was a major benefactor of the institute. Prospero Lambertini, archbishop of Bologna and later
Pope Benedict XIV, was a strong supporter of the institute. Elected Pope in 1741, he arranged for purchase of astronomical instruments for the
Specola observatory from
Jonathan Sisson of London. He launched a major project to reorganize the library of the
Istituto delle Scienze e della Arti, building the "Benedictine" wing of the
Aula Magna reading room, now part of the university library. The collections and library of the
Ulisse Aldrovandi (1522–1605), the natural historian, were transferred from the university to the institute. The influence of Aldrovandi may be seen in the "liberal
Diluvianism" of the institute's scientists at this time, who believed in a "balanced integration of science, philosophy and religion." In 1742
Ercole Lelli was asked to supply
wax anatomical models for the institute's Museum of Anatomy. In 1743 the institute obtained the donation of the Naturalia Museum collection of natural objects that had been assembled by Senator
Ferdinando Cospi. In 1744 the advice of
Pieter van Musschenbroek and
Willem 's Gravesande was sought in acquiring instruments from the
Netherlands to teach and explore the theories of Galileo and Newton. In 1745 the institute opened a
Gabinetto di Fisica, a room that held a museum and a laboratory for exploring physics. The entire workshop of the optical instrument maker
Giuseppe Campani (1635–1715) was donated to the
Gabinetto di Fisica in 1747. Additional funds were supplied to improve the chemical laboratories and support the Professor of Chemistry. In 1754 Cardinal
Filippo Maria Monti gave the institute his 12,000-volume library and a collection of paintings that included portraits of major scientific figures. The library was formally opened in 1756. In 1757
Giovanni Antonio Galli was made Professor of
Obstetrics, and the next year the Pope overrode opposition and established a school of obstetrics at the institute. After the reforms by Pope Benedict XIV, the Science Academy became a center for all who wanted to advance sciences in Bologna. A new interest arose in the theories of
Marcello Malpighi,
René Descartes and
Isaac Newton, and in the teachings of
Nicolaus Copernicus,
Galileo Galilei and
Francis Bacon, as well as interest in social issues. The physicist
Laura Bassi, who in 1732 had become the second European woman to be awarded a university degree, became a member of the institute where she presented annual papers such as her 1746
On the compression of air. Another early female member was
Émilie du Châtelet. The chemist
Bartolomeo Beccari looked for ways to make populations resistant to
famine through a new type of emergency diet. The academy reached a high level of scientific progress towards the end of the eighteenth century under its President
Luigi Galvani. In 1791 he published his revolutionary treaty
de viribus electricitatis in motu musculari ("Commentary on the Force of Electricity on Muscular Motion"). ==Later history==