varvaro, A.. Palermo: Accademia di Scienze, Lettere ed Arti, 1957.Google Scholar
Pulci, Luigi. Morgante e Lettere. Edited by De Robertis, D.. Florence: Sansoni, 1962.Google Scholar
Pulci, Luigi. Morgante: The Epic Adventures of Orlando and His Giant Friend Morgante. Translated by J. Tusiani. Bloomington: Indiana Univ. Press, 1998.Google Scholar
Pyle, Cynthia M. “Il tema d’Orfeo, la musica e le favole mitologiche del tardo Quattrocento,” in Ecumenismo della cultura, ed. Tarugi, G.. 3 vols. Florence: Olschki: 1981, II, 121139.Google Scholar
Quartana, Maria. “Un umanista minore della corte di Leone X: Raphael Brandolinus.” Atti della Società Italiana per il progresso delle scienze 20 (1932): 462472.Google Scholar
Quintilian (Marcus Fabius Quintilianus). Institutio oratoria. Edited and translated by Russell, D. A., The Orator’s Education, 5 vols. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2001.Google Scholar
Rabil, Albert, ed. Renaissance Humanism: Foundations, Forms, and Legacy. 3 vols. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1988.Google Scholar
Rajna, Pio. “Il cantare del cantari e il sirventese del Maestro di tutte le arti.” Zeitschrift für Romanische Philologie 2 (1878): 2254, 419437.Google Scholar
Rajna, Pio. Ricerche intorno ai Reali di Francia. Bologna: G. Romagnoli, 1872.Google Scholar
Re, Caterina. Girolamo Benivieni, Fiorentino. Cenni sulla vita e sulle opere. Città di Castello: S. Lapi, 1906.Google Scholar
Rebhorn, Wayne A. Courtly Performances: Masking and Festivity in Castiglione’s Book of the Courtier. Detroit: Wayne State University Press, 1978.Google Scholar
Refini, Eugenio. “Reappraising the Charlatan in Early Modern Italy: The Case of Jacopo Coppa.” Italian Studies 71 (2016): 197211.Google Scholar
Rhodes, Dennis E. “Altissimo: GW 1581.” Gutenberg-Jahrbuch 57 (1982): 234235.Google Scholar
Ricciardi, Lucia. Col senno, col tesoro, e colla lancia: Riti e giochi cavallereschi nella Firenze del Magnifico Lorenzo. Florence: Le Lettere, 1992.Google Scholar
Richa, Giuseppe. Notizie istoriche delle chiese fiorentine divise ne’ suoi quartieri. 10 vols. Florence: Viviani, 1754–1762; repr. Rome: Multigrafica, 1972.Google Scholar
Richardson, Brian. “Recitato e Cantato: The Oral Diffusion of Lyric Poetry in Sixteenth-Century Italy,” in Theatre, Opera, and Performance in Italy from the Fifteenth Century to the Present: Essays in Honour of Richard Andrews, ed. Richardson, B., Gilson, S., and Keen, C.. Leeds: Society for Italian Studies, 2004, 6782.Google Scholar
Richardson, Brian. “The Concept of a Lingua Commune in Renaissance Italy,” in The Languages of Italy: Histories and Dictionaries, ed. Lepschy, A. P. and Tosi, A.. Ravenna: Longo, 2007, 1330.Google Scholar
Richardson, Brian. Manuscript Culture in Renaissance Italy. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2009.Google Scholar
Richardson, Brian. “Manuscript, Print, Orality and the Authority of Texts in Renaissance Italy,” in Authority in European Book Culture 1400–1600, ed. Bromilow, P.. Aldershot: Ashgate, 2013, 1529.Google Scholar
Richardson, Brian. “The Social Connotations of Singing Verse in Cinquecento Italy.” The Italianist 34 (2014): 362378.Google Scholar
Richardson, Brian. “Sixteenth-Century Petrarchists and Musical Settings of Their Verse,” in Dall’Aglio, , et al. Voices and Texts in Early Modern Italian Society, 124138.Google Scholar
Rijser, David. Raphael’s Poetics: Art and Poetry in High Renaissance Rome. Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press, 2012.Google Scholar
Robins, William. “Antonio Pucci, Guardiano degli Atti della Mercanzia.” Studi e problem di critica testuale 61 (2000): 2970.Google Scholar
Robins, William. “Antonio Pucci’s Contrasto delle donne and the Circulation of Fourteenth-Century Florentine Dramatic Poetry.” The Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America 95 (2001): 519.Google Scholar
Robins, William. “Vernacular Textualities in Renaissance Florence,” in The Vernacular Tongue: Medieval and Postmedieval Vernacularity, ed. Somerset, F. and Watson., N. University Park: Penn State University Press, 2003, 112131.Google Scholar
Robins, William. “Poetic Rivalry: Antonio Pucci, Jacopo Salimbeni, and Antonio da Ferrara,” in Firenze alla vigilia del Rinascimento: Antonio Pucci e i suoi contemporanei, ed. Predelli, M.. Florence: Cadmo, 2006, 307322.Google Scholar
Rocke, Michael. Forbidden Friendships: Homosexuality and Male Culture in Renaissance Florence. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1996.Google Scholar
Root, Robert K. “Publication before Printing.” Proceedings of the Modern Language Association 28 (1913): 145168.Google Scholar
Rospocher, Massimo. “Dall’oralità alla stampa: rivoluzione o transizione?: I cantastorie nel sistema multimedia del Cinquecento,” in La transizione come problema storiografico: Le fasi critiche dello sviluppo della modernità (1494–1973), ed. Pompeni, P. and Haupt, H.-G.. Bologna: il Mulino, 2013, 151171.Google Scholar
Rospocher, Massimo. “Songs of War: Historical and Literary Narratives of the ‘Horrendous Italian Wars’ (1494–1559),” in War: Early Modern and Contemporary Perspectives, ed. Mondani, M. and Rospocher, M.. Bologna: il Mulino, 2013, 7997.Google Scholar
Rospocher, Massimo. “In vituperium status Veneti: The Case of Niccolò Zoppino.” The Italianist 34 (2014): 349361.Google Scholar
Rospocher, Massimo. “The Battle for the Piazza: Creative Antagonism between Itinerant Preachers and Street Singers in Late Medieval and Early Modern Italy,” in Dall’Aglio, , et al., Voices and Texts in Early Modern Italian Society, 212228.Google Scholar
Rospocher, Massimo. and Salzberg, Rosa. “An Evanescent Public Sphere: Voices, Spaces, and Publics in Venice during the Italian Wars,” in Beyond the Public Sphere: Opinions, Publics, Spaces in Early Modern Europe, ed. Rospocher, M.. Bologna: il Mulino, 2012, 93114.Google Scholar
Rossi, Adamo. “Memorie di musica civile in Perugia nei secoli XIV e XV.” Giornale di erudizione artistica 3 (1874): 129152.Google Scholar
Rossi, Antonio. Serafino Aquilano e la poesia cortigiana. Brescia: Morcelliana, 1980.Google Scholar
Rossi, Giorgio. “Alcune rime inedite di Jacopo Corsi.” Giornale storico della letteratura italiana 26 (1897): 390397.Google Scholar
Rossi, Paolo. Logic and the Art of Memory: The Quest for a Universal Language, trans. S. Clucas. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2000 (Italian version: Milan, 1983).Google Scholar
Rossi, Vittorio. “Di una rimatrice a di un rimatore del sec. XV: Girolama Corsi Ramos e Jacopo Corsi.” Giornale storico della letteratura italiana 15 (1890): 183215.Google Scholar
Rowland, Ingrid D. “The Antipetrarchismo of Serafino Ciminelli ‘L’Aquilano’ (D. 1500),” in Dynamique d’une expansion culturelle: Petrarque en Europe, XIVe–XXe siècle, ed. Blanc, P.. Paris: Champion, 2001, 241256.Google Scholar
Rowland, Ingrid D. The Culture of the High Renaissance: Ancients and Moderns in Sixteenth-Century Rome. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1998.Google Scholar
Rua, Giuseppe. “Postille su tre poeti ciechi: Francesco da Ferrara, Giovanni e Francesco da Firenze.” Giornale storico della letteratura italiana 11 (1888): 294298.Google Scholar
Rubin, Patricia. “Understanding Renaissance Portraiture,” in The Renaissance Portrait from Donatello to Bellini, ed. Christiansen, C. and Weppelmann, S.. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2011, 225.Google Scholar
Rubinstein, Nicolai. “Political Ideas in Sienese Art: The Frescoes by Ambrogio Lorenzetti and Taddeo di Bartolo in the Palazzo Pubblico.” Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 21 (1958): 179207.Google Scholar
Rubinstein, Nicolai. “The Piazza della Signoria in Florence,” in Festschrift Herbert Siebenhüner, ed. Hubala, E. and Schweikhart, G.. Würzburg: Schoning, 1978, 1930.Google Scholar
Ruffini, Franco. Commedia e festa nel Rinascimento: la “Calandria” alla corte di Urbino. Bologna: il Mulino, 1986.Google Scholar
Ruggiero, Guido. “Mean Streets, Familiar Streets, or The Fat Woodcarver and the Masculine Spaces of Renaissance Florence,” in Crum, and Paoletti, , eds. Renaissance Florence: A Social History, 295310.Google Scholar
Ruini, Roberto. Quattrocento fiorentino e dintorni: saggi di letteratura italiana. Florence: Phasar, 2007.Google Scholar
Russo, Mauda Bregoli. Letterati a corte: Ferrara, Firenze, Mantova. Naples: Loffredo, 2004.Google Scholar
Ryder, Alan Charles, Frederick. The Kingdom of Naples under Alfonso the Magnanimous: The Making of a Modern State. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1976.Google Scholar
Sabatini, Francesco. Napoli angioina: Cultura e società. Naples: Edizione Scientifiche Italiane, 1975.Google Scholar
Sacchetti, Franco. Il libro delle rime. Edited by Ageno, F. B.. Florence: Olschki, 1990.Google Scholar
Sacchetti, Franco. Il trecentonovelle. Edited by Lanza, A.. Florence: Sansoni, 1993.Google Scholar
Sacchi, Maria Mussini, Pia. “Le ottave epigrammatiche di Bernardo Accolti nel ms. Rossiano 680. Per la storia dell’epigramma in volgare tra quattro e cinquecento.” Interpres 15 (1995): 219301.Google Scholar
Saccone, Edoardo. “Grazia, Sprezzatura, Affettazione in the Courtier,” in Hanning, and Rosand, , eds. Castiglione: The Ideal and the Real in Renaissance Culture, 4567.Google Scholar
Sadoleto, Jacopo. De pueris recte instituendis, trans. E. T. Campagnac and K. Forbes, Sadoleto on Education. London: Oxford University Press, 1916.Google Scholar
Saffioti, Tito. I giullari in Italia: lo spettacolo, il pubblico, i testi. Milan: Xenia, 1990.Google Scholar
Salamone, N. Cannata. “Per un catalogo di libri di rime 1470–1530: Considerazioni sul canzoniere,” in Santagata, and Quondam, , Il libro di poesia dal copista al tipografo, 8389.Google Scholar
Salvemini, Gaetano, ed. Iohannis Viterbiensis: Liber de regimine civtitatum. Bibliotheca Iuridica Medii Aevi, III. Bologna: Petri Virano, 1901, 125280.Google Scholar
Salvemini, Gaetano. “Il Liber de regimine civitatum di Giovanni di Viterbo.” Giornale storico della letteratura italiana 41 (1903): 284303.Google Scholar
Adam, Salimbene de. The Chronicles of Salimbene de Adam. Translated by J. L. Baird, G. Baglivi, and J. R. Kane. Binghamton, NY: Center for Medieval and Early Renaissance Texts, 1986.Google Scholar
Adam, Salimbene de. Cronica. Edited by Nobili, C. S.. Rome: Istituto poligrafico e Zecca dello Stato, 2002.Google Scholar
Salzberg, Rosa. “The Lyre, the Pen and the Press: Performers and Cheap Print in Cinquecento Venice,” in The Books of Venice, ed. Kallendorf, C. and Pon, L.. New Castle, DE: Oak Knoll Press, 2008, 251276.Google Scholar
Salzberg, Rosa. “In the Mouths of Charlatans. Street Performers and the Dissemination of Pamphlets in Italy.” Renaissance Studies 24 (2010): 638653.Google Scholar
Salzberg, Rosa. “El vulgo zanza. Spazi, pubblici, voci a Venezia durante le guerre d’Italia.” Storica 48 (2010): 83120.Google Scholar
Salzberg, Rosa. “‘Selling stories and many other things in and through the City:’ Peddling Print in Renaissance Florence and Venice.” Sixteenth Century Journal 42 (2011): 737759.Google Scholar
Salzberg, Rosa. and Rospocher, Massimo. “Street Singers in Italian Renaissance Urban Culture and Communication.” Cultural and Social History 9 (2012): 926.Google Scholar
Salzberg, Rosa. and Rospocher, Massimo. Ephemeral City: Cheap Print and Urban Culture in Renaissance Venice. Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2014.Google Scholar
Salzberg, Rosa.“The Word on the Street: Street Performers and Devotional Texts in Italian Renaissance Cities.” The Italianist 34 (2014): 336348.Google Scholar
Salzberg, Rosa. “Poverty Makes Me Invisible: Street Singers and Hard Times in Italian Renaissance Cities.” Italian Studies 71 (2016): 212224.Google Scholar
Sannazzaro, Iacopo. Arcadia and Piscatorial Eclogues. Translated by R. Nash. Detroit: Wayne State University Press, 1966.Google Scholar
Sannazzaro, Iacopo. Arcadia. Edited by Vecce, C.. Classici, 26. Rome: Carocci editore, 2013.Google Scholar
Santagata, Marco. La lirica aragonese: Studi sulla poesia Napoletana del secondo quattrocento. Padua: Antenore, 1979.Google Scholar
Santagata, Marco. and Quondam, Amedeo, eds. Il libro di poesia dal copista al tipografo: Ferrara, 29–31 maggio 1987. Modena: Edizioni Panini, 1989.Google Scholar
Santagata, Marco. and Carrai, Stefano. La lirica di corte nell’Italia del Quattrocento. Milan: Francoangeli, 1993.Google Scholar
Sanudo, Marin. I diarii. Edited by Fulin, R., et al. 58 vols. Venice: Visentini, 1879–1903; repr. Bologna: Forni, 1969–1979.Google Scholar
Sapegno, Natalino. Poetri minori del trecento. Milan: Ricciardi, 1952.Google Scholar
Sapegno, Natalino. Pagine di storia letteratura, 2nd ed. Florence: La Nuova Italia, 1986.Google Scholar
Scapecchi, Piero. “Una dibattuta questione: da [Napoli, tipografia del Terentius] a [Firenze, Niccolò di Lorenzo per Antonio di Guido]. Sull’identificazione e la localizzazione di una ignota tipografia.” Rara volumina 14 (2007): 511.Google Scholar
Schizzerotto, Giancarlo. Otto poemetti volgari sulla battaglia di Ravenna di 1512, integralmente pubblicai e annotati, con la riproduzioni che adornano le antiche stampe. Ravenna: Edizioni dalla Rotonda, 1968.Google Scholar
Scholz, Bernard F. “Ekphrasis and Enargeia in Quintilian’s Institutionis oratoriae libri XII,” in Rhetorica movet: Studies in Historical and Modern Rhetoric in Honor of Heinrich F. Plett, ed. Oesterreich, P. and Sloane, T.. Leiden: Brill, 1999, 324.Google Scholar
Serafino de’ Ciminelli dall’Aquila (Serafino Aquilano). Le rime di Serafino de’ Ciminelli dall’Aquila. Edited by Menghini, M.. 2 vols. Bologna: Romagnoli-Dall’Acqua, 1894.Google Scholar
Serafino de’ Ciminelli dall’Aquila (Serafino Aquilano). Strambotti. Edited by Rossi, A.. Parma: Guanda, 2002.Google Scholar
Serafino de’ Ciminelli dall’Aquila (Serafino Aquilano). Sonetti e altre rime. Edited by Rossi, A.. del Cinquecento, Biblioteca, 119. Roma: Bulzoni, 2005.Google Scholar
Sercambi, Giovanni. Le Chroniche. Edited by Bongi, S.. 3 vols. Rome: Istituto Storico Italiano, 1892.Google Scholar
Shearman, John. “The Vatican Stanze: Functions and Decoration.” Proceedings of the British Academy 57 (1971): 369424.Google Scholar
Shearman, John. Raphael in Early Modern Sources (1483–1602). 2 vols. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2003.Google Scholar
Shephard, Tim. Echoing Helicon: Music, Art and Identity in the Este Studioli, 1440–1530. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2014.Google Scholar
Signorini, Stefania. Poesia a corte: le rime per Elisabetta Gonzaga (Urbino 1488–1526). Pisa: ETS, 2008.Google Scholar
Slim, H. Colin. “Musicians on Parnassus.” Studies in the Renaissance 12 (1965): 134163.Google Scholar
Slim, H. Colin. “An Iconographical Echo of the Unwritten Tradition in a Verdelot Madrigal.” Studi Musicali 17 (1988): 3356.Google Scholar
Slim, H. Colin. “The Lutenist’s Hand.” Achademia Leonardi Vinci 1 (1988): 3234.Google Scholar
Smart, Janet L. “Gaspara Stampa’s Poetry for Performance.” Journal of the Rocky Mountain Medieval and Renaissance Association 12 (1991): 6184.Google Scholar
Soldati, Benedetto. “Improvvisatori, canterini e buffoni in un dialogo del Pontano,” in Miscellanea di studi critici pubblicati in onore di Guido Mazzoni dai suoi discipali, ed. della Torre, A. and Rambaldi, P. L.. 2 vols. Florence: Galileiana, 1907, I: 321342.Google Scholar
Soranzo, Giovanni. L’umanista canonico regolare lateranense Matteo Bosso di Verona: (1427–1502): i suoi scritti e il suo Epistolario. Padua: Libreria editrice Gregoriana, 1965.Google Scholar
Soranzo, Matteo. “Audience and Quattrocento Pastoral: The Case of Jacopo Sannazaro’s Arcadia.” Skepsi 2 (2009): 4965.Google Scholar
Soranzo, Matteo. “Reading Marsilio Ficino in Quattrocento Italy: The Case of Aragonese Naples.” Quaderni d’italianistica 32 (2011): 2746.Google Scholar
Speight, Kathleen. “Vox Populi in Antonio Pucci,” in Italian Studies Presented to E.R. Vincent, ed. Brand, C. P., Foster, K., and Limentani, U.. Cambridge: Heffer, 1962, 7691.Google Scholar
Speroni, Gian Battista, ed. Bono Giamboni: Fiore di rettorica. Pavia: Università degli Studi di Pavia, 1994.Google Scholar
Spilner, Paula Lois. “Ut Civitas Amplietur: Studies in Florentine Urban Development, 1282–1400.” 2 vols. PhD diss., Columbia University, 1987.Google Scholar
Spongano, Raffaele. Nozione ed esempi di metrica Italiana. Bologna: Pàtron, 1966.Google Scholar
Stevens, John. Words and Music in the Middle Ages: Song, Narrative, Dance and Drama, 1050–1350. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1986.Google Scholar
Stoppelli, Pasquale. “I sonetti di Giovanni di Firenze (Malizia Barattone).” Annali dell’Istituto di filologia moderna dell’Università di Roma 1 (1977): 189221.Google Scholar
Stoppelli, Pasquale. “Malizia Barattone (Giovanni di Firenze) autore del Pecorone,” Filologia e critica 2 (1977): 134.Google Scholar
Statius, Publius Papinius. Silvae, trans. D. R. Shackleton-Bailey. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2003.Google Scholar
Storey, Christina. “The Philosopher, the Poet, and the Fragment: Ficino, Poliziano, and Le stanze per la giostra.” The Modern Language Review 98 (2003): 602619.Google Scholar
Storia di Ferrara, ed. Vasina, A.. 7 vols. Ferrara: G. Corbo, ca. 1987–2004.Google Scholar
Strocchia, Sharon. “Theaters of Everyday Life,” in Crum, and Paoletti, , eds. Renaissance Florence: A Social History, 5580.Google Scholar
Tagliavini, Luigi. “Metrica e ritmica nei modi di cantare ottave,” in Forme e vicende. Per Giovanni Pozzi, ed. Besomi, O.. Padua: Antenore, 1988, 239267.Google Scholar
Tanturli, Giuliano. “I Benci copisti: vicende della cultura fiorentina volgare fra Antonio Pucci e il Ficino.” Studi di filologia italiana 36 (1978): 197313.Google Scholar
Tartaro, Achille. La letteratura civile e religiosa del Trecento. Bari: Laterza, 1972.Google Scholar
Tartaro, Achille. La letteratura italiana Laterza: Il primo Quattrocento. Bari: Laterza, 1971.Google Scholar
Tartaro, Achille. Forme poetiche del Trecento. Bari: Laterza, 1981.Google Scholar
Tarulli, Luigi. “Una scuola di canto a Perugia nella prima metà sel sec. XIV.” Bollettino della Regia Deputazione di storia patria per l’Umbria 27 (1924): 339394.Google Scholar
Taylor, Andrew. “Songs of Praise and Blame and the Repertoire of the Gestour,” in The Entertainer in Medieval and Traditional Culture: A Symposium, ed. Anderson, F., Pettitt, T., and Schröder, R.. Odense: Odense University Press, 1997.Google Scholar
Tedeschi, Emma. La Rappresentazione d’Orfeo e la Tragedia d’Orfeo.” Atti e memorie, Reale Accademia virgiliana di Mantova, R. Deputazione di storia patria per l’antico ducato, new series 17–18 (1924–1925): 4774.Google Scholar
Thomae de Chobham Summa Confessorum. Edited by Broomfield, F.. Analecta Mediaevalia Namurcensia, 25. Louvain: Éditions Nauwelaertse, 1968.Google Scholar
Tissoni Benvenuti, Antonia. L’Orfeo del Poliziano, con il testo critico dell’originale e delle successive forme teatrali. 2nd rev. ed. Padua and Rome: Antenore, 2000.Google Scholar
Tissoni Benvenuti, Antonia. “La tipologia del libro di rime manoscritto e a stampa nel quattrocento,” in Santagata, and Quondam, , eds. Il libro di poesia dal copista al tipografo, 2533.Google Scholar
Tissoni Benvenuti, Antonia. “Una frottola inedita di Baccio Ugolino,” in Laurentia laurus: per Mario Martelli, ed. Bausi, F. and Fera, V.. Biblioteca umanistica, 1. Messina: Centro interdipartimentale di studi umanistici, 2004, 423432.Google Scholar
Tissoni Benvenuti, Antonia. “La ricezione delle Silvae di Stazio e la poesia all’improvviso nel Rinascimento,” in Gli antichi e i moderni: studi in onore di Roberto Cardini, ed. Bertolini, L. and Coppini, D.. 3 vols. Florence: Polistampa, 2010, III, 12841324.Google Scholar
Tocco, Felice and Bacci, Orazio. “Un trattatello mnemonico di Michele del Giogante.” Giornale storico della letteratura italiana 32 (1898): 327354.Google Scholar
Tomasello, Santina. “Arie per cantar l’ottave ceciliane nei manoscritti Riccardiani,” in Rime e suoni alla spagnola: atti della giornata internazionale di studi sulla chitarra barocca, ed. Veneziano, G.. Florence: Alinea, 2003, 109137.Google Scholar
Tomlinson, Gary. Music in Renaissance Magic. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1993.Google Scholar
Tomlinson, Gary. “Preliminary Thoughts on the Relations of Music and Magic in the Renaissance,” in In Cantu et in Sermone: For Nino Pirrotta on His 80th Birthday, ed. Seta, F. Della and Piperno, F.. Nedlands WA: Olschki/Univeristy of Western Australia Press, 1989, 121139.Google Scholar
Trachtenburg, Marvin. Dominion of the Eye: Urbanism, Art, and Power in Early Modern Florence. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1997.Google Scholar
Trexler, Richard. Public Life in Renaissance Florence. New York: Academic Press, 1980.Google Scholar
Trinkaus, Charles Edward. In Our Image and Likeness: Humanity and Divinity in Italian Humanist Thought. 2 vols. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1970.Google Scholar
Tristano, Richard M. “History ‘Without Scruple’: The Enlightenment Confronts the Middle Ages in Renaissance Ferrara.” Medievalia et Humanistica 38 (2012): 79121.Google Scholar
Ugolini, Francesco. I cantari d’argomento classico. Florence: Olschki, 1933.Google Scholar
Unglaub, Jonathan. “Bernardo Accolti, Raphael’s ‘Parnassus’ and a New Portrait by Andrea del Sarto.” Burlington Magazine 149 (2007): 1422.Google Scholar
Unglaub, Jonathan. “Bernardo Accolti, Raphael, and the Sistine Madonna: The Poetics of Desire and Pictorial Generation,” in Ut pictura amore: The Reflexive Imagery of Love in Artistic Theory and Practice, 1500–1700, ed. Melion, W. S., Woodall, J., and Zell, M.. Leiden: Brill, 2017, 612645.Google Scholar
Vacchelli, A.M. Monterosso. “Gli strumenti musicali nell’opera del Boccaccio,” in L’ars nova italiana del Trecento, IV, ed. Ziino, A.. Certaldo: Centri di studi sull’ars nova italiana del Trecento, 1978, 315344.Google Scholar
Valori, Niccolò. Vita di Lorenzo de’ Medici, scritta in lingua latina da Niccolò Valori, resa in volgare dal figlio Filippo Valori. Edited by Niccolini, E.. Vicenza: Accademia Olimpica, 1991.Google Scholar
Varchi, Benedetto. L’Hercolano. Florence: Giunti, 1570. Edited by Sorella, A.. 2 vols. Pescara: Libreria dell’Università, 1995.Google Scholar
Vasari, Giorgio. Le vite dei più eccellenti pittori, scultori e architettori. Edited by Milanesi, G.. 9 vols. Florence: Sansoni, 1906.Google Scholar
Vasari, Giorgio. Lives of the Most Eminent Painters, Sculptors, and Architects, trans. G. du C. de Vere. 10 vols. London: Warner, 1912–15.Google Scholar
Vecce, Carlo. Gli umanisti e la musica: Un’antologia de testo umanistici sulla musica. Milan: I.S.U. Università Cattolica, 1985.Google Scholar
Ventrone, Paola. Gli araldi della commedia: teatro a Firenze nel rinascimento. Pisa: Pacini Editore, 1993.Google Scholar
Ventrone, Paola. “Between Acting and Literacy: Origin of Italian Vernacular Comedy.” Journal de la Renaissance 5 (2007): 371–82.Google Scholar
Ventrone, Paola. ed. Lo spettacolo nelle città italiane del tardo medioevo: Forme, strategie e funzioni. Milan: EDUCatt, 2009.Google Scholar
Ventrone, Paola. Teatro civile e sacra rappresentazione a Firenze nel rinascimento. Florence: Le Lettere, 2016.Google Scholar
Ventrone, Paola. “Civic Performance in Renaissance Florence,” in Dall’Aglio, , et al., Voices and Texts in Early Modern Italian Society, 153169.Google Scholar
Verde, Armando. Lo studio fiorentino, 1473–1503: Ricerche e documenti. Pistoia: Presso Memorie Domenicane, 1977, III/2, 665720.Google Scholar
Verino, Ugolino. Carlias: Ein Epos des 15.Jahrhunderts, ed. Thurn, N.. Munich: Fink, 1995.Google Scholar
Villani, Filippo. Expositio seu comentum super ‘Comedia’ Dantis Allegherii. Edited by Bellomo, S.. Florence: Le Lettere, 1989.Google Scholar
Villani, Filippo. De origine civitatis Florentie et de eiusdem famosis civibus. Edited by Tanturli, G.. Padua: Antenore, 1997.Google Scholar
Villani, Giovanni. Nuova Cronica. Edited by Porta, G.. Milan-Parma: Fondazione Pietro Bembo-Guanda, 1991.Google Scholar
Villoresi, Marco. “Note e divagazioni sul canterino Antonio di Giovanni da Bacchereto (1425ca–1490).” Medioevo e rinascimento 13 (1999): 231247.Google Scholar
Villoresi, Marco. “Firenze e i fiorentini in alcuni testi cavallereschi del quattrocento.” Medioevo e Rinascimento 16 (2002): 75100.Google Scholar
Villoresi, Marco., ed. La fabbrica dei cavalieri: Cantari, poemi, romanzi in prosa fra medioevo e rinascimento. Rome: Salerno, 2005.Google Scholar
Villoresi, Marco. “La tradizione manoscritta dei testi cavallereschi in volgare. Cantari, poemi, romanzi in prosa,” in Villoresi, , ed., La fabbrica dei cavalieri, 1137.Google Scholar
Villoresi, Marco. “La biblioteca del canterino Michelangelo di Cristofano da Volterra,” in Villoresi, , ed., La fabbrica dei cavalieri, 175209.Google Scholar
Villoresi, Marco. “Tra Andrea da Barberino e Luigi Pulci. La letteratura cavalleresca a Firenze nel Quattrocento,” in Paladini di carta: il modello cavalleresco fiorentino, ed. Villoresi, M.. Rome: Bulzoni, 2006, 930.Google Scholar
Villoresi, Marco. “Zanobi della Barba, canterino ed editore del rinascimento,” in Il cantare italiano fra folklore e letteratura. Atti del convegno internazionale di Zurigo, Landesmuseum, 23–25 giugno 2005, ed. Picone, M. and Rubini, L.. Florence: Olschki, 2007, 461473.Google Scholar
Villoresi, Marco. “Panoramica sui poeti performativi d’età laurenziana.” Rassegna europea di letteratura italiana 34 (2009): 1133. Repr. in La voce e le parole, 197–220.Google Scholar
Villoresi, Marco. “La voce in piazza. Note e divagazioni sulla figura del canterino.” Paragone Letteratura 60 (2009): 4172. Repr. in La voce e le parole, 171–195.Google Scholar
Villoresi, Marco. La voce e le parole: studi sulla letteratura del Medioevo e del Rinascimento. Florence: Società Editrice Fiorentina, 2016.Google Scholar
Vitale, VitoBernabò Visconti nella novella e nella cronaca contemporanea.” Archivio storico lombardo 18 (1901): 261285.Google Scholar
Volpi, Guglielmo. “Francesco Cei poeta fiorentino dell’ultimo Quattrocento,” in Note di varia erudizione e critica letteraria (secoli XIV e XV). Florence: Bernardo Seeber, 1903, 5672.Google Scholar
Volpi, Guglielmo. “Lorenzo il Magnifico e Vallombrosa.” Archivio storico italiano ser. 7, vol. 22 (1934): 121132.Google Scholar
Voss, Angela. “Orpheus Redivivus: The Musical Magic of Marsilio Ficino,” in Marsilio Ficino: His Theology, His Philosophy, His Legacy, ed. Allen, M. J. B. and Rees, V.. Leiden: Brill, 2002, 227241.Google Scholar
Walker, Daniel P. “Ficino’s Spiritus and Music.” Annales Musicologiques I (1953): 131150.Google Scholar
Walker, Daniel P. Spiritual and Demonic Magic: from Ficino to Campanella. London: Warburg Institute, University of London Press, 1958; 2nd ed. Notre Dame, IN: University of Notre Dame Press, 1975.Google Scholar
Warburg, Aby. The Renewal of Pagan Antiquity. Los Angeles: Getty Center for the History of Art and the Humanities, 1999.Google Scholar
Warden, John, ed. Orpheus: The Metamorphosis of a Myth. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1982.Google Scholar
Watkins, Renee. “Il Burchiello (1404–1448): Poverty, Politics, and Poetry.” Italian Quarterly 14 (1970): 2157.Google Scholar
Watson, Paul F. “To Paint Poetry: Raphael on Parnassus,” in Renaissance Rereadings: Intertext and Context, ed. Horowitz, M. C., Cruz, A., and Furman, W.. Urbana, IL: University of Illinois Press, 1988, 113141.Google Scholar
Wegman, Rob. The Crisis of Music in Early Modern Europe, 1470–1530. New York: Routledge, 2005.Google Scholar
Welch, Anthony. Renaissance Epic and the Oral Past. Yale Studies in English. New Haven: Yale University Press, 2014.Google Scholar
Welles, Elizabeth B. “Orpheus and Arion as Symbols of Music in Mantegna’s Camera degli Sposi.” Studies in Iconography 13 (1989–1990): 113144.Google Scholar
Weller, Sanne. “Essendo di natura libero e sciolto: A Proposal for the Indentification of the Painter Visino and an Analysis of his Role in the Social and Cultural Life of Florence in the 1530s and 1540s.” Mitteilungen des Kunsthistorischen Instituts in Florenz 54 (2010–2012): 479504.Google Scholar
Wilkins, Ernest H. “On the Circulation of Petrarch’s Italian Lyrics during His Lifetime.” Modern Philology 46 (1948): 16.Google Scholar
Wilkins, Ernest H. “On Petrarch’s Ad seipsum and I’ vo pensando.” Speculum 32 (1957): 8491.Google Scholar
Wilkins, Ernest H. A History of Italian Literature, rev. ed. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1974.Google Scholar
Wilson, Blake. Music and Merchants: The Laudesi Companies of Republican Florence. Oxford: Clarendon Press 1992.Google Scholar
Wilson, Blake. “Hora mai sono in età: Savonarola and Music in Laurentian Florence,” in Una città e il suo profeta: Firenze di fronte al Savonarola, ed. Garfagnini, G. C.. Florence: Sismel, 2001, 283309.Google Scholar
Wilson, Blake. Singing Poetry in Renaissance Florence: the ‘Cantasi Come’ Tradition (1375–1550). Florence: Olschki, 2009.Google Scholar
Wilson, Blake. Transferring Tunes and Adjusting Lines: Leonardo Giustinian and the ‘Giustiniana’ in Quattrocento Florence,” in Uno gentile e subtile ingenio’: Studies in Honor of Bonnie Blackburn, ed. Bloxam, M. J. and Filocamo, G.. Turnhout: Brepols, 2009, 547567.Google Scholar
Wilson, Blake. “Poliziano and the Language of Lament from Isaac to Layolle,” in Sleuthing the Muse: Essays in Honor of William F. Prizer, ed. Forney, K. and Smith., J. New York: Pendragon Press, 2012, 85114.Google Scholar
Wilson, Blake. “Dominion of the Ear: Singing the Vernacular in Piazza San Martino.” I Tatti Studies in the Italian Renaissance 16 (2013): 273287.Google Scholar
Wilson, Blake. “Canterino and Improvvisatore: Oral Poetry and Performance,” in Busse Berger, and Rodin, , eds. The Cambridge History of Fifteenth-Century Music, 292310.Google Scholar
Wilson, Blake. Canterini, Corone, and Frescos: The Performance of Sonnet Cycles Linked to Fresco Cycles,” unpublished paper presented at the annual meeting of the Renaissance Society of America, Berlin, Germany, March 26, 2015.Google Scholar
Wilson, Blake. “The Cantastorie/Canterino/Cantimbanco as Musician.” Italian Studies 1971 (2016): 621.Google Scholar
Winternitz, Emanuel. “The Inspired Musician: A Sixteenth-Century Musical Pastiche.” Burlington Magazine 100 (1958): 4855.Google Scholar
Winternitz, Emanuel. Musical Instruments and Their Symbolism in Western Art. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1979.Google Scholar
Winternitz, Emanuel. Leonardo da Vinci as a Musician. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1982.Google Scholar
Witt, Ronald G. “The Rebirth of the Romans as Models of Character: De viris illustribus,” in Petrarch: A Critical Guide to the Complete Works, ed. Kirkham, V. and Maggi, A.. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2009, 103112.Google Scholar
Woodley, Ronald. “Ioannes Tinctoris: A Review of the Documentary Biographical Evidence.” Journal of the American Musicological Society 34 (1981): 217248.Google Scholar
Woodward, William H. Vittorino da Feltre and Other Humanist Educators. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1897.Google Scholar
Wright, Thomas. The Life of Walter Pater. 2 vols. New York: Putnam, 1907.Google Scholar
Yates, Francis. The Art of Memory. Chicago, University of Chicago Press, 1966.Google Scholar
Yates, Francis. “Lodovico da Pirano’s Memory Treatise,” in Cultural Aspects of the Italian Renaissance: Essays in Honour of Paul Oskar Kristeller, ed. by Clough, C. H.. New York: Alfred F. Zambelli, 1976.Google Scholar
Zambotti, Bernardino. Diario Ferrarese dall’anno 1476 sino al 1504. Edited by Pardi, G.. Rerum Italicarum Scriptores, ed. Muratori, L. A., XXIV/27. Bologna: Zanichelli, 1928.Google Scholar
Zambrano, Patrizia, and Nelson, Jonathan Katz. Filippino Lippi. Milan: Electa, 2004.Google Scholar
Zampieri, Adriana. “Il Notturno Napolitano: Catalogo delle edizioni.” La Bibliofilia 78 (1976): 107187.Google Scholar
Zuliani, Luca. Poesia e versi per musica: l’evoluzione dei metri italiani. Bologna: il mulino, 2009.Google Scholar
Zumthor, Paul. Oral Poetry: An Introduction. Translated by Kathryn Murphy-Judy. Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press, 1990.Google Scholar

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure coreplatform@cambridge.org 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
  • Blake Wilson, Dickinson College, Pennsylvania
  • Book: Singing to the Lyre in Renaissance Italy
  • Online publication: 31 October 2019
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108768887.012
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
  • Blake Wilson, Dickinson College, Pennsylvania
  • Book: Singing to the Lyre in Renaissance Italy
  • Online publication: 31 October 2019
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108768887.012
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
  • Blake Wilson, Dickinson College, Pennsylvania
  • Book: Singing to the Lyre in Renaissance Italy
  • Online publication: 31 October 2019
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108768887.012
Available formats
×