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Cvijeta Zuzorić

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Name
  
Cvijeta Zuzoric

Role
  
Poet

Died
  
1648, Ancona, Italy


Cvijeta Zuzoric dubrovnikdigestcomimagescvijetazuzorijpg

Cvijeta zuzori buco sr an 1974


Cvijeta Zuzorić ([tsʋijěta zûzoritɕ]; also Fiora Zuzori or Flora Zuzzeri) (Ragusa, 1552 – Ancona, 1648) was a lyric poet from the Republic of Ragusa. She wrote in Italian, Latin and Croatian.

Contents

Cvijeta Zuzorić Cvijeta Zuzori svetlost renesansnog Dubrovnika Slavko Patakovi

cvijet na dra i cvijeta zuzori


Life

Cvijeta Zuzorić Portal Oko IVOT UKLETIH HRVATICA Cvijeta Zuzori i velika zavist

She was born in Ragusa (now called Dubrovnik) into a prominent merchant family, she was daughter of Frano Zuzori and Marina Radagli. Early in her childhood, she moved with her parents to Ancona, where she was educated. In 1570, she married a Florentine nobleman, merchant and diplomat Bartolomeo Pescioni who had been Florentine consul in the Republic of Ragusa. In the same year, the couple moved to Ragusa where they lived for thirteen years, until Pescioni's debts and bankruptcy stemming from his failed textile trade business forced them to move back to Ancona.

Cvijeta Zuzorić Cvijeta Zuzori Wikipedia

Being a well-educated woman, she invited numerous authors and artists to her house, which was home to a widely known literary academy. Zuzorić was an exceptionally beautiful and intelligent woman, was said to have written excellent epigrams and gentle rhymes, most of which, however, have not survived. She is known only by reputation, since she was mentioned and celebrated in countless poems by Dinko Zlatarić, Miho Bona-Babulinov, Miho Monaldi, Boccabinco, Simonetti, Marin Bettera, her contemporaries, as well as later Ragusan authors.

Cvijeta Zuzorić Dubrovnik Konavle Boka

It is interesting to note that she was also mentioned in the sonnets of the famous Italian poet Torquato Tasso, who praised her virtues and beauty even though he had never met her. Her great friend Nikola Vitov Gučetić and his wife Marija Gundulić Gucić described her physical and spiritual beauty in his famous philosophical work on love, a treatise on the Meteors of Aristotle.

References

Cvijeta Zuzorić Wikipedia