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http://hdl.handle.net/2183/24373 Private and Intellectual Conflicts and the Mysteries of the Empresas Políticas in the Unpublished Letters of Juan Antonio de Vera, Count of La Roca, to Diego Saavedra Fajardo (1634-1640)
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Monostori, Tibor
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Monostori, T. (2019) Private and Intellectual Conflicts and the Mysteries of the Empresas Políticas in the Unpublished Letters of Juan Antonio de Vera, Count of La Roca, to Diego Saavedra Fajardo (1634-1640). Janus: estudios sobre el Siglo de Oro, 8, 172-198. http://www.janusdigital.es/articulo.htm?id=119
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Abstract
[Resumen] La correspondencia inédita entre los dos escritores y diplomáticos del Siglo de Oro refuerza la opinión de que intensas redes políticas y grupos eruditos rigieron en el cuerpo diplomático y en el medio cultural del siglo XVII. Juan Antonio de Vera, el conde de La Roca y Diego Saavedra Fajardo, escritor y diplomático murciano se necesitaron el uno al otro como centros de información, puntos de control intelectuales y transmisores de bienes culturales. Condujeron debates profesionales en cuanto a la política exterior de Madrid. La Roca trató a Saavedra con desdén y superioridad soberbia. Una nota sobre las Empresas Políticas hace una sombra y pone de relieve un misterio sobre su primera edición
[Abstract] The unpublished correspondence between two renowned Golden Age writers and diplomats reinforces the view that intense political and intellectual networks and circles reigned in the diplomatic corps and the cultural milieu in the seventeenth century. Juan Antonio de Vera, Count of La Roca, and Diego Saavedra Fajardo, a diplomat from Murcia, needed each other as information hubs, intellectual control points and transmitters of cultural goods. They engaged in professional debates about the foreign policy of Madrid. La Roca repeatedly treated the diplomat with disdain and condescending superiority. A note on the Empresas Políticas casts a shadow on its first edition and highlights a puzzle
[Abstract] The unpublished correspondence between two renowned Golden Age writers and diplomats reinforces the view that intense political and intellectual networks and circles reigned in the diplomatic corps and the cultural milieu in the seventeenth century. Juan Antonio de Vera, Count of La Roca, and Diego Saavedra Fajardo, a diplomat from Murcia, needed each other as information hubs, intellectual control points and transmitters of cultural goods. They engaged in professional debates about the foreign policy of Madrid. La Roca repeatedly treated the diplomat with disdain and condescending superiority. A note on the Empresas Políticas casts a shadow on its first edition and highlights a puzzle
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Atribución-NoComercial-SinDerivadas 4.0 España


