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Muretus

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He returned to Rome in 1563. His lectures gained him a European reputation, and in 1578 he received a tempting offer from the king of Poland to become teacher of jurisprudence in his new college at
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and letters, which were widely circulated before they were printed. His orations remained models for students through the eighteenth century.
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to settle in Rome in 1559. In 1561 Muretus revisited France as a member of the cardinal's suite at the conference between
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and his queen being among his hearers. In Paris he formed part of the larger circle of humanists and poets that included
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Venetiis: Apud Josephum Orlandelli, 1791, for example. The collection had been republished repeatedly since 1739
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Muretus edited a number of classical authors with learned and scholarly notes. His other works include
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His success made him many enemies, and he was thrown into prison on a charge of
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was presented. Some time before 1552 he delivered a course of lectures in the
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and is among the usual candidates for the best Latin prose stylist of the
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This article incorporates text from a publication now in the
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Orationes, et epistolae...ad usum scolarum selectae....
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Muretus' Senecan tragedy, printed in 1591 (Latin text)
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After a wandering and insecure life of some years in
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Index

Marc-Antoine Muret

Latinized
French
humanist
Ciceronian Latin style
Renaissance
Muret
Limoges
elder Scaliger
archiepiscopal
Auch
Villeneuve
College of Guienne
Bordeaux
Collège du Cardinal Lemoine
Paris
King Henry II
Jean Dorat
Pierre de Ronsard
epigrams
odes
satires
homosexuality
Toulouse
Huguenot
sodomite
Italy
Ippolito II d'Este
Roman Catholics

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