Elisabetta Fiorini Mazzanti


Elisabetta Fiorini Mazzanti, was an Italian botanist and writer. She was known for her work in bryology and algae. In scientific literature, she is referred to by the abbreviation Fior.-Mazz.

Early years

Elisabetta Fiorini Mazzanti, born in Terracina, Italy in 1799, was the only daughter of Count Giuseppe and Teresa Scirocchi, but her mother passed away soon after she was born.
Elisabetta's father took charge of his only daughter's education providing her with a good education in history, geography, literature and art, as well as Latin, French, English and German. Already in her early youth, she developed an interest in botany, and one of her first teachers was Giambattista Brocchi. Through him, she came into contact with other scientists of the time, notably Giuseppe De Notaris who would have an important impact throughout her life.
In 1829, she married the lawyer Luca Mazzanti, and they had a child. In 1842, the Contessa Fiorini-Mazzanti, as she was then known, lost her husband, father and only daughter within a year and became the sole heir to the large family estates. She adopted and educated the young Contessa Enrichetta Fiorini, niece of the late botanist Ernesto Mauri, who would become Fiorini Mazzanti's companion and nurse during her last years.

Research

In 1831, inspired by De Notaris, Fiorini Mazzanti published her best-known work Specimen Bryologiae Romanaewith a second edition published ten years later in 1841. This publication was instrumental in encouraging the study of mosses throughout Italy and France. Subsequently, she dedicated her research almost exclusively to the study of freshwater algae, of which she had discovered several species. She also "maintained a lively relationship with peers and was also interested in the smaller achievements of others in the field of botany."
Fiorini Mazzanti's was remembered as "a diligent hunter of botanical finds." Her publications include a small paper of 1874 that describes a new moss Hypnum formianum, found in the province of Naples. Her last work, the Florula del Colosseo was published shortly before her death and described the flora around the Roman Colosseum. She was always anxious to increase her moss collection, and received samples from many foreign collectors, even receiving a last bedside gift from a German friend of mosses from Mauritania and Ceylon.
At the age of 74, Fiorini Mazzanti participated in the botanical congress of 1874 in Florence, where, although fatigued by the journey, she enjoyed the personal acquaintances of foreign botanists, particularly those from Germany.
Fiorini Mazzanti usually lived quietly in Rome but often left during the summer months to reside in her hometown, the ancient coastal city of Terracina, Italy.

Death

She died in Rome 23 April 1879 and news of her passing spread via the most important European botanical magazines and many dedications followed.
Elisabetta Fiorini Mazzanti was active in several academic societies.
Fiorini Mazzanti was a prolific botany writer with many scientific publications to her credit.