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GIOVANNI FLORIO (1553?-1625)

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Originally appearing in Volume V10, Page 547 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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GIOVANNI

FLORIO (1553?-1625)  ,
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English writer, was born in
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London about 1553 . He was of Tuscan origin, his parents being Waldenses who had fled from persecution in the Valtelline and taken
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refuge in England . His
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father, Michael Angelo Florio, was pastor of an
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Italian
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Protestant congregation in London in 1550 . He was attached to the household of
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Sir William
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Cecil, but dismissed on a charge of immorality . ; He dedicated a
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book on the Italian language to Henry Herbert, and may have been a tutor in the
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family of William Herbert,
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earl of Pembroke . Anthony a Wood says that the Florios
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left England on the accession of Queen Mary, but returned after her
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death . The son resided for a time at Oxford, and was appointed, about 1576 tutor to the son of Richard Barnes, bishop of Durham, then studying at Magdalen College . In 1578 Florio published a
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work entitled First Fruits, which yield Familiar Speech, Merry Proverbs, Witty Sentences, and
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Golden Sayings (4to) . This was accompanied by A Perfect Induction to the Italian and English Tongues . The work was dedicated to the earl of Leicester . Three years later Florio was admitted a member of Magdalen College, and became a teacher of French and Italian in the university . In 1591 appeared his Second Fruits, to be gathered of Twelve Trees, of
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divers but delightsome Tastes to the Tongues of Italian and English men; to which was annexed the Garden of Recreation, yielding six thousand Italian Proverbs (q to) .

These manuals contained an outline of the

grammar, a selection of dialogues in parallel columns of Italian and English, and longer extracts from classical .Italian writers in
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prose and verse . Florio had many patrons; he says that he " lived some years " with the earl of Southampton, and the earl of Pembroke also befriended him . His Italian and English
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dictionary, entitled A
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World of Words, was published in folio in 1598 . After the accession of James I., Florio was named French and Italian tutor to Prince Henry, and afterwards became a gentleman of the privy. chamber and clerk of the closet to the queen, whom he also instructed in
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languages . His magnum opus is the admirable
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translation of the Essayes on Morall, Politike, and Millitarie Discourses of Lo . Michaell de Montaigne, published in folio in 1603 in three books, each dedicated to two noble ladies . A second edition in 1613 was dedicated to the queen .
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Special
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interest attaches to the first edition from the circumstance that of the several copies in the
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British Museum library one bears the autograph of Shakespeare—long received as genuine but now supposed to be by an 18th-century hand—and another that of Ben
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Jonson . It was suggested by Warburton that Florio is satirized by Shakespeare under the character of Holofernes, the pompous
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pedant of Love's Labour's Last, but it is much more likely, especially as he was one of the earl of Southampton's proteges, that he was among the
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personal friends of the dramatist, who may well have gained his knowledge of Italian and French from him . He had married the
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sister of the poet Daniel, and had friendly relations with many writers of his day . Ben Jonson sent him a copy of Volpone With the inscription, " To his loving father and worthy friend Master John Florio, Ben Jonson
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seals this testimony of his friendship and love." He is characterized by Wood, in Athenae Oxonienses, as a very useful man in his profession, zealous for his religion, and deeply attached to his adopted country . He died at
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Fulham, London, in the autumn of 1625 .

End of Article: GIOVANNI FLORIO (1553?-1625)
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