Skip to main content
Skip to main navigation menu
Skip to site footer
Open Menu
Home
CESURA
Current Issue
Archives
About
CESURA - Journal
Editorial Team
Open Access
Peer Review
Submissions
Publication Ethics
Privacy
Contact
Search
Login
Home
/
Renaissance
Renaissance
20 Items
All Items
Porcelio and the crusade against the Turks in the poem De die mundi
Nicoletta Rozza
187-246
A Pope and a Poet on Crusade: Pius II and Porcelio de' Pandoni
Antonietta Iacono
149-186
«Alter erit Tiphys». Egidio of Viterbo, Sannazaro, and the Idea of Crusade
Marc Deramaix
133-148
Romances of Chivalry and the Crusade Ideal under the Catholic Monarchs and Charles V
Rafael Ramos
101-132
The Fall of Constantinople (1453), Alfonso the Magnanimous, and the Dream of Humanism. 1. Literary trends
At the Crossroads of the Mediterranean. a new definition of the Mediterranean Humanism and Renaissance
Fulvio Delle Donne
3-8
Chivalry, War, and Ancient History in Curial e Güelfa and Tirant lo Blanc. The Stratagem of Zopyrus
Jaume Torró Torrent
63-100
The Lament of Constantinople in Book I of Matteo Zuppardo’s Alfonseis
Armando Bisanti
9-62
For the edition of the correspondence of Ceccarella Minutolo. Notes on a nineteenth-century witness in the Library of the Società Napoletana di Storia Patria
Cristiano Amendola
249-273
Translations from Greek and their political use: Theodore Gaza, Panormita, Aelianus Tacticus
Giulia De Ioia
443-467
News from CESURA
Fulvio Delle Donne
V-VI
The king and the sultan reflecting one another
Nicholas Sagundinus’ “Oratio ad Alphonsum regem” and “Aragonese Humanism“
Cristian Caselli
391-418
The Fall of Constantinople (1453), Alfonso the Magnanimous, and the Dream of Humanism. 1. Dominant Lines
At the Crossroads of the Mediterranean: an introduction to a new definition of the Medi-terranean Humanism and Renaissance
Fulvio Delle Donne
303-308
The “Crusade” in the Age of Alfonso of Aragon
Bruno Figliuolo
349-363
In Praise of Interventionism: The Turkish Threat and the Kingdom of Naples at the Time of Alfonso the Magnanimous
Francesco Storti
327-348
The opening of the De magnanimitate by Giovanni Pontano between Aristotelian thought and aemulatio
Giuseppe Zeccato
227-269
At the Crossroads of the Mediterranean. 2. Cultural lines
Contribution to the definition of the concept of Humanism and the Mediterranean Renaissance
Guido Cappelli, Fulvio Delle Donne
3-6
At the Crossroads of the Mediterranean. 1. Institutional and ideological lines
Contribution to the definition of the concept of Humanism and the Mediterranean Renaissance
Guido Cappelli, Fulvio Delle Donne
1-7
News from CESURA
Fulvio Delle Donne
V-VI
News from CESURA
Fulvio Delle Donne
V-VI
Another Journal?
Guido Cappelli, Fulvio Delle Donne
3-8
Language
Italiano
English
CESURA
CESURA APS: Who we are
International Interuniversity Center
CESURA - Press
Information
For Readers
For Authors
For Librarians
Browse
Categories
Arts and Architecture
Humanistic literature
Renaissance
Literature
Catalan Literature
Greek Literature
Italian Literature
Latin Literature
Political Literature
Philology
History
Economic and Fiscal History
Military history
Diplomatic History
History of Historiography
Philosophy