Angelo Canini (Angelus Caninius; 1521–1557) was an Italian grammarian, linguist and scholar from Anghiari.
After time in Spain, he found a patron in Guillaume du Prat, who helped him move to Paris.
He wrote an Aramaic grammar, published in 1554, Institutiones linguae Syriacae, Assyricae, atque Thalmudicae and taught Hebrew in Paris in the 1550s. Christian Aramaism: The Birth and Growth of Aramaic Scholarship in the Sixteenth Century at p. 7. At Paris he taught Greek to Bonaventura Corneille Bertram and Dudithius; he was at the Collège des Lombards and then the Collège de Cambrai.Robert Wallace, Antitrinitarian Biography Vol. II (1850), p. 287; online text. In 1555 he published in Paris a Greek grammar, Hellenismus (Ellenismos).Henry Hallam, Introduction to the Literature of Europe in the Fifteenth, Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries, Vol. II (1880), p. 28.
He also translated into Latin as Liber Visorum Divinorum a Hebrew work of Ludovicus Carretus.
He died in the Auvergne, France.
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