- Jean-Jacques Boissard
Jean-Jacques Boissard (
1528 -October 30 ,1602 ), was a French antiquary andLatin poet .He was born at
Besançon and educated atLeuven ; but disgusted by the severity of his master, he secretly left the seminary there, and travelled throughGermany toItaly , where he remained several years and was often reduced to poverty. His time in Italy gave him a taste for antiquities, and he soon formed a collection of curious artefacts fromRome and its vicinity. He then visited the islands ofGreece , but a severe illness obliged him to return to Rome. Here he resumed his favourite pastimes, and having completed his collection, returned to France; but not being permitted to profess publicly theProtestant religion, which he had embraced some time before, he withdrew toMetz , where he remained till his death.His most important works are:
*"Poemata" (1574)
*"Emblemata" (1584)
*"Icones Virorum Illustrium" (1597)
*"Vitae et Icones Sultanorum Turcicorum, etc." (1597)
*"Theatrum Vitae Humanae" (1596)
*"Romanae Urbis Topogrephia" (1597-1602), now very rare
*"De Divinatione et Magicis Praestigiis" (1605)
*"Habitus Variarum Orbis Gentium" (1581), ornamented with seventy illuminated figures.References
*1911
External links
* [http://www.uni-mannheim.de/mateo/desbillons/aport.html His Bibliotheca chalcographica, hoc est Virtute et eruditione clarorum Virorum Imagines]
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