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86:. At the time members of the Alidosi family dominated Imola, and other citizens looked to the papacy for a change. The petition brought by Benvenuto and others failed; the local political situation at home caused him to move on without returning, going to Bologna, where he made a living as a teacher. He was made the subject of accusations there of indecency, which may have been connected to lectures on the
90:; on the other hand Benvenuto himself had made accusations to the papal legate in Bologna of improper teacher-student relationships of others. While previously in Bologna he may have lectured officially, and did teach some classical authors, his later lectures were in a private house, that of the grammarian
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considered that
Benvenuto's commentary on Dante had "a value beyond that of any of the other fourteenth-century commentators". It exists in three versions: one published in 1875, one from his time in Ferrara, and a third published in 1887 by
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Margaret of York, Simon
Marmion, and the Visions of Tondal: papers delivered at a symposium organized by the Department of Manuscripts of the J. Paul Getty Museum in collaboration with the Huntington Library and Art Collections, June 21–24,
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who had heard
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Ideas and Forms of
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362:Commentary and Ideology: Dante in the Renaissance
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462:The Liberal Education of Charles Eliot Norton
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380:Christopher Kleinhenz,
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71:and nephew of Cardinal
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404:The Dante Encyclopedia
164:Giovanni da Serravalle
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296:Augustalis libellus
211:De Gestis Romanorum
172:Hermannus Alemannus
97:In 1373 he visited
92:Giovanni de Soncino
485:(1993), p. 206–7;
304:Holy Roman Emperor
290:Seneca the Younger
192:foundation of Rome
177:Other works were:
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138:(edited by
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306:Wenceslas.
255:(Bucolics)
241:are known.
103:Boccaccio
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464:, 1999,
443:Archived
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260:Georgics
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239:Romuléon
183:Romuleon
168:Averroes
99:Florence
302:to the
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152:tragedy
107:Ferrara
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