Mario Teluccini, Erasto in verse: Difference between revisions
From The Seven Sages of Rome
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|Has Title=Erasto | |Has Title=Erasto | ||
|Has Branch Of Tradition=Seven Sages of Rome | |Has Branch Of Tradition=Seven Sages of Rome | ||
|Has Language Of Version=Italian | |Has Language Of Version=Italian | ||
|Has Place Of Text Composition=Pesaro, Italy | |Has Place Of Text Composition=Pesaro, Italy | ||
|Has Date Of Text Composition=1566 | |Has Date Of Text Composition=1566 | ||
|Has Source For Date Of Text Composition=Lalomia (2019) | |Has Source For Date Of Text Composition=Lalomia (2019) | ||
|Has Modern Research Literature=Wikeley (1983); Lalomia (2019) | |Has Modern Research Literature=Wikeley (1983); Lalomia (2019) | ||
|Has Modern Edition=Teluccini, Erasto, ed. by Lalomia (2019) | |Has Modern Edition=Teluccini, Erasto, ed. by Lalomia (2019) | ||
|Is Adapted From=Erasto (Es) | |||
}} | }} | ||
{{EmbeddedStory | {{EmbeddedStory | ||
|Has Short Title=Canis | |Has Short Title=Canis | ||
Revision as of 13:35, 18 February 2026
Mario Teluccini's verse Erasto poem, composed in ottava rima, in nine cantos, was published in 1566 - just decades after the emergence of the first version of the Erasto narrative in 1542. Wikeley observes that in addition to attempting to build on the Erasto's popularity, Teluccini was also drawing on Ariosto's Orlando furioso for inspiration (Wikeley, 1983, p. 11-12). The poem was not immensely successful, however.
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