Tommaso Perelli
Tommaso Perelli (Florence, 21 July 1704 – Arezzo, 5 October 1783) was an Italian astronomer, mathematician and hydraulic engineer.[1]
Biography
Born into a noble family of Arezzo, Perelli was encouraged by his father to study law at the University of Pisa, but Guido Grandi (1671–1742), an abbot who was teaching mathematics there, steered him toward science. When his father died, Perelli abandoned the study of law for good. He decided to get a degree in physics and medicine. He studied astronomy and medicine at the University of Bologna, and Greek literature at the University of Padua. He was then appointed by the Tuscan government to the chair in astronomy at the University of Pisa, where he became a noted astronomer and hydraulics expert. He was the first to identify the hill of Arcetri, near Galileo's (1564–1642) last home, Villa Il Gioiello, as ideal location for astronomical observations.[2]
Works

- Risposta sopra i diversi progetti per il regolamento delle acque delle tre provincie di Bologna, Ferrara e Romagna (in Italian). Florence: Andrea Bonducci. 1765.
- Relazione sopra il lago Trasimeno (in Italian). Florence: Allegrini & Pisoni & Comp. 1771.
See also
References
- ^ Renato Pasta (2015). "PERELLI, Tommaso". Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani (in Italian). Vol. 82: Pazzi–Pia. Rome: Istituto dell'Enciclopedia Italiana. ISBN 978-88-12-00032-6.
- ^ Barsanti, Danilo, and Leonardo Rombai. Scienziati idraulici e territorialisti nella Toscana dei Medici e dei Lorena. Vol. 2. Centro editoriale toscano, 1994. pp. 111-112.