Vittorino da Feltre and Other Humanist Educators

By William Harrison Woodward
Foreword by Eugene F. Rice Jr.
Categories: Education, History Of Education, History, World History, Renaissance Studies
Series: RSART: Renaissance Society of America Reprint Text Series
Publisher: University of Toronto Press, Scholarly Publishing Division
Paperback : 9780802071576, 264 pages, December 1996
Ebook (PDF) : 9781442664890, 264 pages, December 1996

Description

'The humanist idea of education is among the permanently influential legacies of the Italian Renaissance. Four short Latin treatises published between 1400 and 1460 define it admirably: Pier Paolo Vergerio's De ingenuis moribus et liberalibus adolescentiae studiis; Leonardo Bruni's De studiis et literis; the De liberorum educatione of Aeneas Sylvius, who later became Pope Pius II; and Battista Guarino's De ordine docendi et studendi. Translated into English by William Harrison Woodward and framed, on the one hand, by his description of the famous school founded by Vittorino da Feltre in 1424 at the court of Gianfrancesco Gonzaga, marquis of Mantua, and, on the other, by a judiciously balanced analysis of the aims and methods of the humanist educators, these important texts form the heart of a book that has remained for almost seventy years the fundamental study of early Renaissance educational theory and practice.'

From the foreword by Eugene F. Rice Jr.