Laura Bassi: The Woman Who Brought Newtonian Physics to ItalyThe story of Italy’s first Professoressa Laura Bassi

Gabriellebirchak/ January 20, 2026/ Middle Ages, Post Classical

By Car­lo Van­di — https://www.meisterdrucke.es/impresion-art%C3%ADstica/Carlo-Vandi/771741/Retrato-de-Laura-Bassi-1711–1778,-mediados-del-siglo-XVIII..html, Pub­lic Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=134183271

New­ton­ian physics con­sists of three foun­da­tion­al laws of motion that describe how mas­sive bod­ies move and inter­act. New­ton pub­lished these laws in his work Philosophiæ Nat­u­ralis Prin­cip­ia Math­e­mat­i­ca in 1687, and at the time, they were rev­o­lu­tion­ary. Today, New­ton is known world­wide, but there was a time in the late sev­en­teenth cen­tu­ry and ear­ly eigh­teenth cen­tu­ry when he was only known in parts of the world, exclud­ing Italy.

That is until the bril­liant Ital­ian physi­cist, and aca­d­e­m­ic Lau­ra Maria Kate­ri­na Bassi became one of his great­est advo­cates. Bassi, the bril­liant Ital­ian physi­cist and aca­d­e­m­ic, was born around Octo­ber 29, 1711, and became the first woman ever in the his­to­ry of the world to hold an aca­d­e­m­ic chair and become the high­est-paid lec­tur­er of her time at the Uni­ver­si­ty of Bologna.

Bassi was raised in mod­est sur­round­ings by her par­ents Rosa Marie Cesarei and Giuseppe Bassi. Her father was a lawyer from Mod­e­na. She attend­ed ele­men­tary school, and upon com­plet­ing that, she began to take pri­vate lessons. She stud­ied from her cousin Father Loren­zo Sta­gani, who taught her arith­metic, French, and Latin. She also learned from the fam­i­ly doc­tor Gae­tano Tac­coni for sev­en years as she mas­tered the sci­ences, math­e­mat­ics, and phi­los­o­phy. How­ev­er, her rela­tion­ship with Tac­coni began to decay as she found inter­est in New­ton­ian physics, which Tac­coni adamant­ly dismissed.

He want­ed her to focus on some­thing less con­tro­ver­sial, specif­i­cal­ly from the Carte­sian teach­ings. Regard­less, her curios­i­ty for New­ton­ian the­o­ries moved her for­ward. It inspired her and spurred her into the aca­d­e­m­ic lime­light. No doubt she was incred­i­bly learned, a prodi­gy, and an intellectual’s intel­lec­tu­al. Bassi became so famous for her acu­men that in March 1732, she joined Bolog­na’s Acad­e­my of Sci­ences. On April 17, 1732, she pub­licly defend­ed 49 the­ses in the Palace of the Elders (Sala degli Anziani) at the pub­lic Palazzo.

This event was her break­out moment. Bassi was 21 years old ready to take on aca­d­e­mics. She defend­ed 49 the­ses, which includ­ed six the­ses on log­ic, 16 the­ses on meta­physics, nine the­ses on top­ics relat­ed to phi­los­o­phy and reli­gion, and 18 the­ses devot­ed to physics.

A month lat­er, in May of 1732, the Uni­ver­si­ty of Bologna award­ed Bassi her doc­tor­al degree. Anoth­er month lat­er, she defend­ed 12 more the­ses, which earned her the unprece­dent­ed posi­tion of lec­tur­er at the Uni­ver­si­ty of Bologna. The defense of a the­sis was much dif­fer­ent than that it is today. Before her defense, she had writ­ten sev­er­al essays that encom­passed these top­ics. Her defense encom­passed her respons­es to a series of philo­soph­i­cal and sci­en­tif­ic ques­tions that the university’s pro­fes­sors pre­sent­ed to her. Unlike the grad­u­ate-lev­el the­ses writ­ten today, her research was not original.

Much like the soci­etal pres­sure that Hypa­tia endured, which led to her dec­la­ra­tion of vir­gin­i­ty, Bassi grap­pled with her rep­u­ta­tion as a female sci­en­tist. She want­ed to main­tain her work in sci­ence. How­ev­er, the uni­ver­si­ty was lim­it­ing her oppor­tu­ni­ties to pro­vide reports on her research and give reg­u­lar lec­tures. Because of this, she had to teach from her home.

Addi­tion­al­ly, the uni­ver­si­ty was push­ing her to write poet­ry and pro­vide com­men­taries on lit­er­a­ture. These two areas of aca­d­e­mics were not her pas­sion. In a let­ter to Flamino Scarsel­li, she wrote, “I fear that I would grave­ly offend the Mus­es were I to present myself as their ser­vant who have the hon­or of see­ing them mere­ly in the dis­tance fleetingly.”

Exper­i­men­tal physics tugged at her heart. It encom­passed her mind and filled her with a stead­fast pas­sion for exper­i­men­tal sci­ence. So, unlike Hypa­tia, who taught in Alexan­dria in 400 CE and chose vir­gin­i­ty because it gave the impres­sion of pure, vir­ginal ded­i­ca­tion to her role as a pro­fes­sor, teacher, philoso­pher, and aca­d­e­m­ic, Bassi decid­ed to marry.

Mar­riage would allow her to vis­it her col­leagues and enabled them to vis­it her with­out any pub­lic scruti­ny, judg­ments, or appre­hen­sions. And so Bassi mar­ried Giuseppe Ver­rat­ti, who was also a sci­en­tist. He was not near­ly as bril­liant as her. Many com­ment­ed that she mar­ried some­body who was not her intel­lec­tu­al equal. How­ev­er, he was sci­en­tif­i­cal­ly curi­ous, which was impor­tant to her.

They worked togeth­er in their research facil­i­ty based out of their home and kept up with soci­etal expec­ta­tions. Bassi gave birth to 12 chil­dren. Sad­ly, only five of those chil­dren sur­vived infan­cy into adult­hood. Between rais­ing chil­dren, con­tin­u­ing her research, and main­tain­ing her posi­tion at the Uni­ver­si­ty of Bologna, her oppor­tu­ni­ties were dwin­dling. Then she met Pros­pera Lam­ber­ti­ni, who would even­tu­al­ly go on to become Pope Bene­dict XIV. The pope, who was a big sup­port­er of the sci­ences, became her great­est champion.

In 1745, he finan­cial­ly sup­port­ed a research and exper­i­men­tal group called the Benedet­ti­ni. Bassi hoped to become a mem­ber of this elite group of sci­en­tists. How­ev­er, her hus­band was elect­ed to the Benedet­ti­ni instead. After 12 years, she had enough. She approached the pope and asked if she could be added as a twen­ty-fifth mem­ber. The Pope unyield­ing­ly agreed to let her become a mem­ber despite the push­back that he endured from exist­ing mem­bers of the Benedet­ti­na. As a mem­ber of the Benedet­ti­na Research Group, she now had the plat­form that she need­ed to deliv­er annu­al reports on her sci­en­tif­ic research. These reports includ­ed her work on hydro­dy­nam­ics, New­ton’s light refrac­tion, and Boyle’s law of gases.

In her life­time, Bassi authored 28 papers. Most of these papers cov­ered top­ics in physics and hydraulics. Voltaire high­ly respect­ed her. In a let­ter to her, Voltaire wrote, “There is no Bassi in Lon­don, and I would be much hap­pi­er to be added to your Acad­e­my of Bologna than that of the Eng­lish, even though it has pro­duced a Newton.”

In 1776, she obtained the posi­tion of chair of exper­i­men­tal physics at the Uni­ver­si­ty of Bologna. Her hus­band was giv­en the job as her lab assis­tant. She became the first woman in the his­to­ry of the world to hold an aca­d­e­m­ic chair. Addi­tion­al­ly, over the years, she had been advo­cat­ing for her­self for more pay. As a result, by the time she took the role of chair, she obtained the high­est salary for a lec­tur­er at the uni­ver­si­ty. Sad­ly, just two years lat­er, she passed away.

If it were not for Bassi, New­ton’s the­o­ries would not have spread as quick­ly. In Italy, she was his great­est cham­pi­on. She was his most promi­nent defend­er. Though we don’t have direct evi­dence of Bassi’s work, we do have her writ­ings, which encom­pass cor­re­spon­dence on her work. Bassi was pas­sion­ate about physics. What lit­tle time she had rais­ing five chil­dren, she com­mit­ted every spare minute to sci­ence and physics. Bassi put the Uni­ver­si­ty of Bologna back on the map, and through her work, she advo­cat­ed for women in physics. Thus, Pro­fes­sores­sa Lau­ra Bassi left a remark­able lega­cy and a life sto­ry that, even in the twen­ty-first cen­tu­ry, con­tin­ues to inspire women in STEM.

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