'Benedetto Accolti' (
1415–
1466) was an
Italian jurist and
historian.
He was born at
Arezzo, in
Tuscany, of a noble family, several members of which were distinguished like himself for their attainments in
law.
He was for some time professor of
jurisprudence in the
University of Florence, and on the death of the celebrated
Poggio Bracciolini, in
1459, became
chancellor of the Florentine republic. He was given numerous ecclesiastical honors;
Leo X gave him bishopric of
Cadiz, and
Adrian VI that of
Cremona; and the archbishopric of
Ravenna.
Clement VII created him a cardinal. At the request of the latter pontiff, he wrote a treatise to assert the right of the pope to the kingdom of Naples.
Accolti was so great a master of the
Latin language, that he was called the '
Cicero' of his age. His memory was uncommonly retentive. Having, one day, heard a speech delivered by an ambassador from the king of
Portugal to the senate of Florence, he afterwards repeated it, word for word.
In conjunction with his brother
Leonardo, he wrote in
Latin a history of the
first crusade, entitled ''De Bello a Christianis contra Barbaros gesto pro Christi Sepulchro et Judaea recuperandis libri tres'' (1432), or "On the War carried on by the Christians against the Barbarians, for the Recovery of Christ's Sepulchre, and of Judea", which is said to have furnished
Tasso with the historic basis for his ''Jerusalem Delivered''. Another work of Accolti's, ''De Praestantia Virorum sui Arretii'', was published at
Parma in 1689; in this work, which passed through many editions, the author compares the characters of the moderns to the ancients, in order to prove that the former are in no respect inferior to the latter.
His brother
Francesco was also a distinguished jurist. His son
Pietro became a cardinal, while younger son
Bernardo was a notable poet.
References
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See also
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Accolti, other members of the family