Emanuel Calvo

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Emanuel Calvo (late-seventeenth century - before 1772) was an Italian physician and Neo-Hebraic poet.

He was born at Thessaloniki. In early youth he went to Livorno with his learned father, , and on October 23, 1724, he graduated as a doctor in Padua. Calvo practiced medicine with considerable success at Leghorn, but inclined to the Kabbala toward the end of his life. Several of Calvo's poems are included in A.B. Piperno's collection Ḳol 'Ugab, Leghorn, 1846. He was an intimate friend of the poet Abraham Isaac Castello and of Moses Hayyim Luzzatto, who wrote a eulogy of him in a Hebrew poem after his graduation, and subsequently corresponded with him. When Calvo died wrote an elegy, which is published in his Yeḳara de-Shakbe, 1774.

References[]

  •  This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainJoseph Jacobs and Meyer Kayserling (1901–1906). "Calvo, Emanuel". In Singer, Isidore; et al. (eds.). The Jewish Encyclopedia. New York: Funk & Wagnalls.
Retrieved from ""