Simone Stratigo

Simone Stratigo

A portrait of Simone Stratigo.
Born Symeon Filippos Stratigos
1733
Zara, Dalmatia, Republic of Venice
Died 1824
Milan, Italy
Occupation Mathematics, Nautical science
Ethnicity Greek[1]

Simone Stratigo (Greek: Συμεών Φίλιππος Στρατηγός, Symeon Filippos Stratigos; Italian: Simone Filippo Stratico; 1733–1824) was an Italian Greek mathematician and a nautical science expert who studied and lived in Padua and Pavia in 18th-century Italy.[2][3]

Biography

Simone Stratigo was born in 1733 as Symeon Filippos Stratigos to a family of Greek origin in Zara (modern Zadar in Croatia), part of Venetian Dalmatia at the time.[1][4] His family were originally from Candia, Crete and had migrated to Dalmatia due to the Ottoman conquest of Crete in 1669.[5] While still young, Simone and his brother studied in the University of Padua under the discipline of their uncle Antonio Stratico (Antonios Stratigos), who was an educated man, especially in things Greek, and was director of the Cottunio Greek college at the time.[6] Stratigo graduated in medicine from the University of Padua, where at the age of twenty-five years he became a professor.

He was a member of the delegation who traveled from Venice to England in 1761 to congratulate the new King George III, he remained in the country a few years to study and became a member of various academies including the Royal Society of London. At that time he was greatly impressed by the size and economic strength of the British navy. He soon moved back in Padua, where he replaced Giovanni Poleni the chair of Mathematics and Navigation. In this capacity, he studied extensively the water regime of the Republic of Venice, collaborating with various interventions in hydraulics. He participated in cleaning up the valleys of Verona and the regulation of the Brenta and Bacchiglione. In 1786, he joined as an ordinary member of the Accademia dei XL.

With the fall of the Republic in 1801 he was invited to teach nautical science at the University of Pavia, and he also studied the teaching of physics under Alessandro Volta. During the Napoleonic Kingdom of Italy was appointed Inspector General of Bridges and Roads, and among other positions he was President of the Academy of Fine Arts and Sciences Institute of Lombardy in Milan. In recognition of his work, he was elected senator in 1809. He received several international awards, including the title of Knight of the Legion of Honor and of the Iron Crown. The Emperor Francis I of Austria awarded him the Cross of the Order of Leopold, and the title of Professor Emeritus of the University of Padua and Pavia. Simone Stratigo died in Milan, Italy on 16 July 1824.

Works

The most important scientific contributions of Stratigo were in the field of physics, hydraulics and naval architecture. Of the roughly 35 works that he left, the most memorable are (in chronological order):

References

Citations

  1. 1 2 Boehm 1995, p. 755: "Between the 15th and 19th centuries the University of Padua attracted a great number of Greek students who wanted to study medicine. They came not only from Venetian dominions (where the percentage reaches 97% of the students of Italian universities) but also from Turkish-occupied territories of Greece. Several professors of the School of Medicine and Philosophy were Greeks, including Giovanni Cottunio, Niccolo Calliachi, Giorgio Calafatti, Tomaso Catani, Simone Stratigo..."
  2. Akadēmia Athēnōn 1986, p. 276: "Ό Κρητικής καταγωγής Συμεών ή Σίμων Φίλιππος Στρατηγός (Ζάρα Δαλματίας 1733-Μιλάνο 1824), υιός τοῦ Ιωάννου Βαπτιστοῦ καὶ ἀνεψιός τοῦ Αντωνίου Στρατηγοῦ, διευθυντού (1716–1744) τοϋ Κωττουνιανοῦ Κολλεγίου τής Ρίΐάονα, έφοίτησεν είς τό..."
  3. Marconato 1999, p. 47: "Il Presidente uscito, conte Polcastro, nomo onesto ma dippoco, oltreche nulla ha fatto nell’ anno tuo, è venduto al greco di cui mal conosce il finissimo accorgimento (il "greco" è Simone Stratico, professore allo Studio padovano di matematica e successore del Polcastro all presidente dell’Accademia..."
  4. Vinciguerra 2008, p. LIX: "In particolare, i «Riformatori» Bernardo Nani e Lorenzo Morosi- ni, su ispirazione del professore Simone Stratico, nato a Zara ma da famiglia ritenuta di origine greca, erano riusciti a far approvare dal Senato Veneto una riforma in in data 2 maggio 1760, ce prevedeva l’abolizione di dua delle Quattro cattedre di diritto canonico, due delle quattro di diritto civile, in quanto ritenute..."
  5. Capra, Peruta & Mazzocca 2002, p. 200: "Simone Stratico, nato a Zara nel 1733 da famiglia originaria di Creta (abbandonata a seguito della conquista turca del 1669)."
  6. Istituto per la storia dell'Università de Padova 1971, p. 139: "Stratico Antonio, scolaro (direttore del Collegio Cottunio); Straticò Simone (1733–1824), professore di fisica..."

Sources

  • Akadēmia Athēnōn (1986). Pragmateiai tēs Akadēmias Athēnōn, Volume 48, Part 2 (in Greek). Athens: Grapheion Dēmosieumatōn Akadēmias Athēnōn. 
  • Boehm, Eric H. (1995). Historical Abstracts: Modern History Abstracts, 1450–1914, Volume 46, Issues 3–4. Santa Barbara, CA: American Bibliographical Center, Clio Press. OCLC 701679973. 
  • Capra, Carlo; Peruta, Franco Della; Mazzocca, Fernando (2002). Napoleone e la Repubblica Italiana: 1802–1805 (in Italian). Milan: Skira. ISBN 978-8-88-491415-6. 
  • Marconato, Ruggiero (1999). La famiglia Polcastro: sec. xv-xix: personaggi, vicende e luoghi di storia padovana (in Italian). Padova: Lions Club Camposampiero. OCLC 42311000. 
  • Istituto per la storia dell'Università de Padova (1971). Quaderni per la storia dell'Università di Padova, Volume 4 (in Italian). Padova: Editrice Antenore. ISBN 978-8-88-455345-4. 
  • Vinciguerra, Sergio (2008). Codice penale degli Stati Uniti delle Isole Jonie (1841) (in Italian). Padova: Wolters Kluwer Italia. ISBN 978-8-81-328527-2. 
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