Giambattista Roberti
Giambattista Roberti (4 March 1719 – 29 July 1786) was an Italian Jesuit, poet and writer. BiographyBorn in Bassano del Grappa, on 20 May 1736 Roberti entered the Society of Jesus and in 1743 he was ordained a priest.[1] He taught in the Jesuit colleges of Piacenza, Brescia, Parma and Bologna.[1] In Brescia he befriended Saverio Bettinelli and wrote his first works. He displayed a moderately progressive outlook in his didactic poems Le fragole (1752) and La commedia (1756), which praises Carlo Goldoni's theatrical reforms.[2] A close friend of Giampietro Zanotti, Roberti was a member of the Accademia dei Gelati of Bologna.[1] In his essay Del leggere i libri di metafisica e di divertimento (1769), Roberti refuted the anonymous pamphlet De la prédication, attributed to Voltaire, and denounced the irreligiosity and licentiousness of contemporary literature.[1] The work was translated into German and published in Augsburg in 1788.[1] After the suppression of the Society of Jesus (1773), Robert left Bologna and moved to his native in Bassano, where he met the famous astronomer Roger Joseph Boscovich.[1] In 1782 he published the Favole esopiane, a sharp criticism 18th century moral decadence. In his pamphlet Lettera di un ufficiale portoghese ad un mercante inglese sopra il trattamento de’ negri (1786) Roberti condemned slavery and advocated abolition of the international slave trade.[2] He died in Bassano on 29 July 1786. Works
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