Lorenzo Valla

Italian humanist
Latin Laurentius Vallensis
born 1407, Rome, Papal States [Italy]
died Aug. 1, 1457, Rome
Main
Italian humanist, philosopher, and literary critic who
attacked medieval traditions and anticipated views of the
Protestant reformers.
Valla was the son of a lawyer employed at the papal
court. His family was from Piacenza. Until he was 24 Lorenzo
spent most of his time in Rome, studying Latin grammar and
rhetoric. Unable to obtain a post as papal secretary in
1430, he left Rome and spent the next five years wandering
about northern Italy. He taught rhetoric at the University
of Pavia, where he made public his De voluptate (On
Pleasure), a dialogue about the nature of the true good.
That work surprised many of its readers by its
then-unfashionable defense of the Greek philosopher
Epicurus, who maintained that, with the attainment of
virtue, a wise man may live a life of prudent pleasure, free
from pain. Valla then went on to attack stoicism, the
philosophy of the control of the emotions through reason and
its advocacy of a simple life. Valla caused a still greater
sensation by an attack on the barbarous Latin used by the
celebrated 14th-century lawyer Bartolus. The law faculty at
Pavia took offense, and Valla found it expedient to leave.
He lived at Milan and Genoa before settling down, in
1435, as royal secretary and historian at the court of
Alfonso of Aragon, king of Naples. He remained 13 years in
Alfonso’s service, and it was during this time that Valla,
then in his 30s, wrote most of his important books. His
Declamatio (Treatise of Lorenzo Valla on the Donation of
Constantine), written in 1440, attacked the crude Latin of
its anonymous author and from that observation argued that
the document could not possibly have dated from the time of
Constantine. As King Alfonso was at war with Pope Eugenius
IV at this time, it was politically convenient to attack the
foundation of papal claims to temporal power in Italy. The
book was first printed in 1517 in Germany, the same year
that Martin Luther circulated his Ninety-five Theses,
criticizing papal policies. (See Researcher’s Note.)
Valla wrote other books in his years at Alfonso’s court.
In his brief dialogue De libero arbitrio (“On Free Will”),
Valla attacked the stoic philosopher Boethius (480–524/525),
who had attempted to reconcile man’s free will with God’s
foreknowledge; and in his Dialecticae disputationes
(“Dialectical Disputations”), Valla reduced Aristotle’s nine
“categories” to three (substance, quality, and action, which
corresponded to noun, adjective, and verb) and denounced as
barbarisms a number of the technical terms of scholastic
philosophy, such as “entity” and “quiddity.” Valla preferred
the language of ordinary people to the jargon of
professional philosophers. His “Disputations” was at once a
rhetorician’s attack on logic and an attempt to reduce
philosophical problems to linguistic ones. The Elegantiae
linguae Latinae (“Elegances of the Latin Language”), printed
in 1471, was the first textbook of Latin grammar to be
written since late antiquity; it became highly popular in
grammar schools all over Europe.
Valla could make even grammar polemical and shocked
contemporaries by his criticisms of the prose of the famous
Roman rhetorician Cicero. Similarly, his first book, written
when he was 20 and now lost, had apparently argued that
Quintilian, another Roman rhetorician, was a better stylist
than Cicero. Valla also produced a history of the reign of
Ferdinand of Aragon, Alfonso’s father. Characteristically,
he showed most interest in linguistic problems, such as how
to write in classical Latin about things that did not exist
in Roman times—e.g., cannons and parliaments. For his
offenses against the “dignity of history” he was attacked in
an Invective by Bartolomeo Facio, another humanist in
Alfonso’s service. Valla responded with his “Recriminations
Against Facio,” written in dialogue form and recalling the
debates among the court humanists, to which the king loved
to listen. This work also contains Valla’s celebrated
emendations to the text of the Roman historian Livy.
Meanwhile, Valla had become embroiled in another
controversy, theological this time, over his refusal to
believe that the Apostles’ Creed had been composed by the
Twelve Apostles. As a result, he was denounced by the clergy
and investigated by the Inquisition, which found him
heretical on eight counts, including his defense of Epicurus
and his criticisms of Aristotle’s categories. Only Alfonso’s
personal intervention saved him from the stake.
Valla left Naples in 1448 when Nicholas V, successor to
Eugenius IV and a supporter of humanists, appointed him
papal secretary, a post in which he was confirmed by
Nicholas’ successor in 1455. Valla also taught rhetoric in
Rome, where he remained until his death. In his 40s, he
composed his last major work, In Novum Testamentum ex
diversorum utriusque linguae codicum collatione adnotationes
(“Annotations on the New Testament Collected from Various
Codices in Each Language”), with the encouragement and
advice of two famous scholars, the cardinals Bessarion and
Nicholas of Cusa. The Adnotationes, not printed until 1505,
applied the methods of humanist philology to a sacred text.
Predictably, Valla was attacked for his disrespect to St.
Jerome, the presumed author of the Latin translation of the
Bible; during the Counter-Reformation the Adnotationes were
to be placed on the Index, the Roman Catholic church’s list
of condemned books. Valla also translated many works from
Greek into Latin. Early in his Naples days he had translated
Aesop’s fables, and Pope Nicholas commissioned him to
translate the historians Thucydides and Herodotus.
Despite his heavy literary commitments, Valla never
seemed to lack time or energy to engage in controversies.
The Florentine humanist Poggio Bracciolini had criticized
the “Elegances,” and Valla replied in his Antidoti in
Poggium (“Antidotes to Poggio”). Both scholars are seen at
their worst here, hurling at one another accusations of
ignorance, of barbarism, of plagiarism, and even worse.
Benedetto Morandi, a notary from Bologna, assailed Valla for
his disrespect in arguing that Livy had made mistakes about
Roman history; so Valla rebutted with his Confutatio in
Morandum (“Refutation of Morandi”). In a little dialogue, De
professione religiosorum (“On Monastic Vows”), Valla
criticized the vows of poverty, chastity, and obedience on
the grounds that what mattered was “not a vow, but
devotion.”
Valla’s last public appearance was characteristic of his
provocative, polemical style. In 1457 he was invited to
deliver an encomium of St. Thomas Aquinas to an audience of
Dominicans in the Church of Santa Maria sopra Minerva at
Rome, to celebrate the saint’s anniversary. Valla, however,
delivered an antiencomium, a critique of St. Thomas’ style
and his interest in logic that advocated a return to the
theology of the Fathers of the church. It is uncertain
whether Valla was a priest or not. He certainly held
ecclesiastical benefices. He never married but had three
children by his Roman mistress.
An aggressive man, even for that age of intellectual
gladiators, Valla made enemies easily. A professional
heretic, he was well suited for his role as a critic of
authority and orthodoxy. As one colleague observed about his
notorious comparison of Cicero and Quintilian: Valla wrote
simply to disturb people. There is no doubt about his
success in this respect. More than 50 years later, in the
age of Luther and of the great European humanist Erasmus,
his barbs were still felt. Many of his criticisms of
established ideas were pedantic and quibbling, but some were
penetrating. He was disliked for his “impudence,”
“presumption,” “temerity,” and “sacrilege.” In an age when
many traditions were held sacred, Valla’s sacrilege
fulfilled an important intellectual and social function.
Ulick Peter Burke