Maddalena Scrovegni | |
Birth Place: | Padua, Italy |
Death Place: | Venice, Italy |
Nationality: | Italian |
Occupation: | Humanist |
Years Active: | 1380s-1429 |
Maddalena Scrovegni (1356 ca.-1429) was an Italian humanist.
Maddalena Scrovegni was from a very wealthy family from Padua, Italy; she was the only daughter in the family. Her father was Ugolino da Scrovegni. She married Francesco Manfredi, a knight, in 1376. Manfredi died by 1381.[1]
In 1383, Scrovegni wrote a letter to the Carraresi family to exonerate her family after they were exiled in Padua. The family was welcomed back into Paduan society under the Carraresi patron, Francesco il Vecchio.[1] She was the subject of Antoni Loschi's poem The Temple of Chastity, written in 1389. In the poem, Loschi depicts Scrovegni as Chastity and that her study or home was a temple.[2] The poem was commissioned by the House of Visconti in response to Scrovegni's letter.[1]
Scrovegni, her father, and her brothers were exiled to Venice in 1390. In Venice, she founded a hospice. She died in Venice in 1429.[3]
Scrovegni communicated with Angela Nogarola.[1]