Francesco Ficoroni Explained

Francesco (de') Ficoroni (1664 – 25 January 1747)[1] was an Italian archaeologist, connoisseur and antiquarian in Rome closely involved with the antiquities trade.[2] He was the author of numerous publications on ancient Roman sculpture and antiquities, guides to the monuments of Rome and the city's ancient topography, and on ancient Greek and Roman theatre and theatrical masks, among other subjects. For his antiquarian works he was made a Fellow of the Royal Society of London.[3] A major segment of his potential audience, both for his publications and for the objects from his perpetually changing collection, was composed of British milordi on their Grand Tours. His complementary volumes on ancient and modern Rome (1744) remained in print long after his death: Thomas Jefferson purchased both volumes while he was abroad in 1785-89.[4]

Life

Ficoroni was born near Lugnano, in the comune of Valmontone, Latium.

From 1705 to 1710 he undertook a series of excavations along the Via Appia in the vigna Moroni,[5] the Moroni vineyard, which revealed ninety-two funerary chambers decorated with frescoes and mosaics, which provided material for his Bolla d'oro (1736); the excavation was supported by Cardinal Filippo Antonio Gualterio, who purchased many of the antiquities discovered. Later Ficoroni bought back some of Gualterio's objects, while over two hundred of the examples of glass, terracotta oil lamps and some carved hardstones were purchased by Sir Hans Sloane and eventually found their way, with the rest of his collection, to establish the British Museum.[6] Reasons of cost aborted the engraving of the watercolor drawings of the frescoes (now long disappeared) made for Ficoroni by Gaetano Piccini (1681–1736); the watercolors were purchased by Cardinal Gualterio but dispersed after his death in 1728.[7] The frescos in the 92 tombs unearthed along the via Appia were visited by the painter Carlo Maratta, who brought his students to view them.[8]

Ficoroni's excavations at Hadrian's Villa were never fully published. Carlo Fea summarised some outstanding finds in 1790.[9] The most famous object that was in his collection or passed through his hands was the fourth-century BCE cylindrical bronze ritual vessel known still as the, which was found in an Etruscan woman's tomb just south of Palestrina (the ancient sanctuary site of Praeneste) in 1738 and which Ficoroni gallantly presented to the museum assembled by Athanasius Kircher in the Collegio Romano.[10] The Ficoroni Cista is signed by its maker, Novius Plautius. It has four finials on its lid, the figure of Dionysus flanked by aroused satyrs, and love scenes of Heracles and Iolaos.

The catalogue of his own collection of ancient Roman mercantile sealings stamped in lead was written by conte C. Gaetani and doubtless published at Ficoroni's expense.[11]

He died in Rome.

Selected publications

Notes and References

  1. Book: Sandys, John Edwin. John Sandys (classicist). A History of Classical Scholarship. 1908. 380. Cambridge University Press. 2: From the Revival of Learning to the End of the Eighteenth Century in Italy, France, England and the Netherlands.
  2. Lang. Jörn. 2014. Ficoroni, Francesco de'. 10.1163/2214-8647_bnps6_COM_00230. Brill's New Pauly Supplements I - Volume 6: History of Classical Scholarship - A Biographical Dictionary.
  3. According to the title page of his Gemmae antiquae, 1750.
  4. They are listed in the catalogue he made.
  5. The cippus, excavated here in 1701, inscribed C. Fannius Hellanicus, (CILvi.17713) found its way into Pope Clement XI's shortlived Museo ecclesiastico, was noted in the Vatican Library and is today in the Capitoline Museums (Christian Hülsen, Il museo ecclesiastico di Clemente XI Albani, Rome, 1890, cat. no. 6).
  6. Bolla d'oro (1736:35-46), noted by François de Polignac, "Francesco Bianchini et les 'cardinaux antiquaires'", in Valentin Kockel and Brigitte Sölch, eds., Francesco Bianchini (1662-1729) und die europäische gelehrte Welt um 1700, 2005:171.
  7. They have been traced to volumes from the Corsini and the Capponi collections, and at Eton, by Eliana Fileri, "Contributo allo studio dei disegni di pitture e mosaici antichi: il codice Corsini", Xenia Antiqua 9 (2000:79-146).
  8. F. de Polignac, "Field, sites and finds: Images of archeological investigations and self-representations of antiquarians in early 18th century Rome", 2002 (on-line text, pdf file).
  9. Fea, Miscellanea filologica critica ed antiquaria dell'Avvocato Fea. Notizie di antichità ricavate dalle opere dell'Abate Francesco Ficoroni. (Rome, 1790, vol. II, 1827).
  10. The Ficoroni cista is now conserved in the Museo Nazionale di Villa Giulia, Rome.
  11. Piombi antichi mercantili... Dissertazione... chi servir potrebbe Appendici ai Piombi antichi del Signor Abbate F. de' F. (Rome, 1740); it was translated into Latin as De plumbeis antiquorum numismatibus dissertatio, by Domenico Cantagalli [Rome, 1750]): Cole and Pollen; (De Plumbeis Antiquorum...).
  12. This list has been taken from Henry Cole and John Hungerford Pollen, First Proofs of the Universal Catalogue of Books on Art, 1870, s.v. "Ficoroni".
  13. Joseph Breck, "The Ficoroni Medallion and Some Other Gilded Glasses in the Metropolitan Museum of Art", The Art Bulletin 9,.4 (June 1927:352-356)