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Mary Louise Lord, “The Use of Macrobius
and Boethius in Some Fourteenth-Century Commentaries on Virgil,”
IJCT 3 (1996-1997), pp. 3-22.
Four commentators on Virgil, Nicholas Trevet, Francesco Petrarca,
Ciones (Zonus) de Magnali, and Benvenuto da Imola, besides citing
an abundant number of classical writers, owed a special debt to
the late antique authors, Macrobius and Boethius. From Macrobius
they quoted passages of antiquarian and philosophical interest from
the Saturnalia and from the Commentarii in Somnium
Scipionis. Petrarch in his manuscript of Virgil, the Codex
Ambrosianus, Sala dal Prefetto 10/27, was particularly diligent
in copying out passages from Macrobius. These are presented in an
Appendix to the present article. The Virgilian commentators were
inspired also by the moral earnestness of the De Consolatione
Philosophiae of Boethius. Themes treated by the commentators
include the harmony of the spheres, the descent of the soul into
the body through the orbits of the planets, and Platonic elements
in Aeneid 6. These references help to illustrate the vigor
and variety of the Virgilian commentaries and their contribution
to the growing humanistic movement of the fourteenth century.
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