Agnese D’Angelo: Prodesse et delectare: a commentary (for teaching?) on Catull. 64 by Piero Vettori This paper examines the autograph marginalia of the Italian humanist Piero Vettori found in a printed edition of Catullus (C = München, Bayerische Staatsbibliothek, 2° Inc.c.a. 1043). These annotations spe-cifically comment on Catullus’ poem 64: after an overview of the pa-laeographical aspects and chronological problems, the paper focuses on the content of the commentary, with a detailed analysis of a sam-ple (the notes to Catull. 64, 1 – 15). Based on this evidence, it is sug-gested that Vettori commented poem 64 with an educational purpose. Even though Vettori taught at the Studium Florentinum for almost fifty years, little is known about his teaching activities. To support this hy-pothesis, Vettori’s marginal notes in C are compared with annotations found in books from his library that he used for university courses and placed in the broader context of Catullan teaching in the Humanism and Renaissance.
Prodesse et delectare: un commento (didattico?) di Piero Vettori a Catull. 64 / D'Angelo, Agnese. - In: MITTELLATEINISCHES JAHRBUCH. - ISSN 0076-9762. - (2026), pp. 363-386. [10.36191/mjb/2025-60-3-3]
Prodesse et delectare: un commento (didattico?) di Piero Vettori a Catull. 64
D'Angelo, Agnese
2026
Abstract
Agnese D’Angelo: Prodesse et delectare: a commentary (for teaching?) on Catull. 64 by Piero Vettori This paper examines the autograph marginalia of the Italian humanist Piero Vettori found in a printed edition of Catullus (C = München, Bayerische Staatsbibliothek, 2° Inc.c.a. 1043). These annotations spe-cifically comment on Catullus’ poem 64: after an overview of the pa-laeographical aspects and chronological problems, the paper focuses on the content of the commentary, with a detailed analysis of a sam-ple (the notes to Catull. 64, 1 – 15). Based on this evidence, it is sug-gested that Vettori commented poem 64 with an educational purpose. Even though Vettori taught at the Studium Florentinum for almost fifty years, little is known about his teaching activities. To support this hy-pothesis, Vettori’s marginal notes in C are compared with annotations found in books from his library that he used for university courses and placed in the broader context of Catullan teaching in the Humanism and Renaissance.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.


