Angelo Poliziano

Politian, Italian in full Angelo
Poliziano, also called Angelo Ambrogini
(b. July 14, 1454, Montepulciano,
Tuscany [Italy]—d. Sept. 28/29, 1494,
Florence), Italian poet and humanist,
the friend and protégé of Lorenzo de’
Medici, and one of the foremost
classical scholars of the Renaissance.
He was equally fluent in Greek, Italian,
and Latin and was equally talented in
poetry, philosophy and philology.
The
murder of Politian’s father in May 1464
left the family poverty-stricken, and
not later than 1469 Politian was sent to
Florence. He started to write Latin and
Greek epigrams and attracted the
attention of Lorenzo de’ Medici, to whom
Politian dedicated the first two books
of his Latin translation of the Iliad.
In about 1473 he entered the Medici
household and was able to study in the
Medici library until, in 1475, he was
entrusted with the education of
Lorenzo’s eldest son, Piero, then aged
three. In 1477 he was given as a
benefice the priory of San Paolo. His
translation of the Iliad, books ii–v,
into Latin hexameters (1470–75) brought
him his first renown. Between 1473 and
1478 he produced Latin and Greek verses
that are among the best examples of
humanist poetry: they include elegies,
odes, and epigrams (of particular merit
are the elegies In violas [“In Violets”]
and In Lalagen and the ode In puellam
suam [“In Regard to One’s Daughters”]).
To the same period belong the strange
and poetically experimental Sylva in
scabiem (1475; “Trees with Mildew”), in
which he describes realistically the
symptoms of scabies.
His
poetic masterpiece of this period is,
however, a vernacular poem in ottava
rima, Stanze cominciate per la giostra
del Magnifico Giuliano de’ Medici
(“Stanzas Begun for the Tournament of
the Magnificent Giuliano de’ Medici”),
composed between 1475 and 1478, which is
one of the great works of Italian
literature. In it he was able to
synthesize the grandeur of classical
literature with the spontaneity of
Florentine vernacular poetry. The poem
describes the love of “Julio” (i.e.,
Giuliano de’ Medici), for “Simonetta”
(i.e., Simonetta Cattaneo; d. 1476) by
means of a poetic transfiguration in
which beauty is glorified according to
humanist ideals. Stylistically it is
influenced by Latin epic and encomiastic
poems and reveals the author’s taste for
refined poetry. It was interrupted at
book ii, stanza 46, probably because of
Giuliano’s death in 1478.
Politian was, with Lorenzo de’ Medici,
one of those mainly responsible for the
revaluation of vernacular literature. It
is generally believed that it was he who
wrote the dedicatory letter, tracing the
history of vernacular poetry and warmly
defending it, that accompanied the
so-called Raccolta Aragonese (“The
Aragon Collection”), a collection of
Tuscan verse sent by Lorenzo de’ Medici
to Federico d’Aragona in about 1477.
Politian was with Lorenzo and Giuliano
when the latter was killed by the Pazzi
on April 26, 1478; on this episode he
wrote the dramatic report Pactianae
coniurationis commentarium (1478). In
May 1479, as a result of a quarrel with
Lorenzo’s wife, Clarice Orsini, he was
expelled from the Medici household. In
December, instead of accompanying
Lorenzo on a difficult diplomatic
mission to Naples, he undertook a series
of journeys in northern Italy. After
visiting Venice and Verona he was
attracted to Mantua, where, in the
Gonzaga court, he found a new patron in
Cardinal Francesco Gonzaga. It was for a
court occasion that he wrote in Mantua
Orfeo (1480; “Orpheus”), a short
dramatic composition in the vernacular,
based on the myth of Orpheus and
Eurydice and inspired by the same
humanist ideal of beauty that pervades
his Stanze. Orfeo is less refined than
the Stanze, but it nevertheless reveals
the author’s poetic genius. During his
stay in Mantua, Politian repeatedly
wrote to Lorenzo asking to be recalled
to Florence, and in August 1480 he was
at last invited to return and was again
entrusted with Piero’s education. Thanks
to Lorenzo he was appointed to the
Florentine chair of Latin and Greek
(autumn 1480) but was not readmitted to
the Medici household and went to live
outside of Florence.
At the
Florentine university he gave four
inaugural lectures in verse, known
collectively as the Sylvae (“The
Trees”): Manto (1482; “The Cloak”), on
Virgil’s poetry; Rusticus (1483; “The
Countryside”), on the bucolic poems of
Hesiod and Virgil; Ambra (1485;
“Amber”), on Homer; and Nutricia (1486;
“The Foster Mother”), on the different
genres of Greek and Latin literature.
In 1488
he took part in a diplomatic mission to
Pope Innocent VIII; and in 1491 he
traveled to Bologna, Ferrara, Padua, and
Venice to trace manuscripts for the
Medici library. Otherwise he spent the
last years of his life in Florence. His
writings of this last period include a
Latin translation of Epictetus’ Manual
(1479); a collection of Detti piacevoli
(witty sentences), composed in the
vernacular between 1477 and 1479; Greek
epigrams; a number of vernacular canzoni
a ballo (“songs for dancing”) and
rispetti (“regards”), which show his
taste for popular poetry; and Latin
letters on problems of style and
literature.
His
most important work on classical
philology is the Miscellanea (1489), two
collections, each consisting of about
100 notes (centuria) on classical texts:
these and other works laid the
foundations for subsequent scholarly
studies in classical philology.