Angelo Canini (Angelus Caninius; 1521–1557) was an Italian grammarian, linguist and scholar from Anghiari.
His first publication was Book II of the commentary of Alexander of Aphrodisias on the De anima of Aristotle (Venice 1546).
[1] After time in Spain, he found a patron in Guillaume du Prat, who helped him move to Paris.
[1] He wrote an Aramaic grammar, published in 1554,[2] and taught Hebrew in Paris in the 1550s.
[6] He also translated into Latin as Liber Visorum Divinorum a Hebrew work of Ludovicus Carretus.