Alessandro Tassoni

Summary

Alessandro Tassoni (28 September 1565 – 25 April 1635) was an Italian poet and writer, from Modena, best known as the author of the mock-heroic poem La secchia rapita (The Rape of the Pail, or The stolen bucket).

Alessandro Tassoni
Born28 September 1565 Edit this on Wikidata
Modena, Duchy of Modena and Reggio
Died25 April 1635 Edit this on Wikidata (aged 69)
Modena, Duchy of Modena and Reggio
NationalityItalian
Other namesAldrovinci Melisone
Alma mater
OccupationWriter, poet, literary critic Edit this on Wikidata
WorksLa secchia rapita Edit this on Wikidata
MovementBaroque

Life edit

He was born in Modena, to a noble family, from Bernardino Tassoni and Sigismonda Pellicciari. Having lost both parents at an early age, he was raised by the maternal grandfather, Giovanni Pellicciari. It was with Giovanni that, according to tradition, he first visited the bucket, which was later to inspire his major work, in the belfry of Modena's Cathedral.[1]

At the age of 13, Alessandro Tassoni was taught Greek and Latin by Lazzaro Labadini, a professor of Literature at the University.[2]

He then became a law student, attending university in Modena, then in Bologna, Pisa and Ferrara, where he eventually graduated. He appears to have been a rowdy youth, living for some time in Nonantola, from where he was expelled in 1595, due to several incidents in which Tassoni had been involved as a member of a local street gang.[3]

In 1597, he began his service for the cardinal Ascanio Colonna whom he followed to Spain.[4] In 1589 he was elected to the Accademia della Crusca. In 1603, he was back in Italy and moved to Rome.

In 1612 he published anonymously the booklet Le Filippiche in which he attacked the Spanish domination of parts of the Italian peninsula. Though he always denied having written it (probably for fear of Spanish retaliation), the work became famous enough to ingratiate Tassoni to the Charles Emmanuel I, Duke of Savoy, who, in 1618 hired him in Turin with the title of first secretary.[4]

After this, Tassoni was with the cardinal Ludovico Ludovisi in 1626 and served under Francesco I d'Este, duke of Modena, in 1635.

He died in Modena. His fellow citizens remembered his life and work with a statue that can still be seen in front of the town symbol, the Ghirlandina.

Work edit

 
Alessandro Tassoni monument, below the Ghirlandina

Besides the above-mentioned "Filippiche", Tassoni is known for other works, some of poetry and some of literary criticism. The latter includes the Varietà di pensieri di Alessandro Tassoni ("Diverse meditations by Alessandro Tassoni"), and Considerazioni sopra il Petrarcha (1609), a piece of criticism showing independence of traditional views. However, Tassoni is best known as the author of the mock-heroic poem La secchia rapita (The Rape of the Pail, or The stolen bucket); it is by virtue of this work that he is remembered as Modena's poet laureate.[4]

La secchia rapita edit

La secchia rapita was written by Tassoni between 1614 and 1615 and first published in Paris in 1622. It was not to be published in Italy until Tassoni modified it slightly to accommodate the censorship of the Catholic Church. Tassoni paid for the first Italian edition, bearing his own name, in 1624 (the poem had been previously circulated under the pseudonym of Aldrovinci Melisone). The final edition was published in 1630.

The poem is loosely based on a war originating from the battle of Zappolino fought between Modena and Bologna in 1325.[5] Most of the events reported in the poem are completely fictitious, even incorporating in the war the battle of Fossalta which had been fought almost a hundred years before. The central episode, in which the Modenese steal a bucket from their rivals, is not reported by the main contemporary historians,[6] however a bucket, purported to be that very trophy, has been on display, in the basement of the Torre della Ghirlandina, from the times of the battle to present.

In the poem, the theft of the bucket results in the eruption of an extremely complicated war, where even the Olympian gods take part (this is in the tradition of classical poems such as Homer's Iliad) and is eventually resolved by the intervention of the Pope.

The narration is dotted by references to situations and persons contemporary to the author, and with farcical appearances such as the "Conte di Culagna" (Count of Ass-land) probably the best known character of the book. In the third chapter of the poem, armies from all over the country arrive to take part in the war, and the Conte of Culagna makes his first appearance:

(*)The feathers recall the peacock and its vanity, the horns are the traditional symbol of the cuckold.

La secchia rapita was immensely popular both in Italy and abroad. While Marino's influence was fading, Tassoni's comic poem opened the way for the works of his epigones: L'Eneide travestita (1634), a parody by Giovanni Battista Lalli, imitated in the Virgile travesti by Paul Scarron, Il Malmantile racquistato by Lorenzo Lippi (1676) and several others.

 
The Stolen Bucket, inside the Ghirlandina Tower

References edit

  1. ^ Vittorio G.Rossi, Tassoni, Milano, Edizioni Alpes, 1931, pg.5-8
  2. ^ Dizionario dei Parmigiani. Labadini appears briefly in the third chapter of "La secchia Rapita".
  3. ^ Vittorio G.Rossi, Tassoni, Milano, Edizioni Alpes, 1931
  4. ^ a b c Chisholm 1911.
  5. ^ Cambridge History of Italian Literature ed. Brand and Pertile (1996) p.310
  6. ^ Matteo Griffoni, "Conflictus Zapolini", in Memoriale historicum de rebus bononiensium, s. anno 1325.

External links edit

  • Lazzarini, Andrea (2019). "TASSONI, Alessandro". Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani, Volume 95: Taranto–Togni (in Italian). Rome: Istituto dell'Enciclopedia Italiana. ISBN 978-8-81200032-6.
  • Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Tassoni, Alessandro" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 26 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 446.