Leiden  

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-:''[[16th century literature]], [[French literature]], [[French Renaissance literature]], [[French erotic literature]], [[16th century erotica]]''+# A city in [[South Holland]] on the [[Old Rhine]], seat of a famous Dutch university.
- +==See also==
-* [[Philippe d'Alcripe]] ([[15]]?-[[16]]?) : ''[[La nouvelle fabrique des excellents traits de vérité]]'', contes facétieux et licencieux publiés sans date+*[[John of Leiden]]
-* [[Joachim du Bellay]] ([[1522]]-[[1560]]) :<br />''[[La Maquerelle]]'' ou ''La vieille courtisane de Rome'', publiée dans ''[[Jeux rustiques]]'' en [[1558]]<br />''[[L'Anti-érotique de la vieille et de la jeune amie]]'', poème publié en [[1561]]+
-* [[Pierre de Brantôme]] ([[1540]]-[[1614]]) : ''[[Vie des dames galantes]]'', publié à [[Leyde]] chez J. Sambix jeune en [[1565]]+
-* [[Nicolas de Cholières]] ([[1509]]-[[1592]]) : ''[[Guerre des masles contre les femelles]]'', essai publié en [[1588]]+
-* [[Noël du Fail]], seigneur de la Hérissaye (vers [[1520]]-[[1586]]), ''[[Contes et discours d'Eutrapel]]'', publiés à [[Rennes]] en [[1585]]+
-* [[Louise Labé]] ([[1524]]-[[1566]]) :<br />''[[Le débat de la Folie et de l'Amour]]'', dialogue en prose publié en [[1555]]<br />''[[Sonnets et élégies]]'', publiés en [[1556]]+
-* [[Jean de Luxembourg]] (?-[[1548]]), sous le nom de plume de « Jean de la Roche » : ''[[Vie et actes triumphans d'une demoiselle nommée Catharine des Bas-Souhais]]'', publié en [[1546]]+
-* [[Jean de Marconville]] ([[1540]]-après [[1574]]) : ''[[Traité de la bonté et mauvaiseté des femmes]]'', publié en [[1564]]+
-* [[Gabriel de Minut]] ([[1520]]-[[1587]]) : ''[[De la beauté ou ce qui est beau et bon]]'' suivi de ''La paulégraphie ou Description des beautés d'une dame tholosane nommé la Belle Paule'', textes publiés à [[Lyon]] en [[1587]]+
-* [[Bonaventure des Périers]] ([[1510]]-[[1544]]) : ''[[Les nouvelles récréations et joyeux devis]]'', publiés à [[Lyon]] par Antoine du Moulin chez Granjon en [[1558]]+
-* [[Pierre Ronsard]] ([[1524]]-[[1585]]) : ''[[Livret de folastreries à Jeannot, parisien]]'', recueil de vers publié en [[1553]]+
-* [[Marguerite de Navarre (1492-1549)|Marguerite de Valois]] ([[1492]]-[[1549]]) : ''[[L'Heptaméron]]'', recueil de nouvelles publié en [[1558]]+
-* [[Étienne Tabourot]] ([[1549]]-[[1590]]) : ''[[Bigarrures du seigneur des accords]]'', publié en [[1572]]+
- +
-==Other literary forms==+
-The French Renaissance was rich in a whole body of moral, literary, philological and philosophical writing. [[Michel de Montaigne]] was the first essayist of modern times ([[Essays (Montaigne)|''The Essays'']]) and a remarkable writer on the human condition. [[Étienne Pasquier]]'s ''Recherches de la France'' was another monumental compendium of historical, political and cultural observations. +
- +
-[[Pierre de Bourdeille, seigneur de Brantôme]] wrote biographical sketches of the men and women of the court.+
- +
-[[Jean Bodin]] wrote a number of important works on political science.+
- +
-[[Henri Estienne]] and his son [[Robert Estienne]] were among the most important printers in France in the 16th century, and Robert Estienne's edition of the Bible was the first to use chapter and verse divisions.+
- +
-The Catholic/Huguenot and civil/political conflicts of the last half of the century -- the [[French Wars of Religion]] -- generated a great deal of political, religious and satirical writing, including the [[Monarchomachs]]' [[libel (poetry)|libels]]. +
- +
-The [[Satire Ménippée]] (1593/1594) written by [[Nicolas Rapin]], [[Jean Passerat]] and [[Florent Chrestien]], and edited/revised by [[Pierre Pithou]] was a political and satirical work in prose and verse which criticized the excesses of the [[Catholic League (French)|Catholic League]] during the Wars of Religion.+
- +
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  1. A city in South Holland on the Old Rhine, seat of a famous Dutch university.

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