Petrus Nannius (also Pieter Nanninck, b. 1496, Alkmaar - d. 1557) was a Dutch poet, accomplished Latin scholar and humanist of the 16th century.[1] A contemporary of Desiderius Erasmus, he was born in Alkmaar and was an important figure in the humanism of the time, having provided a foundation with his teaching for the later flowering of humanism in the region.[2]
Life
We first hear of Nannius teaching in Gouda, South Holland. His appointment here is considered a turning point in the humanism of Gouda, in that the humanistic spirit was being found less inside monasteries, and more in public, secular life.[3] In 1539, Nannius succeeded Conrad Goclenius as Latin teacher at the Collegium Trilingue,[1] where he taught renowned intellectuals of the age such as Jacobus Cruquius. Nannius was described by Flemish humanist Justus Lipsius as the first person to introduce a love of letters in the Collegium Trilingue.[4] Nannius served in this capacity from 1539 to his death in 1557.[5][6] For his many scholarly endeavours, he could rely on the financial help of influential patrons, such as Antoine Perrenot de Granvelle.[7]
Works
Nannius was also a writer who wrote a commentary on the Ars Poetica of Horace, and saw in it many similarities to Menippean satire.[8] He translated the works of many Greek authors, including Aeschines, Plutarch, and Athanasius.[9] He also produced ten books of critical and explanatory Miscellanea, and commentaries on the Eclogues and fourth book of the Aeneid by Virgil.[4]
Selective bibliography
Philological Commentaries
Vergil: Aeneis IV (1544),[11]Bucolica (1559, published posthumously)
Livy: Ab Urbe condita III (1545)
Cicero: In Verrem (1546)
Σύμμικτα or Miscellanea (1548)
Horace: Ars poetica (1608, published posthumously)
Latin translations of Greek texts
Lucian: 7 Dialogues of the Gods and 4 Dialogues of the Sea Gods (1528)
Basil of Caesarea: several homilies (1538 and 1539)
Plutarch: Lives of Phocion and Catothe Younger (1540)
Athenagoras: On the Resurrection of the Dead (1541, editio princeps)
Athanasius: Complete works (1556)
Original literary output
Vinctus (1522)
Declamatio de Bello Turcis Inferendo (1535/6)[12][13]
Orationes tres (1541)
Dialogismi heroinarum (1541 and 1550)
Declamatio quodlibetica, de aeternitate mundi (1549)
Dream orations (1611, published posthumously)
Somnium, sive Paralipomena Virgilii: Res Inferae a Poeta relictae
^Feys, Xander (2020). "A Hippocrates for eight stuivers: On Petrus Nannius' library and the earliest known Leuven book auction (1557)". De Gulden Passer. 98 (1): 239–257.
^Feys, Xander (2023). 'Reading Vergil through Homer: the Role of the Greek Language in Petrus Nannius’ Deuterologiae sive spicilegia.' In Trilingual learning: The study of Greek and Hebrew in a Latin world (1000-1700), ed. by R. Van Rooy, P. Van Hecke, and T. Van Hal, pp. 207-230. Turnhout: Brepols.
^Jaspers, Martijn (2020). Moeten we de Turken de oorlog verklaren? Petrus Nannius' 'Declamatio de bello Turcis inferendo (Leuven: Rutger Rescius, 1536). Leuven: University of Leuven (KU Leuven), Faculty of Arts.