Moderata fonte biography of michael

          Moderata Fonte, born Modesta Pozzo — one of the strengest and most polemical female voices in the literature of the Italian Renaissance — was certainly aware.

        1. Moderata Fonte, born Modesta Pozzo — one of the strengest and most polemical female voices in the literature of the Italian Renaissance — was certainly aware.
        2. Our “donna del giorno” is Moderata Fonte, pseudonym of Modesta di Pozzo di Forzi (or Zorzi), also known as Modesto Pozzo (–), a Venetian writer and.
        3. The engaging biography of Fonte written by her onetime guardian Giovanni Niccolò Doglioni speaks of her as largely self-educated, reading her.
        4. Michael Sherberg examines the role of amity in Boccaccio's cornice.
        5. Moderata Fonte, pseudonym of Modesta Pozzo () was an Italian writer from Venice.
        6. The engaging biography of Fonte written by her onetime guardian Giovanni Niccolò Doglioni speaks of her as largely self-educated, reading her.!

          Moderata Fonte

          Venetian writer and poet (1555–1592)

          Moderata Fonte, directly translating to Modest Well,[3] is a pseudonym of Modesta di Pozzo di Forzi (or Zorzi), also known as Modesto Pozzo (or Modesta, feminization of Modesto),[4] (1555–1592) a Venetian writer and poet.[5] Besides the posthumously-published dialogues, Giustizia delle donne and Il merito delle donne (gathered in The Worth of Women, 1600), for which she is best known, she wrote a romance and religious poetry.

          Details of her life are known from the biography by Giovanni Niccolò Doglioni (1548-1629), her uncle, included as a preface to the dialogue.[6]

          Life and history

          Pozzo's parents, Girolamo da Pozzo and Marietta da Pozzo (née dal Moro),[7] died of the plague in 1556, when she was just a year old, and she and her older brother Leonardo were placed in the care of their maternal grandmother and her second husband.

          She spent several years i