Lodovico Sergardi
Lodovico Sergardi | |
|---|---|
Lodovico Sergardi | |
| Born | 27 March 1660 |
| Died | 7 November 1726 (aged 66) |
| Resting place | Spoleto Cathedral |
| Alma mater | Sapienza University of Rome |
| Occupations |
|
| Parent(s) | Curzio Sergardi and Olimpia Sergardi (née Biringucci) |
| Writing career | |
| Pen name | Quintus Sectanus |
| Language | |
| Literary movement | Neoclassicism |
| Notable works | Quinti Sectani Satyrae in Philodemum (1694) |
Lodovico Sergardi (b. at Siena, 1660; d. at Spoleto, 7 November 1726) was an Italian Roman Catholic priest and poet, chiefly known for his vivid latin satires against the jurist Giovanni Vincenzo Gravina, models of composition, which for nearly a decade kept the Roman public in an uproar. Sergardi's satires were an influence on Parini's Il giorno.