Octavien de Guasco (22 February 1712 – 10 March 1781),[1] Count of Clavières, was an Italian writer and translator.

Life edit

He was born Giovanni Battista Ottaviano Guasco in Bricherasio (Vapereau[1] has Pignerol), to Francesco Bartolomeo de Guasco (1675–1742) and Maria Anna Margherita Turinetti (1685–1733). His father belonged to a cadet branch of an ancient family of Alessandria (see Genealogy of the Guasco family [it]), and was jurisconsult [it] and intendant to Victor Amadeus II of Savoy. His mother was of the family of the marquises of Priero and Pancalieri.[2] He was the fourth of sixth children — three boys and three girls — his elder brother being Francesco Guasco [it] (1708–1763) and his younger brother being Pier Alessandro Guasco [it] (1714–1780).

He entered holy orders and in 1751 was granted a rich canonicate at Tournai.[1]

He lived some years in Paris, where he was linked with the Lumières and with the salon of Madame de Tencin;[1] he was on close terms with Montesquieu, and highly esteemed by Lord Chesterfield and by Claude Adrien Helvétius. In 1750 he was elected to the Académie des Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres (as an associé libre);[1] he was also a member of the Royal Society of London,[1] the Etruscan Academy of Cortona [it; fr], and the National Academy of Bordeaux [fr].

In his Lettres familières du président de Montesquieu (1767), Guasco published a selection of his personal correspondence; this embroiled him[clarification needed] with Madame Geoffrin and her social circle.[1]

One of his relatives, the marquis Francesco-Eugenio de Guasco (born 1720 in Alessandria), was also known in Italy for some literary works.[1]

Octavien de Guasco died at Verona in 1781.

Works edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h Gustave Vapereau (1884). "Guasco (Octavien de)". Dictionnaire universel des littératures (in French) (2nd ed.). Paris: Librairie Hachette.
  2. ^ Francesco Guasco di Bisio (1924). "Famiglia Guasco di Alessandria". Tavole genealogiche di famiglie nobili alessandrine e monferrine dal secolo IX al XX (in Italian). Vol. 1. Casale: Bellatore, Bosco & C.