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1[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/petrarch_engraving.png]]
2 [[caption-width-right:350:Engraving from the 19th century.]]
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4->''To begin with myself, then, reports about me will differ widely, since in passing judgement almost every one is influenced by preference rather than truth, and good and evil rumour both know no bounds.''
5-->-- '''Petrarch''', ''Letter to Posterity''
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7Francesco Petrarca (20 July 1304 – 19 July 1374), anglicized as Petrarch, was an Italian [[RenaissanceMan poet, scholar, diplomat, and moral philosopher]] famous for his CourtlyLove poems, and for inventing Humanism, thus starting (in his own view) UsefulNotes/TheRenaissance. Born in Arezzo, when his father (a contemporary of [[Creator/DanteAlighieri Dante]]) was exiled from Florence, he was to grow up near the Papal Court at Avignon. In minor clerical orders, though never fulfilling any priestly duties, he spent most of his adult life travelling between Avignon and various towns in Italy, either working as an envoy for various powers, or as an independent scholar, searching libraries for forgotten books.
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9Petrarch devoted his life to the revival of classical learning and style, criticising the methods (though not many of the beliefs) of the then-dominant scholastic philosophers of the medieval universities. Petrarch spent a large proportion of his time finding, and making copies of, previously lost or unknown classical works. Through this, Petrarch hoped to bring back the lost culture of the classical world, particularly that of the Romans. Ironically, though Petrarch was very insistent on the superiority of Latin to vernacular languages, his Latin works are now very little read, and his Italian writings form the basis for the modern Italian language.
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11Though he lived a comparatively long time, Petrarch was rarely satisfied with his writing, and [[OrphanedSeries finished very few of his works]], often for the reason that he started something else and never got back to his previous work.
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13His works include, but are not limited to:
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15!!Poetry
16* ''Canzoniere'' or ''Rime Sparse'' - Petrarch's main sequence of Italian poems, written across most of his life, and still being revised up to his death. Made up of 366 poems, mostly sonnets, and almost entirely about [[TheMuse Laura]]. [[TropeCodifier Extremely influential]] in the development of Renaissance poetry.
17* ''Triumphs'' - A series of poems in terza rima (referencing Dante) describing the triumphal processions of Love, Chastity, Death, Fame, Time, and Eternity. Like the ''Canzoniere'', these were also written over Petrarch's life, and are also about Laura.
18* ''Africa'' - An epic poem in Latin hexameters about the [[UsefulNotes/PunicWars Second Punic War]], equivalent to Literature/TheAeneid. Petrarch based his reputation as a poet on it... although it was never published during his lifetime, and, when it finally was, it was considered [[MagnumOpusDissonance disappointing]]. Unfinished.
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20!!Philosophy
21* ''Secretum'' (1347-53) - A dialogue between [[AuthorAvatar 'Franciscus']] and St Creator/AugustineOfHippo wherein he wrestles with the universal themes of suffering, desire, fear, and joy.
22* ''De viris illustribus'' - biographies of famous men (1338-50s). Unfinished. [[DistaffCounterpart Prompted]] Creator/GiovanniBoccaccio's ''De mulieribus claris'' - biographies of famous women.
23* ''De remediis utriusque fortunae'' - A series of 254 dialogues offering {{Stoic}} advice on a variety of good and bad events, such as having a son, becoming pope, being exiled, and headaches. (1354-66)
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25!!Letters
26* ''Familiares'' (1350-66) - A collection, in 24 volumes, of Petrarch's letters to various friends, including the famous 'Ascent of Mount Ventoux', regarded as the first record of someone climbing a mountain just to look at the view.
27* ''Seniles'' ('Letter of Old Age') (1361-73) - Like the ''Familiares'', a letter collection, but of those generally written after those collected in the ''Familiares''. Contains a number of letters addressed to classical figures (yes, ''actually'' written to people like Cicero and Seneca as if expecting a response), and the (unfinished...) 'Letter to Posterity', which is autobiographical.
28* ''Sine nomine'' ('Book without a name') - a collection of letters critical of the Avignon Papacy.
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30!!Other

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