Clelia Borromeo was a member of one of the most important patrician families of Northern Italy. She was born in Genoa, the daughter of Marcantonio Grillo, duke of Mondragone, and Maria Antonia Imperiali.[3]
Borromeo was educated in several languages, mathematics, natural science and mechanics.[1] She spoke eight languages and was interested in geometry, natural science and mathematics.[3] She was educated first by her mother and then in a convent, but it is unknown where she received education in the subjects she became known for.[3]
In 1707, she married count Giovanni Benedetto Borromeo Arese (1707–1744), and became the mother of eight children.[3]
Borromeo was famous for her ability to solve every mathematical problem presented to her. Borromeo was described as an independent person, which was regarded as eccentric because it was not considered natural for her gender. She opened her salon to the best scientific minds of the time during those years. The most frequent visitor to the salon of the Countess was Antonio Vallisneri, physician, naturalist and Professor of medicine at the University of Padua.
The Clelian Academy played a major role in the scientific cultural debate at the time. It played a significant role in the dissemination of Newtonian physics and Leibnizian philosophy in Italy.[2]
During the war in 1746, Borromeo took the side of Spain against Austria and was therefore exiled. When she was allowed to return to Milan, she was celebrated as a heroine.[3]
Clelia curves
In 1728, Luigi Guido Grandi described the so-called Clelia curves in his book Flores geometrici ex rhodonearum et cloeliarum, which he dedicated to Borromeo. These are curves on the sphere for whose points there is a linear relationship between longitude and colatitude. That is, their spherical coordinates satisfy for some constant .[1]
Recognition
The city of Genoa honored her with a medal with the inscription Genuensium Gloria (The Honor of Genoa).[1]
Generali, Dario, ed. (2011). Clelia Grillo Borromeo Arese: un salotto letterario settecentesco tra arte, scienza e politica. Florence: Leo S. Olschki. ISBN9788822260512.