Though lyric poetry prevailed at Frederick's (and later Manfredi's) court, it is at this time that we have an interesting exception in Rosa fresca aulentissima (transl: "Fresh very perfumed rose"), widely known as Contrasto and attributed to Cielo d'Alcamo (also known as Ciullu di Vincenzullu), about which modern critics have much exercised themselves.
•
A sirventese is, in effect, eminently political: it usually refers to real battles and attacks real military or political enemies, the author often being the soldier or the knight involved in the strife, as in Guittone d'Arezzo's Rotta di Montaperti (Defeat of Montaperti), a bloody battle where Manfred of Sicily, Frederick's son, defeated the guelfs.
•
The Sicilian school was later re-founded by Guittone d'Arezzo in Tuscany following the death of Manfredi, Frederick's son, so many of these poems were later copied in manuscripts that widely circulated in Florence.
high school | Harvard Business School | London School of Economics | Harvard Medical School | secondary school | Harvard Law School | Eastman School of Music | Juilliard School | Public school (government funded) | High School Musical | Gymnasium (school) | Yale Law School | Rugby School | school district | high school football | public school | school | New York University School of Law | Westminster School | Tisch School of the Arts | Charterhouse School | Harrow School | University-preparatory school | Naval Postgraduate School | Glasgow School of Art | University of Michigan Law School | Manhattan School of Music | Guildhall School of Music and Drama | Columbia Law School | elementary school |
There, too, Lysias is said to have commenced his studies in rhetoric—doubtless under a master of the Sicilian school possibly, as tradition said, under Tisias, the pupil of Corax, whose name is associated with the first attempt to formulate rhetoric as an art.