Rajmundo Kunić

Rajmundo Kunić
Born January 17, 1719
Dubrovnik, Republic of Ragusa
Died November 22, 1794(1794-11-22) (aged 75)
Rome, Papal States
Occupation Priest, humanist

Rajmundo Kunić (January 17, 1719 – November 22, 1794) was a Greek and Latin humanist of Croatian origin.

Kunić was born in the Republic of Ragusa, in the small town of Cavtat, he lost his father early in life. In 1734, at age fifteen, he was sent to the order of the Society of Jesus (Jesuits) in Rome. He became, along with Ruđer Bošković, one of the most illustrious academics produced by the Republic of Ragusa.

Kunić spent twenty-seven years teaching Latin and Greek in Florence, Rome and other parts of Italy. He wrote several elegant orations, including one for Pope Clement XIII, and many epigrams and elegies following Tibullus and Catullus. He translated Theocritus and the epigrams of the Greek Anthology. His best-known work is the Latin translation of The Iliad: "Homeri Ilias Latinis Versibus Expressa" (1776).

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