Vincenzo Flauti (4 April 1782 – 20 June 1863) was an Italian mathematician, professor in the university of Naples.
Flauti studied at the Liceo del Salvatore, the school led by Nicola Fergola.
Although he began medical studies, he changed them to mathematics influenced by his master Fergola.
In 1860, when the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies was conquered by Giuseppe Garibaldi and was incorporated into the Kingdom of Italy, Flauti was excluded from the Academy of Sciences of Naples and from his docent duties, because he had been a supporter of the Bourbon monarchy.
[1] In 1807, jointly with Felice Giannattasio, he was entrusted by the Bourbon government to write a mathematics textbook for all schoolchildren in the kingdom.