Gennaro Maria D'Afflitto
Gennaro Maria D'Afflitto was an Italian Dominican friar and military engineer who worked under Philip IV and Charles II of Spain.
Biography
Early life and education
Little is known about D'Afflitto's early life. He was born into a noble family in Naples in 1618. On 16 September 1633, he entered the Dominican convent of Santa Maria della Sanità, Naples, where he received a good scientific and humanistic education, and developed a keen interest in mathematics.Career
In 1647 D'Afflitto met Philip IV's natural son John Joseph of Austria, who had been sent to Naples to quell the rebellion of Masaniello. He followed him in the campaign to recapture Orbetello and Porto Longone and later served as military engineer in the Spanish Army in Catalonia, Portugal and the Southern Netherlands. He also worked at the fort of Peñíscola in Valencia, the fort of Santa Caterina in Cádiz, and the fort of Sanlúcar de Barrameda on the Guadalquivir. In 1663 the Supreme Council of War appointed him as professor of mathematics in the Real Academia de Matemáticas, Artillería y Fortificación of Madrid. He was in charge of the chair until 1665.Later life
Following the fall from grace of Don Juan Joseph, D'Afflitto entered the service of Ferdinando II de' Medici as a teacher of mathematics and military engineer. He did not remain in Florence for long: in 1667 he was in Rome, and at the end of 1667 he became an advisor to the Republic of Genoa on engineering matters. On behalf of the Republic D'Afflitto inspected the walls of Savona and concurred with Guerrini in fortifying Vado Ligure. D'Afflitto is also credited with fortification works in Cuneo and Nizza Marittima on behalf of the House of Savoy. Finally returning to Naples, he died in the convent of Santa Maria della Sanità in 1673.Works
D'Afflitto published at Madrid a treatise on fortifications in two volumes, De Munitione et Fortificatione, Libri duo. The first volume is dedicated to Don John Joseph of Austria. Abstracts of this work were published at Florence in 1665, by Captain Giovanni Battista Sergiuliani, and in 1667 by Filippo Domenico Mazzenghi. Likewise, he is the author of Compendio de modernas fortificaciones, translated into Spanish in 1657 by Baltasar Siscara. D'Afflitto wrote also a treatise on fire and explosive weapons, De igne et ignivomis. The work is divided into two parts: the first deals with the nature of fire and the different kinds of fuels; the second describes various types of explosives. He left in manuscript Terra seu quadripartites orbis, Compendio della Sfera universale, and a number of poems and miscellaneous tracts on philosophical and theological topics. Jonas Moore considered D'Afflitto, together with Francesco Tensini and Pietro Sardi, one of Italy's foremost experts on fortification.Published works
De munitione et fortificatione*