Francesco Nazzari was born on 13 December 1638 in
Borgo di Terzo, near
Bergamo. He was still young when he was given a philosopher's chair in the
Sapienza University of Rome. Following the advice of
Michelangelo Ricci, afterwards
cardinal, he undertook in 1668 to establish an
academic journal in
Italian, for which the
Journal des sçavans, which appeared a short time before in
Paris, served him as a model. His associates, Ricci,
Johannes Lucius, Salvatore and Francesco Serra, Tommaso de' Giuli,
Giovanni Pastrizio, and
Giovanni Ciampini, agreed to furnish him with extracts from works in foreign languages. Nazzari retained the general editorship and the analysis of the
French books. He issued this journal, entitled ''
Giornale de' Letterati, until the month of March 1675, from the office of Tinassi; but forced, in consequence of a difference with the latter, to yield his duties to Ciampini, he formed a new society, and published, under the same title, a continuation, which was printed at the office of Carrara until the end of 1679. After having been attached as secretary to Johannes Lucius, a Dalmatian savant, he accompanied, in 1686, the geometrician Adrien Auzout to France, and it is said was very useful to him in the observation of eclipses and celestial revolutions. He died at Rome on October 19, 1714. By his will he left his wealth and his library to the Church of Bergamo, and founded at Rome a college for the scholars of his province. Besides the journal that he has edited, and which has been reprinted at Bologna, with additions, we owe to Nazzari an Italian version of the Exposition de la doctrine de l'Église catholique'', by
Bossuet (Rome, 1678), and an edition of
Diomede Borghesi's
Lettere discorsive (Rome, 1701). ==Notes==