(Redirected from Aristotle Fioravanti)'Aristotele Fioravanti' (c.
1415 or
1420 – c.
1486) was an Italian Renaissance architect and engineer. His surname is sometimes given as 'Fieraventi'. Russian versions of his name are Фьораванти, Фиораванти, Фиеравенти, Фиораванте.
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The Assumption Cathedral.
Biography
Little is known about Fioravanti's early years. He was born in
Bologna around 1415/1420 to a family of architects and hydraulics engineers.
He became renowned for the very innovative devices he used for the rebuilding of the towers belonging to the noble families of the city. Between 1458 and 1467 he worked at
Florence for
Cosimo de' Medici the Elder and at
Milan, before returning to his native city. Here he created the plans for the
Palazzo Bentivoglio, but the edifice was not finished (by
Giovanni II Bentivoglio) until
1484–
94. In 1467 he worked for king
Matthias Corvinus in
Hungary.
In
1475 at the invitation of
Ivan III he went to Russia, and built the magnificent
Assumption Cathedral (''Uspensky Sobor'', also known as Dormition Cathedral) in
Moscow from
1475–
1479, taking inspiration from the
eponymous cathedral in
Vladimir. This is the work he is best remembered for.
According to some accounts, he was thrown into prison by Ivan III when he asked to return to
Italy, and died in captivity. According to other accounts, he participated as a military engineer and artillery commander in the campaigns against
Novgorod (
1477–
78),
Kazan (
1482) and
Tver (
1485).
[1]
References
1. Michael C. Paul, "The Military Revolution in Russia 1550-1682," ''The Journal of Military History'' (Jan. 2004):9-45.