Antonio Landi

Antonio Landi (1725-1783) was an Italian poet, writer and dramatist of some importance in the European literary, cultural and theatrical scene.

He was a counselor of the Court in Berlin and was the author of a summary in French of the monumental History of Italian literature of Girolamo Tiraboschi.

Biography

He born in Livorno in 1725 and appointed an abbot in 1765. He preached in the collegiate church of Andrew the Apostle in Empoli, but his "immoral" lifestyle won him a rebuke from the Church, and he eventually abandoned the cassock.[1]

He then moved to Berlin in the service of the emperor Frederick II of Prussia, on the recommendation of the Grand Duke of Tuscany, with the task of composing and adapting stage works for its theater. He also became a court counselor.

At the court in Berlin he was the author of librettos, plays and some historical and literary works such as the Histoire de la litterature d'Italie, an abridged French translation of Tiraboschi, and a history of the Saxon emperors, published in German.[2] He died in Berlin in 1783.

Works

Plays

Literary and historical works

Translations

References

  1. Schmidl Carlo, Landi Antonio, cited in Universal Dictionary of the musicians. By Carlo Schmidl, IIa, Milan, Sonzogno, 1938, p. 445
  2. Natali Giulio, Storia letteraria d’Italia, I, Milan, Casa Editrice Vallardi, 1973, pp. 50; 386-387
  3. Landi, Antonio (1761). L'Aspasia tragedia d'Inanto Lanido Acc. Ap. all'illustriss. signora Vittoria Gaetani Borgherini (in Italian). Anton Giuseppe Pagani. Retrieved 10 January 2015.
  4. Landi, Antonio (1765). Il Rodrigo, tragedia dell'abate Antonio Landi Fiorentino dedicata al... (in Italian). Florence: Stamperia Imperiale. Retrieved 10 January 2015.
  5. Landi, Antonio (1771). Raccolta di poesie teatrali (in Italian). Retrieved 10 January 2015.

Other sources

External links

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