Giulio Sirenio (Latin: Julius Syrenius; 1553 – 1593) was an Italian philosopher from Brescia.[1][2]
He was professor of theology and metaphysics at the University of Bologna.[3]
Works
edit- De fato (in Latin). Venice: Iordani Zileti. 1563.
- De unitate naturae angelicae (in Latin). Bologna: Societatem Typographiae Bonon. 1578.
- De praedestinatione compendium (in Latin). Venice: Dominici Guerraei. 1580.
- Promptuarium theologicum (in Latin). Bologna: Faustum Bonardum. 1580.
References
edit- ^ "Sirenio, Giulio (1553-1593)" (in Spanish). Biblioteca Nacional de España.
- ^ "Autore Giulio Sirenio (1553-1593)" (in Italian). Chapter Library of Verona.
- ^ Ossa-Richardson, Anthony (2013). The Devil's Tabernacle: The Pagan Oracles in Early Modern Thought. Princeton University Press. pp. 111–115. ISBN 978-1-4008-4659-7.