Giovanni Francesco Fortunio
Giovanni Francesco Fortunio (Zadar or Pordenone,[1] ca. 1470 – Fano, 1517) was an Italian grammarian, jurist and humanist.
Biography[]
He is especially remembered for having printed in 1516 the first ever Italian grammar book with the title Regole grammaticali della volgar lingua. It contains a morphological and orthographical analysis of the Tuscan vernacular based upon works by Dante Alighieri, Francesco Petrarca e Giovanni Boccaccio.[2]
He was also an important politician and vicarian.
Bibliography[]
- A. Benedetti, Giovanni Francesco Fortunio umanista e primo grammatico della lingua italiana, Pordenone, s.d.
References[]
- ^ Uncertain origin; documents in Trieste report Portunaone, while at Ancona the origin is marked as Hyadria ("Zara") in Dalmatia
- ^ This work was very successful. The re-edition printed in Venice (Aldo Manuzio, 1552) is available at 24 Italian libraries: Regole grammaticali della volgar lingua, di messer Francesco Fortunio, nuouamente reuiste, et con somma diligentia corrette.
Categories:
- 1470 births
- 1517 deaths
- Italian Renaissance humanists
- Italian jurists
- Grammarians of Italian
- Grammarians from Italy
- 16th-century jurists
- European linguist stubs
- Italian academic biography stubs
- Italian law biography stubs