Vincenzo
da Filicaja was born in
Florence to a prominent aristocratic family. From an incidental notice in one of his letters, stating the amount of house rent paid during his childhood, his parents must have been in easy circumstances, and the supposition is confirmed by the fact that he enjoyed all the advantages of a liberal education, first under the
Jesuits of Florence, and then in the
University of Pisa. At
Pisa he studied law. After five years in Pisa, he returned to Florence, where he married Anna, daughter of the senator and marquis
Scipione Capponi, and withdrew to a small villa at "Al Filicaja" (he always referred to Al Filicaja with the former name of "Figline"), not far from the city. Abjuring the thought of writing amatory poetry due to the premature death of a young lady to whom he had been attached, he occupied himself chiefly with literary pursuits, above all the composition of Italian and
Latin poetry. He was a member of the celebrated
Accademia della Crusca and had good relations with the patrons of the Capponi family. At this academy he befriended
Lorenzo Magalotti,
Benedetto Menzini,
Gori and
Francesco Redi. The latter, author of
Bacchus in Tuscany, was influential in gaining Filicaja access to court patronage. Filicaja's rural seclusion was due to his limited means than to his rural tastes. But his poetical genius was fired by the
deliverance of
Vienna from the Turks in 1683, and helped by Redi, who not only laid Filicaja's verses before his own sovereign, but had them transmitted with the least possible delay to the foreign princes whose noble deeds were praised. The first recompense came, however, not from those princes, but from
Christina, the ex-queen of
Sweden, who, from her circle of savants and courtiers at
Rome, spontaneously and generously announced to Filicaja her wish to bear the expense of educating his two sons, enhancing her kindness by the delicate request that it should remain a secret. Filicaja's fortunes now improved. In 1691 he became a member of the
Academy of Arcadia, assuming the pseudonym of Polibo Emonio. Shortly afterwards, the grand duke of
Tuscany,
Cosimo III, conferred on him an important office, the commissionership of official balloting. He was named governor of
Volterra in 1696, where he strenuously exerted himself to improve public morality. Both there and at Pisa, where he was subsequently governor in 1700, his popularity was so great that on his removal the inhabitants of both cities petitioned for his recall. He passed the close of his life at Florence; the grand duke raised him to the rank of senator, and he died in that city. He was buried in the family vault in the church of San Pietro in Florence, and a monument was erected to his memory by his sole surviving son Scipione Filicaja. ==Assessment==