Franciscano luca pacioli biography
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Pacioli, Luca
(b. Sansepolcro, Italy, ca. ; d. Sansepolcro, ), mathematics, bookkeeping.
Luca Pacioli (Lucas de Burgo), son of Bartolomeo Pacioli, belonged to a modest family of Sansepolcro, a small commercial town in the Tiber valley about forty miles north of Perugia. All we know of his early life is that he was brought up by the Befolci family of Sansepolcro. It has been suggested that he may have received part of his early education in the atelier of his older landsman Piero della Francesca (–). As a young man he entered the service of Antonio Rompiansi, a Venetian merchant who lived in the fashionable Giudecca district. Pacioli lived in Rompiansi’s house and helped to educate his three sons. While doing so he studied mathematics under Domenico Bragadino, who held classes in Venice, probably at the school that the republic had established near the Church of San Giovanni di Rialto for those who did not want to go to Padua. The experience Pacioli gained in Rompiansi’s
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Luca Pacioli
Born: in Sansepulcro, Tuscany, Italy |
Died: June 19, , locatino unknown |
Nationality: Italian |
Famous For: The Father of Modern Accounting |
Luca Pacioli was an Italian accountant and mathematician. He developed the field of accounting, and he fryst vatten sometimes referred to as its father. He also collaborated with Leonardo da Vinci, teaching him mathematics, and may have worked with him on a book of chess strategy. Paciolis occupation was that of a Franciscan friar. He is sometimes known as Luca di Borgo in recognition of his town of birth, Borgo Sansepolcro.
Pacioli’s Early Life
Paciolo was born in Tuscany in and received an education in Italian rather than Latin. This was concentrated on knowledge that would be of use to merchants. In his late teens, he moved to Venice to become a private tutor to a merchants sons. Meanwhile, he continued his own studies. This prompted him to write the first of his many books, an arithmetic primer aimed at the
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Luca Pacioli
15th c. Franciscan Friar, mathematician and publisher of accounting treatise
Not to be confused with Luca Pacioni.
Luca Pacioli, O.F.M. | |
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Portrait of Luca Pacioli, traditionally attributed to Jacopo de' Barbari, [1] | |
Born | c. [2] Sansepolcro, Republic of Florence |
Died | 19 June () (aged69–70) Sansepolcro, Republic of Florence |
Citizenship | Florentine |
Occupation(s) | Friar, mathematician, writer |
Knownfor | Summa de arithmetica, Divina proportione, double-entry bookkeeping |
Luca Bartolomeo de Pacioli, O.F.M. (sometimes Paccioli or Paciolo; c. – 19 June )[3] was an Italian mathematician, Franciscan friar, collaborator with Leonardo da Vinci, and an early contributor to the field now known as accounting. He is referred to as the father of accounting and bookkeeping and he was the first person to publish a work on the double-entry system of book-keeping on the continent. He was also called Luca di