Benjamin Consolo (; 1806–1887) was an Italian
Hebrew writer and translator. Consolo was born in
Ancona, where he studied at the
Talmud Torah under the instruction of Rabbi David A. Vivant. He studied Italian with Count Pietro Alety, a student of Dante, and then
Latin with Lorenzo Barili. He was appointed secretary of the Jewish community at Ancona, and later of that at
Florence, where he began translating Hebrew works into Italian.
Consolo's works include: ''I Capitoli dei Padri, Trattato Misnico Morale con Commenti'', an Italian translation of Abot; ''I Doveri de' Cuori'' (Prato, 1847); ''Volgarizzamento del Libro di Job'' (Florence, 1874); ''Volgarizzamento delle Lamentazioni di Geremi''; and ''Il Salterio o Canti Nazionali del Popolo d'Israele Spiegati e Commentati'' (Florence, 1885). He was also the author of several shorter essays and poems, and published a translation of "The Duties of the Heart", an eleventh century moral treatise by Maestro Bechai originally written in Arabic and translated into Hebrew by
Judah ben Tibon.
His wife, Regine, published an Italian translation of the ''Enchiridion d'Egitto''. The composer and virtuoso
Federico Consolo
Federico Consolo (April 4, 1841 – December 14, 1906) was an Italian violinist and composer.
Background and earlier life
Federico Consolo was born to Benjamin Consolo at Ancona in 1841. After studying the violin with Ferdinando Giorgetti in F ...
was his son.
References
{{DEFAULTSORT:Consolo, Benjamin
1806 births
1887 deaths
Jewish Italian writers
People from Ancona
Translators from Hebrew
Translators to Italian
19th-century Italian translators