Journalism A polymath and a bibliophile, Zeno wrote prolifically on many topics, translated classics into Italian and composed poetry and opera libretti. He began work as a literary journalist for the
Galleria di Minerva, also taking upon executive responsibilities, but distanced himself when he realised that he had not succeeded in making the impact upon the publication that he intended. In 1710, together with
Scipione Maffei,
Antonio Vallisneri and his brother, , he founded the ''Giornale de' letterati d'Italia'' (The Journal of Italian Letters), maintaining that it was necessary that "Italians themselves make their own newspaper... revealing that good sense, erudition and ingenuity never were lacking among us, and now more than ever are they flourishing." The tri-monthly publication had prestigious contributors such as
Eustachio Manfredi,
Ludovico Antonio Muratori,
Giovanni Battista Morgagni,
Giovan Battista Vico,
Bernardino Ramazzini. Motivated above all by the desire to improve Italian learning, it enjoyed considerable success. When Apostolo Zeno was called to duty as poet laureate to the imperial court of
Vienna in 1718, his brother, Pier Caterino, took over the direction until 1732, publishing the periodical annually.
Historical works Zeno was thoroughly familiar with all the latest contributions to
diplomatics made by
Mabillon, Dom
Thierry Ruinart,
Étienne Baluze, Adrien de Valois and
Ezekiel Spanheim as well as those by
Bacchini and Muratori. In 1700, he provided a translation of Pierre Le Lorrain de Vallemont's ''Les éléments de l'histoire'' (1696) for the benefit of Italians. In the preface of his translation, he called for a return to the historiographical models that had been authoritative during the
Renaissance: namely,
Machiavelli and
Guicciardini. In 1702, Zeno found the perfect opportunity to put his theories into practice. The
Mappamondo istorico or
universal history of
Jesuit rhetorician and historian Antonio Foresti had been left unfinished at its author's death in 1692. One of the most thorough works of its kind, it had already run into 6 volumes, covering
ancient Greece,
Rome,
Persia, the
popes and the
Holy Roman Empire. That made it far more comprehensive than such recent one-volume essays in the genre as
Walter Raleigh's
History of the World (1652),
Georgius Hornius's
Orbis politicus (1668),
Samuel von Pufendorf's
Einleitung zu der Historie der vornehmsten Reiche (1684) or
Peter Heylyn's
Cosmography (1689). It was even longer than the last important Italian essay, Giovanni Tarcagnota's five-volume
Delle istorie del mondo (1580). Now it was to be completed and republished by the Venetian firm of
Girolamo Albrizzi. Adopting the approach of Tarcagnota's early seventeenth-century editors, later repeated by William Temple in 1695 for a
History of England, Albrizzi assigned the new sections to a team of expert writers. He gave
Egypt to Domenico Suarez of
Mantua,
China to Vittore Silvio Grandi of Venice; and he gave
England,
Scotland,
Denmark,
Sweden, the
Duchy of Holstein and the counties of
Guelders to Apostolo Zeno. The finished work promised to fill an important gap in popular historiography and to achieve considerable sales among educated readers. In scholarship, Zeno far outdid Foresti, who was not above repeating the popular myth about the fall of
Belisarius (already rejected by the sixteenth-century historian
Crinitus). He also outdid the rest of the collaborators. Unlike them, he followed the Renaissance humanists in discarding the awkward Christianized version of the
Book of Daniel's four-monarchy scheme, which divided universal history into the periods of Babylon, Persia, Greece, and Rome, distantly succeeded by the kingdom of heaven. He didn't treat the
Holy Roman Empire as the logical extension of Rome into the modern world, so he could quietly divide the section on the third monarchy into separate volumes on each of the Northern kingdoms. And in order to avoid the dizzying complexities of a straight narrative presentation of hundreds of years of documented history, he followed Renaissance historian
Paolo Emilio – who wrote on France – in adopting the
Suetonian model of a series of biographies.
Libretti Zeno wrote the libretti for 36 operas with historical and mythological themes, including
Temistocle (1701),
Ambleto (1706),
Teuzzone (1719),
Merope (1734) and ''
Sesostri re d'Egitto (Prague edition 1760) as well as 17 oratorios, including Giuseppe
(1722), Gioaz
(1726), David umiliato
(1731). The total number of librettos written by him is 71; they were collected and edited by Gasparo Gozzi as Poesie drammatiche di Apostolo Zeno'' (10 vols., Venice, 1744; reprinted in 11 vols., Orléans, 1785-86). == Critical evaluation ==