Of the Forogiulio dei Carni and that of other Transpadane peoples

Letter from Count Girolamo Asquini member of the Academy of Agriculture, Commerce and Arts ... to the very clear Mr. Count Cintio Frangipane
Verona: typography by Pietro Bisesti ed., 1827
Page 76
specimen in beards
Italian language
26 x 19.5 cm
Overall in good condition, binding removed, tear at the top of the last page, creases at the corners of the pages, natural yellowing with foxing. I refer you to the photo gallery for details.

ASQUINI GIROLAMO (Fagagna 1762 - Parma, 1837)


He was born in Fagagna The January 20, 1762, by Count Fabio, an important innovator of Friulian agriculture and entrepreneurship. He received his first education at the Barnabite college in Udine, where he came into contact with the rector, Angelo Maria Cortenovis, scholar of antiquarianism and local history, with whom he carried out some archaeological campaigns Aquileia And Zuglio. From this master the A. he received the conviction that the ancient Roman city of Forum Iulii was to be identified in Zuglio and not, as would have been correct, in Cividale: a thesis that he supported throughout his life. 
Nohe works Of the Forogiulio dei Carni and that of other Transpadane peoples, Asquini, with the support of his correspondence, uses the corpus known epigraph, together with the one he invented, in support of Zuglio's illustrious origins. 

He was born in Fagagna The January 20, 1762, by Count Fabio, an important innovator of Friulian agriculture and entrepreneurship. He received his first education at the Barnabite college in Udine, where he came into contact with the rector, Angelo Maria Cortenovis, scholar of antiquarianism and local history, with whom he carried out some archaeological campaigns Aquileia And Zuglio. From this master the A. he received the conviction that the ancient Roman city of Forum Iulii was to be identified in Zuglio and not, as would have been correct, in Cividale: a thesis that he supported throughout his life.  Nohe works Of the Forogiulio dei Carni and that of other Transpadane peoples, Asquini, with the support of his correspondence, uses the corpus known epigraph, together with the one he inven