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Lorenzo Valla's Christianity
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 July 2009
Extract
Lorenzo Valla (1407–1457), whose major writings were produced during the second quarter of the fifteenth century, is one of the most disputed figures among the humanists of the Italian Renaissance. His character and work were of such a nature that he aroused the admiration or antipathy of scholars from the beginning of his literary activities to the present day. It is largely because he dared to put into writing the critical ideas entertained, but seldom published, by many of his contemporaries, that he has ever since been considered either a hero or a scoundrel.
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- Copyright © American Society of Church History 1949
References
1 Published in Florence by G. C. Sansoni, 1891. See Remigio, Sabbadini's book review in Giornale Storico defla Letturatnra Italiana, XIX (1892), 403–414Google Scholar, which is in general agreement with the views of Mancini. Another favorable account is that of von Wolff, Max, Lorenzo Yalta, Seine Leben und seine Werke (Leipzig, 1893)Google Scholar, as is that of Barozzi, L. and Sabbadini, R., Studi sut Panormita e sul Valla (Florence, 1891)Google Scholar.
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13 The first printed edition appeared at Louvain in 1483. It was entitled Eloquentissimi doctissuniqui yin Laurentii de Yafla in Librum suum pangeticon de nero bono prohernium. The revised text, although enlarged, remained substantially the same and was printed twice in Basel, in 1519 and 1540. It is entitled De Voluptate ac de nero bono. A copy of the edition of 1519 is in my possession.
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