The Philosophical Transactions and the letters preserved in the Royal
Society's archives provide precious insights into the making of science
and the workings of the Republic of Letters in the early and late modern
periods. This book investigates the Royal Society's relations with Italy
through a socio-historical and critical linguistic analysis of the
papers concerning Italian research published in the Transactions and
of the epistolary exchanges between the Society's Fellows and Italian
scholars. The aim, from the linguistic perspective, is to describe the
features and development of papers based on Italian research published
in the journal, as well as the discursive aspects that characterise the
exchanges between the two countries. Ultimately, from the historical and
cultural point of view, the study will provide a picture of the
development of Anglo-Italian relations in scientific context from the
seventeenth to the end of the nineteenth century.