Giovanni Ingegneri (or Ingenerio, Latin: Johannes Ingegnierius, Venetian: Zuane Inzegneri; c.1522 – 1600) was bishop of Capodistria from 1576 to his death.
[3] He received the episcopal consecration in the chapel of Saint Justus of the Patriarcal Palace of Castello on 15 December 1577 by the hands of the Patriarch of Venice Giovanni Trevisan.
Giovanni Ingegneri was particularly active in implementing the measures of the Council of Trent, in reforming the clergy and in defending the public morality.
Nella quale con ragioni tolte dalla filosofia, dalla medicina, dall'anatomia, si dimostra, come dalle parti del corpo humano, per la sua naturale complessione, si possa agevolmente conietturare quali siano le inclinazioni degl'huomini.
It merged knowledges of philosophy, medicine and law in order to read the motions, gestures and signs of the body, and the emotions on face, as clues of guilty of a defendant.