Giovanni Ciampini
Giovanni Giustino Ciampini was an ecclesiastical archaeologist.
Biography
He graduated from the University of Macerata as a student of law but soon devoted himself to archaeological interests, which an important office in the Apostolic Chancery permitted him to pursue. He devoted himself to the collection of books, coins, and statues, and to the creation of scientific circles for the development of antiquarian learning; thus he founded, in 1671, a society for ecclesiastical history and, in 1679, an academy of the sciences, the latter under the patronage of his friend, Queen Christina of Sweden.He continued the school of archaeological research begun by Onofrio Panvinio and Antonio Bosio, and carried on a smaller scale by Fabretti, Boldetti, and Bottari, and later Alarchi and Giovanni Battista de Rossi. Apart from some minor archaeological studies, he has left two illustrated works:
- "De sacris aedificiis a Constantino magno constructis", published in 1693 in Rome, is a history of the ancient churches East and West built by Emperor Constantine the Great
- "Vetera monimenta in quibus praecipua... musiva opera... illustrantur", published in two volumes in 1690–99 in Rome, is a history of the art of mosaics