Pre-humanism defined Petrarch is popularly defined as the first
humanist, however, figures such as Albertino Mussato, and his teacher
Lovato Lovati are argued by many scholars to have preceded Petrarchan humanism in their use of classical works. Humanism, or "pre-humanism", began in
Padua in the 1260s with Lovati modeling poems based on
Ovid and
Horace, followed by his pupil, Mussato, classicizing prose and modeling his play,
Ecerinis, after the
Senecan tragedy. The interest in classical works by the Northern Italians, is argued by Nicholas Mann to originate in the study of Roman Law, the
Corpus Juris Civilis. Northern Italian early humanists, such as Lovati and Mussato, were often lawyers, and applied Roman law to contemporary legal situations. The lawyers studying these ancient Roman legal texts also became interested in other aspects of classical heritage: history and moral philosophy. The main interests of early humanists, such as Lovati and Mussato, did not lie in advocating for an emulation of historical Greece or Rome, but in the mythical worlds of Gods and heroes of classical Latin poetry. The early humanists did not have as romanticized a view of the superiority and glory of ancient societies, like later humanists such as Petrarch, as their works predominantly attempted to evoke the emotions and thoughts of ancient society. This is especially seen in Mussato's tragic play,
Ecerinis, based on the Senecan tragedy. Overall, Lovati and Mussato contribute to features of later humanism, such as: the rejection of contemporary Latin, the appetite for classical texts, and the desire to both ascertain their meaning and imitate them. Later humanists, such as Petrarch and
Dante are argued to be indebted to the works of the early Northern Italian humanists such as Lovati and Mussato.
Lovati and influence Mussato was influenced by his teacher and contemporary, Lovato Lovati, a figure also associated with Northern Italian humanism. Connecting Lovati's influence to Mussato, lies in Mussato's most well known work, his play
Ecerinis.
Ecerinis was modeled after the
Senecan tragedy unearthed by Lovati, showing that Lovati and Mussato were close contemporaries as well as sharing a student teacher relationship. They even made
sobriquets, or nicknames for each other, which was also part of classical tradition. Lovati's was "Wolf", and Mussato's, "Little ass". Lovati believed Mussato showed great promise, as on his death bed, he told Mussato to put his poetic interests above his family, saying "since you are deemed gifted by the muses, by these you will be muse inspired. Ivy will circle your temples".
Classical influence in works Mussato's most well known play,
Ecerinis, was written in 1314. Modeled after the Senecan tragedy, as well as the first play to be composed in a classical metre since antiquity, it was the first tragic drama to emerge after Lovati unearthed Seneca's plays. Ecerinis did not feature mythological characters, like Seneca's did, but dramatized historical events in
Northern Italy and was based on the tyrannical career of Ezellino III de Romano. The play's objective was to warn Paduans of the danger of tyranny. Unlike later humanists, who cited classical works as examples of a glorious and far superior past, Mussato and early humanists were more concerned with the effects of the ancient tragic genre in evoking powerful emotions and moral lessons. Mussato stated that "the voice of the tragic poet makes minds strong when confronted by adversities, so that cowardly fear evaporates".
Carolingian and
12th century "renaissances" did not do much to revive Roman dramatists, and Petrarchan humanists were overly concerned with advocating for classical works while not undermining Christianity.
Ecerinis displays an early humanist use of the classics, as he took aspects from classical works, without advocating for the absolute supremacy of the classics. Mussato's use of both classical metre, and the ancient genre of Senecan tragedy, as well the attempted invocation of moral lessons from the tragic genre foreshadow aspects of Petrarchan humanism, and are an example of the beginning of the Petrarchan humanist movement.
Philosophy and characteristics Medieval universities focused on the metrical and rhetorical features of writing, and this allowed early humanists, like Mussato, to recognize and emulate the verbal patterns of ancient poets. Mussato classicized Latin prose in his letters and plays, suggesting he rejected traditional medieval prose metric in favour of
classical Latin. He was the first, besides Lovati, to use classicizing style in poetic letters, and in his use of classical Latin, displays a founding characteristic of later humanists in his rejection of the contemporary style of Latin in favour of classical Latin. As well as letters, emulation of classical authors and style also influenced Mussato in historical writing, as he acted as chronicler in works such as
Historia Augusta which described events such as Henry IV's invasion of Brescia.
Historia Augusta shows classical influence in Mussato's use of classical Latin stylistically, but also conceptually, as he drew on ancients such as
Sallust in the inclusion of documents in the text, and
Suetonius in his characterization of individuals. In terms of Christianity, Mussato was not overly religious, but believed in the connection between historical cycles and astrological theory. Mussato's belief in the connection between historical cycles and astrological theory can be seen in the following excerpt from his
De Traditione: ::"Paduan posterity might observe the fortune of their city, as it were, imposed by nature herself and the fatal sentence of its own history, whether on account of the location of the land or by a fluctuation of some kind of elements or by some sort of disposition concealed from mortals". In defense of the un-Christian nature of ancient poets, Mussato invoked
Aristotle and argued that poets were the first theologians. He also argued that poetry was not a vehicle for expressing God's word, but contained allegorical representations pertaining to divinity and God's creatures. Mussato blurred the line between poetry and theology, stressing continuity between ancient poetry and the Bible. However, Mussato's later works were more traditionally Christian in nature, perhaps owing to Mussato's old age and a desire to reconcile with the medieval Christian hierarchy.
Legacy Petrarch owed much to the early Northern Italian humanists, in their emulation, recovery and use of ancient works. Later, Petrarch would praise the works of Mussato's teacher, Lovato Lovati. Theologians, monks and clergy criticized later humanists because the church believed that the study of classical poetry distracted men from religion. These later humanists, such as Petrarch and
Boccacio defended the use of classical poetry the same way Mussato did several decades before by arguing that the allegorical truths classical works portrayed had contemporary relevance. Petrarch consciously echoed Mussato in both the defense, and ceremony of ancient poetry, and Mussato's tragedy
Ecerinis has been cited as the work to popularize tragedy, and inspire
Shakespeare's Richard the III to be modeled after the Senecan tragedy. ==Works==