Francesco Del Furia

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Francesco Del Furia (28 December 1777- 19 October 1856) was an Italian scholar and librarian of the Biblioteca Marucelliana in Florence.

Biography[]

De Furia was born in Pratovecchio in Tuscany, and there had his initial studies in the communal school. At the age of 11, becauase of his skills with Latin, he was brought to meet the librarian of the Laurentian library, Angiolo Maria Bandini who was vacationing in this town. With the encouragement of doctor Luigi Tramontanni and professor Migliorotto Maccioni, his parents were induced to allow him to move to Florence with Bandini. In 1792, he went to study in Pisa at the Seminary of Sant Caterina under the patronage of the Grand-Duke Ferdinand III. There he also learned Greek. In 1798, he moved to Florence to learn Hebrew, Syriac, and Arabic languages under Cesare Malanima and Padre Tacci. In 1801, he was named vice-librarian of the Marucelliana. Within a year he had added the same position from the Laurenziana. In 1812 he was named a member of the Accademia della Crusca, and in 1814, secretary of the . In the meantime, the suppression of various monasteries include San Marco enlarged the ancient codicil collections of the Laurentian library. In addition collections of Scioppiani manuscripts, owned by Conte Pierucci were bought. In 1820, the manuscripts of Francesco Redi were obtained, in 1814, the autographical manuscripts of Vittorio Alfieri. Del Furia was involved in their translations and cataloguing.[1]

References[]

  1. ^ Elogio del cavaliere professore Francesco Del Furia. read 25 maggio 1857 by Giuseppe Bardelli.
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