Camillo Almici
Template:Short description Camillo Almici (2 November 1714 – 30 December 1779[1]) was a Catholic priest and academic of the Congregation of the Oratory.
Biography
Almici was born at Brescia, of a noble family.[2] He became a member of the Congregation of the Oratory at a very early age, and devoted himself to the study of theology, Greek, and Hebrew, the Bible, chronology, religious and secular history, antiquities, criticism, diplomacy, and liturgy. He gained a strong reputation among his contemporaries for his scholarship.[1]
He has left critical reflections on the work of Febronius's De Statu Ecclesiae (1763), together with some treatises, part of which are still in manuscript.[2] His Méditations sur la vie et les écrits du P. Sarpi is a critical examination of Paolo Sarpi's partisan history of the Council of Trent.[1]
He wrote under multiple pseudonyms, including Callimaco Limi, Callimaco Mili, and N. N.[3]
His brother Giambattista Almici was a celebrated Italian jurist.[2]
Works
Of the many works he wrote, the principal are the following:
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- Script error: No such module "Lang". (1765, 2 vols.)
- Script error: No such module "Lang". (1765)[1]
References
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- Wikipedia articles incorporating text from the New General Biography
- 1714 births
- 1779 deaths
- Religious leaders from Brescia
- 18th-century Italian Roman Catholic priests
- Italian literary critics
- Italian male writers
- Italian biblical scholars
- 18th-century Italian historians
- 18th-century Italian Roman Catholic theologians
- Oratorians