year: 2012
isbn: 9789042926080
pages: X-166 p.
Boncompagno da Signa, «Amicitia» and «De malo senectutis et senii»
					author: 
	Summary:
	
  
    
  
  
    Boncompagno was born in Signa, not far from Florence, sometime between 
    1165 and 1175. He first studied at Florence but soon moved to Bologna, 
    becoming a teacher of grammar and rhetoric there. One of the most famous 
    teachers of rhetoric in his time, he was regarded by his contemporaries as 
    being the most skillful, the most original, and the most fertile in 
    imagination of them all. The Amicitia was written toward the end of 
    1205 at Rome. Its unspoken purpose is to act as a guide in identifying and 
    classifying the various kinds of people who try to gain our trust by 
    posing as friends. Indeed, the text excels in describing in exuberant 
    detail the many 'false' friends we encounter in life. Boncompagno's last 
    work (he died sometime after 1240), the Libellus de malo senectutis et 
    senii, was written when he was old and, as a final irony, without 
    friends. It contains a stark description of the human condition as each 
    one enters into old age and decrepitude and finally encounters death. To 
    the end, Boncompagno continues to regard all of human life with a 
    skeptical, even cynical eye, a detached observer of and commentator on the 
    society of his time.
  
 
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