Gaetano Polidori

Gaetano Polidori
1848. G.Polidori by D.G.Rossetti[1]
Born(1763-08-05)5 August 1763
Died16 December 1853(1853-12-16) (aged 90)[2]
Occupation(s)writer, publisher
Spouse
Anna Maria Pierce
(m. 1793)
Children4, including John William and Frances

Gaetano Fedele Polidori (5 August 1763 – 16 December 1853) was an Italian writer, political and scholar living in Highgate. He was the son of Agostino Ansano Polidori (1714–1778), a physician and poet who lived and practised in his native Bientina, near Pisa, Tuscany.

Polidori studied law at the University of Pisa. He became secretary to the tragedian Vittorio Alfieri in 1785 and remained with him four years.

He came to England from Paris in 1790 after resigning as Alfieri's secretary. He settled in Highgate, working as an Italian teacher and translator. He translated various literary works, notably, John Milton's Paradise Lost and Horace Walpole's The Castle of Otranto, besides other writings of Milton and Lucan. He wrote prolifically, producing his own fiction, poetry, criticism, and tragedies. He also set up a private press at his home, where amongst other works (mostly his own), he printed the first editions of some poems by his grandchildren, Dante Gabriel Rossetti and Christina Rossetti. He also printed an edition of the poem Osteologia, which his father Agostino Ansano Polidori had written in 1763.

He retired to a house in Holmer Green, Buckinghamshire in 1836.

  1. ^ source: Rossetti, Dante; Rossetti, William Michael (1895). Dante Gabriel Rossetti; his family-letters, with a memoir by William Michael Rossetti. London: Ellis and Elvey. p. 122.
  2. ^ Manfredi, Marco. "Polidori, Gaetano Fedele" (in Italian). Treccani- Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani. Retrieved 28 June 2018.

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