Pope Paul II arrested a prominent group of humanists on charges of conspiracy and heresy. They were imprisoned in Castel Sant'Angelo and tortured before ultimately being released. One of those humanists, Bartolomeo Platina, later wrote a Lives of the Popes that became the definitive history of the papacy for hundreds of years. The work included a Life of Paul II, which Platina used as an opportunity to defend himself and humanism— and to attack Paul II. It is a remarkable work of literature, in which the main conflict in the story plays out between the protagonist and the author himself. For Latinists interested in exploring Renaissance literature, there are few better introductory texts than Platina's Life of Paul II. The narrative is animated by the controversies stemming from the rediscovery of Classical literature, including issues such as republicanism, homoeroticism, and debates about the immortality of the soul. Platina's Paul II also introduces readers to key Renaissance institutions like the Papal Curia and the Roman Academy.This edition aims to enable intermediate-level students of Latin to read the text in its original language. There is a substantial introduction that provides background on fifteenth-century Rome and on Latin in the Renaissance, as well as new research on the constitution of the text. The Latin text includes a running glossary and grammatical commentary on every page.
Bartolomeo Platina Libros
Bartolomeo Platina fue un escritor italiano del Renacimiento cuya obra De honesta voluptate et valetudine (Sobre el placer honorable y la salud) sentó las bases de la gastronomía moderna. Basándose en ideales antiguos y en el saber humanista, fusionó magistralmente el arte culinario con reflexiones filosóficas sobre el placer y la salud. Su influencia trascendió Italia, dando forma al concepto europeo de la alta cocina. Platina dejó así una huella imborrable en la historia de la literatura y la gastronomía.


Covers the period from the founding of the church through ad 461.