Filippo_della_Torre

Filippo della Torre

Filippo della Torre

Italian humanist, antiquarian and Roman Catholic prelate


Filippo della Torre (1 May 1657 – 25 February 1717) was an Italian humanist, antiquarian and Roman Catholic prelate who served as Bishop of Adria (1702-1717).[1]

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Biography

Filippo della Torre was born in 1657, of a noble family at Cividale del Friuli.[2] His connexions with Ottavio Ferrari, one of the most distinguished Italian philologists, increased his natural taste for that study. Having settled at Rome, he gained the esteem and friendship of the cardinals Imperiali and Noris, pope Innocent XII and Clement XI.[2] While at Rome he published a work on the antiquities of Antium, Monumenta veteris Antii, which was much esteemed by contemporary scholars.[3] On 19 March 1702, he was consecrated Bishop of Adria.[1] He served in that position until his death in 1717.[1] Girolamo Lioni wrote a biography of Filippo della Torre.

Works

  • “Monumenta veteris Antii hoc est inscriptio M. Aquilii et tabula solis Mithrae variis figuris & symbolis exsculpta”, Rome 1700 and 1714; reprinted in Burmann’s Thesaurus rerum italicarum (vol. VIII);
  • “Taurobolium antiquum Lugduni anno 1704 repertum, cum explicatione,” Lyon, 1704, reprinted in Sallengre’s “Thesaurus Antiquitatum” (vol. II) and in Jean Le Clerc's Bibliothèque choisie (XVII, 167-185);
  • “De annis imperii M. Antonii Aurelii Heliogabali,” Padua, 1714.

Notes

  1. Cheney, David M. "Bishop Filippo della Torre". Catholic-Hierarchy.org. Retrieved October 6, 2022. [self-published]

Bibliography

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