Maffeo Vegio
Author
1407 – 1458
Who was Maffeo Vegio?
Maffeo Vegio was an Italian poet who wrote in Latin; he is regarded by many as the finest Latin poet of the fifteenth-century. Born near Lodi, he studied at the University of Pavia, and went on to write some fifty works of both prose and poetry.
His greatest reputation came as the writer of brief epics, the most famous of which was his continuation of Virgil's Aeneid, known variously as the Supplementum or Aeneidos Liber XIII. Completed in 1428, this 600-line poem starts immediately after the end of Virgil's epic, and describes Aeneas's marriage to Lavinia and his eventual deification. It is elegantly written, and its combination of classical learning and piety made it very popular in its day; it was often included in editions of the Aeneid in the fifteenth and sixteenth-centuries. An electronic text can be found at the Latin Library.
Vegio also wrote an epic Astyanax, on the death of the son of Hector, prince of Troy, and a four-book epic Vellus Aureum. During 1436-37 he completed his epic on the life of the Christian Saint Anthony, the Antoniad. Michael C. J. Putnam edited and translated Vegio's Short Epics for the I Tatti Renaissance Library.
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- Born
- 1407
Lodi - Also known as
- Maphaeus Vegius
- Nationality
- Italy
- Education
- University of Pavia
- Died
- 1458
Rome
Submitted
on July 23, 2013
Citation
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