
Francis Petrarch
Familiar Letters
From James Harvey Robinson, ed. and trans.
Petrarch: The First Modern Scholar and Man of Letters
(New York: G.P. Putnam, 1898)
Hanover Historical Texts Project
Scanned by Jason Boley and Jacob Miller in August, 1995.
Proofread by Monica Banas, Stephanie Hammett, and Heather Haralson
in April, 1996.
Proofread and pages inserted by Faisal Shahid, December 2000.

To Posterity
To Socrates: Preface to his First Collection of Letters
To the Abbot of St. Benigno: Petrarch's Passion for Work - The Trials of a Man of Letters
The Visit to the Goldsmith at Bergamo
Petrarch Disclaims all Jealousy of Dante
The Story of Griselda
On the Italian Language and Literature
His Aversion to Logicians
To Marcus Tullius Cicero (1 of 2)
The Old Grammarian of Vicenza
To Marcus Tullius Cicero (2 of 2)
To Homer
On the Nature of Poetry
On the Scarcity of Copyists
The Young Humanist of Ravenna
An Excursion to Paris, the Netherlands, and the Rhine
The Ascent of Mount Ventoux
Ignorance and Presumption Rebuked
The Charms of Pavia(in progress)
To Cola di Rienzo(in progress)
Rienzo under the Protection of the Muses(in progress)
To the Roman People, urging them to Intervene in Rienzo's
Trial(in progress)
To Charles IV, Emperor August of the Romans(in progress)
Familiar
Letters - His Audience with the Emperor(in progress)
Religion does not Require us to Give up Literature(in progress)
On a Religious Life(in progress)
On the Impossibility of Acquiring Fame during one's Lifetime(in progress)
Petrarch's Intention to Work until the Last(in progress)

Return to Hanover Historical Texts Project
Return to Hanover College Department of History
Please send comments to:luttmer@hanover.edu
