André Schott

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André Schott (in Latin Andreas Schottus; 12 September 1552 – 23 January 1629) was a Flemish Jesuit priest, academic, linguist, translator and editor.

Born in Antwerp (in the Seventeen Provinces of the Low Countries) he studied at the Collegium Trilingue of Louvain, where he was a pupil of the Latinist Cornelius Valerius,[1] Douai and Paris; and taught in Zaragoza and Toledo.

After entering the Society of Jesus in 1586 he taught Greek in Rome and Antwerp. He corresponded with Ortelius, Isaac Casaubon, and Hugo Grotius.[2] André Schott died in Antwerp in 1629.

Contents

[edit] Editions Schottus was responsible for

[edit] Schottus' own works

  • Hispania illustrata 1604
  • Annotationum Spicilegium
  • Adagia sive Proverbia Graecorum Antwerp, 1612
  • Adagia sacra Novi Testamenti 1612
  • Observationum Humanarum libri V Hanoviae, 1615

[edit] Notes and references

  1. ^ Sandys, II, p. 305
  2. ^ Guillaume H.M. Posthumus Meyjes (ed.), Hugo Grotius, Meletius sive De iis quae inter Christianos conveniunt Epistola: Critical Edition with Translation, Commentary and Introduction, Brill 1988, p. 33, n. 67
  3. ^ Anonymous, Origo Gentis Romanae: The Origin of the Roman People (2004). Preface.
  4. ^ Smith, Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology, v. 3, page 1255
  • F.-N.-J.-G. Baguet (1848), Notice biographique et littéraire sur André Schott (Andreas Schottius), Bruxelles, Hayez

[edit] External links

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