Francesco Giorgi

E144395

Francesco Giorgi was a 16th-century Venetian Franciscan friar, philosopher, and mystic known for integrating Christian theology with Kabbalistic and Neoplatonic thought in his influential work "De harmonia mundi."

All labels observed (2)

Label Occurrences
Francesco Giorgi canonical 2
Francesco Zorzi 1

How this entity was disambiguated

Statements (51)

Predicate Object
instanceOf Catholic theologian
Franciscan friar
Renaissance humanist
book
human
mystic
philosopher
alsoKnownAs Francesco Giorgio Veneto
Francesco Giorgi
surface form: Francesco Zorzi

Franciscus Georgius Venetus
author Francesco Giorgi self-linksurface differs
birthCentury 15th century
birthPlace Venice
citizenship Republic of Venice
deathCentury 16th century
era Renaissance philosophy
familyName Giorgi
fieldOfWork Christian theology
Kabbalah
cosmology
mysticism
philosophy of religion
genre philosophical treatise
theological treatise
givenName Francesco
influencedBy Christian mysticism
Kabbalah
Neoplatonism
Pythagoreanism
languageOfWorkOrName Italian
Latin
mainSubject harmony of the universe
relationship between God, cosmos, and humanity
memberOf Order of Friars Minor
movement Christian Kabbalah
Neoplatonism
Renaissance Platonism
notableIdea harmonic structure of the universe
integration of Christian theology with Kabbalistic thought
synthesis of Neoplatonism and Christianity
notableWork De harmonia mundi
occupation friar
mystic
philosopher
theologian
philosophicalSchool Christian Platonism
placeOfActivity Venice
religion Roman Catholicism
surface form: Catholicism
religiousOrder Order of Friars Minor
surface form: Franciscans
subjectOf studies in Christian Kabbalah
theologicalTradition Catholic theology

How these facts were elicited

Referenced by (3)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Christian Kabbalah hasNotableProponent Francesco Giorgi
Francesco Giorgi alsoKnownAs Francesco Giorgi
this entity surface form: Francesco Zorzi
Francesco Giorgi author Francesco Giorgi self-linksurface differs
subject surface form: De harmonia mundi