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{{Short description|Italian botanist and painter (1512–1600)}}
{{Short description|Italian botanist and painter (1512–1600)}}
[[File:White Hellebore Cibo.jpg|thumb|A plate of by Cibo, showing herbalists in the field and ''Polygonatum'' in the foreground]]
[[File:White Hellebore Cibo.jpg|thumb|A plate of by Cibo, showing herbalists in the field and ''Polygonatum'' in the foreground]]
'''Gherardo Cibo''' also known by the alias of '''Ulisse Severini da Cingoli''' (1512 − 30 January 1600) was an artist and a herbalist from Italy. The herbarium that he began in 1532 is the oldest surviving example of the method invented in Italy by his contemporaries and is preserved in Rome.<ref>{{cite journal|author=Celani, E. |year=1902 |title=Sopra un Erbario di Gherardo Cibo conservato nella R. Biblioteca Angelica di Roma| journal=Malpighia| volume=16| pages=181–226|url=https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/page/34719560}}</ref> His illustrations of plants show plants in the foreground with landscapes and details of people and places in the background.
'''Gherardo Cibo''', also known by the alias of '''Ulisse Severini da Cingoli''' (1512 − 30 January 1600), was an artist and a herbalist from Italy. The herbarium that he began in 1532 is the oldest surviving example of the method invented in Italy by his contemporaries and is preserved in Rome.<ref>{{cite journal|author=Celani, E. |year=1902 |title=Sopra un Erbario di Gherardo Cibo conservato nella R. Biblioteca Angelica di Roma| journal=Malpighia| volume=16| pages=181–226|url=https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/page/34719560}}</ref> His illustrations of plants show plants in the foreground with landscapes and details of people and places in the background.


Cibo was born in Genoa in 1512 to Aranino and Bianca Vigeri Della Rovere (daughter of the bishop of Senigallia) in a wealthy family related to the Duke of Urbino. His paternal great grandfather was [[Giovanni Battista Cibo]] better known as [[Pope Innocent VIII]]. After some early years in Genoa he moved to Rome where he stayed with his aunt, the Duchess of Camerino, Caterina Cibo da Varano and sought to join the clergy but war led to his movement to Bologna where he studied botany under [[Luca Ghini]]. His studies during this period ending in 1532 included the collection of plants and the creation of a herbarium. In 1534 he moved to Agnano and stayed with Lorenzo Cibo where he made trips around Pisa. In 1539 he visited Germany and travelled to Marches, Umbria and moved to Rome in 1553. He spent the largest part of his life in Arcevia.<ref name=treccani />
Cibo was born in Genoa in 1512 to Aranino and Bianca Vigeri Della Rovere (daughter of the bishop of Senigallia) in a wealthy family related to the Duke of Urbino. His paternal great-grandfather was [[Giovanni Battista Cibo]] better known as [[Pope Innocent VIII]]. After some early years in Genoa he moved to Rome where he stayed with his aunt, the Duchess of Camerino, Caterina Cibo da Varano and sought to join the clergy but war led to his movement to Bologna where he studied botany under [[Luca Ghini]]. His studies during this period ending in 1532 included the collection of plants and the creation of a herbarium. In 1534 he moved to Agnano and stayed with Lorenzo Cibo where he made trips around Pisa. In 1539 he visited Germany and travelled to Marches, Umbria and moved to Rome in 1553. He spent the largest part of his life in Arcevia.<ref name=treccani />


Cibo left diaries of his daily trips, illustrations of the landscapes. He studied the works of Pliny, [[Leonhart Fuchs]] and [[Pietro Andrea Mattioli|Pierandrea Mattioli]]. He corresponded with Mattioli and [[Ulisse Aldrovandi]] and Andrea Bacci. He maintained his herbarium in alphabetical order. The letters and collections are scattered across museums and archives. Books in his library that have survived at the [[Biblioteca Angelica]] include ''Historia Stirpium'' by Leonhart Fuchs, a copy of the ''Historia dei semplici'' by [[Garcia da Orta]] as well as 1548, 1558 and 1573 editions of ''Discorsi'' by Mattioli with illustrations added by Cibo.<ref name=treccani>{{cite book|chapter=Cibo, Gherardo| title=Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani|volume=25|year=1981|author=De Ferrari, Augusto|url=http://www.treccani.it/enciclopedia/gherardo-cibo_(Dizionario-Biografico)/}}</ref><ref>{{cite book| title=Possessing Nature: Museums, Collecting, and Scientific Culture in Early Modern Italy| author=Findlen, Paula| publisher=University of California Press|year= 1996|pages=167–170}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|doi=10.1080/01445170.1989.10410574|title=Gherardo Cibo: Visions of landscape and the botanical sciences in a sixteenth-century artist|journal=The Journal of Garden History|volume=9|issue=4|pages=199–216|year=1989|last1=Tomasi|first1=Lucia Tongiorgi}}</ref>
Cibo left diaries of his daily trips, illustrations of the landscapes. He studied the works of Pliny, [[Leonhart Fuchs]] and [[Pietro Andrea Mattioli|Pierandrea Mattioli]]. He corresponded with Mattioli and [[Ulisse Aldrovandi]] and Andrea Bacci. He maintained his herbarium in alphabetical order. The letters and collections are scattered across museums and archives. Books in his library that have survived at the [[Biblioteca Angelica]] include ''Historia Stirpium'' by Leonhart Fuchs, a copy of the ''Historia dei semplici'' by [[Garcia da Orta]] as well as 1548, 1558 and 1573 editions of ''Discorsi'' by Mattioli with illustrations added by Cibo.<ref name=treccani>{{cite book|chapter=Cibo, Gherardo| title=Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani|volume=25|year=1981|author=De Ferrari, Augusto|url=http://www.treccani.it/enciclopedia/gherardo-cibo_(Dizionario-Biografico)/}}</ref><ref>{{cite book| title=Possessing Nature: Museums, Collecting, and Scientific Culture in Early Modern Italy| author=Findlen, Paula| publisher=University of California Press|year= 1996|pages=167–170}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|doi=10.1080/01445170.1989.10410574|title=Gherardo Cibo: Visions of landscape and the botanical sciences in a sixteenth-century artist|journal=The Journal of Garden History|volume=9|issue=4|pages=199–216|year=1989|last1=Tomasi|first1=Lucia Tongiorgi}}</ref>

The most important part of his artistic production is the corpus of landscape drawings done in pen and ink or sanguine, and his botanical illustrations in watercolour and tempera. Over 220 botanical illustrations can be found in two illuminated manuscripts kept in the British Library (Add. Ms. 22332 and Add. Ms. 22333). Cibo’s illustrations are executed with great accuracy and feature different plants, usually common species of Italy and the central Apennines. They are often placed against the brightly coloured landscapes of their natural habitat, sometimes with scenes of daily life and details of buildings. The illustrations are accompanied by botanical commentaries excerpted from ''Discorsi'' by [[Pietro Andrea Mattioli]] (glossed Italian translation of [[Pedanius Dioscorides|Dioscorides]]’ ''[[De materia medica]]'') and notes by Cibo himself.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Tongiorgi Tomasi |first=Lucia |title=Mattioli's Dioscorides illustrated by Cibo |publisher=M. Moleiro Editor |year=2021 |isbn=9788416509676 |location=Barcelona |pages=13–65 |language=en |chapter=Plants, Landscapes, Colours. The Life, Writings and Works of Gherardo Cibo}}</ref>


==References==
==References==
{{reflist}}
{{reflist}}


== Bibliography ==
==External links==
{{refbegin}}
{{commonscat|Gherardo Cibo}}
* {{cite journal |last1=Sprague |first1=T. A. |last2=Nelmes |first2=E. |title=The Herbal of Leonhart Fuchs |journal=[[Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society]] |date=1 October 1931 |volume=48 |issue=325 |pages=545–642 |doi=10.1111/j.1095-8339.1931.tb00596.x}}
{{refend}}

== External links ==
* [http://www.bibliotecaangelica.beniculturali.it/index.php?it/322/erbario-cibo Sample Herbarium sheet]
* [http://www.bibliotecaangelica.beniculturali.it/index.php?it/322/erbario-cibo Sample Herbarium sheet]
* [http://www.bl.uk/catalogues/illuminatedmanuscripts/record.asp?CollID=27&NStart=22333 British Library images]
* [http://www.bl.uk/catalogues/illuminatedmanuscripts/record.asp?CollID=27&NStart=22333 British Library images]
* [https://archive.org/stream/contribuzionial00penzgoog#page/n4/mode/2up Contribuzioni alla storia della botanica by Otto Penzig (1905) - an index to the herbaria of Cibo]
* [https://archive.org/stream/contribuzionial00penzgoog#page/n4/mode/2up Contribuzioni alla storia della botanica by Otto Penzig (1905) - an index to the herbaria of Cibo]
* [https://www.moleiro.com/en/books-of-medicine/dioscorides-by-mattioli-and-cibo.html Facsimile edition of ''Mattioli’s Dioscorides illustrated by Cibo''] (Add. Ms. 22332) published by [[M. Moleiro Editor]].


{{commons category|Gherardo Cibo}}
{{authority control}}
{{authority control}}


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[[Category:16th-century Italian botanists]]
[[Category:16th-century Italian botanists]]
[[Category:Pre-Linnaean botanists]]
[[Category:Pre-Linnaean botanists]]
[[Category:16th-century Italian artists]]

Latest revision as of 23:57, 21 May 2024

A plate of by Cibo, showing herbalists in the field and Polygonatum in the foreground

Gherardo Cibo, also known by the alias of Ulisse Severini da Cingoli (1512 − 30 January 1600), was an artist and a herbalist from Italy. The herbarium that he began in 1532 is the oldest surviving example of the method invented in Italy by his contemporaries and is preserved in Rome.[1] His illustrations of plants show plants in the foreground with landscapes and details of people and places in the background.

Cibo was born in Genoa in 1512 to Aranino and Bianca Vigeri Della Rovere (daughter of the bishop of Senigallia) in a wealthy family related to the Duke of Urbino. His paternal great-grandfather was Giovanni Battista Cibo better known as Pope Innocent VIII. After some early years in Genoa he moved to Rome where he stayed with his aunt, the Duchess of Camerino, Caterina Cibo da Varano and sought to join the clergy but war led to his movement to Bologna where he studied botany under Luca Ghini. His studies during this period ending in 1532 included the collection of plants and the creation of a herbarium. In 1534 he moved to Agnano and stayed with Lorenzo Cibo where he made trips around Pisa. In 1539 he visited Germany and travelled to Marches, Umbria and moved to Rome in 1553. He spent the largest part of his life in Arcevia.[2]

Cibo left diaries of his daily trips, illustrations of the landscapes. He studied the works of Pliny, Leonhart Fuchs and Pierandrea Mattioli. He corresponded with Mattioli and Ulisse Aldrovandi and Andrea Bacci. He maintained his herbarium in alphabetical order. The letters and collections are scattered across museums and archives. Books in his library that have survived at the Biblioteca Angelica include Historia Stirpium by Leonhart Fuchs, a copy of the Historia dei semplici by Garcia da Orta as well as 1548, 1558 and 1573 editions of Discorsi by Mattioli with illustrations added by Cibo.[2][3][4]

The most important part of his artistic production is the corpus of landscape drawings done in pen and ink or sanguine, and his botanical illustrations in watercolour and tempera. Over 220 botanical illustrations can be found in two illuminated manuscripts kept in the British Library (Add. Ms. 22332 and Add. Ms. 22333). Cibo’s illustrations are executed with great accuracy and feature different plants, usually common species of Italy and the central Apennines. They are often placed against the brightly coloured landscapes of their natural habitat, sometimes with scenes of daily life and details of buildings. The illustrations are accompanied by botanical commentaries excerpted from Discorsi by Pietro Andrea Mattioli (glossed Italian translation of DioscoridesDe materia medica) and notes by Cibo himself.[5]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Celani, E. (1902). "Sopra un Erbario di Gherardo Cibo conservato nella R. Biblioteca Angelica di Roma". Malpighia. 16: 181–226.
  2. ^ a b De Ferrari, Augusto (1981). "Cibo, Gherardo". Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani. Vol. 25.
  3. ^ Findlen, Paula (1996). Possessing Nature: Museums, Collecting, and Scientific Culture in Early Modern Italy. University of California Press. pp. 167–170.
  4. ^ Tomasi, Lucia Tongiorgi (1989). "Gherardo Cibo: Visions of landscape and the botanical sciences in a sixteenth-century artist". The Journal of Garden History. 9 (4): 199–216. doi:10.1080/01445170.1989.10410574.
  5. ^ Tongiorgi Tomasi, Lucia (2021). "Plants, Landscapes, Colours. The Life, Writings and Works of Gherardo Cibo". Mattioli's Dioscorides illustrated by Cibo. Barcelona: M. Moleiro Editor. pp. 13–65. ISBN 9788416509676.

Bibliography

[edit]
[edit]