Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Marin Držić

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
Marin Drzic


Role
  
Playwright

Marin Drzic MARIN DRI Osobe Dubrovako neretvanska upanija


Died
  
May 2, 1567, Venice, Italy

Plays
  
Dundo Maroje, Novela od Stanca, The Miser

Books
  
The Conspiracy Letters to Cosimo I De\' Medici

Similar People
  
Pavao Pavlicic, Slobodan Prosperov Novak, Giovanni Mocenigo, Pasquale Malipiero, Jacopo Tiepolo

House of marin dr i old town dubrovnik


Marin Držić ([mâriːn dř̩ːʒitɕ]; also Marino Darza or Marino Darsa; 1508 – 2 May 1567) is considered the finest Croatian Renaissance playwright and prose writer.

Contents

Marin dr i video biografija sje anja na poznate hrvatske velikane hd rezolucija


Life

Marin Držić Marin Drzic 15081567 a famous Croatian Renaissance playwright

Born into a large and well to do family (with 6 sisters and 5 brothers) in Dubrovnik, Držić was trained and ordained as a priest — a calling very unsuitable for his rebel temperament. Marin's uncle was another famous Croatian author Džore Držić. Ordained in 1526, Držić was sent in 1538 to Siena in Tuscany to study the Church Canon Law, where his academic results were average. Thanks to his extroverted and warm personality, he is said to have captured the hearts of his fellow students and professors, and was elected to the position of Rector of the University. Losing interest in his studies, Marin returned to the Dubrovnik Republic in 1543.

Marin Držić wwwdubrovnikonlinenetimagesmarindrzicdubrov

Here he became an acquaintance of Austrian adventurer Christoph Rogendorf, then at odds with Vienna court. After a brief sojourn in Vienna, Držić came back to his native city. Other vagabond exploits followed: a connection with a group of Dubrovnik outlaws, a journey to Constantinople and a brief trip to Venice. After a career as an interpreter, scrivener and church musician, he even became a conspirator. Convinced that Dubrovnik was governed by a small circle of elitist aristocracy bent to tyranny, he tried to persuade in five letters (four of which survive) the powerful Medici family in Florence to help him overthrow the government in his home town; they did not respond. Marin died suddenly in Venice on 2 May 1567. He was buried in the Church of St. John and Paul.

Works

Držić's works cover many fields: lyric poetry, pastorals, political letters and pamphlets, and comedies. While his pastorals (Tirena, Venera i Adon and Plakir) are still highly regarded as masterful examples of the genre, the pastoral has, as artistic form, virtually vanished from the scene.

Marin Držić House of Marin Drzic

However, his comedies are among the best in European Renaissance literature. As with other great comedy writers like Lope de Vega, Ben Jonson or Molière, Držić's comedies are full of exuberant life and vitality, celebrating love, liberty and sincerity and mocking avarice, egoism and petty tyrants — both in the family and in the state. His best-known comedies include:

  • Pomet (1548 or 1553) - some Croatian historiographers argue that Pomet is indeed Marin's oldest play, his debut, while others disagree. The fact that it's lost makes it harder to classify it.
  • Novela od Stanca (1550)
  • Dundo Maroje (1551 or 1556) - in today's Croatia arguably Marin's most famous play. It was also played in some international theatres.
  • Skup (1554) - thematically similar to Plautus' Aulularia and Molière's The Miser
  • The gallery of young lovers, misers, cuckolds, adventurers, senile tyrants, painted with the gusto of buoyant idiom that exemplifies richness of the Croatian language in the Renaissance period has remained the pillar of Croatian high comedy theatre ever since.

    Legacy

    Since its independence Croatia has awarded the Marin Držić Award for dramatic work. The Croatian Parliament also declared 2008 the Year of Marin Držić, as it is the 500th anniversary of his birth. An avenue in Zagreb is named after him. In Draškovićeva street (centre of Zagreb) there is a scenical stage named after Marin's nickname Vidra. Nicknames are given for various reasons. In Croatian word vidra could also point to a person who is perfidious and resourceful.

    References

    Marin Držić Wikipedia