Buscheto

Buscheto or Busketus (sometimes also Buschetto or Boschetto, early Latin writers also used Bruschettus,[2] active in Pisa between 1063 and 1110[3]) was an Italian architect.

Leopoldo Cicognara had assumed Buscheto's Italian origin based on his name, yet Leader Scott points out that this can be a nickname.

/ Quod fit Busketi prorsus ab ingenio" ("there is nothing like a white marble temple / built solely by Buscheto's genius").

During the expansion of the cathedral by architect Rainaldo the tomb was transferred to the new facade (first blind arch on the left, the original epitaph is above the strigilated sarcophagus with remains[7]) and a new inscription added below, "Quod vix mille boum possent iuga iuncta movere / Et quod vix potuit per mare ferre ratis / Busketi nisu quod erat mirabile visu / Dena puellarum turba levabat onus" ("a thousand oxen could barely move it / and a ship hardly could carry it across the sea / wonderful to see with Buscheto's skill / a group of girls lifting the weight").

[4] The newer epitaph shows admiration of Buscheto'e engineering skills and refers to the size and weight of monolithic columns of the cathedral.