Adriano Politi

Adriano Politi (1542 – 15 January 1625) was an Italian translator, philologist and classical scholar. He belonged to the Sienese School of philologists.[1]

Adriano Politi
Born1542
San Quirico d'Orcia, Republic of Siena
Died15 January 1625(1625-01-15) (aged 82–83)
Sarteano, Grand Duchy of Tuscany
Occupationtranslator, philologist and classical scholar
LanguageItalian
NationalityItalian
PeriodLate Middle Ages
Literary movementRenaissance

Biography

Adriano Politi was born at San Quirico d'Orcia in 1542.[2] He chose the ecclesiastical career, and was attached as secretary to the cardinals Capizucchi, Serbelloni, Cornaro and Aldobrandini.[2] He died in Sarteano in January 1625.[2]

Works

Adriano Politi is best known today for his Italian translation of Tacitus (Opere di C. Tacito, Rome, 1604 and 1611; a revised and improved edition of Politi's translation was published in Venice in 1644). Politi's translation was reissued in the luxurious edition of Tacitus's complete works, edited by Girolamo Canini d'Anghiari.[3] Published in 1618 by Giunti and Ciotti, this new edition of Politi's translation was hugely successful despite being a complex and expensive work. When he reprinted it just two years later the printer Giunti noted that in only a few months it had sold 1,200 copies but demand outstripped the supply.[4] The edition was reissued three times during the first half of the century (1620, 1628, and 1641). Politi published also a Dittionario Toscano (Rome, 1614, 8vo): this work, an abridgment of the Vocabolario degli Accademici della Crusca, added Sienese equivalents to some of the Vocabolario's distinctively Florentine lexical items.[5] Among his other notable works is the Ordo Romanæ historiæ legendæ (Venice, 1627, 4to, and in vol. 3 of Gaudenzio Roberti's Miscellanea Italica erudita).

Notes

Bibliography

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