Bernardino Baldi
Reverend Bernardino Baldi | |
---|---|
Born | |
Died | 10 October 1617 Urbino, Duchy of Urbino | (aged 64)
Occupations |
|
Title | Abbot |
Parent(s) | Francesco Baldi and Virginia Baldi (née Montanari) |
Academic background | |
Alma mater | University of Padua |
Influences | |
Academic work | |
Discipline |
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Sub-discipline | History of Mathematics |
Bernardino Baldi (5 June 1553 – 10 October 1617) was an Italian mathematician, poet, translator and priest.
Biography
Baldi descended from a noble family from Urbino, Marche, where he was born. He pursued his studies at Padua, and is said to have spoken about sixteen languages during his lifetime, though according to Tiraboschi the inscription on his tomb limits the number to twelve.
The appearance of the plague at Padua forced him to return to his native city. Shortly afterwards he was called to act as tutor to Ferrante Gonzaga, from whom he received the rich abbey of Guastalla. The oldest biography of Nicolaus Copernicus was completed on 7 October 1588 by him.[2] He held office as abbot for 25 years, and then returned once again to Urbino. In 1612 he was employed by the duke as his envoy to Venice. Baldi died at Urbino on 12 October 1617.
He is said to have written upwards of a hundred different works, the chief part of which have remained unpublished. His various works show his abilities as a theologian, mathematician, geographer, antiquary, historian and poet. His Cronica dei Matematici, a collection of lives of mathematicians, from antiquity to his own time, was conceived in emulation of Vasari's Lives, and was intended to contain the lives of more than two hundred mathematicians. The work was not published in the Renaissance, but an abridgement appeared in Urbino in 1707. His life has been written of by Affò, Mazzucchelli and others.
See also
Writing
Scientific works
- De gli automati, overo machine se moventi, Libri 2 (Venice, 1589; repr. 1601), On Automatons; Author: Hero of Alexandria, translated from the Greek
- Scamilli impares Vitruviani (Augsburg, 1612)
- De Vitruvianorum verborum significatione (Augsburg, 1612) -- a.k.a. Lexicon Vitruvianum
- Heronis Ctesibii Belopoeeca (Augsburg, 1616)
- In mechanica Aristotelis problemata exercitationes. (Aristotle's Mechanics) (Mainz, 1621)
- Cronica de matematici, overo Epitome dell'istoria delle vite loro (Urbino, 1707)
Other works
- La corona dell'anno (Venice, 1589)
- Versi e Prose di Monsignor Bernardino Baldi da Urbino (Venice, 1590)
- Il Lauro, scherzo giouenile (Pavia, 1600)
- La Deifobe, overo gli oracoli della Sibilla Cumea Monodia (Venice, 1604) (About the Oracles of the Cumaean Sibyl)
- Il Diluvio universale, cantato, con nuova maniera di versi (Pavia, 1604)
- Concetti morali (Rome, 1607)
- Oratione di Bernardino Baldi ... alla Serenità del nouvo Duce M. Antonio Memmo (Venice, 1613)
- In tabvlam aeneam Evgvbinam, lingua Hetrusca veteri perscriptam, divinatio (Augusta Vindelicorum, 1613)
- La Nautica: Poema
- Encomio della patria (1706)
Notes
- ^ a b Amaturo 1963.
- ^ On the revolutions, Foundations of natural history, Band 1, p.335, Nicolaus Copernicus: Complete Works, Edward Rosen, Johns Hopkins University Press, 1992.
References
- Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). . Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
- Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company. .
- Rose, Rose and Wright, A New General Biographical Dictionary (1857), pp. 46-48. (in Google Books)
- Amaturo, Raffaele (1963). "Baldi, Bernardino". Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani, Volume 5: Bacca–Baratta (in Italian). Rome: Istituto dell'Enciclopedia Italiana. ISBN 978-8-81200032-6.
External links
- Online Galleries, History of Science Collections, University of Oklahoma Libraries[dead link] High resolution images of works by and/or portraits of Bernardino Baldi in .jpg and .tiff format.
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- 1553 births
- 1617 deaths
- Writers from Urbino
- 16th-century Italian Roman Catholic priests
- 17th-century Italian Roman Catholic priests
- Christian Hebraists
- 16th-century Italian mathematicians
- 17th-century Italian mathematicians
- Catholic clergy scientists
- 17th-century Italian writers
- 17th-century Italian male writers