Carlo Trivulzio - 1772-9-16

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Carlo Trivulzio, Milan, 1772/09/16

Carlo Trivulzio - 1772-9-16
FINA IDUnique ID of the page  10957
InstitutionName of Institution.
InventoryInventory number. Ms. Cod. Triv. 2107, cc. 5
PlacePlace of publication of the book, composition of the document or institution. Milan 45° 28' 0.48" N, 9° 11' 25.80" E
AuthorAuthor of the document. Carlo Trivulzio
Associated personsNames of Persons who are mentioned in the annotation. Giuseppe Bartoli
Publication dateDate when the publication was issued: day - month - year . September 16, 1772
KeywordNumismatic Keywords  Salary , Lombards , Roman , Maximianus , Quinarius , Anthemius , Brockage
LiteratureReference to literature. Doyen – Rambach 2020, p. 19, note 981
LanguageLanguage of the correspondence Italian
External LinkLink to external information, e.g. Wikpedia 
Other entries for the same diary
DiaryPublication dateDate when the publication was issued: day - month - year .
Carlo Trivulzio - 1770-6-1616 June 1770
Carlo Trivulzio - 1772-9-1616 September 1772
Grand documentOriginal passage from the "Grand document".

-16 septembre 1772 : « On this morning, Mr Giuseppe Bartoli was with me for some time who arrived last night from Venice and will leave today at noon for Turin in order to pass by on his way to stay in Paris. This man of letters is reader of the ‘belles lettres’ at the University of Turin and he also holds the office of antiquarian of his Sardinian Majesty, but it is for some time that he is away from Turin, for reasons of an encounter with the Royal ministers, but I believe that the main reason boils down to the fact that those ministers do not think it convenient that a foreigner be antiquarian of his Majesty, in any case the king continues to pay his pension as lecturer. I asked Bartoli whether he had any antiquity with him, and he told me to have in his travelling desk a few medals, among which was a gold coin of Aribertus, king of the Lombards, and for this reason I went with him to his accommodation which is the Public Inn of the Three Magi, and when I saw the medals I purchased the one of Aribertus which is well dear to me; a beautiful Maximianus in gold with the reverse of Herculi Victori: a gold quinarius of Antemius; and a Consular silver medal minted only on one side. This way it is a pleasure to admit a foreigner: while I lose some hour of my time, I acquire it back in some other way by increasing my collection” (Doyen – Rambach 2020, p. 19, note 98).

References

  1. ^ Doyen – Rambach 2020