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  1. Pierre de Ronsard (French pronunciation: [pjɛʁ də ʁɔ̃saʁ]; 11 September 1524 – 27 December 1585) was a French poet or, as his own generation in France called him, a "prince of poets". Ronsard was born at Manoir de la Possonnière in the village of Couture-sur-Loir , Vendômois .

  2. Apr 18, 2024 · Pierre de Ronsard (born Sept. 11, 1524, La Possonnière, near Couture, Fr.—died Dec. 27, 1585, Saint-Cosme, near Tours) was a poet, chief among the French Renaissance group of poets known as La Pléiade. Ronsard was a younger son of a noble family of the county of Vendôme.

  3. Pierre de Ronsard, (born Sept. 11, 1524, La Possonnière, near Couture, France—died Dec. 27, 1585, Saint-Cosme, near Tours), French poet. Of a noble family, Ronsard turned to scholarship and literature after an illness left him partially deaf.

  4. His numerous collections of poetry include Odes (1550), Les Amours (1552), Le Bocage (1554), and La Franciade (1572). French Renaissance poet Pierre de Ronsard was educated at the Collège de Navarre in Paris. He served as a page to the Duke of Orléans and to James V, the….

  5. May 17, 2018 · Pierre de Ronsard is considered by many scholars to be the greatest poet of the French Renaissance. He founded and led a small group of like-minded writers known first as the Brigade and later as the Pléiade who sought to create a French literature .

  6. Nov 26, 2019 · Introduction. Perhaps no poet of the French Renaissance has known as much fame, in both his own lifetime and through his legacy, as Pierre de Ronsard (b. 1524–d. 1585). Born at the manor of La Possonnière in the Vendômois region of France to a father who served François I, the noble Ronsard participated in the royal diplomatic corps before ...

  7. La Pléiade, group of seven French writers of the 16th century, led by Pierre de Ronsard, whose aim was to elevate the French language to the level of the classical tongues as a medium for literary expression. La Pléiade, whose name was taken from that given by the ancient Alexandrian critics to.

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