1515, Venice: ALDUS MANUTIUS AND ANDREA TORRESANI DI ASOLO

Andrea Torresani was born in Asolo in 1451 and acquired in 1479 the fonts of Nicholas Jenson, from whom he learned the printing trade. In 1503, Torresani married his daughter to Aldus Manutius, and the two men formed a professional partnership which continued from 1506 until Aldus' death in 1515. Torresani continued to run the company until his own death in 1529.

Aldus himself however is believed to have prepared this second edition of the 1502 Dante, which appeared shortly after his death. Significantly, with regard to the textual authority of Benivieni's 1506 Giuntina, Aldus often adopted variant readings which Benivieni had introduced in his edition. Moreover, the influence of the Giuntina on Aldus' second edition is evident in the addition of several illustrations of the structure of Hell, including a moral schema of sins punished in Dante's Lower Hell recently attributed to Pietro Bembo (a, b, c). The courtly vernacular context for the edition is indicated by its dedication to Vittoria Colonna (1490-1547), one of the most famous women of the Italian Renaissance, friend to the most important cultural figures of the age including Bembo, Castiglione and Michelangelo, and a poet in her own right.

Marginal notations tell us something about the reception of Dante during this period. For example, a Renaissance reader has annotated several passages in this copy, marking the passage of time as he was reading the poem. He glosses Purgatorio XXVIII, 50-51: "You make me recall where and what Proserpina was at the time her mother lost her, and she the Spring." Perhaps to mark the passing of Spring the year he was reading the poem, the reader adds : "Hearken well and be wise Marco, 1557, the last day of May."