Nicola Coleti

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Nicola Coleti
Born1681 Edit this on Wikidata
Venice, Republic of Venice
DiedFebruary 1765 Edit this on Wikidata (aged 83–84)
Venice, Republic of Venice
NationalityItalian
Alma mater
OccupationHistorian, Catholic priest Edit this on Wikidata

Nicola Coleti (or Coletti; 1680–1765) was an Italian Catholic priest and historian.

Life and works[edit]

Born in Venice, he studied at Padua, where he received the degree of Doctor. He was sent to the church of San Moisè at Venice, and there devoted himself to historical and antiquarian research.

His first work of importance was a new edition of Ferdinando Ughelli's Italia Sacra published in ten volumes from 1717 to 1722. Besides correcting many errors, Coleti continued Ughelli's history to the beginning of the eighteenth century.

Coleti then undertook the compilation of his large work entitled Collectio Conciliorum. Up to this time there had been two standard histories of the councils, Sacrorum conciliorum nova et amplissima collectio by Philippe Labbe and Gabriel Cossart (1671–72), its supplement compiled by Étienne Baluze (of which only the first volume was published), and the collection of Jean Hardouin (1715). Coleti's collection was based on that of Labbe and Cossart, though he used Baluze and Hardouin. It was published by his brother Sebastiano from 1728 to 1733 in twenty-three volumes. The last two were called Apparatus primus and Apparatus secundus, containing the indexes.

Other works of Coleti's were Series episcoporum Cremonensium aucta (1749), and Monumenta ecclesiæ Venetæ S. Moisis (1758). Coleti also annotated a manuscript of Scipione Maffei, now preserved in the Biblioteca Vallicelliana at Rome.

He died at Venice in 1765.

Bibliography[edit]

 This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainHerbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Nicola Coleti". Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.

External links[edit]