Pirro Maria Gabrielli
Pirro Maria Gabrielli (April 1, 1643-19 December 1705) was an Italian physician, residing in his native Siena.
Biography
Pirro Maria Gabrielli was born in Siena in 1643. He was baptized on April 2, 1643.[1]
He was a member of the Signoria of Siena in 1668, the year he received his doctorate in medicine and philosophy.[2]
He initially began studies of logic and philosophy in Siena under A. Venturi Gallerani, but settled to study also medicine. In 1692, he befriended the mathematician Elia Astorini. This combination of interests helped him found in 1691–1692, a scholarly-scientific society known as Fisiocritici with a Lucrezian motto of "Veris quod possit vincere falsa". The entity in a fashion continues to exist today as the Accademia dei Fisiocritici with an associated Natural History museum in Siena.[3]
The group originally met in the library of the Spedale di Santa Maria della Scala. In 1694 the academy moved to the Casa della Sapienza, now the hall of the Biblioteca Comunale degli Intronati belonging to the University of Siena. In 1816 the group moved to the former Camaldolese monastery donated to it by the Grand Duke Ferdinand III, and now serving as a Natural History museum.
In Gabrielli's time, the group also started furthering, however, arcadian fancies and readings. Gabrielli did continue some works on scientific instruments such as a heliometer and a meridian line, and some combined astronomical and astrological observations, including observations about the 1681 comet.[1][4]
Opere
- Gabbrielli, Pirro Maria (1705). Heliometro fisiocritico, o vero La meridiana sanese. Siena: Bonetti.
References
- ^ a b De Gregorio 1998.
- ^ British Museum entry.
- ^ Siena Online, entry on the fisiocritici academy.
- ^ Lastri, Marco (1774). Elogi degli uomini illustri toscani. Vol. III. pp. 508–514.
Bibliography
- De Gregorio, Mario (1998). "GABBRIELLI, Pirro Maria". Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani, Volume 51: Gabbiani–Gamba (in Italian). Rome: Istituto dell'Enciclopedia Italiana. ISBN 978-8-81200032-6.