Ferdinando Cesarini | |
---|---|
![]() | |
Born | 1606[1]
Rome, Italy |
Died | 8 March 1646
Rome, Italy | (aged 41–42)
Occupation(s) | poet and physicist |
Ferdinando Cesarini (c. 1606–1646) was an Italian poet and physicist
Born in Rome in a noble family. Brother of the better-known Virginio Cesarini (1596–1624) to whom Galileo Galilei (1564–1642) addressed Il Saggiatore [The Assayer] ( Rome, 1623) in the form of a letter. Ferdinando Cesarini, as a referendarius utriusque signaturae and patron, corresponded with Benedetto Castelli (1577/8-1643), who described the Galilean thermoscope to him in a letter of September 20, 1638. [2]
Father Castelli also invited him to spread the Discorso sulla calamita [Discourse on the loadstone], also dedicated to Cesarini, within a limited circle of "trust" people. [3] Fundamental was the ascending of Cesarini, who pushed Castelli to turn his thoughts around the most "noble fields of the philosophizing". [4]
Cesarini also had contacts with Giovanni Ciampoli, who presented him in a poem [5] and with whom, in the late nineteenth century, he was counted among the prelates of his era inclined "to promote the progress of science". [6]
As a poet he mostly distinguished himself in the satirical poetry; [7] he was also the author of a Latin oration in memory of St. Aloysius Gonzaga that he declaimed, fifteen, in the presence of several cardinals, [8] and of a Latin poem, recited in Jesuits' Roman College, for the election of the Emperor Ferdinand II. [9] [10]
Cesarini died at age forty-two, leaving as his executor and heir Cardinal Federico Sforza. [11]
ferdinando cesarini ciampoli.
Ferdinando Cesarini | |
---|---|
![]() | |
Born | 1606[1]
Rome, Italy |
Died | 8 March 1646
Rome, Italy | (aged 41–42)
Occupation(s) | poet and physicist |
Ferdinando Cesarini (c. 1606–1646) was an Italian poet and physicist
Born in Rome in a noble family. Brother of the better-known Virginio Cesarini (1596–1624) to whom Galileo Galilei (1564–1642) addressed Il Saggiatore [The Assayer] ( Rome, 1623) in the form of a letter. Ferdinando Cesarini, as a referendarius utriusque signaturae and patron, corresponded with Benedetto Castelli (1577/8-1643), who described the Galilean thermoscope to him in a letter of September 20, 1638. [2]
Father Castelli also invited him to spread the Discorso sulla calamita [Discourse on the loadstone], also dedicated to Cesarini, within a limited circle of "trust" people. [3] Fundamental was the ascending of Cesarini, who pushed Castelli to turn his thoughts around the most "noble fields of the philosophizing". [4]
Cesarini also had contacts with Giovanni Ciampoli, who presented him in a poem [5] and with whom, in the late nineteenth century, he was counted among the prelates of his era inclined "to promote the progress of science". [6]
As a poet he mostly distinguished himself in the satirical poetry; [7] he was also the author of a Latin oration in memory of St. Aloysius Gonzaga that he declaimed, fifteen, in the presence of several cardinals, [8] and of a Latin poem, recited in Jesuits' Roman College, for the election of the Emperor Ferdinand II. [9] [10]
Cesarini died at age forty-two, leaving as his executor and heir Cardinal Federico Sforza. [11]
ferdinando cesarini ciampoli.