Selecciona una palabra y presiona la tecla d para obtener su definición.
 

41

This is published by J. Soler, RHi, xli (1917), 110-82, and page references are to this ed. Tratado del aojamiento is published ibid. 182-97.

 

42

Ed. M. Morreale (Madrid, 1958), 44.

 

43

E. Cotarelo y Mori, Don Enrique de Villena. Su vida y obras (Madrid, 1896), 169, notes that these three works draw on Petrarch. Farinelli's statement (op. cit. 14-15) that Villena owned MSS. of three Petrarchan works seems to rest on a misunderstanding of Cotarelo's study, for no inventory of Villena's library has survived.

 

44

La Bibliothèque du Marquis de Santillane (Paris, 1905).

 

45

The first three MSS. are described in Appendix I, nos. 17, 22, and 28. Schiff believes that Santillana could not read Latin, and the language of the MSS. strongly supports that view.

 

46

Schiff deals with Guzmán's work in appendix I. Among Santillana's other helpers were Alfonso de Cartagena (see below) and Juan de Lucena (d. 1506), who was the friend of Italian humanists and a familiar of Aeneas Sylvius.

 

47

Decembrio's Latin poem is published by Schiff, appendix 4.

 

48

Letter... to Don Peter, ed. A. R. Pastor and E. Prestage (Oxford, 1927).

 

49

Cancionero castellano del siglo XV, ed. R. Foulché-Delbose, vol. i (NBAE 19, Madrid 1912), 510. The placing of Petrarch between two Latin auctores is significant.

 

50

Rafael Lapesa, La obra literaria del Marqués de Santillana (Madrid, 1957), 5.