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・ Pedro Pablo Velasco
・ Pedro Pacheco
・ Pedro Pacheco de Villena
・ Pedro Pagés
・ Pedro Palacio
・ Pedro Palm
・ Pedro Pancho
・ Pedro Mendinueta y Múzquiz
・ Pedro Mendy
・ Pedro Menendez High School
・ Pedro Menéndez de Avilés
・ Pedro Menéndez Márquez
・ Pedro Meoqui
・ Pedro Mercado
・ Pedro Messía de la Cerda, 2nd Marquis of Vega de Armijo
Pedro Mexía
・ Pedro Meyer
・ Pedro Meza
・ Pedro Miguel
・ Pedro Miguel Arce
・ Pedro Miguel Aráoz
・ Pedro Miguel Caratini
・ Pedro Miguel Costa Ferreira
・ Pedro Miguel da Câmara Pinheiro
・ Pedro Miguel Dias
・ Pedro Miguel Echenique
・ Pedro Miguel Fault
・ Pedro Miguel Fonte Boa Santos
・ Pedro Miguel González Pinzón
・ Pedro Miguel Martins Santos


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Pedro Mexía : ウィキペディア英語版
Pedro Mexía

Pedro Mejía (old Spanish spelling: Pero Mexía), (between 17 January and 6 September 1497 - 17 January 1551) was a Spanish Renaissance writer, humanist and historian.
He was born and died in Seville, where he lived for the majority of his life and for which there is always a special affection in his writings.
He studied humanities and law at Seville and Salamanca universities. He maintained correspondence with Erasmus of Rotterdam, Luis Vives and Juan Gines de Sepulveda. In 1548, he was appointed official chronicler of the court of Emperor Charles V.
His major work is ''Silva de varia lección'' (''A Miscellany of Several Lessons'') (1540), which became an early best seller across Europe. It was reprinted 17 times in the sixteenth century and was translated into Italian (1542), French (1552) and English (1571). Within a century, ''Silva'' reached 31 editions in Spanish, and 75 in foreign languages. It is an encyclopedic miscellany or mixture of subjects of interest across the diverse repertoire of humanistic knowledge of the time. The work takes material from the ''Attic Nights'' by Aulus Gellius, the ''Banquet of the Sophists'' by Ateneo, the ''Saturnalia'' of Macrobius, the ''Memorable deeds and sayings'' of Valerius Maximus, the ''Inventor of all things'' by Polidoro Virgilio, the ''Moralia'' and ''Parallel Lives'' of Plutarch and, above all, the ''Natural History'' of Pliny the Elder. It also contains work by Erasmus of Rotterdam. Traces of this miscellany can be found in works by Mateo Alemán, Miguel de Cervantes, Shakespeare and Montaigne, to mention only a few of the authors he influenced.
Other major works by Mexia are ''Historia imperial y cesárea'' (1545), ''Historia del Emperador Carlos V'' (unfinished and unpublished) and ''Coloquios y Diálogos'' (1547).
==References==

*''Mexia, Pedro''. Ed. Antonio Castro Díaz. ''Silva de varia lección''. Ed. Cátedra. Vol 1-2. Madrid, 1989.
*(History of Spanish Literature ), by George Ticknor, Ticknor & Fichers, 1864. Pages 10–15.
*( Pedro Mejía ) The Power of the Word website, Spanish, 2011



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