Paolo Emiliani Giudici

Paolo Emiliani Giudici (13 June 1812 – 8 September 1872), Italian writer, was born in Mussomeli, Sicily.

Biography

His History of Italian Literature (1844) brought him to the front, and in 1848 he became professor of Italian literature at Pisa, but after a few months was deprived of the chair on account of his liberal views in politics. On the creation of the new Kingdom of Italy he became professor of aesthetics (resigning 1862) and secretary of the Academy of Fine Arts at Florence, and in 1867 was elected to the chamber of deputies. He held a prominent place as an historian, his works including a Storia del teatro (1860), and Storia dei comuni italiani (1861), besides a translation of Macaulay's History of England (1856). He died at Tonbridge in England, on 8 September 1872.[1]

gollark: They dropped it in Alder Lake anyway, due to bee.
gollark: Reject 64-bit registers, embrace AVX2.
gollark: That seems implausible.
gollark: It uses just one 4-byte key which it XORs with everything and yet people weren't able to trivially reverse it?
gollark: It's reading a key from memory somewhere, doesn't mean it uses the *same* key for everything.

References

  1. Chisholm 1911, p. 52.
Attribution
  •  This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Giudici, Paolo Emiliani". Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
    • A Life appeared at Florence in 1874.
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