Vincenzo Gamba

Vincenzo or Vincenzio Gamba (16061649), later Vincenzo Galilei (1619), was the illegitimate son of Galileo Galilei (15641642) and his mistress Marina Gamba (15701612). Vincenzo was legitimated by his father in 1619. Like his grandfather Vincenzo Galilei, the younger Vincenzo became a lutenist.

Life

Vincenzio was born in Padua like his two sisters: Virginia (16001634) (later Sister Maria Celeste) and Livia (16011659) (later Sister Arcangela).

He was named after his grandfather. In 1619, after his mother's death in 1612, his birth was legitimized by the Grand Duke of Tuscany. As a consequence, the names of the older and younger Vincenzo Galilei became identical, sometimes leading to confusion in biographies.

Vincenzo was particularly gifted in poetry, music, and mechanics. His father encouraged him to study law in Pisa, entrusting him to Benedetto Castelli (1577/15781643).

In 1629, he married Sestilia Bocchineri (c. 16101669). After his marriage, he quarreled with his father over money. Their relationship later improved and Vincenzo lovingly assisted his father in the last, difficult years of Galileo’s life.

Vincenzo Viviani (16221703) mentions Vincenzo Galilei’s skill as inventor of musical instruments and in particular his construction of a "lute made with such art that, playing it so excellently, he extracted continuous and goliardic voices from the cords as if they were issuing from an organ's pipes...".[1]

gollark: It's basically rebranded Thunderbolt.
gollark: irc.osmarks.net and other things (testbot knows).
gollark: I'm sure I could upload random snippets of rust code if necessary.
gollark: You should obviously join my IRC network, which has ~no drama and about 4 users.
gollark: Broadly speaking, to the best of my knowledge: TVs accept commands from remotes as modulated infrared somehow. The basic modulation stuff is fairly consistent, but not all TVs support the same set of commands. So universal remote things can work by recording the data another remote sends when you press a particular button, saving it, and replaying it when you press a button on it.

References

  1. Vincenzo Galilei junior, brunelleschi.imss.fi.it


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.