03714nam 2200565 450 991082709820332120230814221650.090-04-34613-910.1163/9789004346130(CKB)4100000002068739(MiAaPQ)EBC5331633(OCoLC)1022077299(OCoLC)1015859417(nllekb)BRILL9789004346130(EXLCZ)99410000000206873920210425d2018 uy 0engurcnu||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierHumanism, theology, and spiritual crisis in Renaissance Florence Giovanni Caroli's Liber dierum Lucensium : a critical edition, English translation, commentary, and introduction /[edited] by Amos EdelheitLeiden ;Boston :Brill,[2018]1 online resource (281 pages)The Renaissance Society of America texts and studies series ;v. 10Contains a critical edition of the Latin text of the manuscritp MS Florence, Biblioteca Nazionale Centrale, Conv. Suppr. C.8.279, an English translation, entitled The book of my days in Lucca, commentary notes, and an introduction.90-04-34612-0 Includes bibliographical references and index.Front Matter -- Copyright Page /Amos Edelheit -- Dedication /Amos Edelheit -- Preface /Amos Edelheit -- Acknowledgements /Amos Edelheit -- Introduction /Amos Edelheit -- Sigla /Amos Edelheit -- Giovanni Caroli Liber dierum lucensium The Book of My Days in Lucca /Amos Edelheit -- Liber Primus /Amos Edelheit -- Liber Secundus /Amos Edelheit -- Liber Tertius /Amos Edelheit -- Commentary /Amos Edelheit -- Book One /Amos Edelheit -- Book Two /Amos Edelheit -- Book Three /Amos Edelheit -- Back Matter -- Bibliography /Amos Edelheit -- Index Nominum et Rerum /Amos Edelheit.This is the first work by Giovanni Caroli (1428-1503) to appear in printing Caroli was one of the leading theologians in Florence during the last decades of the fifteenth century, a man who lived between the two great traditions of his time: the scholastic and the humanist. The volume contains a critical edition of the Latin text, entitled The Book of My Days in Lucca , an English translation, commentary notes and an introduction. Caroli presents us with his powerful personal reaction to the institutional crisis regarding the required reform in the Dominican Order, yet even here we already notice the pervasive influence of his classical education, and especially his acquaintance with authors such as Cicero, Livy, Tacitus, and especially Virgil.The Renaissance Society of America10.Christianity and religious humanismEarly works to 1800HumanismItalyFlorenceHistoryEarly works to 1800Manuscripts, LatinItalyFlorenceManuscripts, RenaissanceItalyFlorenceLucca (Italy)ReligionEarly works to 1800Christianity and religious humanismHumanismHistoryManuscripts, LatinManuscripts, Renaissance261.5/1094551Caroli Giovanni1428-1503.1627017Edelheit Amos786107Caroli Giovanni1428-1503.1627017Caroli Giovanni1428-1503.1627017NL-LeKBNL-LeKBBOOK9910827098203321Humanism, theology, and spiritual crisis in Renaissance Florence3963393UNINA