Giuseppe Bencivenni Pelli

Giuseppe Bencivenni Pelli or Giuseppe Pelli Bencivenni (1729 - 31 July 1808) was an Italian civil servant and essayist. Born and dying in Florence, he served as director of the Uffizi Gallery from 1775 to 1793. He was the last member of a Florentine patrician family.

Manupscript by Giuseppe Bencivenni Pelli

Life

Orphaned early in life, he studied law at the University of Pisa but did not gain his doctorate. In 1758 he joined the Secretariat of State of the Grand Duchy of Tuscany. A supporter of the Tuscan Enlightenment, he wrote several books, essays and dissertations on art and culture. He followed the scholar Giovanni Lami as editor of the "Novelle letterarie", he also wrote the 80-volume Efemeridi, a collection of diaries offering an incredible fresco of Florentine society between 1750 and 1799[1]. He died in Florence.

Works

gollark: Arch, if you must know.
gollark: Oh, parents turned it off.
gollark: I dislike this.
gollark: Hmm, it says wlan0 is up and yet badness?
gollark: 128x72 or so.

References

  1. "Giuseppe Bencivenni Pelli". Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani. 1966.

Bibliography

  • (in French) Philippe Audegean, Le plus ancien programme de l'abolitionnisme italien: le Discorso della pena di morte de Giuseppe Pelli (1760-1761), in La peine de mort, edited by Luigi Delia and Fabrice Hoarau, CORPUS, revue de philosophie, 62 (2012), pp. 135-156.
  • (in Italian) Silvia Capecchi, Scrittura e coscienza autobiografica nel diario di Giuseppe Pelli, Roma: Edizioni di Storia e Letteratura, 2006.
  • (in Italian) Miriam Fileti Mazza, Bruna M. Tomasello, Galleria degli Uffizi 1775-1792. Un laboratorio culturale per Giuseppe Pelli Bencivenni, Modena: Franco Cosimo Editore, 2003.
  • (in Italian) Miriam Fileti Mazza, Bruna M. Tomasello, Catalogo delle pitture della Regia Galleria compilato da Giuseppe Bencivenni giĆ  Pelli. Gli Uffizi alla fine del Settecento, 2004.
  • (in Italian) Roberto Zapperi, Giuseppe Bencivenni Pelli, in Dizionario biografico degli italiani, vol. VIII; Roma: Istituto dell'Enciclopedia Italiana, 1966, pp. 219-222.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.