Pietro Paolo Kandler (23 May 1804 – 18 January 1872) was an Italian historian, archaeologist and jurist.

Bust of Kandler in Trieste

Biography

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Kandler was born in Trieste to a family who moved there from Vienna in the 17th century (but of Scottish descent: the original surname was Chandler) he was multilingual, but preferred to write in Italian.

Trained in the universities of Vienna and Pavia, where he studied law, he was one of the top exponents of the Trieste culture in the 19th century.[1] His work is characterized by an Enlightenment imprint, derived in particular from the observation of the reforms implemented during the French occupation of Trieste.[2]

He was lawyer of his native comune after the death of Domenico Rossetti De Scander,[3] in whose office he had worked, Kandler was nominated in 1856 conservator of monuments for the Austrian Littoral, the only one that the Hapsburg empire chose for the territories that were later part of Italy, of the provinces of Trieste and Gorizia,[4] and dealt at length with the collection and publication of epigraphs and Roman antiquities present in the north-Adriatic area,[5] with particular regard to the Roman bricks,[6] which Theodor Mommsen used for his Corpus Inscriptionum Latinarum.[3]

Among his best-known works are the Codice diplomatico istriano ("Istrian Diplomatic Code", 1847), in six volumes, in which he collected the statutes of various Istrian cities including Parenzo, Rovigno, Cittanova, and the Storia del consiglio dei patrizi di Trieste ("History of the council of patricians of Trieste", 1858).

Some of his writings bear the pseudonyms of Giusto Traiber and Giovannina Bandelli.[citation needed]

Works available online

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References

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  1. ^ Carlo Dionisotti, Ricordi della scuola italiana, Rome, Edizioni di storia e letteratura, 1998, p. 174
  2. ^ Maria Rosa Di Simone, Percorsi del diritto tra Austria e Italia (secoli XII-XX), Milano, Giuffrè Editore, 2006, pp. 111-112.
  3. ^ a b Schingo, Gianluca. "Kandler, Pietro Paolo". Treccani. Retrieved 29 January 2023.
  4. ^ Vittorio Foramitti, Tutela e restauro dei monumenti in Friuli-Venezia Giulia, 1850-1915, Udine, Edizioni del Confine, 2004, p. 18
  5. ^ Claudio Zaccaria - Matej Župančič, Bolli laterizi del territorio di Tergeste romana, in C. Zaccaria (a cura di), I laterizi di età romana nell'area nordadriatica, Roma, L'Erma di Bretschneider, 1993, p. 135.
  6. ^ Robert Matijašić, Lo studio dei bolli laterizi romani in Istria dal '700 ad oggi, pp. 127-132.