, 1739 with Etruscan alphabet and review of
Museum Etruscum Gori also published ancient inscriptions found in
Etruria, in a series of volumes, his
Museum Etruscum, in three volumes published between 1736 and 1743. These are among the
incunabula of Etruscan studies, and incurred the jealous criticism of his rival in incipient
Etruscology,
Francesco Scipione Maffei (1675–1755); the two engaged in running skirmishes in print. He edited
Giovanni Battista Doni's collected transcriptions of ancient inscriptions (1731), and issued a publication on Late Antique and Byzantine
ivory diptychs. His
Museum cortonense (Rome 1750) in co-operation with
Ridolfino Venuti of Cortona and
Francesco Valesio of Rome, described antiquities in
Cortona, both in the academy and in noblemen's collections. Gori catalogued the collection of antique
carved gems assembled by the Venetian art dealer and connoisseur
Antonio Maria Zanetti (1698–1767), so it was natural at the end of his career that he compile the catalogue of the engraved and carved gem and cameo collection assembled by
Consul Smith in Venice, not only carefully describing the gems, illustrated in 100 engraved plates, but also included a detailed history of gem engraving and a discussion of gem engravers, though he concentrated on the iconography of the subjects represented and did not attempt to ascribe the gems to a period. After purchase of many of the gems for
George III, the work was sumptuously printed by J.B. Pasquali in Venice, as
Dactyliotheca Smithiana., 1767. Gori's other notable works include the earliest widely read published description of the first discoveries at
Herculaneum, 1748.
Symbolae litterariae (Florence and Rome, 1748–51). Gori was also an authority on the Greek vases being found in such quantities in Etruria that they were considered to be Etruscan. In 1751, Gori published the
Satire or Satires by
Jacopo Soldani. Others remember Gori because of
Galileo Galilei's finger, allegedly stolen by Gori from Galileo's tomb at
Santa Croce, when Galileo's remains were transferred on 12 March 1737; the finger was kept in a bottle in the
Bibliotheca Medicea at San Lorenzo, and shown to visitors. Gori is buried in the church of San Marco, Florence. ==Notes==