1549 in poetry
Appearance
| |||
---|---|---|---|
+... |
Nationality words link to articles with information on the nation's poetry or literature (for instance, Irish or France).
Events
[edit]This section is empty. You can help by adding to it. (July 2010) |
Works published
[edit]- Joachim du Bellay, France:
- L'Olive, the first sonnet sequence written in France[1]
- La Defense et illustration de la langue françoyse;[1] the author argues that all languages have equal value, and that modern French can express wisdom and truth as well as Ancient Greek, Latin, Italian or Spanish, but du Bellay also advocates adoption of Italianate and classical poetic forms to improve French poetry; he states that it is "no vicious thing, but praiseworthy, to borrow from a foreign tongue thoughts and words and appropriate them to our own"[2]
- Recueil de poesie, presente à tres illustre princesse Madame Marguerite, seur unique du Roy [...]
- Vers lyriques[3]
- Pontus de Tyard. Erreurs amoureuses
- William Baldwin, The Canticles or Balades of Saloman[4]
- Robert Crowley, The Voyce of the Laste Trumpet Blowen bi the Seventh Angel[4]
- Thomas Sternhold and John Hopkins, The Whole Booke of Psalmes, translated from the Old Testament[5]
Other
[edit]- Friedrich Dedekind, Grobianus[5] a poem written by a German in Latin elegiac verse; enormously popular across Continental Europe (see also Grobiana, an enlarged edition 1554, and Grobianus et Grobiana: sive, de morum simplicitate, libri tres 1558)
Births
[edit]Death years link to the corresponding "[year] in poetry" article:
- Giles Fletcher the Elder, birth year uncertain (died 1611), English poet and ambassador; father of Giles Fletcher the younger
Deaths
[edit]Birth years link to the corresponding "[year] in poetry" article:
- December 12 – Marguerite de Navarre, also known as "Marguerite of Angoulême" and "Margaret of Navarre" (born 1492), French queen consort of King Henry II of Navarre; patron of humanists and reformers, author, playwright and poet
- date not known – Arakida Moritake 荒木田守武 (born 1473), Japanese, the son of Negi Morihide, and a Shinto priest; said to have excelled in waka, renga, and in particular haikai
- date not known – Arthur Kelton died either 1549 or 1550 (born unknown), author who wrote in rhyme about Welsh history
See also
[edit]- Poetry
- 16th century in poetry
- 16th century in literature
- French Renaissance literature
- Renaissance literature
- Spanish Renaissance literature
Notes
[edit]- ^ a b Preminger, Alex and T. V. F. Brogan, et al., The New Princeton Encyclopedia of Poetry and Poetics, 1993. New York: MJF Books/Fine Communications
- ^ Kennedy, William J., "Petrarchan poetics", in Kennedy, George Alexander, et al., The Cambridge History of Literary Criticism, Volume 3, p 125, Cambridge University Press, 1999,ISBN 0-521-30008-8, ISBN 978-0-521-30008-7, retrieved via Google Books May 27, 2009
- ^ Weinberg, Bernard, ed., French Poetry of the Renaissance, Carbondale, Illinois: Southern Illinois University Press, Arcturus Books edition, October 1964, fifth printing, August 1974 (first printed in France in 1954), ISBN 0-8093-0135-0, "Joachim du Bellay" p 43
- ^ a b Cox, Michael, editor, The Concise Oxford Chronology of English Literature, Oxford University Press, 2004, ISBN 0-19-860634-6
- ^ a b Kurian, George Thomas, Timetables of World Literature, New York: Facts on File Inc., 2003, ISBN 0-8160-4197-0