Become a Readings Member to make your shopping experience even easier. Sign in or sign up for free!

Become a Readings Member. Sign in or sign up for free!

Hello Readings Member! Go to the member centre to view your orders, change your details, or view your lists, or sign out.

Hello Readings Member! Go to the member centre or sign out.

The Correspondence of Erasmus: Letters 446 to 593, Volume 4
Hardback

The Correspondence of Erasmus: Letters 446 to 593, Volume 4

$269.99
Sign in or become a Readings Member to add this title to your wishlist.

The year that began in August 1515 was the annus mirabilis of Erasmus’ career, the year, notably of the epistles of St Jerome and the first edition of his New Testament. In the months following, covered in this volume of the CWE, from August 1516 to June 1517, the active exchange of letters that began with volume 3 continued, giving a vivid impression of the impact of Erasmus’ great achievement upon his contemporaries. In his own words, The New Testament has made me friends everywhere. To Erasmus, the most important event of these months was intensely private, the dispensation granted by Leo X allowing him to escape permanently from the restraints of his religious community, to earn his living with the freedom of a secular priest. In elucidating the complex circumstances surrounding this crucial development in Erasmus’ career, Dr McConica advances a new view of the obscure circumstances surrounding Erasmus’ illegitimacy. We are also given Erasmus’ thinly veiled account of his boyhood in the Letter to Grunnius, and, in an Appendix, the closely related account in the Compendium vitae, a vital if controversial document for our knowledge of his early life. In the background are the life and enterprise of the Low Countries. Pursuit of personal promotion, the politics of the Burgundian Court, and the emergence of the young Prince Charles-soon to be Charles V-in the European scene, provide further tuition for the great humanist in the use and abuse of princely power. In this volume Erasmus moves between the Burgundian court at Brussels and the domestic quiet of Pieter Gillis’ household at Antwerp, where he was prearing further work for the Froben press at Basel. He is drawn to Louvain but avoids it, fearing a scrutiny of his works by the hostile theologians of the University. The England of Tunstall and More is always at hand, and the letters of volume 4 incidentally provide the most important chronicle for the publication of More’s Utopia, over which Erasmus kept a watchful eye. This volume records important developments in Erasmus’ many-faceted philosophy, especially in politics and education. There is the sharpest condemnation of princely power beneath the veil of rhetorical courtesy, with classical statements of Erasmus’ programme for men of education and Christan principle, the rulers upon whom he rested his hope for the reform of Christiandom. Educated Europe now waited upon Erasmus’ words, and, as a French humanist writes, Words never fail him; and such words! Volume 4 of the Collected Works of Erasmus series

Read More
In Shop
Out of stock
Shipping & Delivery

$9.00 standard shipping within Australia
FREE standard shipping within Australia for orders over $100.00
Express & International shipping calculated at checkout

MORE INFO
Format
Hardback
Publisher
University of Toronto Press
Country
Canada
Date
1 December 1977
Pages
447
ISBN
9780802053664

The year that began in August 1515 was the annus mirabilis of Erasmus’ career, the year, notably of the epistles of St Jerome and the first edition of his New Testament. In the months following, covered in this volume of the CWE, from August 1516 to June 1517, the active exchange of letters that began with volume 3 continued, giving a vivid impression of the impact of Erasmus’ great achievement upon his contemporaries. In his own words, The New Testament has made me friends everywhere. To Erasmus, the most important event of these months was intensely private, the dispensation granted by Leo X allowing him to escape permanently from the restraints of his religious community, to earn his living with the freedom of a secular priest. In elucidating the complex circumstances surrounding this crucial development in Erasmus’ career, Dr McConica advances a new view of the obscure circumstances surrounding Erasmus’ illegitimacy. We are also given Erasmus’ thinly veiled account of his boyhood in the Letter to Grunnius, and, in an Appendix, the closely related account in the Compendium vitae, a vital if controversial document for our knowledge of his early life. In the background are the life and enterprise of the Low Countries. Pursuit of personal promotion, the politics of the Burgundian Court, and the emergence of the young Prince Charles-soon to be Charles V-in the European scene, provide further tuition for the great humanist in the use and abuse of princely power. In this volume Erasmus moves between the Burgundian court at Brussels and the domestic quiet of Pieter Gillis’ household at Antwerp, where he was prearing further work for the Froben press at Basel. He is drawn to Louvain but avoids it, fearing a scrutiny of his works by the hostile theologians of the University. The England of Tunstall and More is always at hand, and the letters of volume 4 incidentally provide the most important chronicle for the publication of More’s Utopia, over which Erasmus kept a watchful eye. This volume records important developments in Erasmus’ many-faceted philosophy, especially in politics and education. There is the sharpest condemnation of princely power beneath the veil of rhetorical courtesy, with classical statements of Erasmus’ programme for men of education and Christan principle, the rulers upon whom he rested his hope for the reform of Christiandom. Educated Europe now waited upon Erasmus’ words, and, as a French humanist writes, Words never fail him; and such words! Volume 4 of the Collected Works of Erasmus series

Read More
Format
Hardback
Publisher
University of Toronto Press
Country
Canada
Date
1 December 1977
Pages
447
ISBN
9780802053664