Vincenzo Tanara or Tanari (died 1667) was an Italian agronomist and gastronome.
Vincenzo Tanara | |
---|---|
Died | 1667 |
Known for | Writing L'economia del cittadino in villa |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Agriculture |
A Bolognese nobleman, he wrote the important 1653 treatise entitled L'economia del cittadino in villa (The economy of the citizen in the country).
Career
editTanara had established a close friendship with the cardinal Francesco Sforza who had a large library in Bologna. This gave him access to books. He wrote a manuscript on bird hunting, that remained unpublished until the 19th century: La caccia degli uccelli.[1]
In his major work, Tanara wrote of plants in order to provide a guide for "city dwellers."[2] In Botanical Progress, Horticultural Innovation and Cultural Changes, it written that Tanara's "handbooks became very popular among land stewards as landowners were losing their interest in direct management of their estates." Not only did he characterize plant life as central to family economy: he specialized in "utility," particularly agricultural efficiency.
References
edit- ^ A History of Fowling, Being an Account of the Many Curious Devices by which Wild Birds are Or Have Been Captured in Different Parts of the World, by Hugh Alexander Macpherson (1897): page XXIII.
- ^ Botanical Progress, Horticultural Innovations, and Cultural Changes. Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection. 2007. pp. 187–8. ISBN 9780884023272.
- Saltini, Antonio (1984). Storia delle scienze agrarie. Bologna: Edagricole. pp. 501–517.
- W. John, Kress, Mauro Ambrosoli, Nurhan Atasoy, and Peter Del Tredici. Botanical Progress, Horticultural Innovation and Cultural Changes. Ed. Michael Conan. Vol. 28. N.p.: Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection, 2007. Print.
External links
edit- (in English) Polybiblio