Throughout the project, an extensive body of unpublished material was examined, including thousands of handwritten documents, experimental diaries, scientific reports, correspondence, and references to instruments. These sources document hundreds of experiments and reveal dense networks connecting Florentine scholars with major European figures such as Christiaan Huygens, Robert Hooke, Ismael Boulliau, Nicolas Steno, and many others.
The project combined traditional archival research with innovative digital methods. A large-scale digital research infrastructure was created to organise documents, people, places, experiments, instruments, and concepts into an interconnected system. This allowed the team to identify patterns of collaboration, circulation, and knowledge production that would otherwise remain invisible.
Research demonstrated that experimentation at the Accademia del Cimento was not an isolated activity but emerged from collective reading practices, exchanges of books, shared instruments, and intense correspondence. Visual materials, diagrams, and images played a crucial role in shaping experimental reasoning and scientific credibility. Instruments circulated across Europe not only as technical devices but also as vehicles of trust, diplomacy, and shared practice.
The project also revealed the breadth of the academy’s activities, extending far beyond what was published in the Saggi. Mathematics, hydraulics, acoustics, colour experiments, natural history, and meteorology all formed part of a vibrant and diverse research environment. These findings fundamentally revise traditional interpretations of the Accademia del Cimento as a narrowly controlled or purely symbolic institution.
Results were disseminated through international conferences, public lectures, peer-reviewed publications, edited journal issues, and the development of an open digital database designed to make previously inaccessible materials available to scholars and wider audiences.