Giunio Resti

Giunio Resti (Latin: Junius Restius, Croatian: Džono Rastić; 11 January 1755-30 March 1814) was a Ragusan politician and writer. He wrote poetry in Latin, and was a governor of the Lopud island.[1]

Giunio Antonio de Resti was born in 1755 in Ragusa. He studied in the local college of the Jesuits, where humanistic culture and poetry were the main disciplines. He was a polyglot. He soon became a member of the Greater Council, the legislative assembly of the Republic of Ragusa. He was member of the Senate of the Republic. In 1797 he was elected chancellor, that is head of the State. He left office after only a month. Made bitter from intrigues and from the compromises of the political life, he was withdrawn dedicating himself to the composition of satire. He witnessed the entrance of Napoleon's envoy, general Lauriston, in 1806, of the formal restoration of the Republic in 1813, and Austrian occupation in 1814. Dispirited, tired and sick, he died on 30 March 1814.

His works were published in four books in 1816 in Padova, by Francisco Maria Appendini, with the title Junii Antonini contis de Restiis, patrici Ragusini, Carmina. The works included satire, several elegie, epistles and poems.

Sources

  • Furio Brugnolo; Vincenzo Orioles (2002). Eteroglossia e plurilinguismo letterario: atti del XXI Convegno interuniversitario di Bressanone (2-4 luglio 1993). Il calamo. p. 248. ISBN 978-88-88039-23-7.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
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gollark: "Some phenomeon exists" != "some phenomenon exists in whatever context you're on about"
gollark: Some sort of convoluted new model of the universe based on electricity or something does *not* do that.
gollark: Are you aware of the "correspondence principle"? It basically just means that your new theory has to match with all the previously found empirical evidence for other theories.
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  1. Brugnolo & Orioles 2002, p. 248.
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