Pietro Bembo

(Latin: Petrus Bembus; 20 May 1470 – 18 January 1547) was a Venetian scholar, poet, and literary theorist who also was a member of the Knights Hospitaller, and a cardinal of the Catholic Church.

His father Bernardo Bembo (1433–1519) was a diplomat and statesman and a cultured man who cared for the literature of Italy, and erected a monument to Dante Alighieri (1265–1321) in Ravenna.

The poems were later set to music, which Bembo preferred to be sung by a woman to the accompaniment of a lute, an artistic wish granted in 1505 when he met Isabella d'Este (1474–1539) in her response to having received a gift copy of Gli asolani.

He accompanied Giulio di Giuliano de' Medici (1478–1534) to Rome, where Bembo later was appointed Latin secretary to Pope Leo X (r. 1513–1521), and also was made a member of the Knights Hospitaller, in 1514.

In 1530, he accepted the office of official historian of his native Republic of Venice, shortly afterwards, Bembo also was appointed librarian of the basilica of San Marco di Venezia.

That the specific placement of words within a line in a poem — based upon the writer’s strict attention to the sonic rhythm of vowels and consonant letters — would elicit from the Italian reader and listener the range of human emotions, from grace and sweetness to gravity and grief.

Deriving all from love, or the lack thereof, Bembo's schemas were appended as supplements [14][15] to the newly invented technology of printing by Aldus Manutius in his editions of The Divine Comedy in the 16th century.

Bembo's Coat of Arms
Proper left profile of Bembo, as a medal in bronze, 3.45 cm., ca. 1523, by Valerio Belli, National Gallery of Art in Washington.
The obverse face of a bronze coin features the left profile of Bembo. ( Valerio Belli , ca. 1532)
Bembo's portrait, Historia veneta (1729)