Abondio Collina Explained

Abbondio Collina
Birth Date:1691
Birth Place:Bologna
Death Place:Bologna
Nationality:Italian
Field:mathematics and geography
Work Institutions:University of Pisa
Known For:Monograph on the discovery of Compass

Abbondio Collina, O.S.B. Cam. (169112 December 1757) was an Italian Camaldolese monk, priest, mathematician, and geographer.

Life

Grandi was born (al secolo) Giovani in Bologna to Pietro Collina and Giacoma Santi. In Ravenna at the monastery of Classe he became a Camaldolese monk in 1709. He was sent in 1717 to the University of Pisa to study under Luigi Guido Grandi. He then moved to Bologna to occupy the cathedra of geography and Nautics at the Istituto delle Scienze. He was also named lecturer of geometry, endowed by his brother Marco Antonio Collina Sbaraglia. A third brother, Bonifacio (al secolo Giuseppe) Collina was similarly educated like Abbondio, and endowed to teach philosopy in Bologna. He was a founding member of the Accademia Benedettina of Bologna. In 1742, he was named as Governor of the Monastery of Santi Cosma e Damiano del Monaftero de' Santi Cofma, e Damiano di Bologna.

Among these lectures was a set of around the topic of the Invention of the Compass, published in the Acts of the Academy of the Istituto di Bologna.

Later these were collected in a monograph titled Considerazioni Istoriche sopra l'origine della Bassola nautica nell' Asia, published in quarto by the Padre Abate Trombelli in Faenza in 1748.

Collina also translated some recollections of travels by two Arabs published by ab. Renaudot. This translation was published in quarto in Bologna 1749. His poetry was included in collections. He died in December 1753 and left manuscript titled: Geografia Storica, a Istituzioni Nautiche and the Annali d'Italia del Muratori compilati e corretti.[1] [2]

Notes and References

  1. Book: Nuovo Dizionario Storico, Volume VII. Michele Morelli, Naples. Naples. 1791. 239–240.
  2. Book: Notizie degli scrittori Bolognesi. Giovanni Fantuzzi. Stamperia di San Tommaso d'Aquino. Bologna. 1783. 105.