Antonio Salvi

{{Short description|Italian physician, court poet and librettist}}

File:Teatro alla pegola 11.JPG in Florence]]

Antonio Salvi (17 January 1664 – 21 May 1724) was an Italian physician, court poet and librettist, active mainly in Florence, Italy. He was in the service of the grand-ducal court of Tuscany and the favourite librettist of Prince Ferdinando de' Medici. Salvi was one of the developers of the opera seria.

Life

Salvi was born in Lucignano and became a court physician in Florence for the Medici family. From 1694 (?) he wrote libretti for the theatre in Livorno and Florence and adapted works by Jean Racine[https://books.google.com/books?id=1qw8AAAAIAAJ Essays on Handel and Italian opera By Reinhard Strohm] and Molière.;[https://books.google.com/books?id=GpedtmXE6tIC The operas of Leonardo Vinci, Napoletano By Kurt Sven Markstrom] Salvi took many of his plots from French tragedy.Dean, W. (1995) Handel's Operas 1704-1726, p. 86. Between 1701 and 1710 seven of his works were performed in the Villa di Pratolino. After the death of Ferdinando (III) de' Medici in 1713 he decided to work outside the Grand Duchy of Tuscany: in Rome, Reggio Emilia, Turin, Venice and Munich. His libretti were set to music by several famous composers including Scarlatti, Vivaldi and Handel. He died in Florence, aged 60.

Vivaldi wrote three operas for Florence to texts by Antonio Salvi. All were produced at the Teatro della Pergola.

Works

  • Astianatte (1701),The operas of Leonardo Vinci, Napoletano

By Kurt Sven Markstrom [https://books.google.com/books?id=GpedtmXE6tIC&dq=Antonio+Salvi+Florence&pg=PA125] based on Andromaque by Jean Racine, set to music by Giacomo Antonio Perti, Antonio Maria Bononcini, Francesco Gasparini, Vinci, Giovanni Bononcini and Niccolò Jommelli

  • Arminio (1703),Polymath of the baroque: Agostino Steffani and his music

By Colin Timms [https://books.google.com/books?id=JoYZHCgXELkC&dq=Antonio+Salvi+Florence&pg=PA243] set to music by Alessandro Scarlatti, Antonio Caldara, Carlo Francesco Pollarolo, Johann Adolph Hasse, Georg Friedrich Handel and Baldassare Galuppi

Sources