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note that it was given “nell'Accademica de' Signori
Humoristi di Roma à di 20. di Gennaio 1636.” The dedication of the Venetian edition, to the “Nobile venetiano” Luigi Molino, is signed Rome 11 April 1636. The Milanese edition was dedicated to Antonio
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Music and Poetry in
Seventeenth-Century Rome: Settings of the Canzonetta and Cantata Texts of Francesco Balducci, Domenico Benigni, Francesco Melosi, and Antonio Abati
360:. It was there that Abati died in October 1667. He led a merry life, his activity was well rewarded and he had the protection of powerful men (among whom was
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between 1638 and 1649. From 1641 to 1644 he was at the
Habsburg court in Austria, where he enjoyed the favor of Ferdinand III and his brother,
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391:, which attacks the vices of poets of his time. He The bulk of Abati's poetry was first published posthumously by Giovanni Recaldini in 1671.
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From Rome and its surroundings Abati turned his attention further north. His friendship with Rosa led to several visits to
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A Dissertation upon the
Italian poetry: in which are interspersed some remarks on Mr. Voltaire's Essay on the epic poets
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Abati returned to Italy in 1645, and resided mainly in Rome and its provinces. In his final years he enjoyed the
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224:. Rosa was in large part inspired to become a satirist by his example. His satires were first published in
263:. It was here on 20 January of that year that he delivered the speech that was shortly to be published as
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387:, a collection of satires in the form of dialogues, published in Venice in 1651. The most well-known is
216:(“Report from Parnassus”), dedicated to the bad poets of the times. Between 1634 and 1638, Abati was in
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and its provinces, Abati's earliest publications indicate a period spent in the
Spanish territories of
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He moved to Rome in 1631. By early 1636 he was already well-regarded enough to address the Roman
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Applausi festivi fatti in Roma per l'elezione di
Ferdinando III al Regno de' Romani
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Seicento satirico: Il
Viaggio di Antonio Abati (con edizione critica in appendice)
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325:. Cardinal Chigi secured for Abati a series of provincial governorships in the
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Towards the end of his life, Abati's Tuscan connections eased his final days.
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651:"Indagine su un valentuomo ridicolo, ovvero: ancora su Abati e Salvator Rosa"
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in
Italian in his praise. However, his writings fell out of favor during the
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410:, a collection of satirical Poems mixed with Prose, Venice, 1651, in-8°;
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208:. He was a member of several Italian literary academies, including the
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Ragguaglio di
Parnaso contra i poetastri e partigiani delle nationi
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655:"Tutto il lume de la spera nostra": studi per Marco Ariani
298:. This Austrian sojourn was in turn followed by a trip to
513:(Rome: Pietro Antonio Facciotti, 1637), pt. 2, pp. 20-25.
248:, about 1600. Though he was to spend most of his life in
665:, in «La parola del testo», XXVI, 1-2, 2022, pp. 77-100.
591:, will be totally lost and forgotten in a short time.
279:, where he began his friendship with Salvator Rosa.
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275:as King of the Romans. In 1638 he was in nearby
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380:in his “Dissertation upon the Italian Poetry”.
352:, gave the poet the use of a villa and farm in
228:in 1651 and went through a number of editions.
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267:. A year later he contributed a poem to an
485:. University of Pennsylvania. p. 416.
457:The Oxford Companion to Italian Literature
212:(the Humorists), where he read his satire
567:It is to be hoped that the works of fra
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626:Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani
495:The title pages of both editions of
271:celebrating the election of Emperor
220:, where he made the acquaintance of
632:Istituto dell'Enciclopedia Italiana
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551:In ciel suo loco dĂ Phebo facondo.
549:Teban poeta, e ancor per coronarti
547:Al tuo sì gran valor cede giocondo
543:Antonio Abati sei stupor del Mondo
376:, and were strongly criticized by
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699:17th-century Italian male writers
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565:. London: R. Dodsley. p. 9.
356:, near her own ancestral home in
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201:– October 1667) was an Italian
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180:Delle Frascherie, fasci tre
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694:17th-century Italian poets
481:Robert Rau Holzer (1990).
430:(1674) – composed in 1660.
236:Antonio Abati was born in
619:Zapperi, Roberto (1960).
561:Giuseppe Baretti (1753).
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649:Malavasi, Massimiliano.
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350:Ferdinando II de' Medici
292:Archduke Leopold Wilhelm
261:Accademia degli Umoristi
461:Oxford University Press
424:The Council of the Gods
416:, Bologna, 1671, in-8°;
383:His major work are the
657:(in Italian): 407–420.
420:Il Consiglio degli dei
614:at Wikimedia Commons
532:Enciclopedia Treccani
497:Ragguaglio di Parnaso
408:Frascherie, fasci tre
403:. Milan, 1638, in-8°;
362:Emperor Ferdinand III
346:Vittoria della Rovere
265:Ragguaglio di Parnaso
214:Ragguaglio di Parnaso
176:Ragguaglio di Parnaso
630:(in Italian). Rome:
545:Base ferma dell’Arti
451:Diffley, P. (2002).
374:Age of Enlightenment
589:marinian corruption
689:Italian male poets
684:People from Gubbio
294:, who crowned him
122:Baroque literature
709:Italian satirists
661:Massimo Colella,
610:Media related to
581:Giovanni Ciampoli
573:Claudio Achillini
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151:Literary movement
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641:978-8-81200032-6
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464:. Retrieved
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368:composed an
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327:Papal States
323:Flavio Chigi
319:papal nephew
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246:Papal States
244:town in the
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117:17th century
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70:Papal States
62:October 1667
45:Papal States
16:Italian poet
679:1667 deaths
466:15 February
321:, Cardinal
317:of the new
199: 1600
77:Occupations
36: 1600
673:Categories
435:References
385:Frascherie
354:Senigallia
348:, wife of
308:Il Viaggio
66:Senigallia
58:1667-10-00
315:patronage
269:anthology
232:Biography
389:Pegasino
370:acrostic
339:Frascati
335:Recanati
302:and the
284:Florence
210:Umoristi
163:Marinism
101:Language
428:Bologna
378:Baretti
288:Tuscany
277:Viterbo
242:Umbrian
218:Viterbo
203:baroque
158:Baroque
105:Italian
638:
525:entry
500:Diani.
358:Urbino
331:Grotte
300:France
238:Gubbio
226:Venice
142:satire
137:Poetry
130:Genres
111:Period
86:Writer
41:Gubbio
395:Works
240:, an
636:ISBN
509:See
468:2013
337:and
286:and
250:Rome
206:poet
83:Poet
52:Died
29:Born
426:),
406:Le
341:).
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443:^
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196:c.
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33:c.
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