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Fulvio Testi

Fulvio Testi (August 1593 in Ferrara – 28 August 1646 in Modena) was an Italian diplomat and poet who is recognised as one of the main exponents of 17th-century Italian Baroque literature. He worked in the service of the d'Este dukes in Modena, for whom he held high office, such as the governorship of Garfagnana. His poems tackle civic themes in solemn tones, showing Testi's lasting anti-Spanish and, consequently, pro-Savoia political passions. Accused of treason for having tried to set up diplomatic relations with the French court, he was imprisoned and died in jail soon after. One later literary critic wrote:

Fulvio Testi
Ludovico Lana, Portrait of Fulvio Testi, c. 1629
Born(1593-08-00)August 1593
Died28 August 1646(1646-08-28) (aged 52–53)
Resting placeSan Domenico, Modena
Other namesFulvio Savojano
Alma mater
Occupations
  • Diplomat
  • Poet
  • Politician
  • Writer
SpouseAnna Leni
Children7
Parent(s)Giulio Testi and Margherita Testi (née Calmoni)
HonoursOrder of Saints Maurice and Lazarus
Order of Santiago
Writing career
LanguageItalian, Latin
Notable worksPoesie liriche
Le Filippiche contro gli spagnuoli

If he'd been born in a less barbarous age, and had had more time than he did to cultivate his talent, he would doubtless have been our Horace, and perhaps been hotter and more vehement and more sublime than the Latin man[1]

Life

The son of Giulio and Margherita Calmoni, Fulvio studied literature and philosophy with the Jesuits at Modena, and then studied poetry privately at Bologna.[2] His sonnets, circulating in manuscript, had already earned him a certain amount of fame by 1611, before entering the services of the Este chancelry, as a scribe. His first volume of verses, published at Venice in 1613 and dedicated to his patron and lord Alfonso III d'Este, followed the well-established vein of the Baroque pastoral idyll and courtly Mannerist marinismo. That same year he traveled to Naples and Rome, forming a friendship with Alessandro Tassoni, and returned to Modena in the summer of 1614. In the autumn he married Anna Leni.

His Rime published in 1617, anticipated by their dedication to Carlo Emanuele, Duke of Savoy, the anti-Spanish octaves they contained, which were composed in 1615 and better known under the title Il pianto d'Italia,[2] and characterized the injuries being suffered by the Spanish hegemony in Italy, to such a degree that the Spanish Resident at the Duchy of Modena tendered a remonstrance, in consequence of which the printer Giuliano Cassiani was arrested and the edition suppressed. Testi having fled the Duchy, was pronounced contumaceous and exiled. Nevertheless, on receipt of a plea for forgiveness, he was pardoned by Cesare d'Este, 5 February 1619. In the following summer, the Duke of Savoy in question, apprised of the troubles Testi had undergone, enrolled him in the Savoyard Order of Santi Maurizio e Lazzaro, while the Duke acknowledged his literary gifts as virtuoso di camera.

Henceforth, Testi's career took him on a long series of travels of a diplomatic nature, notably to Vienna, Rome, Venice and Turin, with the result that in April 1635 he was awarded a feudal demesne that brought him the title of conte At the end of that year he was sent as ambassador to the court of Spain. Embarking 10 March 1636 at Vado, where he encountered an old acquaintance from Rome, Gabriello Chiabrera, his embassy in Madrid, which brought him the cross of the Order of Santiago, lasted exactly a year, though he would be sent again in 1638. Meanwhile, back in Modena by March 1637, Testi was made the Duke's Secretary of State. In 1640, stifled by court life (though he returned in 1642), with which he did was perhaps always considered a parvenu, he asked for and obtained from Francesco I d'Este the post of governor of Garfagnana.

Following further diplomatic missions, he undertook confidential inquiries through the Italian Cardinal Mazarin, to be transferred to the court of France. Upon discovery, in January 1646 he was committed to the prison of Modena as a traitor, where, after seven months' confinement, he died.

A hypothesis developed by Girolamo Tiraboschi suggested that Testi's imprisonment was motivated by the resentment of principe Raimondo Montecuccoli, to whom Testi would have dedicated a far from flattering ode; the poet Ugo Foscolo, absorbing Tiraboschi's thesis, recorded nevertheless that the ode in question, though dedicated tor Montecuccoli, indirectly affronted the Este.

Main works

 
Frontespizio della tragedia L'Isola di Alcina del Testi

Lyric poems

  • Fulvio Testi (1617). Rime. Modena. per Giuliano Cassiani.
  • Fulvio Testi (1627). Poesie liriche. Modena. presso Giuliano Cassani.
  • Fulvio Testi, L'isola d'Alcina, 1626.[3][4]
  • Fulvio Testi (1652). L'Arsinda, ouero la descendenza de' ser.mi prencipi d'Este. Venetia. per Francesco Baba.
  • Fulvio Testi (1817). Opere scelte. Vol. I (Poesie). Modena. Presso la Società tipografica.

Political works

  • Fulvio Testi (1618). L'Italia all'inuittissimo, e gloriosissimo prencipe Carlo Emanuel Duca di Sauoia. Torino. s.e.
  • Fulvio Testi (1643). Ristretto delle ragioni che la serenissima Casa d'Este ha colla Camera apostolica, con le risposte di Roma, & contrarisposte per parte del serenissimo di Modena. s.l. s.e.
  • Fulvio Testi (1838). Scritti inediti di Daniello Bartoli, Fulvio Testi, Alberto Lollio. Ferrara. Dai tipi Negri alla Pace.
  • Fulvio Testi (1902). Francesco Bartoli (ed.). Le filippiche e due altre scritture contro gli spagnuoli. con lo pseudonimo di Fulvio Savojano. Milano: Francesco Bartoli. Società Editrice Sonzogno.

Letters

  • Fulvio Testi (1817). Opere scelte. Vol. II (Lettere). Modena. Presso la Società tipografica.
  • Fulvio Testi, Lettere inedite in nome del duca Francesco I. a Francesco Sassatelli, luogotenente di Vignola, s.e., Modena 1841.
  • Fulvio Testi (1843). "Lettere inedite". Memorie di Religione, di Morale e di Letteratura. Modena: Real tip. Soliani: 49–85 (t. XV) e 333–346 (t. XVI).
  • Alfredo Lazzari, ed. (1872). Quattro lettere inedite di Fulvio Testi. Faenza: Alfredo Lazzari. Conti.
  • Fulvio Testi, Lettere, 3 voll. (1609-1633, 1634–1637, 1638–1646), a cura di Maria Luisa Doglio, Casa editrice Giuseppe Laterza & figli, Bari 1967.

References

  1. ^ Se fosse venuto in età meno barbara, e avesse avuto agio di coltivare l'ingegno suo più che non fece, sarebbe stato senza controversia il nostro Orazio, e forse più caldo e veemente e sublime del Latino" - Giacomo Leopardi, Lettere, edited by F. Flora, (Mondadori, Milan) 1949, p. 174
  2. ^ a b Fulvio Testi entry (in Italian) by Luigi Fassò in the Enciclopedia italiana, 1937 .
  3. ^ Vecchi, Giuseppe (1981). "Per una storia dei rapporti tra Modena, l'Europa dell'est e la Polonia nel campo della musica-teatro (sec. XVII–XVIII)". Musica, Teatro, Nazione Dall'Emilia All'Europa Nel Settecento. Modena: S.T.E.M.: 19.
  4. ^ Cecchi, Paolo (2017). "SACRATI, Francesco". Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani, Volume 89: Rovereto–Salvemini (in Italian). Rome: Istituto dell'Enciclopedia Italiana. ISBN 978-8-81200032-6. Retrieved 18 March 2019.

Bibliography

External links

  •   Italian Wikisource has original text related to this article: Autore:Fulvio Testi
  • (in Italian) Quotes on Italian Wikiquote

fulvio, testi, august, 1593, ferrara, august, 1646, modena, italian, diplomat, poet, recognised, main, exponents, 17th, century, italian, baroque, literature, worked, service, este, dukes, modena, whom, held, high, office, such, governorship, garfagnana, poems. Fulvio Testi August 1593 in Ferrara 28 August 1646 in Modena was an Italian diplomat and poet who is recognised as one of the main exponents of 17th century Italian Baroque literature He worked in the service of the d Este dukes in Modena for whom he held high office such as the governorship of Garfagnana His poems tackle civic themes in solemn tones showing Testi s lasting anti Spanish and consequently pro Savoia political passions Accused of treason for having tried to set up diplomatic relations with the French court he was imprisoned and died in jail soon after One later literary critic wrote Fulvio TestiLudovico Lana Portrait of Fulvio Testi c 1629Born 1593 08 00 August 1593Ferrara Duchy of FerraraDied28 August 1646 1646 08 28 aged 52 53 Modena Duchy of Modena and ReggioResting placeSan Domenico ModenaOther namesFulvio SavojanoAlma materUniversity of BolognaUniversity of FerraraOccupationsDiplomatPoetPoliticianWriterSpouseAnna LeniChildren7Parent s Giulio Testi and Margherita Testi nee Calmoni HonoursOrder of Saints Maurice and LazarusOrder of SantiagoWriting careerLanguageItalian LatinNotable worksPoesie liricheLe Filippiche contro gli spagnuoli If he d been born in a less barbarous age and had had more time than he did to cultivate his talent he would doubtless have been our Horace and perhaps been hotter and more vehement and more sublime than the Latin man 1 Contents 1 Life 2 Main works 2 1 Lyric poems 2 2 Political works 2 3 Letters 3 References 4 Bibliography 5 External linksLife EditThe son of Giulio and Margherita Calmoni Fulvio studied literature and philosophy with the Jesuits at Modena and then studied poetry privately at Bologna 2 His sonnets circulating in manuscript had already earned him a certain amount of fame by 1611 before entering the services of the Este chancelry as a scribe His first volume of verses published at Venice in 1613 and dedicated to his patron and lord Alfonso III d Este followed the well established vein of the Baroque pastoral idyll and courtly Mannerist marinismo That same year he traveled to Naples and Rome forming a friendship with Alessandro Tassoni and returned to Modena in the summer of 1614 In the autumn he married Anna Leni His Rime published in 1617 anticipated by their dedication to Carlo Emanuele Duke of Savoy the anti Spanish octaves they contained which were composed in 1615 and better known under the title Il pianto d Italia 2 and characterized the injuries being suffered by the Spanish hegemony in Italy to such a degree that the Spanish Resident at the Duchy of Modena tendered a remonstrance in consequence of which the printer Giuliano Cassiani was arrested and the edition suppressed Testi having fled the Duchy was pronounced contumaceous and exiled Nevertheless on receipt of a plea for forgiveness he was pardoned by Cesare d Este 5 February 1619 In the following summer the Duke of Savoy in question apprised of the troubles Testi had undergone enrolled him in the Savoyard Order of Santi Maurizio e Lazzaro while the Duke acknowledged his literary gifts as virtuoso di camera Henceforth Testi s career took him on a long series of travels of a diplomatic nature notably to Vienna Rome Venice and Turin with the result that in April 1635 he was awarded a feudal demesne that brought him the title of conte At the end of that year he was sent as ambassador to the court of Spain Embarking 10 March 1636 at Vado where he encountered an old acquaintance from Rome Gabriello Chiabrera his embassy in Madrid which brought him the cross of the Order of Santiago lasted exactly a year though he would be sent again in 1638 Meanwhile back in Modena by March 1637 Testi was made the Duke s Secretary of State In 1640 stifled by court life though he returned in 1642 with which he did was perhaps always considered a parvenu he asked for and obtained from Francesco I d Este the post of governor of Garfagnana Following further diplomatic missions he undertook confidential inquiries through the Italian Cardinal Mazarin to be transferred to the court of France Upon discovery in January 1646 he was committed to the prison of Modena as a traitor where after seven months confinement he died A hypothesis developed by Girolamo Tiraboschi suggested that Testi s imprisonment was motivated by the resentment of principe Raimondo Montecuccoli to whom Testi would have dedicated a far from flattering ode the poet Ugo Foscolo absorbing Tiraboschi s thesis recorded nevertheless that the ode in question though dedicated tor Montecuccoli indirectly affronted the Este Main works Edit Frontespizio della tragedia L Isola di Alcina del TestiLyric poems Edit Fulvio Testi 1617 Rime Modena per Giuliano Cassiani Fulvio Testi 1627 Poesie liriche Modena presso Giuliano Cassani Fulvio Testi L isola d Alcina 1626 3 4 Fulvio Testi 1652 L Arsinda ouero la descendenza de ser mi prencipi d Este Venetia per Francesco Baba Fulvio Testi 1817 Opere scelte Vol I Poesie Modena Presso la Societa tipografica Political works Edit Fulvio Testi 1618 L Italia all inuittissimo e gloriosissimo prencipe Carlo Emanuel Duca di Sauoia Torino s e Fulvio Testi 1643 Ristretto delle ragioni che la serenissima Casa d Este ha colla Camera apostolica con le risposte di Roma amp contrarisposte per parte del serenissimo di Modena s l s e Fulvio Testi 1838 Scritti inediti di Daniello Bartoli Fulvio Testi Alberto Lollio Ferrara Dai tipi Negri alla Pace Fulvio Testi 1902 Francesco Bartoli ed Le filippiche e due altre scritture contro gli spagnuoli con lo pseudonimo di Fulvio Savojano Milano Francesco Bartoli Societa Editrice Sonzogno Letters Edit Fulvio Testi 1817 Opere scelte Vol II Lettere Modena Presso la Societa tipografica Fulvio Testi Lettere inedite in nome del duca Francesco I a Francesco Sassatelli luogotenente di Vignola s e Modena 1841 Fulvio Testi 1843 Lettere inedite Memorie di Religione di Morale e di Letteratura Modena Real tip Soliani 49 85 t XV e 333 346 t XVI Alfredo Lazzari ed 1872 Quattro lettere inedite di Fulvio Testi Faenza Alfredo Lazzari Conti Fulvio Testi Lettere 3 voll 1609 1633 1634 1637 1638 1646 a cura di Maria Luisa Doglio Casa editrice Giuseppe Laterza amp figli Bari 1967 References Edit Se fosse venuto in eta meno barbara e avesse avuto agio di coltivare l ingegno suo piu che non fece sarebbe stato senza controversia il nostro Orazio e forse piu caldo e veemente e sublime del Latino Giacomo Leopardi Lettere edited by F Flora Mondadori Milan 1949 p 174 a b Fulvio Testi entry in Italian by Luigi Fasso in the Enciclopedia italiana 1937 Vecchi Giuseppe 1981 Per una storia dei rapporti tra Modena l Europa dell est e la Polonia nel campo della musica teatro sec XVII XVIII Musica Teatro Nazione Dall Emilia All Europa Nel Settecento Modena S T E M 19 Cecchi Paolo 2017 SACRATI Francesco Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani Volume 89 Rovereto Salvemini in Italian Rome Istituto dell Enciclopedia Italiana ISBN 978 8 81200032 6 Retrieved 18 March 2019 Bibliography EditLeone Marco 2019 TESTI Fulvio Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani Volume 95 Taranto Togni in Italian Rome Istituto dell Enciclopedia Italiana ISBN 978 8 81200032 6 Slawinski M 2002 Testi Fulvio The Oxford Companion to Italian Literature Oxford University Press Retrieved 7 June 2023 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Fulvio Testi Italian Wikisource has original text related to this article Autore Fulvio Testi in Italian Quotes on Italian Wikiquote Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Fulvio Testi amp oldid 1159788092, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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