2012
DOI: 10.1017/cbo9780511779299
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The Two Latin Cultures and the Foundation of Renaissance Humanism in Medieval Italy

Abstract: This book traces the intellectual life of the Kingdom of Italy, the area in which humanism began in the mid thirteenth century, a century or more before exerting its influence on the rest of Europe. Covering a period of over four and a half centuries, this study offers the first integrated analysis of Latin writings produced in the area, examining not only religious, literary, and legal texts. Ronald G. Witt characterizes the changes reflected in these Latin writings as products of the interaction of thought w… Show more

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Cited by 62 publications
(27 citation statements)
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“…"Culture" conceived of as a textual phenomenon within a given area or community seems to be, in this sense, the point of arrival of his scientific reflection on Humanism. Anyone who reads In the Footsteps of the Ancients [Witt 2000[Witt (2005] after The Two Latin Cultures [Witt 2012[Witt (2017] will notice that In the Footsteps, although important work and one much more linked to the genetic process of Humanism, engages with certain texts while excluding others: it reflects in depth on historiographical, poetic, and epistolographic production while almost never touching upon documentary production stricto sensu. On the contrary, The Two Latin Cultures presents itself as all-encompassing, including every type of text within its horizon.…”
Section: What Exactly Ismentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…"Culture" conceived of as a textual phenomenon within a given area or community seems to be, in this sense, the point of arrival of his scientific reflection on Humanism. Anyone who reads In the Footsteps of the Ancients [Witt 2000[Witt (2005] after The Two Latin Cultures [Witt 2012[Witt (2017] will notice that In the Footsteps, although important work and one much more linked to the genetic process of Humanism, engages with certain texts while excluding others: it reflects in depth on historiographical, poetic, and epistolographic production while almost never touching upon documentary production stricto sensu. On the contrary, The Two Latin Cultures presents itself as all-encompassing, including every type of text within its horizon.…”
Section: What Exactly Ismentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Nor, if we consider the book's final bibliography, was he familiar with Emily Steiner's [2003] research on interactions between documentary culture and literary practices in late medieval England. For The Two Latin Cultures, his own direct precedent seems to be Michael Clanchy's book [1979] on English practical literacy [quoted on: Witt 2012Witt , 51 (2017], which, however, remains focused solely on documentary practices. The works of Rosamond McKitterick [1989] and Nicholas Everett [2003] on the Carolingian and Lombard realms also seem to have been influential antecedents.…”
Section: What Exactly Ismentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…In fact, he contends that chivalry's influence in Italy generally has been undervalued by historians, as it was “a major and essential element” of Italian society, “a fully naturalized and domesticated product.” Likewise, the prominent intellectual and cultural historian Ronald Witt has also noted tangentially the powerful influence of what he called “the chivalric ethos” on the behavior of urban elites in Tuscany in the thirteenth century. Witt () adopts a Kaeuperian view of chivalry, as he claims that the ethos had a disruptive influence urban society by encouraging and justifying elite violence with “dire social and political effects.” Similar observations about chivalry's applicability to Florentine elites can be found in the work of Lansing (), Najemy (), Dameron (), and among others, although they often use different terminology (i.e., knightly) and do not explore chivalric ideology. Indeed, while the terms “knightly” and “chivalric” are often used synonymously by scholars, this is actually misleading because chivalry's influence on the lifestyle and identity of elite male warriors extended well beyond dubbed knights.…”
Section: Studies Of Florentine and Tuscan Chivalrymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…El cronista lleva a cabo una labor heurística de recopilación de fuentes notariales y testimonios orales para su redacción, demostrando así las aptitudes que adquiere en Bolonia y Padua 64 , centro éste, como sostiene R.G. Witt, donde maduran y se desarrollan durante esta época los principios axiomáticos de las litterae humaniores que definen el humanismo bajomedieval 65 . Tanto su metodología como reflexión preliminar se asemejan a las disertaciones de los humanistas florentinos de la centuria posterior (Villani, Bonaiuti, Palmieri…).…”
Section: Ancona (Marche)unclassified