An advanced form of crown of sonnets is also called a sonnet redoublé or heroic crown, comprising fifteen sonnets, in which the sonnets are linked as described above, but the final binding sonnet is made up of all the first or the last lines of the preceding fourteen, in order. The fifteenth sonnet is called the Mastersonnet. This form was invented by the
Siena Academy, which was formed in 1460, but there are no existing crowns of sonnets written by them. The form was first described by
Giovanni Mario Crescimbeni in his work ''L'Istoria della volgar poesia
(History of Vernacular Poetry), published in Venice, 1731 and later by P.G. Bisso in his Introduzione alla volgar poesia
(Introduction to Vernacular Poetry), published in Venice, 1794. A variation on the form is sometimes used in which the binding sonnet is the first sonnet, and subsequent sonnets end with a line taken from it in order. The oldest complete crown which survived time was published in 1748. It was written by a group of 14 poets to celebrate the birth of the ideal woman: Corona di rime per festeggiare il natalizio giorno di fille''.
John Donne wrote
La corona, a set of 7 sonnets which are linked together. Because there are only 7 of them and because there's no Mastersonnet,
La corona is not a full heroic crown. Probably the first full crown of sonnets in English is
Lady Mary Wroth's
A Crown of Sonnets Dedicated to Love which is from circa 1620. The children's book
A Wreath for Emmett Till by
Marilyn Nelson also follows the form of a heroic crown of sonnets. Another well-known and frequent author of contemporary crowns of sonnets is
Marilyn Hacker. "Intertidal", a collaborative crown of sonnets by contemporary poets
Judith Barrington,
Annie Finch,
Julie Kane, Julia Lisella, D'Arcy Randall, Kathrine Varnes, and
Lesley Wheeler, was organized through discussion on the
Wom-Po listserv and published in 2007. The form is used frequently by
Tyehimba Jess, both in his first book
Leadbelly, and multiple times in his
Pulitzer-prize winning collection
Olio, which is structured around a heroic crown of
persona poems in the voices of the original
Fisk Jubilee Singers. 21st Century crowns in English are e.g. by Linda Bierds, Andrea Carter Brown, Robert Darling,
Moira Egan, Jenny Factor,
Andrei Krylov, Rachael Briggs, Julie Fay,
Constance Merritt, Julie Sophia Paegle,
Marie Ponsot,
Patricia Smith, Marilyn Taylor,
Natasha Trethewey,
David Trinidad, John Murillo, John McDonough, Kathrine Varnes, Angela Alaimo O'Donnell, Laurie Ann Guerrero, Cindy Tran, Alicia Mountain, and
Robert Luis Rodriguez. Fiona Chamness's heroic crown
Choreography for Ensemble won the 2014 Beloit Poetry Prize.
Joelle Taylor's "dust kings, tough kids", subtitled "a broken crown of sonnets", uses the form to represent butch lesbian subjectivity and history.
A Wreath of Sonnets () is the oldest Slovenian crown of sonnets, written by the
Romantic poet
France Prešeren. It was written in 1833 and was enriched with
acrostic in the master sonnet. Prešeren's crown of sonnets was translated into Russian in 1889, which had great influence on many poets, including
Valery Bryusov.
Jaroslav Seifert wrote his sentimental
Věnec sonetů (A Wreath of Sonnets) in this form about
Prague, with an authorized translation by
Jan Křesadlo, who also composed his own emigre
riposte in the same format, as well as writing several other sonnet cycles. The poet
Venko Markovski wrote and published more than 100 crowns of sonnets, which also contained
acrostics dedicated to various historical figures. The oldest Dutch crown of sonnets is written by
H.Th. Boelen in 1876: 'Saffo-fantasie', published in a journal for theatre. The second Dutch crown is by
Eliza Laurillard: 'Der bloemen lof', published in his book
Bloemen en knoppen from 1878.
Jeanne Reyneke van Stuwe wrote the third Dutch crown, her book
Impressies (1898) opens with a crown. In the 20th and 21st Century the crown became a regular form of poetry in Dutch literature, with authors like
Frédéric Bastet,
Ilja Leonard Pfeijffer,
Frank van Pamelen,
Wouter Ydema, and
O.B. Kunst.
A Celestial Crown of Sonnets, written by Sam Illingworth and
Stephen Paul Wren, was published in 2021 by Penteract Press. It explores the development of astronomy from
Thales of Miletus to
Shi Shen to
William Herschel. ==Heroic crown of crowns==