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Ausgewählte Funeralgedichte Johann von Bessers im Gefüge von rhetorisch-poetologischem Reglement und singulärem Erleben sowie Rollenverständnis und FunktionsabhängigkeitenPlötz, Anke January 2009 (has links)
Zugl.: Potsdam, Univ., Diss., 2009
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Die Trauer- und Trostgedichte in der römischen Literatur, untersucht nach ihrer Topik und ihrem Motivschatz.Esteve-Forriol, José, January 1962 (has links)
Inaug.-Diss.--Munich, 1962.
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Repraesentatio mundi - Körperbezogene Repräsentationsdiskurse in Epicedien Johann von Bessers Körperbilder im Gelegenheitsschrifttum des 17. Jahrhunderts /Palm, Mathias. January 2007 (has links)
Potsdam, Univ., Magisterarbeit, 2007.
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Culture and Self-Representation in the Este Court: Ercole Strozzi's Funeral Elegy of Eleonora of Aragon, a Text, Translation, and Commentary.Cassella, Dean Marcel 12 1900 (has links)
This dissertation presents a previously unedited text by one of the most distinguished- yet neglected-Latin writers of the Italian Renaissance, Ercole Strozzi (1471-1508), a poet and administrator in the court of Ferrara. Under the Este Dukes, Ferrara became a major center of literary and artistic patronage. The Latin literary output of the court, however, has received insufficient scholarly scrutiny. The text is a verse funeral elegy of Eleonora of Aragon (1450-1493), the first Duchess of Ferrara. Eleonora was a remarkable woman whose talents and indefatigable efforts on behalf of her husband, her children, and her state, won her accolades both at home and abroad. She also served as a prototype for the remarkable careers of her two daughters, Isabella d'Este, and Beatrice d'Este, who are celebrated for their erudition and patronage of arts and letters. The text is a mirror of the Estense court and reveals to us how its members no doubt saw themselves, at the very peak of its temporal power and the height of its prestige as a center of cultural creativity. It is also important for the striking portrait it presents of Eleonora. Ercole Strozzi chose to call his poem an epicedium, an ancient minor literary genre that had received attention in the two decades prior to its composition, due to the discovery and printing of the silver age Roman poet Statius, whose text includes several epicedia. Strozzi deftly adapts and transcends both his ancient and contemporary models (especially Poliziano), and in the process, creates a new Latin literary genre, the Renaissance epicedium. It is a fine poem, full of both erudition and creativity, and as such is the first fruits of what would be Ercole Strozzi's illustrious poetic career. The work is genuinely worthy of study on both esthetic and historical grounds.
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