Giolito's press published a mix of Renaissance classics and new authors. Giolito was dedicated to publishing works in the
lingua volgare, or Italian vernacular, as opposed to Latin, Greek and other languages not familiar to the common population. Beginning in 1545, his printing house issued the influential collections of lyric poetry entitled 'Rime Diverse' and known today as the 'Giolito Anthologies.' Eight anthologies would follow, not all of them published by Giolito. The poems in these anthologies, especially the first two, would serve as influential models to the French poet
Joachim du Bellay. He was also famous for his 1555 edition of
Dante Alighieri's
Commedia, edited by
Lodovico Dolce and for the first time published with the title
Divina Commedia. Giolito was also well known for his
printer's mark, which had many variations but was most often represented by a phoenix emerging from flames atop a globe with the initials G.G.F. File:Giolito.jpg File:Giolito 2.jpg File:Giolito 3.jpg ==Death==