Available Formats
Ermolao Barbaro's On Celibacy 1 and 2
By (Author) Prof Gareth Williams
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic
24th April 2025
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
European history: Renaissance
306.732
Paperback
216
Width 138mm, Height 216mm
This volume offers the first annotated translation in English of the first two books of On Celibacy (1473) by the eminent Venetian humanist Ermolao Barbaro (1454-93); Books 3 and 4 of On Celibacy are presented, along with Barbaros On the Duty of the Ambassador, in the companion-piece to this first volume. Setting out the historical context that crucially conditions Barbaros advocacy of the celibate life in Books 1 and 2, the introduction examines how On Celibacy seeks to justify a contemplative existence that rejects the career path expected of a figure of Barbaros standing within the Venetian patrician class. Beyond setting out the essential facts of Ermolao Barbaros life-story, Gareth Williams discusses how On Celibacy is set in counterpoise to the treatise On Marriage (1415) that was composed by Ermolaos eminent grandfather, Francesco Barbaro. If the latters treatise was vitally concerned with the institution of marriage as a key factor in the safeguarding of family succession and the stability of patriciate participation in government at Venice, On Celibacy presents an alternative ideal whereby the celibate can proudly renounce civic life in the name of self-discovery and the pursuit of wisdom, his abilities simply unsuited to the rigors of civic life. On Celibacy is thus implicated in a much wider 15th-century debate about the claims of the contemplative as opposed to the active life a debate that extends all the way back to Greco-Roman antiquity.
Gareth Williams is Professor of Classics at Columbia University, USA. He is author of numerous works including Pietro Bembo on Etna: The Ascent of a Venetian Humanist (2017).