Tommaso Diplovataccio

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Tommaso Diplovataccio or Diplovatazio (1468–1541) was a Greco-Italian jurist, publisher and politician.

His family were Greek nobility who emigrated to Naples after the fall of Constantinople. After studies in Naples (where he married Maria Laskaris), in Padua and Ferrara, he held the office of fiscal in Pesaro from 1492 to 1507. The wealth he obtained by a 1494 marriage to a trader's daughter allowed him to reduce his work as a jurisconsult and concentrate on scholarly pursuits. From 1504 to 1508 he compiled the Chronicon Pisauri, a compilation of notes about legal sources that are now lost. In 1511 he finished the Tractatus de praestantia doctorum, a biographical treatise on the most influential jurists of Antiquity and the Middle Ages.

In 1517, Diplovataccio moved to Venice, where as a publisher of note he edited De regulis iuris of Dinus, the Commentaria of de Tartagnis and the works of Bartolus, among others. On behalf of the city, he compiled two histories of Venice. Disappointed by their meager success, he moved back to Pesaro, where he spent his last years as an influential member of the city's senate.

[edit] References

  • Mazzacane, Aldo (2001). "Diplovataccio, Tommaso", in Michael Stolleis (ed.): Juristen: ein biographisches Lexikon; von der Antike bis zum 20. Jahrhundert, 2nd edition (in German), München: Beck, 179. ISBN 3406 45957 9.