(Redirected from Sannazzaro)'Jacopo Sannazaro' or 'Sannazzaro' (
1458 -
April 27,
1530) was an
Italian poet,
humanist and epigrammist from
Naples.
He wrote easily in
Latin, in Italian and
Neapolitan, but is best remembered for his humanist classic ''Arcadia'', a masterwork that illustrated the possibilities of poetical prose in Italian, and instituted the theme of ''
Arcadia'', representing an idyllic land, in European literature: see the theme
Et In Arcadia Ego. Sannazaro's elegant style was the inspiration for much courtly literature of the 16th century, including
Sir Philip Sydney's ''Arcadia''.
Biography
He was born in 1458 at Naples of a noble family of the
Lomellina, said to have been of Spanish origin and to derive its name from a seat at San Nazaro near
Pavia. His father died during the boyhood of Jacopo, who was brought up at
Nocera Inferiore and at San Cipriano Piacentino, whose atmosphere colored his poetry.
In the ''Accademia pontaniana'' that collected about the figure of Giovanni Pontano,
Jovianus Pontanus, he took the classicizing ''nom de plume'' of ''Actius Syncerus''. His early withdrawal from Naples, sometimes treated as biographical, is apparently a literary ''trope''. He speedily achieved fame as a poet and place as a courtier, receiving from
Frederick IV of Naples as a country residence the Villa Mergillina near Naples. When his patron was compelled to take refuge in
France in
1501 he was accompanied by Sannazaro, who did not return to Italy till after his death (1504). The later years of the poet seem to have been spent at Naples.
The ''Arcadia'' of Sannazaro was written in the 1480s and circulated in manuscript before its initial publication. Begun in early life and published in
Naples in 1504, the ''Arcadia'' is a
pastoral Romance, in which Sincero, the ''persona'' of the poet, disappointed in love, withdraws from the city (Naples in this case) to pursue in
Arcadia an idealized pastoral existence among the shepherd-poets, in the manner of the Idylls of
Theocritus. But a frightful dream induces him to return to the city, traversing a dark tunnel to his native Naples, where he learns of the death of his beloved. The events are amplified by extensive imagery drawn from classic sources, by the poet's languid melancholy and by atmospheric elegiac descriptions of the lost world of Arcadia. It was the first ''
pastoral'' work in
Renaissance Europe to gain international success. Inspired in part by classical authors who wrote in the pastoral mode (
Virgil,
Theocritus) and by
Boccaccio's ''Ameto'', Sannazaro depicts a lovelorn first-person narrator ("Sincero") wandering the countryside (
Arcadia) and listening to the amorous or mournful songs of the shepherds he meets. In addition to its pastoral setting, the other great originality of the work stems from its novel structure of alternating prose and verse.
Sannazaro's ''Arcadia'' - coupled with the Spanish author
Jorge de Montemayor's ''Diana'' (''Los siete libros de la Diana'', 1559), itself indebted to Sannazaro's work - had a profound impact on literature throughout Europe up until the middle of the seventeenth century.
His bucolic works of
Virgilian inspiration include the five ''Eclogae piscatoriae'',
eclogues on themes connected with the
Bay of Naples, and three books of elegies..
Among his works in Italian and Neapolitan are the recasting of Neapolitan proverbs as ''Gliommeri'' his ''Farse'', and the ''Rime'' (published as ''Sonetti et canzoni di M. Jacopo Sannazaro'', Naples and Rome,
1530), where the manner of
Petrarch is paramount. He also wrote some savage and caustic epigrams.
Sannazaro's now seldom-read sacred poem in Latin, ''De partu Virginis'', which gained for him the name of the "Christian
Virgil", appeared in 1526.
Tomb
"
Montfaucon describes the tomb of the poet Sannazzaro in the church of the Olivetans, Naples, as ornamented with the statues of Apollo and Minerva, and with groups of satyrs. In the eighteenth century the ecclesiastical authorities tried to give a less profane aspect to the composition, by engraving the name of David under the Apollo, and of Judith under the Minerva" (Rodolfo Lanciani, ''Pagan and Christian Rome'' 1896, ch. 1)
External links
★
''Encyclopaedia Britannica'' 1911: Jacopo Sannazaro
★
(Luigi De Bellis) Aggiornamenti: il Quattrocento: Jacopo Sannazaro (in Italian)
★
Jacopo Sannazzaro, ''Arcadia'' (e-text)
★ Rodolfo Lanciani, ''Pagan and Christian Rome,'' 1896, ch. 1
★ class=wikiexternal target=_blank>.html on-line