Synopses & Reviews
The Victorian intellectual Mark Pattison (1813-84) published Isaac Casaubon in 1875, while rector of Lincoln College, Oxford. Casaubon (1559-1614), a French Protestant and distinguished Renaissance scholar, was the author of critical texts and commentaries on a vast corpus of classical authors, including Diogenes Laertius, Theocritus, Aristotle and Strabo. His magnum opus was his text and commentary on Athenaeus' Deipnosophistae. Pattison's account is based on letters, diaries, unpublished lecture notes and students' notes, published works, city archives, and university documents. The work covers Casaubon's youth, education, scholarly career, and final years spent in England (1610-14), where he influenced the rising 'Anglican school'. In his image of Casaubon, Pattison paints the picture of the ideal scholar, and through his portrayal reveals his deeply Victorian convictions and sensibilities. The work is an invaluable source for the life of the Renaissance scholar and the ideas and perspectives of the Victorian man.
Synopsis
An account of the French Renaissance scholar Isaac Casaubon, who produced texts and commentaries on a number of classical authors.
Synopsis
Pattison's Casaubon (1875), based on letters, diaries, lecture notes, published works, archives, and university documents, is an account of the life and work of the renowned French Renaissance scholar Isaac Casaubon, the author of critical texts and commentaries on a large corpus of classical authors, most importantly Athenaeus and Strabo.
Table of Contents
1. Parentage and education. 1559-1578; 2. Geneva. 1578-1596; 3. Montpellier. 1596-1599; 4. Paris. 1600-1610; 5. London. 1610-1614; 6. Casaubon and Baronius' Church History; 7. London, Ely, and Cambridge. 1610-1614; 8. Oxford visit. 1613; 9. London. 1610-1614 continued; 10. Last illness, death, and characteristic. 1614; 11. Index of Casaubon's works in chronological order.