Felice Osio

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Felice Osio
Born(1587-07-12)July 12, 1587
Almo Collegio Borromeo
Academic work
DisciplinePhilology, Medieval studies
Institutions
InfluencedLudovico Antonio Muratori

Felice Osio (

cleric
, scholar, and writer.

Biography

Felice Osio was born in Milan in 1587 into an ancient noble family that, according to Giacomo Filippo Tomasini, claimed to descend from Osius, high priest of the temple of Delphi.[1]

Having completed his studies with some acclaim, he studied philosophy and theology at the Borromeo College, where he received his doctorate at the age of 21.[2] He then embraced holy orders, and, having chosen to become a teacher, lectured on humanities at the Swiss seminary in Milan, then at Bergamo.[3]

In 1621 he was appointed to the chair of rhetoric at the University of Padua.[4] The orations he gave were considered brilliant occasions and were much applauded.[4] Osio was equally gifted in writing in verse; and numerous collections offer his compositions.[4]

History was Osio's primary interest. He was the first to conceive the project, subsequently carried out by Muratori, of forming a great collection of source documents on the medieval history of Italy.[4] As a student in Milan, Osio had worked for Cardinal Federico Borromeo on the foundation of the Biblioteca Ambrosiana and after his appointment at the University of Padua he urged the Venetian Senate to establish a library in support of the university.[5] The new library was established in 1629, and Osio was appointed the first librarian.[6] In 1630, Padua was struck by the plague. Osio remained working in the city but died on 29 July 1631 at the age of forty-four.[4] His remains were laid to rest, without ceremony, in the grounds of the Jesuit church, then still under construction.[7]

Works

Osio left, in manuscript, Poetry, Polemics, Panegyrics, etc. He published a list of his Discourses, which Tomasini included in his Elogia viror. litter. illustrium, and Argelati, in the Bibl. scriptor. Mediolan. He was unable to complete his study on the works of Albertino Mussato; and this was, says Tiraboschi, a disappointment for lovers of the historical genre, for he had such a facility for writing, and was so fond of digressions, that he would have filled a great number of folio volumes with his notes.[8] Osio's Notes on the History of Mussato have been collected and published in the editio princeps of Mussato's works.[9] His commentary on the History or Chronicle of Lodi, by Ottone and Acerbo Morena, Venice, 1639,[10] appeared in volume I of the Scriptor. Brunsvic.; in volume II of the Thesaur. antiquitat. Italiæ, and in volume VI of the Rerum italicarum scriptores; and his commentary on the History of the March of Treviso, features in volume VIII of Muratori's Collection. His notes on the thirteenth book of Lorenzo de Monacis' Chronicon de rebus Venetis were republished by Muratori in volume VIII of Rerum Italicarum scriptores.[11] In addition to the works cited, one can consult the Historia gymnasii Patavini, I, 357–9, on Osio.[12] His engraved portrait can be found in the Elogia of Tomasini.[13]

References

  1. ^ Tomasini 1644, p. 244.
  2. ^ Argelati 1745, pp. 726–727.
  3. ^ Comneno Papadopoli 1726, p. 358.
  4. ^ a b c d e Weiss 1860, p. 444.
  5. ^ da Conturbia, Sandra (2015). “Italy.” In Wayne A. Wiegand and Donald G. Davis, Jr, eds., Encyclopedia of Library History. New York: Taylor & Francis. p. 312.
  6. ^ Osio 1873, p. 7.
  7. ^ Argelati 1745, p. 727.
  8. ^ Tiraboschi, Girolamo (1793). Storia della letteratura italiana. Vol. VIII. Modena: presso la Società Tipografica. p. 384.
  9. ^ Albertini Mussati Historia Augusta Henrici VII Caesaris et alia quae extant opera, Laurentii Pignorii vir. clar. spicilegio, nec non Foelicis Osii et Nicolai Villani castigationibus, collationibus et notis illustrata, Venetiis 1636 (online).
  10. ^ Otho Morena (1629). Felice Osio (ed.). Historia rerum Laudensium tempore Federici Aenobarbi Caesaris (in Latin). Venice: Marco Ginammi.
  11. .
  12. ^ Comneno Papadopoli 1726, pp. 357–9.
  13. ^ Tomasini 1644, p. 245.

Sources