De viris illustribus  

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-==Content==+{{Template}}
-The 106 ''Famous Women'' biographies are of mythological and historical women, as well as some of Boccaccio's Renaissance contemporaries. The brief life stories follow the same general exemplary literature patterns used in various versions of [[De viris illustribus]]. The biography pattern starts with the name of the person, then the parents or ancestors, then their rank or social position, and last the general reason for their notoriety or fame with associated details. This is sometimes interjected with a philosophical or inspirational lesson at the end.+
-The only sources that Boccaccio specifically says he used is Saint Paul (no. 42), the Bible (no. 43) and Jerome (no. 86). The wording of the biographies themselves, however, show much where he obtained his information. He used the classical authors of [[Valerius Maximus]], [[Pliny the Elder|Pliny]], [[Livy]], [[Ovid]], [[Suetonius]], [[Statius]],[[Virgil]], [[Lactantius]], [[Orosius]], and [[Justinus]].+'''De viris illustribus''', meaning "On Illustrious / Famous Men", represents a [[Literary trope|trope]] of ancient Roman [[exemplary literature]] that was revived during the [[Italian Renaissance]] and inspired the assembly or commissioning of series of portraits of outstanding men— and sometimes, by the sixteenth century, of outstanding women as well— with a high [[didactic]] purpose.
-== The famous women ==+
-*1. [[Eve (Bible)|Eve]], the first woman in the bible +
-*2. [[Semiramis]], queen of the Assyrians+
-*3. [[Ops|Opis]], wife of Saturn+
-*4. [[Juno (mythology)|Juno]], goddess of the Kingdoms+
-*5. [[Ceres (mythology)|Ceres]], goddess of the harvest and queen of Sicily+
-*6. [[Minerva]] +
-*7. [[Venus (mythology)|Venus]], queen of Cyprus+
-*8. [[Isis]], queen and goddess of Egypt+
-*9. [[Europa (mythology)|Europa]], queen of Crete+
-*10. [[Libya (mythology)|Libya]], queen of Libya +
-*11 and 12. [[Marpesia]] and [[Lampedo]], queens of the Amazons +
-*13. [[Thisbe]], a Babylonian maiden +
-*14. [[Hypermnestra]], queen of the Argives and priestess of Juno +
-*15. [[Niobe]], queen of Thebes+
-*16. [[Hypsipyle]], queen of Lemnos+
-*17. [[Medea]], queen of Colchis +
-*18. [[Arachne]] of Colophon +
-*19 and 20. [[Orithya]] and [[Antiope (mythology)|Antiope]], queens of the Amazons+
-*21. [[Erythraean Sibyl|Erythraea]] or Heriphile, a [[Sibyl]] +
-*22. [[Medusa]], daughter of Phorcus +
-*23. [[Iole]], daughter of the king of the Aetolians+
-*24. [[Deianira]], wife of Hercules+
-*25. [[Jocasta]], queen of Thebes +
-*26. [[Cumaean Sibyl|Almathea]] or Deiphebe, a [[Sibyl]] +
-*27. Nicostrata, or [[Carmenta]], daughter of King Ionius +
-*28. [[Procris]], wife of Cephalus +
-*29. [[Argea|Argia]], wife of Polynices and daughter of King Adrastus+
-*30. [[Manto (Greek Mythology)|Manto]], daughter of Tiresias +
-*31. The wives of the [[Minyans]]+
-*32. [[Penthesilea]], queen of the Amazons+
-*33. [[Polyxena]], daughter of King Priam+
-*34. [[Hecuba]], queen of the Trojans+
-*35. [[Cassandra]], daughter of King Priam of Troy+
-*36. [[Clytemnestra]], queen of Mycenae+
-*37. [[Helen]], wife of King Menelaus+
-*38. [[Circe]], daughter of the Sun +
-*39. [[Camilla (mythology)|Camilla]], queen of the Volscians +
-*40. [[Penelope]], wife of Ulysses +
-*41. [[Lavinia]], queen of Laurentum+
-*42. [[Dido]], or Elissa, queen of Carthage +With its inception in the circle of [[Cicero]], various works bear the titles ''De viris illustribus'' or ''De hominibus illustribus''. From [[Cornelius Nepos]]' ''De Viris Illustribus'' [[Aulus Gellius]] draws an anecdote of [[Cato the Elder]]; Cornelius Nepos also produced a ''Liber De Excellentibus Ducibus Gentium'' (Lives of Eminent Commanders). [[Suetonius#Other works|Suetonius]]' fragmentary ''Lives'' include grammarians, rhetoricians, historians, and poets. [[Jerome]]'s collection of Christian biographies, ''[[De Viris Illustribus (Jerome)|De Viris Illustribus]]'' contains 135 brief notices. Jerome's work was continued by [[Gennadius of Massilia]]'s ''[[Gennadius of Massilia#De_Viris_Illustribus|De Viris Illustribus]]''.
-*43. [[Queen of Sheba|Nicaula]], queen of Ethiopia+
-*44. [[Pamphile]], daughter of Platea +
-*45. [[Rhea Silvia|Rhea Ilia]], a Vestal Virgin +
-*46. [[Gaia Cyrilla]], wife of King [[Tarquinius Priscus]]+
-*47. [[Sappho]], girl of Lesbos and poetess +
-*48. [[Lucretia]], wife of Collatinus +
-*49. [[Tamyris]], queen of Scythia +
-*50. [[Leaena]], a prostitute+
-*51. [[Athaliah]], queen of Jerusalem+
-*52. [[Cloelia]], a Roman maiden+
-*53. [[Hippo, a Greek woman]]+
-*54. [[Megullia Dotata]] +
-*55. [[Veturia]], a Roman matron +
-*56. [[Timarete|Thamyris]], daughter of Micon+
-*57. [[Artemisia I of Caria|Artemisia]], queen of Caria[+
-*58. [[Verginia]], virgin and daughter of Virginius+
-*59. [[Eirene]], daughter of Cratinus+
-*60. [[Leontium]]+
-*61. [[Olympias]], queen of Macedonia+
-*62. [[Claudia (Roman mythology)|Claudia]], a Vestal Virgin+
-*63. [[Virginia (Volumnius)|Virginia]], wife of [[Lucius Volumnius Flamma Violens|Lucius Volumnius]]+
-*64. [[Flora (mythology)|Flora]] the prostitute, goddess of flowers and wife of Zephyrus+
-*65. A young Roman woman +
-*66. [[Iaia|Marcia]], daughter of Varro +
-*67. [[Sulpicia (Flaccus)|Sulpicia]], wife of [[Quintus Fulvius Flaccus|Fulvius Flaccus]] +
-*68. [[Harmonia (Gelo)|Harmonia]], daughter of Gelon, son of [[Hiero II of Syracuse]]+
-*69. [[Busa of Canosa di Puglia]]+
-*70. [[Sophonisba]], queen of Numidia+
-*71. [[Theoxena]], daughter of Prince Herodicus+
-*72. [[Laodice of Cappadocia|Berenice]], queen of Cappadocia+
-*73. [[The Wife of Orgiagon the Galatian]]+
-*74. [[Tertia Aemilia]], wife of the [[Scipio Africanus|elder Africanus]]+
-*75. [[Dripetrua]], queen of Laodice +
-*76. [[Sempronia]], daughter of [[Gaius Gracchus|Gracchus]]+
-*77. [[Claudia Quinta]], a Roman woman +
-*78. [[Hypsicratea]], Queen of Pontus+
-*79. [[Sempronia]], a Roman Woman+
-*80. The Wives of the [[Cimbrian]]s +
-*81. [[Julia (daughter of Julius Caesar)|Julia]], daughter of the dictator Julius Caesar+
-*82. [[Porcia Catonis|Portia]], daughter of Cato Uticensis +
-*83. [[Curia (wife of Quintus Lucretius)|Curia]], wife of Quintus Lucretius +
-*84. [[Hortensia (orator)|Hortensia]], daughter of [[Quintus Hortensius]] +
-*85. [[Sulpicia (Crus)|Sulpicia]], wife of [[Lucius Cornelius Lentulus Crus|Cruscellio]]+
-*86. [[Cornificia]], a poetess +
-*87. [[Mariamne (second wife of Herod)|Mariamme]], queen of Judaea +
-*88. [[Cleopatra]], queen of Egypt+
-*89. [[Antonia Minor|Antonia]], daughter of Antony +
-*90. [[Agrippina the elder|Agrippina]], wife of Germanicus+
-*91. [[Paulina]], a Roman woman +
-*92. [[Agrippina the Younger|Agrippina]], mother of the Emperor Nero+
-*93. [[Epicharis (Pisonian conspirator)|Epicharis]], a freedwoman+
-*94. [[Pompeia Paulina]], wife of Seneca+
-*95. [[Poppaea Sabina]], wife of Nero +
-*96. [[Triaria]], wife of Lucius Vitellius+
-*97. [[Faltonia Betitia Proba|Proba]], wife of Adelphus +
-*98. [[Faustina the Younger|Faustina Augusta]]+
-*99. [[Julia Soaemias|Symiamira]], woman of Emesa+
-*100. [[Zenobia]], queen of Palmyra +
-*101. [[Pope Joan|Joan]], an Englishwoman and Pope+
-*102. [[Irene (empress)|Irene]], Empress of Constantinople+
-*103. [[Gualdrada]], a Florentine maiden+
-*104. [[Constance of Sicily|Constance]], Empress of Rome and queen of Sicily+
-*105. [[Camiola]], a Sienese widow+
-*106. [[Joan I of Naples|Joanna]], queen of Jerusalem and Sicily+
 +During the Middle Ages the inspirational series took two paths: the specifically Christian models were enshrined in [[hagiography]], in which [[miracle]]s attracted the attention, but the qualities exemplified by [[martyr]]s were those of fortitude, faith and obedience. On the secular side, the worldly models, emulated by aristocrats alone, were contracted and codified in the "[[Nine Worthies]]" who were [[Chivalry|chivalric]] exemplars of valiant ''courtoisie'', the instructive models of aristocratic courtly behavior. The library of literary portraits was figured forth in visual reminders, in [[illuminated manuscript]]s, and in [[tapestry]], among other media.
 +
 +With the very first beginnings of the revival of classical learning in [[Italian Renaissance]], a broader, carefully select group of men of renown from the distant and the recent past outstanding for their statecraft or their learning "emerged almost simultaneously in such diverse Italian centers as [[Milan]], [[Naples]], [[Siena]], [[Padua]], [[Foligno]], [[Florence]], [[Venice]], [[Perugia]]and [[Urbino]].". In literature, the notion was a Petrarchan one, expressed in his ''[[De Viris Illustribus (Petrarch)|De Viris Illustribus]]'',a collection of 36 short biographies ''On Famous Men'' and [[Boccaccio]], inspired to emulation, wrote ''[[De Casibus Virorum Illustrium]]'', a collection of 56 biographies ''On the Fates of Famous Men''. Boccacio also wrote a complement to it, ''[[De mulieribus claris]]'', a collection of 106 biographies ''On Famous Women''. [[Leonardo Bruni]] published translations of [[Plutarch]]'s ''Lives''.
 +
 +These literary examples of ''virii illustri'' preceded the visual ones, based on literary documents rather than surviving Roman series, as the [[Renaissance humanism|humanist]] [[Poggio Bracciolini]] wrote in his essay ''De nobilitate liber'', the Romans should be emulated, "for they believed that the images of men who had excelled in the pursuit of glory and wisdom, if placed before the eyes, would help enoble and stir up the soul." A series of instructive ''uomini illustri'' painted for [[Azzo Visconti]] in Milan. which was mentioned by [[Giorgio Vasari]]. and a series in Naples are both lost, but important early series of portraits of famous men survive in the [[Palazzo Pubblico|Palazzo Pubblico, Siena]]. and in the Sala Virorum Illustrium, Padua.
 +
 +The [[Giovio Series]] of portraits of literary figures, rulers, statesmen and other dignitaries, many of which were done from life, assembled by Renaissance historian and biographer [[Paolo Giovio]] (1483–1552) but subsequently lost, is represented today by the set of copies made for [[Cosimo I de' Medici]] in the [[Uffizi Gallery]].
 +
 +The trope continues strongly today, not so much in universal [[Biographical dictionary|biographical dictionaries]], which verge on [[prosopography]], but in specifically instructive collections of inspirational ''[[Biography|vita]]e'', such as ''[[Profiles in Courage]]'', and is reflected in the ironic title to portraits of all-but-anonymous [[sharecropper]]s in the [[American South]], ''[[Let Us Now Praise Famous Men]]'', which is drawn from a passage in [[Ecclesiasticus]] that begins, "Let us now praise famous men, and our fathers that begat us."
 +
 +
 +== See also ==
 +:''[[illustrious]], [[men]], [[greatness]], [[illustrious women]]''
 +*[[De Casibus Virorum Illustrium]] by Giovanni Boccaccio
 +*[[De Viris Illustribus (Jerome)]]
 +*[[De Viris Illustribus (Petrarch)]]
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De viris illustribus, meaning "On Illustrious / Famous Men", represents a trope of ancient Roman exemplary literature that was revived during the Italian Renaissance and inspired the assembly or commissioning of series of portraits of outstanding men— and sometimes, by the sixteenth century, of outstanding women as well— with a high didactic purpose.

With its inception in the circle of Cicero, various works bear the titles De viris illustribus or De hominibus illustribus. From Cornelius Nepos' De Viris Illustribus Aulus Gellius draws an anecdote of Cato the Elder; Cornelius Nepos also produced a Liber De Excellentibus Ducibus Gentium (Lives of Eminent Commanders). Suetonius' fragmentary Lives include grammarians, rhetoricians, historians, and poets. Jerome's collection of Christian biographies, De Viris Illustribus contains 135 brief notices. Jerome's work was continued by Gennadius of Massilia's De Viris Illustribus.

During the Middle Ages the inspirational series took two paths: the specifically Christian models were enshrined in hagiography, in which miracles attracted the attention, but the qualities exemplified by martyrs were those of fortitude, faith and obedience. On the secular side, the worldly models, emulated by aristocrats alone, were contracted and codified in the "Nine Worthies" who were chivalric exemplars of valiant courtoisie, the instructive models of aristocratic courtly behavior. The library of literary portraits was figured forth in visual reminders, in illuminated manuscripts, and in tapestry, among other media.

With the very first beginnings of the revival of classical learning in Italian Renaissance, a broader, carefully select group of men of renown from the distant and the recent past outstanding for their statecraft or their learning "emerged almost simultaneously in such diverse Italian centers as Milan, Naples, Siena, Padua, Foligno, Florence, Venice, Perugiaand Urbino.". In literature, the notion was a Petrarchan one, expressed in his De Viris Illustribus,a collection of 36 short biographies On Famous Men and Boccaccio, inspired to emulation, wrote De Casibus Virorum Illustrium, a collection of 56 biographies On the Fates of Famous Men. Boccacio also wrote a complement to it, De mulieribus claris, a collection of 106 biographies On Famous Women. Leonardo Bruni published translations of Plutarch's Lives.

These literary examples of virii illustri preceded the visual ones, based on literary documents rather than surviving Roman series, as the humanist Poggio Bracciolini wrote in his essay De nobilitate liber, the Romans should be emulated, "for they believed that the images of men who had excelled in the pursuit of glory and wisdom, if placed before the eyes, would help enoble and stir up the soul." A series of instructive uomini illustri painted for Azzo Visconti in Milan. which was mentioned by Giorgio Vasari. and a series in Naples are both lost, but important early series of portraits of famous men survive in the Palazzo Pubblico, Siena. and in the Sala Virorum Illustrium, Padua.

The Giovio Series of portraits of literary figures, rulers, statesmen and other dignitaries, many of which were done from life, assembled by Renaissance historian and biographer Paolo Giovio (1483–1552) but subsequently lost, is represented today by the set of copies made for Cosimo I de' Medici in the Uffizi Gallery.

The trope continues strongly today, not so much in universal biographical dictionaries, which verge on prosopography, but in specifically instructive collections of inspirational vitae, such as Profiles in Courage, and is reflected in the ironic title to portraits of all-but-anonymous sharecroppers in the American South, Let Us Now Praise Famous Men, which is drawn from a passage in Ecclesiasticus that begins, "Let us now praise famous men, and our fathers that begat us."


See also

illustrious, men, greatness, illustrious women




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