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Julius Caesar Capaccio (15528 July 1634) was a learned Italian humanist of the 17th century. A civic humanist, in 1602 he was appointed secretary of the city of Naples.


Biography

Giulio Cesare Capaccio was born in Campagna d'
Eboli Eboli ( Ebolitano: ) is a town and ''comune'' of Campania, southern Italy, in the province of Salerno. An agricultural centre, Eboli is known mainly for olive oil and for its dairy products, among which the famous buffalo mozzarella from the ...
(Salerno) in 1552, of a humble family. As a youngster he became proficient in Latin and Greek before attending the University of Bologna, where he graduated in law. In 1592 appeared his treatise on emblems ''Delle imprese'', a late but important testimony of Renaissance Neoplatonist tradition. By the early 1600s he was deeply involved in local antiquarian studies, especially in the Phlegraean Fields. An erudite member of the humanist literary-historian circle in late sixteenth- and early seventeenth-century Naples, he was one of the most methodical local scholars interested in reconstructing Naples's past from antiquity to his day. In 1611 Capaccio became a founding member of the Neapolitan
Accademia degli Oziosi The Accademia degli Oziosi (Academy of the Idle) was the most famous Neapolitan literary academies of the Renaissance. History The Accademia degli Oziosi was founded in 1611 by Giovanni Battista Manso, Marquis of Villa. The Academy was official ...
(Academy of the Idle). He died in 1634, shortly after the publication of ''Il Forastiero'', a guide to Naples in dialogue form, which is considered his masterpiece. ''Il Forastiero'' is a huge narrative description of the history of Naples modeled after the conversation between a foreigner and a local sage, imagined as taking place over the course of ten days. His work was part of the historical and geographic genre that became popular in the later sixteenth century. It was, in fact, just the type of book he had helped establish with his earlier guides on the antiquities and natural marvels of the Phlegraean Fields. It was also akin to Eugenio Caracciolo's ''Napoli Sacra'' (1624) in its historical treatment of Naples's sacred sites, martyrs, and saints' cults. Capaccio's detailed descriptions and historical narrative embraced both the pagan and the early Christian period, from which the city's present political institutions and religious traditions were thought to have originated.


Works

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References


Bibliography

* ''This article incorporates text from
Watkins Biographical Dictionary ''Watkins's Biographical Dictionary'' was originally published in 1800, with a second edition in 1825, as ''An Historical Account of the lives, characters and works of the most eminent persons in every age and nation, from the earliest times to th ...
, a publication now in the public domain.'' * * * * * * * *


External links

* {{DEFAULTSORT:Capaccio, Julius 1552 births 1631 deaths Italian male non-fiction writers 17th-century Italian historians 17th-century Italian male writers People from Campagna Italian archaeologists University of Naples Federico II alumni University of Bologna alumni Italian Renaissance humanists 17th-century Latin-language writers Italian Renaissance writers People of the Kingdom of Naples