7 January 2026

7 January

Pope Innocent X

Political pontiff dominated by sister-in-law

A politically charged and controversial period in papal history ended on this day in 1655 with the death in Rome of Pope Innocent X.  Described by some historians as a scheming and bitter pontiff, Innocent X’s tenure was notable for his malicious attack on a rival family, his destruction of the ancient city of Castro, a squabble with France that almost ended in war, his interference in the English Civil War and his refusal to recognise the independence of Portugal.  It was also overshadowed by rumours of an immoral relationship with his sister-in-law, Olimpia Maidalchini, the widow of his late brother. Historians generally agree that these were unfounded, yet Innocent X was dominated by her to the extent that she became the most powerful figure in his court, her influence so strong that ambassadors, cardinals and bishops knew that the pope would defer to her before making any decision. Read more…


ll tricolore

Flag represented people’s hopes for a united Italy

The Italian flag, with its panels of green, white and red, was first hoisted on this day in 1797 in Reggio-Emilia.  Long before Italy became a united country, an early form of the tricolore was being flown in a part of the country then known as the Cispadane Republic, where it had been agreed to make universal “the standard or flag of three colours, green, white and red”.  The Cispadane Republic (Repubblica Cispadana) was founded with the protection of the French Army in 1796 in what is now Emilia-Romagna. The republic organised a congress on 7 January in Reggio Emilia and adopted the first ever tricolore as its flag.  But it was many years and many battles later before the flag as we know it now was formally adopted by the Italian republic in 1948.  It is thought the Cispadane republic chose panels of red and white because they were the colours of the flag of Milan and green because it was the colour of the uniform of the Milan civic guard. Read more…

_______________________________________

Pope Gregory XIII

Pontiff used his power to change the date overnight

Pope Gregory XIII was born Ugo Boncompagni on this day in 1502 in Bologna.  Gregory XIII is chiefly remembered for introducing the Gregorian calendar, which is still the internationally accepted calendar today.  As Ugo Boncompagni, he studied law in Bologna and graduated in 1530. He later taught jurisprudence and among his students were the Cardinals Alessandro Farnese and Carlo Borromeo.  Before he took holy orders, Ugo had an affair with Maddalena Fulchini, who gave birth to his illegitimate son, Giacomo Boncompagni.  Pope Paul III summoned Ugo to Rome in 1538 to work for him in a judicial capacity. He went on to work for Pope Paul IV and Pope Pius IV. Ugo was made Cardinal Priest of San Sisto Vecchio and sent to the Council of Trent by Pius IV.  He was also sent to be legate to Phillip II of Spain and formed a close relationship with the Spanish King.  Read more…

______________________________________

Vincent Gardenia - TV and film actor

US sitcom star with Neapolitan roots

The actor Vincent Gardenia, one of the most recognisable faces on American television in the 1960s and 1970s and twice nominated for an Oscar for his film roles, was born on this day in 1920 in what is now Ercolano, a town that forms part of the Naples metropolitan area.  Gardenia starred as the father of Cher's character in the film Moonstruck, was the detective Frank Ochoa alongside Charles Bronson in Death Wish and was Mr Mushnik in the musical film adaptation of Little Shop of Horrors.  On television, he portrayed J Edgar Hoover in the mini-series Kennedy,  starring Martin Sheen as the murdered former president, but was perhaps best known as Archie Bunker's neighbour Frank Lorenzo in the '70s comedy hit All in the Family, which was the American version of the iconic British comedy Till Death Us Do Part.  Read more…

______________________________________

Ruggiero Giovannelli – composer

Church musician wrote popular madrigals and songs

Ruggiero Giovannelli, a religious composer who also wrote a surprising number of light-hearted madrigals, died on this day in 1625 in Rome.  He may have been a pupil of Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina, the most famous of the Roman School composers of the 16th century. Even though there is no documentary evidence to support this, there are stylistic similarities in their music.  On Palestrina’s death in 1594, Giovannelli was chosen to replace him as maestro di cappella at the Julian Chapel in St Peter’s Basilica.  Giovannelli was born in Velletri near Rome and not much is known about his life until 1583 when he became maestro di cappella at the church of San Luigi dei Francesi near the Piazza Navona in Rome. He moved on to become maestro di cappella at the Collegio Germanico, a pontifical college in Rome, in 1591.  Read more…

_______________________________________

Book of the Day: Absolute Monarchs - A History of the Papacy, by John Julius Norwich

In Absolute Monarchs, a chronicle that captures nearly two thousand years of inspiration and intrigue, John Julius Norwich recounts in riveting detail the histories of the most significant popes and what they meant politically, culturally, and socially to Rome and to the world. Norwich presents such popes as Innocent I, who in the fifth century successfully negotiated with Alaric the Goth, an invader civil authorities could not defeat; Leo I, who two decades later tamed (and perhaps paid off) Attila the Hun; the infamous "pornocracy"- the five libertines who were descendants or lovers of Marozia, debauched daughter of one of Rome's most powerful families; Pope Paul III, "the greatest pontiff of the 16th century," who reinterpreted the Church's teaching and discipline; John XXIII, who in five short years starting in 1958 instituted reforms that led to Vatican II; and Benedict XVI, who had to contend with a modern global priest sex scandal. Epic and compelling, Absolute Monarchs is an enthralling history.

John Julius Norwich was the author of more than 20 books, including the New York Times bestseller Absolute Monarchs. He began his career in the British foreign service, but resigned his diplomatic post to become a writer. He was a chairman of the Venice in Peril Fund and the honorary chairman of the World Monuments Fund. He died in 2018.

Buy from Amazon


Home

6 January 2026

6 January

Baldassare Verazzi - painter

Piedmontese artist famous for image of uprising in Milan

The painter Baldassare Verazzi, whose most famous work depicts a scene from the anti-Austrian uprising known as The Five Days of Milan, was born on this day in 1819 in Caprezzo, a tiny village in Piedmont, 120km (75 miles) from Turin in the hills above Lake Maggiore.  Something of a revolutionary in that he was an active supporter of the Risorgimento, it is supposed that he was in Milan in 1848 when citizens rose up against the ruling forces of the Austrian Empire, which controlled much of northern Italy.  The Cinque Giornate di Milano, in March of that year, comprised five days of street fighting that eventually resulted in the Austrian garrison being expelled from the city, marking the start of the First Italian War of Independence.  Verazzi’s painting is today on display at the Museum of the Risorgimento in the Castello Sforza in Milan. Read more…

________________________________________

First Montessori school opens in Rome

Educationalist Maria Montessori launches Casa dei Bambini

The first of what would become recognised across the world as Montessori schools opened its doors in Rome on this day in 1907.  The Casa dei Bambini, in the working class neighbourhood of San Lorenzo, was launched by the physician and educationalist Maria Montessori.  Montessori - the first woman in Italy to qualify as a physician - had enjoyed success with her teaching methods while working with children as a volunteer at Rome University's psychiatric clinic.  She was convinced that the techniques she had used to help children with learning difficulties and more serious mental health issues could be adapted for the benefit of all children.  The Casa dei Bambini came into being after Montessori had been invited to work on a housing project in San Lorenzo, where her responsibility was to oversee the care and education of the project's children while their parents were at work.  Read more…

________________________________________

Silvana Pampanini - actress and singer

Postwar pin-up who preceded Loren and Lollobrigida

The actress and singer Silvana Pampanini, who starred in more than 50 films and was Italian cinema’s biggest box office draw in the 1950s, died on this day in 2016 in Rome.  She was 90 years old and had been hospitalised for some weeks following abdominal surgery. Her funeral took place at the Basilica di Santa Croce in Gerusalemme, in the Esquilino district to the southeast of the city centre.  Born in Rome into a family of Venetian heritage in 1925, she had ambitions to become an opera singer, inspired by the career of her aunt, Rosetta Pampanini, a noted soprano who sang at many of the world’s great opera houses.  She enrolled at the renowned Conservatorio Santa Cecilia in Rome, where her male teacher was so struck by her physical beauty that without her knowledge he entered her for the 1946 Miss Italy contest, the first to be staged after World War Two. Read more…

________________________________________

Piersanti Mattarella - assassination victim

President’s brother assumed to have been killed by Mafia

The politician Piersanti Mattarella, whose brother, Sergio, is the current President of Italy, was shot dead on this day in 1980.  The 44-year-old Christian Democrat, who was president of the regional government of Sicily, was about to drive to Epiphany mass from his home in Via della Libertà in Palermo when a gunman or gunmen appeared at the side of his car.  Mattarella was shot at point blank range in front of his wife, Irma, their daughter Maria, and his wife’s mother, who were passengers in his Fiat 132. Sergio, at that time a lecturer at the University of Palermo, was called by his nephew, Bernardo, who had not been in the car. He was one of the first on the scene after the shooting and took his brother to hospital. His efforts were in vain; Piersanti was already dead.  Yet the identity of his killers was never established.  Read more…


Adriano Celentano – singer and actor

Italy’s biggest-selling recording artist of all time

The pop singer and movie actor Adriano Celentano, who is estimated to have sold in the region of 200 million records in a career spanning 60 years, was born on this day in 1938 in Milan.  One of the most influential figures in Italian pop culture, Celentano enjoys such enduring popularity that when he gave his first live performance for 18 years at the Arena di Verona in 2012, screened on the Canale 5 television channel, it attracted an audience of more than nine million.  He has recorded more than 40 albums, among which, Tutti le migliori (All The Best) reviving his collaboration with another veteran Italian star, Mina, was released in 2017 and included new material.  Celentano’s biggest individual hits include Stai lontana di me (Stay away from me, 1962), Si è spento il sole (The sun has gone out, 1962), Pregherò (I will pray, 1962) and Il ragazzo della via Gluck (The boy from Gluck Street, 1966). Read more…

________________________________________

Giuseppe Sammartini – oboe player and composer

Musician could make oboe sound like the human voice

Giuseppe Sammartini, a brilliant oboist and composer during the late Baroque and early classical era, was born on this day in 1695 in Milan.  The musician - named Giuseppe Francesco Gaspare Melchiorre Baldassare Sammartini in full - spent many years living and working in London, where he was hailed as ‘the greatest oboist the world had ever known.’ He also worked as a music master for Frederick, Prince of Wales and his wife Augusta, when Frederick was heir to the British throne. Frederick was the eldest son of King George II, but he died before his father. Frederick’s own eldest son later became King George III.  Giuseppe’s younger brother, Giovanni Battista Sammartini, also became a well-known composer and oboe player. The brothers had both been given oboe lessons by their French father, Alexis Saint-Martin.  Read more…

______________________________________

Befana - Italy’s January 6 tradition

A good witch who traditionally sweeps away problems

Children in Italy will be waking up on this day hoping to find that Befana has left them some presents while they have been sleeping.  Although Christmas is almost over, the eve of January 6 is when a kind witch is supposed to visit the good children in Italy and leave them presents.  Traditionally, children who have been naughty are supposed to receive only a lump of coal and those who have been stupid are supposed to receive only a carrot.  But in reality, many children throughout Italy will expect good presents from Befana today.  Befana is also sometimes referred to as La Vecchia (the old woman) and La Strega (the witch). But she is supposed to be a similar character to Saint Nicholas or Santa Claus.  It is believed her name derives from La Festa dell’Epifania (the feast of the Epiphany).  Befana is usually portrayed in illustrations as an old lady riding a broomstick. Read more…

____________________________________

Book of the Day: Modern Italy: A Political History, by Denis Mack Smith

With Count Camillo Cavour's proclamation of a united Italian kingdom in 1861, the history of modern Italy began. But for this country, once at the centre of western culture and now promising to become a prosperous, liberal new European power, this late entry to nationhood and rapid reach for influence would bring frequent crises. In the decades following the Risorgimento, Italy lurched from liberal oligarchy to fascist dictatorship, through civil war to a new democratic regime still riddled with corruption and instability. First published in 1958 as 'Italy: A Modern History', Denis Mack Smith's classic work has been fully revised and updated, providing a new and penetrating analysis of the country's development from 1945 to the present. Stylish, clearly written, deeply informed, and often controversial, Modern Italy: A Political History remains the definitive account.

Denis Mack Smith was an English historian who specialised in the history of Italy from the Risorgimento onwards. He is best known for his biographies of Garibaldi, Cavour and Mussolini, and for his single-volume Modern Italy: A Political History. He was granted Italy's highest civilian honour - Commendatore of the Italian Order of Merit - in 1996.

Buy from Amazon


Home


5 January 2026

5 January

NEW - Giuseppe Gibilisco - pole vaulter

World champion who later faced doping ban

Italy’s most successful pole vaulter, the Sicilian Giuseppe Gibilisco, was born on this day in 1979 in Siracusa (Syracuse), the historic city in the southeast of the island.  Generally known as Peppe, Gibilisco won the gold medal at the 2003 World championships in Paris and followed this with a bronze at the 2004 Athens Olympics.  His personal best of 5.90m (19ft 4ins), which clinched gold in Paris, remains the Italian record.  Before Gibilisco, only two Italian pole vaulters had won major international medals - Aldo Righi, who took the bronze at the 1969 European championships, and Renato Dionisi, bronze medallist at the 1971 European championships and European indoor champion in 1973. Later in his competitive career, Gibilisco changed to an entirely different athletic discipline, taking up bobsleigh. Read more… 

_______________________________________

Giuseppe Impastato - anti-Mafia activist

Son of mafioso was murdered for speaking out

Giuseppe Impastato, a political activist who was murdered by the Sicilian Mafia in 1978, was born on this day in 1948 in Cinisi, a coastal resort 36km (22 miles) west of Palermo which is now home to the city's Punta Raisi airport.  Also known as Peppino, Impastato was born into a Mafia family.  His father, Luigi, had been considered a significant enough figure in the criminal organisation to be sent into internal exile during the Fascist crackdown of the 1920s and was a close friend of the local Mafia boss, Gaetano Badalamenti.  Impastato had already begun to take an interest in left-wing political ideology when his uncle, Cesare Manzella, was blown up by a car bomb in 1963, the victim of a contract killing.  The murder had a profound effect on Impastato, then only 15, who denounced all his father stood for and left home.  Read more…

_________________________________________

Umberto Eco – novelist and semiotician

Prolific author became fascinated with signs and symbols

Academic and writer Umberto Eco was born on this day in 1932 in Alessandria in Piedmont.  Eco, who died in 2016, was best known for his mystery novel, The Name of the Rose - Il Nome della Rosa, which was first published in Italian in 1980, but he was also a respected expert on semiotics, the branch of linguistics concerned with signs and symbols.  Eco studied medieval literature and philosophy at the University of Turin and after graduating worked in television as well returning to lecture at the University of Turin. He was a visiting professor at a number of American universities. As well as producing fiction, he published books on medieval aesthetics, literary criticism, media culture, anthropology and philosophy. He also helped to found an important new approach in contemporary semiotics and to launch a journal on semiotics.  Read more…


Severino Gazzelloni - flautist

Lead player with Rai orchestra considered a great of Italian music

The flautist Severino Gazzelloni, who for 30 years was the principal player of his instrument in the prestigious Rai National Symphony Orchestra but who had a repertoire that extended well beyond orchestral classical music, was born on this day in 1919 in Roccasecca, a town perched on a hillside in southern Lazio, about 130km (81 miles) south of Rome.  He was known for his versatility. In addition to his proficiency in classical flute pieces, Gazzelloni also excelled in jazz and 20th century avant-garde music. As such, many musicians and aficionados regard him as one of the finest flute players of all time.  Gazzelloni also taught others to master the flute. His notable pupils included the American jazz saxophonist Eric Dolphy and the Dutch classical flautist Abbie de Quant.  The son of a tailor in Roccasecca, Gazzelloni grew up in modest circumstances. Read more…

________________________________________

Dr Michele Navarra – physician and Mafia boss

Hospital doctor who headed Corleone clan

Michele Navarra, an extraordinary figure who became the leading physician in his home town of Corleone while simultaneously heading up one of the most notorious clans in the history of the Sicilian Mafia, was born on this day in 1905.  Dr Navarra was a graduate of the University of Palermo, where he studied engineering before turning to medicine, and became a captain in the Royal Italian Army. He could have had a comfortable and worthy career as a doctor.  Yet he developed a fascination with stories about his uncle, Angelo Gagliano, who until he was murdered when Navarra was a boy of about 10 years old had been a member of the Fratuzzi – the Brothers – a criminal organisation who leased agricultural land from absentee landlords and then sublet it to peasant farmers at exorbitant rates, enforcing their authority by extorting protection money.  Read more…

_________________________________________

Book of the Day: Sport Italia: The Italian Love Affair with Sport, by Simon Martin

The Italian love affair with sport is passionate, voracious, all-consuming. It provides a backdrop and a narrative to almost every aspect of daily life in Italy and the distinctively pink-coloured newspaper La Gazzetta dello Sport is devoured by almost half a million readers every day. Narrating the history of modern Italy through its national passion for sport, Sport Italia provides a completely new portrayal of one of Europe's most alluring, yet contradictory countries, tracing the highs and lows of Italy's sporting history from its Liberal pioneers through Mussolini and the 1960 Rome Olympics to the Berlusconi era. By interweaving essential themes of Italian history, its politics, society and economy with a history of the passion for sport in the country, Simon Martin tells the story of modern Italy in a fresh and colourful way, illustrating how and why sport is so strongly embedded in both politics and society, and how it is inseparable from the concept of Italian national identity. Showing sport's capacity to both unite and deeply divide, this fascinating book reveals a novel and previously unexplored element of the history of a society and its state.  Winner of the Lord Aberdare Literary Prize for Sports History in 2012.

Simon Martin is the author of Football and Fascism: The National Game under Mussolini, which won the Lord Aberdare Prize in 2004. He holds a PhD from University College, London and has taught there, as well as at the University of Hertfordshire, the University of California, Rome programme, the New York University in Florence and the American University of Rome.

Buy from Amazon


Home


Giuseppe Gibilisco - pole vaulter

World champion who later faced doping ban

Giuseppe Gibilisco, world champion in 2003, is the most successful pole vaulter in Italian history
Giuseppe Gibilisco, world champion in 2003, is
the most successful pole vaulter in Italian history
Italy’s most successful pole vaulter, the Sicilian Giuseppe Gibilisco, was born on this day in 1979 in Siracusa (Syracuse), the historic city in the southeast of the island.

Generally known as Peppe, Gibilisco won the gold medal at the 2003 World championships in Paris and followed this with a bronze at the 2004 Athens Olympics.

His personal best of 5.90m (19ft 4ins), which clinched gold in Paris, remains the Italian record.

Before Gibilisco, only two Italian pole vaulters had won major international medals - Aldo Righi, who took the bronze at the 1969 European championships, and Renato Dionisi, bronze medallist at the 1971 European championships and European indoor champion in 1973.

Later in his competitive career, Gibilisco changed to an entirely different athletic discipline, taking up bobsleigh, in which he became accomplished enough to compete in the 2017 World championship as brakeman in the four-man event, although without winning a medal.

Since retiring from sport, Gibilisco has become prominent in local politics in his home town, recently appointed chief of staff for the city of Siracusa, following a successful stint as councillor for sport and municipal police.


In 2024, he won many admirers for his frank confession that he suffered depression and contemplated suicide after being handed a two-year ban from competition in 2007 over his links to the disgraced former sports doctor Carlo Santuccione, who was banned for life over his alleged role in supplying athletes with the performance-enhancing hormone, EPO. 

Gibilisco fought successfully to have his suspension overturned but his career suffered nonetheless
Gibilisco fought successfully to have his suspension
overturned but his career suffered nonetheless
Gibilisco’s suspension was overturned on appeal on the basis that he had never tested positive for any banned substance. But the process took a toll on him mentally and financially, not only costing him vital sponsorship deals but requiring him to sell personal possessions, including his car, to pay for a defence lawyer.

In an interview with sports daily Gazzetta dello Sport, Gibilisco - an officer with the Guardia di Finanza law enforcement agency - admitted that at one stage, with only 43 euros in his bank account, he held his service pistol in his hand and thought about using it on himself.

In another part of the interview, he reflected that had it not been for his prowess in sport he would probably have been drawn into a life on the other side of the law, having followed “a bad path” as an adolescent. The ban made him feel that sport, having perhaps saved his life then, was now taking it away.

An outstanding pole vaulter as a junior, Gibilisco was Italian Under-18 champion as a 16-year-old, prompting his coach in Siracusa, Silvio Lentini, to encourage him to leave home a year later.

Lentini thought he would benefit from basing himself at Formia, the resort on the Lazio coastline 90km (54 miles) north of Naples, in order to work with Vitaliy Petrov, the Ukrainian who had coached his countryman, Sergey Bubka, to Olympic gold at Seoul in 1988 as well as six consecutive world pole vault titles.

Gibilisco is an influential figure in his home city of Siracusa
Gibilisco is an influential figure
in his home city of Siracusa
Within a year of coming under Petrov’s wing, Gibilisco had won a bronze at the World junior championships, before making his Olympic debut in Sydney in 2000, where he finished tenth but improved his personal best to 5.70m.

An injury in 2001 set him back, but he returned to form strongly at the start of the 2003 season. He broke the Italian national record twice in the space of half an hour, clearing 5.77m and then 5.82m in finishing second at the Rome Golden League meeting in July, celebrating with a lap of the Stadio Olimpico on the Honda motorcycle on which Valentino Rossi had won his own world title.  

At the World championships in Paris a month later, he failed his first two tries at 5.75m, but gambled with his remaining attempt by trying 5.80m, which he successfully cleared. 

Inspired by that success, he went on to vault 5.85m and then 5.90m, which rivals Okkert Brits, the South African, and Patrick Kristiansson, from Sweden, were unable to match.

Gibilisco’s success continued with bronze at the Athens Olympics in 2004 and a victory in his event at the 2005 European Cup in Florence.

The doping ban and his subsequent fight to have it nullified cost him almost a year out of competition arguably at the peak of his career, after which he was unable to reach the level of his pre-suspension form, although he did win gold at the Mediterranean Games in 2013, before retiring from competition the following year.

After taking part in the 2016-17 bobsleigh season, he retired definitively from competitive sport, continuing his career with the Guardia di Finanza and entering local politics in 2023. 

He was appointed head of the cabinet in the Siracusa municipal authority in November 2025, having previously supervised a number of successful projects to improve sports facilities in the city in his former role.

Siracusa's Duomo, on the island of Ortigia, is  a fine example of Sicilian Baroque architecture
Siracusa's Duomo, on the island of Ortigia, is 
a fine example of Sicilian Baroque architecture 
Travel tip:

Siracusa, often called Syracuse, is a city on the Ionian coast of Sicily. It is steeped in history, being particularly well known for its ancient ruins, notably the Neapolis Archaeological Park, which comprises the Roman Amphitheatre, the Teatro Greco and the Orecchio di Dionisio, a limestone cave shaped like a human ear. The city is the birthplace of the Ancient Greek polymath, Archimedes, born in 287BC. The fourth largest city in Sicily, after Palermo, Catania and Messina with a population of 115,636, it was the island’s capital for several hundred years until the Muslim invasion of 878. During the Spanish era, it was transformed into a fortress, with its historic centre, on the island of Ortigia, rebuilt in the style that became known as Sicilian Baroque, following the devastating earthquake of 1693 that destroyed much of the southeast of the island. The best examples can be found around the Piazza Duomo, notably the Duomo itself, with a facade by Andrea Palma, whose combination of columns, niches, and statues is a classic example of Sicilian Baroque exuberance. Its neighbours include the Chiesa di Santa Lucia alla Badia and the Palazzo Beneventano del Bosco.  Siracusa is also home to Caravaggio’s painting, the Burial of St Lucy - Seppellimento di Santa Lucia - which can still be seen, free of charge, in the Santuario di Santa Lucia al Sepolcro, in the more modern part of the city.

Stay in Siracusa with Expedia

The Tomba di Cicerone is one of the attractions for visitors to Formia
The Tomba di Cicerone is one of the
attractions for visitors to Formia 
Travel tip:

Situated on the Tyrrhenian Sea coast between Rome and Naples, in Lazio but close to the border with Campania, Formia is a port town that was a popular resort with the wealthy of Imperial Rome. One of its major attractions is the Tomba di Cicerone, a Roman mausoleum just outside the town which is said to have been built for the great Roman orator Cicero, who was reportedly assassinated on the Appian Way outside the town in 43 BC. Formia is also home to the Cisternone Romano, an underground reservoir built by the Romans. testament to Roman ingenuity.  Other remains include the towers of the forts of Mola and Castellone, once two neighbouring villages. The generally modern feel of much of the resort and harbour today is down to its necessary reconstruction following a bombardment suffered during the Second World War, when Formia was a point on the German army’s Gustav Line and suffered heavy damage during the Allied invasion.

Find accommodation in Formia with Hotels.com

More reading:

Sara Simeoni, Italy’s gold-medal winning Olympic high jumper

Eugenio Monti, double Olympic bobsleigh champion

Emilio Lunghi, winner of Italy’s historic first Olympic medal

Also on this day:

1905: The birth of physician and Mafia boss Michele Navarra

1919: The birth of flautist Severino Gazzelloni

1948: The birth of anti-Mafia activist Giuseppe Impastato

2016: The death of novelist and semiotician Umberto Eco


Home