Scipione Bargagli (1540–1612) was a Sienese philologist, academician and scholar. He belonged to the Sienese School of philologists.[1]

Scipione Bargagli
Born1540
Died27 October 1612(1612-10-27) (aged 71–72)
NationalityItalian
Occupations
  • Philologist
  • Writer
  • Linguist
SpouseViolante di Pandolfo Savini
Children4
Parent(s)Giulio Bargagli and Ortensia Bargagli (née Ugurgieri)
Academic background
InfluencesClaudio Tolomei
Academic work
EraLate Renaissance
DisciplineItalian studies
InfluencedCelso Cittadini

Biography edit

Scipione Bargagli was born in Siena in 1540, but we have no details regarding the day and month; he was the son of Giulio and Ortensia Ugurgieri. His brother, Girolamo Bargagli, is the author of the famous play The Pilgrim Woman.[2]

Bargagli was a prominent member of the celebrated Accademia degli Intronati of Siena.[3] He pursued inquiries into literary matters in correspondence with his close friends Bellisario Bulgarini, Diomede Borghesi and Adriano Politi.[4][3]

His best-known works are I trattenimenti (Venice, 1587), a collection of novels set in his native Siena modeled on Giovanni Boccaccio's Decameron, and Delle imprese (Siena, 1578), a study of emblems, combining theory with (illustrated) examples.[5] The first part was first published in 1578 and republished in 1589, while the second and third parts were published in 1594. It is presents as a dialogue between Scipione himself, Belisario Bulgarini and Ippolito Agostino, who engage with other theorists such as Girolamo Ruscelli and Paolo Giovio.

Bargagli's translation of George Buchanan's spiritual tragedy Jephthes, sive Votum, published in Lucca in 1587, occasioned him some trouble with the Inquisition.[3]

Bargagli participated in the polemics over the Italian language as a defender of the Sienese dialect. Il Turamino (1602) describes the Sienese variety of Tuscan and justifies its literary use, rejecting Florentine exclusivity advocated by the Accademia della Crusca.[6]

Works edit

  • Delle lodi dell'Academie: oratione di Scipion Bargagli da lui recitata nell'Academia degli Accesi in Siena. Florence: Luca Bonetti. 1569.
  • I Trattenimenti, dove da vaghe donne e giovani uomini rappresentati sono onesti e dilettevoli giuochi, narrate novelle, e cantate alcune amorose canzonette. Venice: Bernardo Giunti. 1587.
  • I Rovesci delle medaglie. Siena: pel Florimi. 1599.
  • Iefte ovver Voto, Tragedia Recata di Latino in Vulgare. Lucca: Vicenzo Busdraghi. 1587.
  • Il Turamino, ovvero del parlare e dello scrivere sanese. Siena: Matteo Florimi. 1602.

Notes edit

  1. ^ Michael T. Ward (2014). "Celso Cittadini and the origin of the vernacular: the convergence of science and subjectivity". Ideologies of Language. Routledge: 111. ISBN 9781134741397.
  2. ^ McClure 2013, p. 55.
  3. ^ a b c Borsellino 1964.
  4. ^ Beccaria, Gian Luigi (1970). "BORGHESI, Diomede". Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani, Volume 12: Bonfadini–Borrello (in Italian). Rome: Istituto dell'Enciclopedia Italiana. pp. 643–646. ISBN 978-8-81200032-6.
  5. ^ Scipione Bargagli entry (in Italian) by Giuseppe Rua in the Enciclopedia italiana, 1930
  6. ^ Richardson 2002.

Bibliography edit

Further reading edit

Information on Scipione Bargagli's life and works is to be found in the following: S. Bargagli, ll Turamino, ed. L. Serianni (Rome, 1976), XXVIII- XXXVI; A. Merenduzzo, "Notizie intorno a Scipione Bargagli," Bulletino Senese di Storia Patria, VIl, 2 (1900), 326-347; G.M. Mazzucchelli, Gli scrittori d'Italia (Brescia, 1763), III, 351; L. Riccò, "Un inedito di Scipione Bargagli," Filologia Critica, Anno VIII, fasc. 1 (1983), 39-107; L. De Angelis, Biografia degli scrittori senesi (Siena, 1824), vol. I, 67 and Memorie del cavalier Girolamo Bargagli e Antonio Malavolti (Siena, 1828).