Map Graph
No coordinates found

Poggio Bracciolini

Italian scholar, writer and humanist (1380–1459)

Gian Francesco Poggio Bracciolini, usually referred to simply as Poggio Bracciolini, was an Italian scholar and an early Renaissance humanist. He is noted for rediscovering and recovering many classical Latin manuscripts, mostly decaying and forgotten in German, Swiss, and French monastic libraries. His most celebrated finds are De rerum natura, the only surviving work by Lucretius, De architectura by Vitruvius, lost orations by Cicero such as Pro Sexto Roscio, Quintilian's Institutio Oratoria, Statius' Silvae, Ammianus Marcellinus' Res Gestae, and Silius Italicus's Punica, as well as works by several minor authors such as Frontinus' De aquaeductu, Nonius Marcellus, Probus, Flavius Caper, and Eutyches.

Read article
File:Gianfrancesco_Poggio_Bracciolini_-_Imagines_philologorum.jpgFile:Bracciolini_-_ita,_neli_anni_di_Cristo_MCCCCLXXVI_a_octo_di_marzo_-_540471.jpgFile:Poggio_Urb._lat._224.jpgFile:Portret_van_Poggio_Bracciolini_Ioan_Franciscus_Poggius_(titel_op_object),_RP-P-1909-4349.jpgFile:Poggio_handwriting.jpg
Top Questions
AI generated

List the top facts about Poggio Bracciolini

Summarize this article

What is the single most intriguing fact about Poggio Bracciolini?

Are there any controversies surrounding Poggio Bracciolini?

More questions