Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/97429
Title: Journal of Maltese Studies : 29 : Giovan Francesco Buonamico (1639-1680)
Authors: Bonello, Giovanni
Cassola, Arnold
Micallef, Bernard
Keywords: Buonamico, Giovanni Francesco, 1639-1680
Poets, Maltese -- 17th century -- Biography
Malta -- History -- Knights of Malta, 1530-1798
Issue Date: 2017
Publisher: University of Malta. Faculty of Arts. Department of Maltese
Citation: Bonello, G., Cassola, A., & Micallef, B. (eds.). (2017). Journal of Maltese Studies : 29 : Giovan Francesco Buonamico (1639-1680). University of Malta. Faculty of Arts. Department of Maltese.
Abstract: This monographic issue of the Journal of Maltese Studies is dedicated to Giovanni Francesco Buonamico, the Maltese seventeenth-century intellectual mainly remembered as the author of the second oldest poem in Maltese, Mejju gie bilward u z-zahar, a work many readers will recall from their early school years, when it would have been learnt by heart. However, this solitary poem in Maltese by Buonamico can hardly be said to do justice to his remarkably broad range of interests. And yet, apart from a pioneering study in 1971 by Giovanni Mangion, very little has been written about this seventeenth-century polymath up to the present publication. It is only recently that his eclectic personality has been revisited through specialised studies. The aim of this publication is to shed further light on the multifaceted scholarly activity of this Maltese doctor, an undertaking that could not have been attempted without the generous offer of Judge Giovanni Bonello to put at the disposal of different scholars the substantial collection of unstudied Buonamico manuscripts, bound in one volume, in his possession. This issue of the Journal of Maltese Studies, therefore, also commemorates the first time that different scholars have gained access to rare Buonamico manuscripts, complementing previously known and accessed material by the same author. This has made it possible for the contributors to this issue to concentrate on particular and distinct aspects of Buonamico's prolific writings. The articles in this issue will quickly reveal to the reader that Buonamico did not only write a poem in Maltese (Friggieri), but also produced different versions ofit in French (Depasquale) and Italian (Brincat). His poetic sensibility is not limited only to praising Grand Master Cotoner, but also sings the praises of any cultural or physical entity associated with the Pauline tradition (Freiler), for which he resorts to Latin versification (Vella, Azzopardi). Buonamico's work goes well beyond literary pieces. He is the first Maltese to have given a detailed account of his travel experiences (Cassar); he touches, too, on several linguistic concerns, showing a keen interest in the etymology of words (Cassola). His varied cultural interests led him to jot down the different types of flora that characterised the Maltese archipelago (Stevens and Lanfranco). In short, he was an inquisitive and energetic "homo faber", ready to take up any cultural, botanical, or literary initiative that came his way. 111is publication both commemorates and honours that disposition. We are grateful to Professor Ivan Callus, of the Department of English at the University of Malta, for his last crucial advice on this issue of the Journal of Maltese Studies before it was sent for printing.
URI: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/97429
Appears in Collections:Scholarly Works - FacArtMal

Files in This Item:
File Description SizeFormat 
Journal of Maltese Studies 29.pdf
  Restricted Access
41.8 MBAdobe PDFView/Open Request a copy


Items in OAR@UM are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.