Lazarus Buonamici
Lazarus (or Lázaro) Buonamici (1479–1552) was an Italian Renaissance humanist.
Biography
Buonamici was born in Bassano, and studied at the University of Padua. He tutored for the Campeggi family for a time, and later was professor of Belles Lettres at the Sapienza University of Rome. He fled Rome during the sack of 1527, escaping to Padua but losing all his property. He became a professor at Padua, where his lectures acquired for him a great reputation, though he did not commit the results of his scholarship to print, and only a few letters and poems of his survive, published posthumously in 1572.
gollark: Oh please, Rust programs wouldn't fit in 8MB.
gollark: There are a few things which are reverse proxied and not exposed to the public, but which are accessible to programs on the same device.
gollark: No, I mean I need to stop you from accessing the ports behind the osmarksfirewall™, see.
gollark: I would also have to restrict disk space and network IO.
gollark: Potentially. I don't know.
References
- Platts, John, ed. (1826). "Lazarus Buonamici". A New Universal Biography. 4. p. 290.
- Richard Copley Christie (1880). Étienne Dolet: The Martyr of the Renaissance. Macmillan and Company. pp. 18–19.
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