Gianfrancesco (or Giovanni Francesco)
Poggio Bracciolini (born near Arezzo
?, Italy,
1380; died at Florence, October 10,
1459) was one of the most important Italian
Renaissance humanists. He studied at
Florence and went to
Rome about 1402.
Pope Boniface IX made him one of the Apostolic secretaries, a position he held under
Innocent VII,
Gregory XII,
Alexander V, and John XXIII. The deposition of John XXIII and the lengthy delays of the [Council of Constance]
? gave him time to search the libraries of the monasteries of Germany and France for classical texts whose names were known to earlier humanists but which did not survive in Italy. He discovered long-unknown texts of
Cicero, Quintilian, Vegetius
?, Manilius
?,
Ammianus Marcellinus, Statius, and Petronius
?. He specialized in recognizing fragments of authors by their writing styles and revealing the lost works.
In the way of many humanists of his time, Poggio himself wrote only in Latin, and translated works from Greek into that language.