England and the continental Renaissance : essays in honour of J.B. Trapp
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Bibliographic Information
England and the continental Renaissance : essays in honour of J.B. Trapp
Boydell Press, 1990
Available at 21 libraries
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Note
"A list of the publications of J.B. Trapp, with a selection of reviews": p. [295]-301
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This wide-ranging collection contains essays devoted to many facets of the Renaissance in England. Its scholarship and scope will ensure that it makes a valuable contribution to the many disciplines on which it impinges: art, political theory, design, literature and theology amongst others. Throughout the links between England and Italy in the sixteenth century appear as a central theme.
Table of Contents
- On the continuity of Medieval English love-lyric, Peter Dronke
- some pre-Elizabethan examples of an Elizabethan art, Douglas Gray
- Erasmus and the canonisation of Aristotle - the letter to John More, Jill Kraye
- Titian, Philip 11 and Mary Tudor, Charles Hope
- "Il Moro" - an Italian life of Sir Thomas More, Dennis E. Rhodes
- a Mantuan in London in 1557 - further research on Annibale Litolfi, D.S. Chambers
- a profile of the grammar of three sixteenth-century lives of Sir Thomas More and of an unrelated 'drab' prose work by Anthony Gilby, Robert Bruchfield
- the perils of publishing in the sixteenth century - Pietro Bizari and William Parry, two Elizabethan misfits, Nicholas Barker
- accident or design - John Gildon's funeral monuments and Italianate taste in Elizabethan England, Nigel Llewellyn
- a Machiavellian solution to the Irish problem - Richard Beacon's "Solon His follie" (1594), Sydney Anglo
- "Vincentio Saviolo His Practise" (1595) - a problem of authorship, Sergio Rossi
- "Counterfeit Presentments" - Shakespeare's "Ekphrasis", Stephen Orgel
- "My Library was Dukedom Large Enough" - Shakespear's Prospero and Prospero Visconti of Milan, E.H.L Gombrich
- England and the Italian medal, J.G. Pollard
- English "Disegno", Michael Baxandall
- an unknown manuscript translation by John Thorpe of Du Cerceau's "Perspective", Karl Josef Holtgen
- Sir Francis Carew's garden at Beddington, Roy Strong
- the protestant confessor, or the tragic history of Mr Molle, R.W. Lightbown
- local heroes - the Scottish humanist parnassus for Charles 1, Elizabeth McGrath
- Edward Altham as a hermit, Jennifer Montagu
- Veleda, Susanna, Boadicea or Dorothy - antiquarian discussions on some sixteenth-century ornamental bricks, Jean-Michel Massing.
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