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Beccadelli and
Alfonso shared a great love of culture, and Beccadelli accompanied Alfonso during the vicissitudes of the king's career. When Alfonso became a prisoner in the hands of Filippo Maria Visconti, Duke of Milan, in 1435, Alfonso persuaded his captor to let him go by making it plain that it
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In
English: "In this (building), which was the ancient palace of the Bologna De'Beccadelli family, was born of that family Antonio, called "the Palermitan" (the one from Palermo), the pride of his city and of Italy, in the 15th century."
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was the interest of Milan not to prevent the victory of the
Aragonese party in Naples. Beccadelli, with his former connection to the Milanese court, played a role in these negotiations.
384:, but he would have to defend not only his work but also his life and morals. Rho discredited and vilified Beccadelli by making allegations about the poet's Sicilian background,
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531:"As much as the King surpasses the nobles, as much as the Sun conquers the stars, so Lucretia surpasses the brides of
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during 1415. They failed to produce children. At Naples, Alfonso fell in love with a woman of noble family named
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202:(1430–1433), where he completed his studies and entered the court of the Visconti. He would dedicate himself to
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This work was greeted with acclaim by scholars but subsequently condemned and censured as obscene by
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Medieval and
Renaissance Italy: Early Renaissance Invective and the Controversies of Antonio da Rho
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Eugene O'Connor, "Panormita's reply to his critics: the 'Hermaphroditus' and the literary defense"
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Quantum rex proceres, quantum Sol sȳdera vincit, / tantum Campānas superat Lucrētia nymphas
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234:. Alfonso was a great patron of the arts, and in this city Beccadelli founded the academy
580:. (The I Tatti Renaissance Library, 42.) Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 2010
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He helped his father with his business until he became consumed with enthusiasm for
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305:. Alfonso had entrusted Beccadelli with the instruction of his son and successor.
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and remained there until August 1427. He returned to
Florence, and then left for
380:(1431/32). Panormita had written invective poetry ridiculing Rho with obscene
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Anthonii
Panhormite, in Alphonsi Regis Aragonum dicta ac facta memoratum digna.
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Beccadelli's critics included the theologian
Antonio da Rho (1395–1447), a
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Beccadelli traveled to numerous
Italian cities, and became a student of
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After
Alfonso's death, Beccadelli remained close to the
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Vita di
Antonio Beccadelli, soprannominato il Panormita
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It is known that Beccadelli himself was married twice.
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queen at the Neapolitan court as well as an inspiring
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Beccadelli is most famous for his bawdy masterpiece
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437:to Alfons V of Aragon, to whom the work refers.
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283:. Beccadelli paid tribute to her with these
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167:. In 1419 he had stayed for a short time in
308:Beccadelli died in January 1471 at Naples.
206:studies, in particular to the tradition of
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357:Amongst those who praised this work was
267:in 1408; the marriage was celebrated in
222:Manuscript detail of Alfonso V of Aragon
578:Antonio Beccadelli, "The Hermaphrodite"
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442:Liber Rerum Gestarum Ferdinandi Regis
427:The Sayings and Deeds of King Alfonso
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489:on the Via Puglia in Palermo reads:
76:January 1471 (aged 76–77)
572:(in Italian). Naples: Angelo Trani.
378:Philippic against Antonio Panormita
322:(1425), a collection of eighty-one
226:In 1434, he entered the service of
89:Poet, scholar, diplomat, chronicler
431:De dictis et factis Alphonsi regis
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671:15th-century Italian historians
691:15th-century Italian diplomats
508:ONORE DI SUA CITTÀ E D'ITALIA
255:Alfonso had been betrothed to
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661:15th-century writers in Latin
641:Italian Renaissance humanists
566:Colangelo, Francesco (1820).
329:, which evoke the unfettered
602:Antonio Beccadelli Panormita
440:He also wrote the chronicle
656:Italian Renaissance writers
505:ANTONIO DETTO IL PANORMITA
214:Beccadelli and King Alfonso
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686:15th-century Italian poets
472:Giovan Filippo de Adinolfo
456:Palazzo del Panormita, at
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194:He became a guest of the
114:, scholar, diplomat, and
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502:NACQUE DI QUELLA STIRPE
433:). He became a kind of
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499:DE' BECCADELLI BOLOGNA
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496:CHE FU ANTICO PALAZZO
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259:(1401–1458; sister of
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196:Filippo Maria Visconti
161:Gasparino da Barizizza
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618:Palazzo del Panormita
467:Palazzo del Panormita
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448:Palazzo del Panormita
303:Ferdinand I of Naples
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130:politics, serving as
651:Writers from Palermo
546:"Plaque description"
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241:Accademia Pontaniana
134:of Palermo in 1393.
98:(1394–1471), called
666:Italian chroniclers
576:Holt Parker (ed.),
228:Alfonso V of Aragon
646:Italian male poets
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420:Epistulae campanae
409:Epistulae gallicae
400:He also wrote the
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261:Juan II of Castile
236:Porticus Antoniana
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179:. He continued to
175:in order to study
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96:Antonio Beccadelli
34:Antonio Beccadelli
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273:Lucrezia d'Alagno
257:María de Castilla
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112:canon lawyer
100:Il Panormita
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27:Italian poet
681:1471 deaths
676:1394 births
396:Other works
122:. Born in
106:"), was an
635:Categories
493:IN QUESTO
435:panegyrist
370:Franciscan
363:Theocritus
265:Valladolid
198:family at
139:humanistic
116:chronicler
104:Palermitan
86:Occupation
594:Panormita
422:) (1474)
414:Campanian
386:orthodoxy
352:Christian
331:eroticism
141:studies.
18:Panormita
533:Campania
416:Epistles
405:Epistles
335:Catullus
327:epigrams
277:de facto
269:Valencia
244:, after
169:Florence
128:Sicilian
478:Palermo
403:Gaulish
382:insults
344:Priapea
339:Martial
287:words:
208:Plautus
181:Bologna
155:Travels
132:Praetor
124:Palermo
108:Italian
81:, Italy
68:, Italy
62:Palermo
54: (
487:plaque
484:marble
458:Naples
232:Naples
110:poet,
79:Naples
66:Sicily
560:Books
520:Notes
374:Milan
372:from
324:Latin
285:Latin
263:) in
200:Pavia
189:Genoa
173:Siena
165:Padua
120:Latin
464:The
337:and
281:muse
185:Rome
73:Died
56:1394
52:1394
49:Born
230:at
163:in
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482:A
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