Filippo Ferrari


Filippo Ferrari was an Italian Servite monk and scholar, known as a geographer, and also noted as a hagiographer.
, in front of Roberto Bellarmine.

Life

He was born at Oviglio in Piedmont. It is near Alessandria, and he was nicknamed Alessandrino. He taught mathematics for 48 years at the University of Pavia.
Ferrari was prior general of his order from 1604 to 1609, and vicar general in 1624/5. He was therefore head of the Servites at the time of the Venetian Interdict, and was consulted by Paolo Sarpi in Venice. A detailed account of Ferrari's dealings with Pope Paul V during the confrontation of those years was given by Fulgenzio Micanzio, Sarpi's ally. It was with Ferrari's approval that Sarpi took up the appointment as theological consultant to Venice on 28 January 1606.

Works

Ferrari published his Epitome Geographicum in 1605. His Lexicon Geographicum was published internationally in a number of later editions: edited by William Dillingham, and by Michel Antoine Baudrand. It was used in the Dictionarium Historicum, of Nicholas Lloyd.
Other works included: