Alessandro Zorzi in Latin as Alexander Georgius (11 September 1747 – 14 July 1779) was an Italian Jesuit theologian and was a promoter of an Italian encyclopedia project called the Nuova enciclopedia italiana. He collected geographical information and the itineraries of early African travellers.

Zorzi was born in Venice and taught theology at the college of Saint Lucia in Bologna in 1772. Following the suppression of the institute he moved to Ferrara to teach the nephews of Cristino Bevilacqua. He began an Italian encyclopedia project similar to that of Diderot and promoted the idea around 1775 but he died in Ferrara at the age of 31.[1] He collected literature on the geography of Ethiopia and the itineraries of travellers to Africa between 1400 and 1524.[2][3][4]

References

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  1. ^ Loveland, Jeff (2017). "A Laissez-Faire Encyclopedia?: A Comparative View of Diderot as Editor of the Encyclopédie". Studies in Eighteenth-Century Culture. 46 (1): 205–227. doi:10.1353/sec.2017.0016. ISSN 1938-6133.
  2. ^ Hardt, Jacob; Nir, Nadav; Schütt, Brigitta (2023). "Combining Historical Maps, Travel Itineraries and Least-Cost Path Modelling to Reconstruct Pre-Modern Travel Routes and Locations in Northern Tigray (Ethiopia)". The Cartographic Journal. 60 (3): 163–179. doi:10.1080/00087041.2022.2150363. ISSN 0008-7041.
  3. ^ Crawford, O.G.S. (1936). "Ethiopian Itineraries, Circa 1400–1524; Roberto Almagià, "Intorno a quattro codici fiorentini e ad uno ferrarese dell'erudito veneziano Alessandro Zorzi,"". La Bibliofilia. 38: 313–347.
  4. ^ Sargent, Jesse (2017-12-14). "Following in Jesuit Footsteps: British Expeditions to Ethiopia in the Early Victorian Era". In Maryks, Robert Aleksander; Mkenda, S.J., Festo (eds.). Encounters between Jesuits and Protestants in Africa. Brill. pp. 31–58. doi:10.1163/9789004347151_004. ISBN 978-90-04-34715-1.