Giovanni Salvemini

Giovanni Francesco Mauro Melchiorre Salvemini di Castiglione FRS (January 15, 1704 Castiglione del Valdarno – October 11, 1791 Berlin) was an Italian mathematician and astronomer.

Life

He graduated from the University of Pisa where he studied law and mathematics, earning a doctorate in 1729. As apparently an atheist, he fled the Inquisition to Switzerland in 1736.[1]

He taught in Lausanne, where he became a Calvinist, before moving to Utrecht in 1751, and then Berlin in 1763, where he remained for the rest of his life.[2] In 1745, he married Elizabeth du Fresne with whom he had three children, the only surviving child was Maximilian Friedrich Gustav Adolf Salvemini (see below). In 1757, Elizabeth died, and he married Madeleine Raven two years later. In November 1787 he suffered a stroke. He met the Scottish diarist James Boswell in both Utrecht and Berlin, with Boswell recording several anecdotes and conversations.[3]

Mathematics

In 1745, he was elected to the Royal Society. In 1765, Frederick the Great appointed him "Astronomer Royal", of the Observatory of Berlin. He received additional honors from foreign academies, was appointed a member of the Academy of Bologna in 1768, the Academy of Mannheim in 1777, the Academy of Padua in 1784, and the Academy of Prague in 1785. Succeeding Joseph-Louis Lagrange, he was appointed Director of the Mathematics Section of the Berlin Academy, a role he held until his death.[4]

He studied conic sections, cubic equations and problems of artillery. Among his latest publications mathematics note

He is also known for the Cramer–Castillon problem.[5]

Works

Maximilian Salvemini

His son Maximilian Friedrich Gustav Adolf Salvemini (Utrecht, Netherlands, 1747–1814) was a theorist of music, and early writer on tonality. He often added "de Castillon" in reference to the family title from their estates at Castiglion Fibocchi in Tuscany, Italy. He was also a member of the Berlin Academy, and published a large volume.[6]

Like his father, Castillon contributed to the Diderot's Encyclopédie in the area of music theory, musical instruments, and musical history.[7]

Notes

  1. Monarchisms in the Age of Enlightenment: liberty, patriotism, and the common good, Editors John Christian Laursen, H. W. Blom, Luisa Simonutti, University of Toronto Press, 2007, ISBN 978-0-8020-9177-2
  2. St Andrews
  3. St Andrews
  4. St Andrews
  5. http://wwwedu.ge.ch/cptic/clubs/cabri/download/lettre96/Preuve_Starck.pdf
  6. Mémoires de l’Académie de Berlin, année 1804, p. 319.
  7. François-Joseph Fétis, Biographie universelle des musiciens et bibliographie générale de la musique, Paris, Firmin-Didot, t., 1883, p. 208.

References

External links

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