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Perotti, Niccolò, 1430-1480

LC control no.n 85044579
Descriptive conventionsrda
Personal name headingPerotti, Niccolò, 1430-1480
    Browse this term in  LC Authorities  or the  LC Catalog
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 placeSiponto (Italy) Manfredonia (Italy) Fano (Italy)
Birth date[1429, 1430]
approximately 1430
Death date1480-12-15
1480-12-14
Place of birthSassoferrato (Italy)
Place of deathSassoferrato (Italy)
Field of activityClassical philology
AffiliationUniversità di Bologna
Profession or occupationHumanists Authors Translators College teachers
University and college faculty members
Found inPolybius. 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from Greek into Latin; he was also the author of invectives, Latin charms, letters, etc., most of which are still unpublished)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>