Tommaso Fazello
Italian historian
Intro | Italian historian | |
Places | Italy | |
was | Religious scholar Historian Theologian | |
Work field | Religion Social science | |
Gender |
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Birth | 1 January 1498, Sciacca | |
Death | 8 April 1570Palermo (aged 72 years) |
Tommaso Fazello (New Latin Fazellus, 1498 – 8 April 1570) was an Italian Dominican friar, historian and antiquarian. He is known as the father of Sicilian history. He is the author of the first printed history of Sicily: De Rebus Siculis Decades Duae, published in Palermo in 1558 in Latin. He was born in Sciacca, Sicily and died in Palermo, Sicily.
He rediscovered the ruins of the ancient Sicilian towns of Akrai (modern Palazzolo Acreide), Selinus (modern Selinunte) and Heraclea Minoa. He also rediscovered the Temple of Olympian Zeus at Akragas (modern Agrigento).
In 1555, he taught at the Convent of St. Dominic of Palermo, which later became the University of Palermo.