1538
Chronology
1538
1538-02
Ambra Moroncini (2016):
It is known that in 1538 the Accademia della Virtù met weekly during Carnival, either at the residence of Archbishop Francesco Colonna or that of Claudio Tolomei, to discuss a theme announced in advance. Each meeting was presided over by a key member enthroned as ‘king’ who hosted a feast. In return, the other members, called either ‘vassals’ or ‘fathers’, rewarded him with small gifts accompanied by an after-dinner speech written in either prose or poetry to account for their chosen offerings. It was a way to celebrate indulgence before the austerity of Lent by a ‘competition of Virtue’ through the composition of ingenious and parodoxical encomia of certain foods and objects.
Caro recounted this sort of ritual in his letter to Benedetto Varchi dated 10 March 1538:
Il Giuoco de la Virtù, che voi sapete, crebbe tanto che diventò reame; e questo carnovale vi si son fatte cose divine, perché ogni settimana sedeva un re, quale avea una cena, e ognuno l’avea a presentar d’una stravaganza e d’una composizione, che a gara tanto l’uno dell’altro e gli re e i vassalli hanno fatto cose che danno che a dire a tutta Roma. […] Io ho fatto certe pappolate che Fabio Segni manderà a messer Mattio, perché non ho tempo a copiare.11
[The Game of Virtue, as you know, grew so much that it became as big as a kingdom; and this Carnival we did divine things, since each week a king officiated, who held a dinner, and everyone had to present him with a bizarre object and a composition, and for this reason everyone in competition with each other, both the kings and their vassals, have composed writings that are getting all Rome talking. […] I have composed some pieces of nonsense that Fabio Segni will send to Messer Mattio, since I do not have time to copy them]12
1538-03
Thomas Platter the Elder publishes in Basel Pomponio Leto's De Antiquitatis Urbis Romae Libellus together with Marliano's Topographia and Publius Victor's De urbis Romae regionibus & locis libellus.
1538-03-10
Letter from Annibale Caro to Benedetto Varchi:
(from: Ambra Moroncini (2016)):
It is known that in 1538 the Accademia della Virtù met weekly during Carnival, either at the residence of Archbishop Francesco Colonna or that of Claudio Tolomei, to discuss a theme announced in advance. Each meeting was presided over by a key member enthroned as ‘king’ who hosted a feast. In return, the other members, called either ‘vassals’ or ‘fathers’, rewarded him with small gifts accompanied by an after-dinner speech written in either prose or poetry to account for their chosen offerings. It was a way to celebrate indulgence before the austerity of Lent by a ‘competition of Virtue’ through the composition of ingenious and parodoxical encomia of certain foods and objects.
Caro recounted this sort of ritual in his letter to Benedetto Varchi dated 10 March 1538:
Il Giuoco de la Virtù, che voi sapete, crebbe tanto che diventò reame; e questo carnovale vi si son fatte cose divine, perché ogni settimana sedeva un re, quale avea una cena, e ognuno l’avea a presentar d’una stravaganza e d’una composizione, che a gara tanto l’uno dell’altro e gli re e i vassalli hanno fatto cose che danno che a dire a tutta Roma. […] Io ho fatto certe pappolate che Fabio Segni manderà a messer Mattio, perché non ho tempo a copiare.11
[The Game of Virtue, as you know, grew so much that it became as big as a kingdom; and this Carnival we did divine things, since each week a king officiated, who held a dinner, and everyone had to present him with a bizarre object and a composition, and for this reason everyone in competition with each other, both the kings and their vassals, have composed writings that are getting all Rome talking. […] I have composed some pieces of nonsense that Fabio Segni will send to Messer Mattio, since I do not have time to copy them]12
Footnotes:
11. Caro, Lettere familiari, 1, 72–73 (there are two versions of the same letter). Caro wrote to Varchi about a similar dining experience also on 10 January 1538 (1, 59).
12. The translation of all quotations is mine. I am grateful to Lisa Sampson for helpful suggestions.
1538-04-10
(cited in [Simons / Kornell 2008: 1077]
On 10 April 1538, in the middle of Lent, Caro wrote to Bernardino Maffei: “Here in Rome,” he reported dispiritedly, “nothing of any note has happened. The Kingdom of Virtue has disbanded. Pasquino went simple years ago. What then can I write to you?” [32]
On the same day, in fact, he had also written to Giovan Francesco Leoni, noting that “the Realm of Virtue is in decline.” [33]
FN 32: Caro, 1957–61, 1:79: “Qui in Roma non è seguita cosa notabile. Il Regno de la Virtù è sbandato. Pasquino, è già di molt’anni va gaglioffo. Che vi scriverò dunque?”
FN 33: Ibid., 83: “Il Regno de la Virtù è in declinazione.”