Ansaldo Cebà (1565 – April 1623) was an Italian Baroque poet and literary critic.

Ansaldo Cebà
Portrait of Ansaldo Cebà. From the book "Le glorie degli Incogniti", 1647
Born1565
DiedApril 1623(1623-04-00) (aged 57–58)
Alma materUniversity of Padua
Occupations
  • Poet
  • Writers
  • Dramatist
Writing career
LanguageItalian language
Period
Genres
Literary movement
Notable worksLa reina Esther

Biography

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Born to an ancient Genoese family connected with the Grimaldi, Cebà attended the University of Padua, where he studied under Sperone Speroni, and Giason Denores.[1] He specialized in Greek language and literature.[2] On his return to Genoa in 1591 he became a member of the prestigious Accademia degli Addormentati (Academy of the Sleepers), and soon distinguished himself by his academic lectures.[3] He lived most of his life in Genoa.[4] He was ordained a cleric in 1605, after his beloved Geronima Di Negro had become a nun. Cebà was a member of the Accademia degli Incogniti. He died in Genoa in April 1623.[1]

Cebà had an extremely close relationship, by correspondence only, with the jewish poet and writer Sara Copia Sullam, whom he admired but whom he never actually met.[5] He appears to have fallen in love with Sara, and constantly urged her to convert to Christianity, but she resisted.[3] Ansaldo and Sara corresponded from spring 1618 until spring 1622. The correspondence is known through Cebà's Lettere di Ansaldo Cebà scritte a Sarra Copia (Genoa: Giuseppe Pavoni, 1623).[6] Sara's letters to Cebà were never published, and are lost.[7]

Works

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Frescoes by Domenico Fiasella inspired by Cebà's poem, Genoa, Palazzo Giacomo Lomellini

Cebà's conservative intellectual outlook was typical of Genoese lesser nobility, but conflicted with an inclination to Baroque novelty.[4] His first book of verse, Rime, appeared in 1596 at Padua and Antwerp. The love-poetry of a Petrarchan stamp which it contained - celebrating a Genoese lady, Aurelia Spinola - gave way in a second volume of Rime (Rome, 1611) to religious and moral themes.[8] In 1615 he published an epic poem entitled La reina Esther, which narrates Esther's story in twenty-one cantos. The poem was a huge success and established him as an author of note.[1] Sara Copia Sullam addressed an enthusiastic letter full of praise to the Genoese poet.[9] In the letter she admitted that she carried the book with her all the time, and even slept with it. Cebà responded to Sara's letter, and this was the start of four years of letters, gifts and poems, exchanged between the two. The Genoese Doge of the time, Giacomo Lomellini, had his palace frescoed by Domenico Fiasella with a cycle of paintings inspired by Cebà's poem.[10]

In 1617 Cebà published the political treatise Il Cittadino di Repubblica, translated into English by Charles Edwards Lester and published in New York City in 1845.[11] In 1620 he published an Italian version of Theophrastus' Characters, accompanied by a detailed commentary.[12] In 1621 appeared the Esercitii Accademici, and the dialogue Il Gonzaga over del Poema Heroico, in which he tried to prove that Ludovico Ariosto and Torquato Tasso had adhered to the classical unities in their epics.[4] The same year he published also a tragedy, La Principessa Silandra, and the historical treatise Il Principio dell'Historia Romana. A second epic poem, Il Furio Camillo, a second tragedy, Alcippo Spartano, and two volumes of Lettere, came out in 1623, the year of Cebà's death. A third tragedy, Le Gemelle Capovane, was printed for the first time in Scipione Maffei's Teatro Italiano (vol. 2), Verona, 1723.[1]

Notes

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  1. ^ a b c d Mutini 1979.
  2. ^ Ansaldo Cebà entry (in Italian) by Antonio Belloni in the Enciclopedia Treccani, 1931
  3. ^ a b Sarot 1954, p. 138.
  4. ^ a b c Slawinski 2002.
  5. ^ Rio 1856, pp. 74–75.
  6. ^ Boccato 1974, pp. 169–91.
  7. ^ Katharina M. Wilson (March 1, 1991). An Encyclopedia of continental women writers. Vol. 2. The Jewish Publication Society. p. 1202. ISBN 978-0-8240-8547-6. Retrieved 2010-04-28.
  8. ^ Hutton 1935, p. 360.
  9. ^ Westwater, Lynn Lara (2020). Sarra Copia Sulam. A Jewish Salonnière and the Press in Counter-Reformation Venice. University of Toronto Press. p. 21. ISBN 9781487505837.
  10. ^ Corradini 1994, p. 147.
  11. ^ Cebà, Ansaldo (1845). The Citizen of a Republic. What are His Rights, His Duties, and Privileges, and what Should be His Education. Translated by Charles Edwards Lester. New York: Paine and Burgess.
  12. ^ I charatteri morali di Theofrasto interpretati per Ansaldo Cebà. Al cardinale Federigo Borromeo. Genoa: appresso Giuseppe Pauoni. 1620.

Bibliography

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  • «Ansaldo Cebà Genovese». In : Le glorie de gli Incogniti: o vero, Gli huomini illustri dell'Accademia de' signori Incogniti di Venetia, In Venetia : appresso Francesco Valuasense stampator dell'Accademia, 1647, pp. 70–73 (on-line).