Later in his life he was made ambassador of Ranuccio II of Parma in Naples, where he settled in 1679.[1] He remained in Naples for about 15 years, where he mainly attended to his studies and where he published almost all of his works. In 1684 he visited the Kingdom of Sicily.[4] He died in Rome in 1695.[1]
Works
Pacichelli left a number of written works. His masterpiece, Il Regno di Napoli in Prospettiva (The Kingdom of Naples in Perspective), was published posthumously in 1703.[1] This work contains a detailed account of the Kingdom of Naples. It was published in three volumes (one volume for each of the three-part work) and totals approximately 800 pages. Pacichelli was a friend and correspondent of many of the foremost scholars of the day, including Angelico Aprosio, Nicolas Steno, René-François de Sluse and Nicolaas Heinsius. He left a detailed account of his travels in his Memorie de' viaggi per l'Europa cristiana published in five duodecimo volumes in 1685, with two further volumes, Memorie novelle de' Viaggi, in 1691.
List of works
Schediasma de iis qui nullo modo possunt in jus vocari. Rome. 1669.
Vita del reuerendissimo padre Gio. Battista de' Marini, con un indice degli scrittori domenicani. Rome: per Nicol'Angeli Tinassi. 1670.
^ abde Groot, Erlend (2006). The World of a Seventeenth-century Collector. The Atlas Blaeu-Van Der Hem. Hes & De Graaf Publishers. p. 159. ISBN978-9061943594.
^Pighetti, Clelia (1988). L'influsso scientifico di Robert Boyle nel tardo '600 italiano. F. Angeli. pp. 70–72. ISBN9788820430078.
Scibilia, Federica (2014). "Le città costiere di Sicilia e le loro architetture nella "memoria" di viaggio di Giovan Battista Pacichelli (1685)". Visibile Invisibile: Percepire la città tra descrizioni e omissioni. Catania: Scrimm Edizioni: 776–788.