Medievalists.net

Where the Middle Ages Begin

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Home
  • News
  • Podcast
  • Features
  • Courses
  • Patreon Login
  • About Us & More
    • About Us
    • Books
    • Videos
    • Films & TV
    • Medieval Studies Programs
    • Places To See
    • Teaching Resources
    • Articles

Medievalists.net

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Home
  • News
  • Podcast
  • Features
  • Courses
  • Patreon Login
  • About Us & More
    • About Us
    • Books
    • Videos
    • Films & TV
    • Medieval Studies Programs
    • Places To See
    • Teaching Resources
    • Articles
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
Articles

Montaigne and the Sports of Italy

by Sandra Alvarez
June 14, 2012

Montaigne and the Sports of Italy

McClelland, John

Renaissance and Reformation, Vol. 27, No. 2 (2003)

Abstract

Beyond Italy’s occasional wins  or near-misses in the World Cup of soccer, people in general are not accustomed to thinking of Italians as being particularly athletic.

De son propre aveu (Essais II, 17) Montaigne n’était pas très sportif. Pourtant, dès la première édition des Essais il y inséra de nombreuses allusions aux sports et de fréquentes métaphores tirées de pratiques athlétiques.De même, pendant son voyage en Allemagne, Suisse et Italie il assista — à une exception près — à toutes les manifestations sportives qui se présentèrent, préférant toutefois celles qui impliquaient la noblesse ou qui lui rappelaient la Rome ancienne. En France à l’époque il y avait très peu de possibilités de regarder des concours athlétiques, et encore moins de parler sport avec des gens de sa classe sociale et intellectuelle. En Italie, il a pu faire les deux, et se réjouissait d’être invité parmi des nobles florentins à discourir un après-midi sur l’escrime.

Click here to read this article from Renaissance and Reformation

 

Subscribe to Medievalverse




Related Posts

  • Sport and Culture in Early Modern Europe
  • Conversion on the Scaffold: Italian Practices in European Context
  • Some Basic Aspects of Medieval Cuisine
  • The Study of Medieval Sports, Games, and Pastimes: A Fifteen-Year Reflection, 1988-2003
  • Women In The Medieval And Renaissance Period: Spectators Only
TagsEarly Modern Period • Later Middle Ages • Medieval Italy • Medieval Social History • Renaissance • Roman Empire • Sports In the Middle Ages

Post navigation

Previous Post Previous Post
Next Post Next Post

Medievalists Membership

Become a member to get ad-free access to our website and our articles. Thank you for supporting our website!

Sign Up Member Login

More from Medievalists.net

Become a Patron

We've created a Patreon for Medievalists.net as we want to transition to a more community-funded model.

 

We aim to be the leading content provider about all things medieval. Our website, podcast and Youtube page offers news and resources about the Middle Ages. We hope that are our audience wants to support us so that we can further develop our podcast, hire more writers, build more content, and remove the advertising on our platforms. This will also allow our fans to get more involved in what content we do produce.

Become a Patron Member Login

Medievalists.net

Footer Menu

  • Privacy Policy
  • Do Not Sell My Personal Information
  • Copyright © 2026 Medievalists.net
  • Powered by WordPress
  • Theme: Uku by Elmastudio
Follow us
  • Facebook
  • Twitter