LC control no. | n 85044579 |
---|---|
Descriptive conventions | rda |
Personal name heading | Perotti, Niccolò, 1430-1480 |
Variant(s) | Perotti, Niccolò, Abp. of Siponto, 1430-1480 Perottus, Nicolaus, 1430-1480 Saxoferratensis, Nicolaus, 1430-1480 Perotto, Niccolo, 1430-1480 |
Other standard no. | 0000000121289876 |
Associated place | Siponto (Italy) Manfredonia (Italy) Fano (Italy) |
Birth date | [1429, 1430] approximately 1430 |
Death date | 1480-12-15 1480-12-14 |
Place of birth | Sassoferrato (Italy) |
Place of death | Sassoferrato (Italy) |
Field of activity | Classical philology |
Affiliation | Università di Bologna |
Profession or occupation | Humanists Authors Translators College teachers University and college faculty members |
Found in | Polybius. Polybij Megalopolitani Historiarum libri priores quinque ... 1554: t.p. (Nicolao Perotto Sipontino interprete) LC data base, 7-12-85 vj46 (hdg.: Perotti, Niccolò, Abp. of Siponto, 1430-1480) German Wikipedia, viewed November 25, 2024 (Niccolò Perotti (also Perotto, Latin Nicolaus Perottus; born 1429 or 1430 in Sassoferrato; died December 15, 1480) was an Italian humanist; he was Archbishop of Siponto from 1458; he was commissioned by Pope Nicholas V to translate Polybios' Roman History; as a professor at the University of Bologna, he wrote the first Latin school grammar Rudimenta grammatices (printed in 1473); his Latin grammar and collection of quotations Cornucopiae remained one of the most popular Latin reference works in Europe for a long time) <https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Niccol%C3%B2_Perotti> Italian Wikipedia, viewed November 25, 2024 (Niccolò Perotti, or Niccolò Perotto, in Latin Nicolaus Perottus (born in Sassoferrato, approximately 1430 - died in Sassoferrato, December 14, 1480), was an Italian humanist, philologist and Catholic archbishop; on October 19, 1458, he was appointed archbishop of Manfredonia; Niccolò Perotti's literary activity consisted almost entirely of works of philology, grammar and translations from Greek into Latin; he was also the author of invectives, Latin charms, letters, etc., most of which are still unpublished) <https://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Niccol%C3%B2_Perotti> Katalog der Deutschen Nationalbibliothek, viewed November 25, 2024 (Nicolaus Perottus, 1429-1480, born in Fano, died in Sassoferrato; was an Italian humanist, translator, classical philologist, University professor and author; from 1458 Archbishop of Siponto; other name variants (selection): Nicolaus Saxoferratensis, Niccolo Perotto) <https://d-nb.info/gnd/118868365> |