Gaetano Polidori

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Gaetano Fedele Polidori (5 August 1763 – 16 December 1853) was an Italian writer and scholar, of Greek descent,<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> living in Highgate. He was the son of Agostino Ansano Polidori (1714–1778), a physician and poet who lived and practised in his native Bientina, near Pisa, Tuscany.

Polidori studied law at the University of Pisa. He became secretary to the tragedian Vittorio Alfieri in 1785 and remained with him four years.

He came to England from Paris in 1790 after resigning as Alfieri's secretary. He settled in Highgate, working as an Italian teacher and translator. He translated various literary works, notably, John Milton's Paradise Lost and Horace Walpole's The Castle of Otranto, besides other writings of Milton and Lucan. He wrote prolifically, producing his own fiction, poetry, criticism, and tragedies. He also set up a private press at his home, where amongst other works (mostly his own), he printed the first editions of some poems by his grandchildren, Dante Gabriel Rossetti and Christina Rossetti. He also printed an edition of the poem Osteologia, which his father Agostino Ansano Polidori had written in 1763.

He retired to a house in Holmer Green, Buckinghamshire in 1836.

Family

File:Rossetti Polidori family tree.gif
Rossetti–Polidori family tree
File:Dante Gabriel Rossetti - The Girlhood of Mary Virgin.jpg
The Girlhood of Mary Virgin (1848/9) by Dante Gabriel Rossetti. Frances as Saint Anne, Christina Rossetti as Mary.

His family, the Polidoris, were of Greek descent.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> On 29 January 1793,<ref>ancestry.com, "London and Surrey, England, Marriage Bonds and Allegations, 1597-1921", Marriage Bonds and Allegations. London, England: London Metropolitan Archives. Surrey Marriage Bonds and Allegations records held by the London Metropolitan Archives, London, England.</ref> Gaetano Polidori married an English governess, Anna Maria Pierce of Middlesex (b. c. 1774<ref>Daughter of John Pierce, born in late 1774 or early 1775, her baptism at Saint Clement Danes, Westminster, is recorded for 10 January 1775. (ancestry.com database "England, Select Births and Christenings, 1538-1975", FHL Film Number: 574266, 574267).</ref>), and they had seven children. His oldest son John William Polidori was a physician to Lord Byron and author of the first vampire story in English, The Vampyre (1819).<ref>W. M. Rossetti (ed.), Dante Gabriel Rossetti: his family-letters (1970 [1895]), 32 (transcript: rossettiarchive.org</ref>

His daughter Frances (Frances Mary Lavinia Polidori, 27 April 1800 – 8 April 1886<ref name="Rossetti_21-24">W. M. Rossetti (ed.), Dante Gabriel Rossetti: his family-letters (1970 [1895]), 21–24 (transcript: rossettiarchive.org</ref>) in 1826 married exiled Italian scholar Gabriele Rossetti.<ref>The date of the proposal was 7 December 1825, that of the weddings, in the Roman Catholic and English Church, on 8 and 10 April 1826, respectively. W. M. Rossetti (ed., trans.), Gabriele Rossetti: A Versified Autobiography (2016 [1901]), endnote 65.</ref> They had four children, Maria Francesca Rossetti, Dante Gabriel Rossetti, William Michael Rossetti and Christina Georgina Rossetti. After Gabriele's death in 1854, Frances quickly burned the remaining copies of his book Il Mistero dell' Amor Platonico del Medio Evo. Frances herself died in 1886 and was buried in the family plot at Highgate Cemetery.

Maria (1827–1876), wrote a book about Dante Alighieri and later became an Anglican nun.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Gabriel Charles Dante (1828–1882) and William Michael (1829–1919) were among the co-founders of the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood. Frances sat for Gabriel for some of his early paintings, for example, The Girlhood of Mary Virgin, in which she modelled for Saint Anne.

Christina Georgina (1830–1894) became famous as a poet and is probably best known as the author of the poem Goblin Market.

References

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  • Doughty, Oswald (1949). Dante Gabriel Rossetti: A Victorian Romantic. New Haven: Yale University Press.
  • Packer, L. M. (1963). Christina Rossetti. Berkeley: University of California Press.
  • Toynbee, P. J. (1909). Dante in English Literature from Chaucer to Cary. London: Metheun.
  • Waller, Ross Douglas (1932). The Rossetti Family, 1824-1854. Manchester: Manchester University Press.

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