Anales de Historia del Arte (Jan 2014)

The Literary Court of Juan de Zúñiga y Pimentel (Plasencia, 1459- Guadalupe, 1504)

  • Fernando Villaseñor Sebastián

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5209/rev_ANHA.2013.v23.42857
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 23, no. 0
pp. 581 – 594

Abstract

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Juan de Zúñiga y Pimentel (Plasencia, 1459 - Guadalupe, 1504), the last Master of the Order of Alcántara, Archbishop of Seville and Primate of Spain, brought together a group of eminent scholars in Gata, Villanueva and Zalamea de la Serena, creating an authentic literary court in Castile in a similar way to the Italian humanists. Following the example of his parents, Álvaro de Zúñiga y Guzmán and his second wife, Leonor Pimentel, who sponsored the construction of the Dominican convent of San Vicente Ferrer, a magnificent example of late Gothic art in Plasencia, developed a model of cultural patronage where a group of miniaturists, with popularity among the privileged classes, possibly were included and they executed some of the best illuminated manuscripts in Castile in the fifteenth century.

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