Brill’s Encyclopaedia of the Neo-Latin World
Get access
Subject: History
Edited by: Philip Ford (†), Jan Bloemendal and Charles Fantazzi
With its striking range and penetrating depth, Brill’s Encyclopaedia of the Neo-Latin World traces the enduring history and wide-ranging cultural influence of Neo-Latin, the form of Latin that originated in the Italian Renaissance and persists to the modern era. Featuring original contributions by a host of distinguished international scholars, this comprehensive reference work explores every aspect of the civilized world from literature and law to philosophy and the sciences.
Subscriptions: Brill.com
Help us improve our service |
With its striking range and penetrating depth, Brill’s Encyclopaedia of the Neo-Latin World traces the enduring history and wide-ranging cultural influence of Neo-Latin, the form of Latin that originated in the Italian Renaissance and persists to the modern era. Featuring original contributions by a host of distinguished international scholars, this comprehensive reference work explores every aspect of the civilized world from literature and law to philosophy and the sciences.
Subscriptions: Brill.com
Swedenborg, Emanuel
(796 words)
¶ Emanuel Swedenborg (1688–1772), Swedish scientist, polyhistor, and mystic, was the author of numerous works in different scientific and philosophical fields, nearly all of them in Latin. Swedenborg w…