Alessandro Politi

Summary

Alessandro Politi (July 10, 1679 – July 23, 1752), was an Italian philologist.

Alessandro Politi
Born10 July 1679 Edit this on Wikidata
Florence, Grand Duchy of Tuscany
Died23 July 1752 Edit this on Wikidata (aged 73)
Florence, Grand Duchy of Tuscany
OccupationPhilologist, theologian Edit this on Wikidata
Employer

Biography edit

Alessandro Politi was born July 10, 1679, at Florence. After studying under the Jesuits, he entered at the age of fifteen the Order of Poor Clerics Regular of the Mother of God of the Pious Schools, and was conspicuous among its members by his rare erudition. He was called upon to teach rhetoric and peripatetic philosophy at Florence in 1700. Barring a period of about three years, during which he was a professor of theology at Genoa (1716–18), he spent the greatest part of his life in his native city, availing himself of the manifold resources he could find there to improve his knowledge of Greek literature, his favorite study. He soon made a name for himself by his careful editions of several little-known Byzantine texts, and in 1733 he was called to the chair of eloquence vacant in the University of Pisa.[1] Accustomed to live among his books aloof from the world, Politi was of an irritable disposition, and sensitive in the extreme to the lightest criticism. He died July 25, 1752.

Works edit

  • Philosophia Peripatetica, ex mente sancti Thomae (Florence. 1708, 12mo);
  • De patria in testamentis condendis potestate, lib. 4 (ibid. 1712, 8vo);
  • Eustathii Commentarii in Homeri Iliadem, with notes and Latin version (ibid. 1730-35, 3 vols. fol.);
  • Eustathii Commentarii in Dionysium Periegetem, Greek and Latin (Cologne, 1742, 8vo);
  • Orationes XII ad Academiam Pisanam (Lucca, 1746, 8vo);
  • Martyrologium Romanum castigatum (vol. 1, Florence, 1751, 8vo).

He left many unpublished works. All his orations have been collected (Pisa, 1774, 8vo).

Notes edit

  1. ^ Eric Cochrane (2013). Florence in the Forgotten Centuries, 1527-1800: A History of Florence and the Florentines in the Age of the Grand Dukes. University of Chicago Press. p. 334. ISBN 9780226115955.

Bibliography edit