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Ermes di Colorêt

Italian count and writer (1622–1692) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Ermes di Colorêt
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Ermes di Colloredo (28 March 1622 – 21 September 1692) was an Italian count and writer who served the Grand Duke of Tuscany, the Holy Roman Emperor and the Republic of Venice.[1] He is widely considered the father and innovator of Friulian literature.[2]

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Biography

Ermes was born in Colloredo di Monte Albano, Friaul.[3] A cousin of Ciro di Pers, he was educated at the Medici court in Florence as page of Grand Duke Ferdinando II, and subsequently became a career soldier.[4] He entered the service of Emperor Ferdinand III during the Thirty Years War as a Cuirassiers' Officier, at the orders of his uncle, Generalfeldmarschall Rudolf von Colloredo, Governor of Prague, and later served the Republic of Venice as a Cavalry Colonel. He retired in 1658 to his estate, to focus on writing poetry, most of which centers on the theme of love.[4]

Ermes wrote over 200 sonnets, in both Friulian and Italian. He used the koinè from San Daniele, which would become the most notable literary language and the basis of today's standard Friulian. Di Colloredo's poetry strikes particularly in its Baroque imagery.[2] His lively dialogues are generally considered the genuine origins of Friulian prose.[2] Ermes di Colorêt died in Gorizzo, Codroipo, on September 21, 1692.[1]

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