Lescot’s excellent understanding of Italian Renaissance styles…
1550 CE
Lescot’s excellent understanding of Italian Renaissance styles enables him to expel from French architecture the lingering traces of the Gothic style in rebuilding the old medieval palace of the Louvre.
In the Cour Carreé, Lescot combines a French system of pavilions with an Italianate elevation of superimposed orders, enriching the facades with delicate low-relief sculpture designed by Jean Goujon.
Another of Lescot’s surviving major works is the Fontaine des Innocents, built around 1550.
Ronsard, regarded as the leader of the "Brigade," devotes his career to answering du Bellay’s nativist call for new poetry based on classical models.
Equally skilled at writing love poems, pastorals, sonnets, philosophical poems, and political verse, Ronsard’s assimilation of classical and native idiom and verse forms expands the range of French poetry.
The twenty-six-year-old poet produces Odes, a verse collection, in 1550.
His own generation in France will label him "prince of poets.”