NEW - Gaetano Cozzi – historian and writer
Professor pursued academic research despite his disability
Historian, professor, and writer Gaetano Cozzi, who became an expert on the history of Venice and taught at both Venice and Padua Universities, was born on this day in 1922 in Zero Branco in the province of Treviso in the Veneto. Although confined to a wheelchair for most of his adult life, Cozzi became famous internationally because of his research into the life of writer and statesman, Paolo Sarpi, and his own writing about the relationship between law and society in Italy. Cozzi grew up in Legnano, a municipality of Milan, and went to military school. At the age of 20, he became a second lieutenant in the Alpine troops. While attending a training school in Parma he was kicked by a horse and suffered a leg wound. A vaccine injected into him to treat the wound caused a serious infection and he was left paralysed in his lower limbs. Read more…
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Fausto Coppi - cycling great
Multiple title-winner who died tragically young
The cycling champion Fausto Coppi, who won the Giro d’Italia five times and the Tour de France twice as well as numerous other races, was born on this day in 1919 in Castellania, a village in Piedmont about 37km (23 miles) southeast of Alessandria. Although hugely successful and lauded for his talent and mental strength, Coppi was a controversial character. His rivalry with his fellow Italian rider Gino Bartali divided the nation, while he offended many in what was still a socially conservative country by abandoning his wife to live with another woman. Fausto, who openly admitted to taking performance enhancing drugs, which were then legal, died in 1960 at the age of just 40 following a trip to Burkina Faso in West Africa. The cause of death officially was malaria but a story has circulated in more recent years that he was poisoned in an act of revenge. Read more…
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Ettore Bugatti - car designer
Name that became a trademark for luxury and high performance
The car designer and manufacturer Ettore Bugatti was born in Milan on this day in 1881. The company Bugatti launched in 1909 became associated with luxury and exclusivity while also enjoying considerable success in motor racing. When the glamorous Principality of Monaco launched its famous Grand Prix in 1929, the inaugural race was won by a Bugatti. Although Bugatti cars were manufactured for the most part in a factory in Alsace, on the border of France and Germany, their stylish designs reflected the company’s Italian heritage and Bugatti cars are seen as part of Italy’s traditional success in producing desirable high-performance cars. The story of Bugatti as a purely family business ended in 1956, and the company closed altogether in 1963. The name did not die, however, and Bugatti cars are currently produced by Volkswagen. Read more…
The first free public school in Europe
Frascati sees groundbreaking development in education
The first free public school in Europe opened its doors to children on this day in 1616 in Frascati, a town in Lazio just a few kilometres from Rome. The school was founded by a Spanish Catholic priest, José de Calasanz, who was originally from Aragon but who moved to Rome in 1592 at the age of 35. Calasanz had a passion for education and in particular made it his life’s work to set up schools for children who did not have the benefit of coming from wealthy families. Previously, schools existed only for the children of noble families or for those studying for the priesthood. Calasanz established Pious Schools and a religious order responsible for running them, who became known as the Piarists. Calasanz had been a priest for 10 years when he decided to go to Rome in the hope of furthering his ecclesiastical career. Read more…
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Umberto II - last King of Italy
Brief reign was followed by long exile
The last King of Italy, Umberto II, was born on this day in 1904 in Racconigi in Piedmont. Umberto reigned over Italy from 9 May 1946 to 12 June 1946 and was therefore nicknamed the May King - Re di Maggio. When Umberto Nicola Tommaso Giovanni Maria di Savoia was born at the Castle of Racconigi he became heir apparent to the Italian throne as the only son and third child of King Victor Emmanuel III of Italy and his wife Queen Elena of Montenegro. He was given the title of Prince of Piedmont. Umberto married Marie Jose of Belgium in Rome in 1930 and they had four children. He became de facto head of state in 1944 when his father, Victor Emmanuel III, transferred his powers to him in an attempt to repair the monarchy’s image after the fall of Benito Mussolini’s regime. Victor Emmanuel III abdicated his throne in favour of Umberto in 1946. Read more…
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Book of the Day: Paolo Sarpi: Between Renaissance and Enlightenment, by David Wootton
Paolo Sarpi (1552–1623) is remembered as the defender of Venice against the Papal Interdict of 1606 and as the first, and greatest, historian of the Counter-Reformation. The sources of his hostility to clerical authority have always been a matter of controversy; many contemporaries claimed that Sarpi was an 'atheist', others that he was in secret a Protestant. David Wootton argues that Sarpi's public opinions must be assessed in the light of the views expressed in his private papers. He seeks to reinterpret Sarpi's life work as being the expression, not of a love of intellectual liberty, nor of a commitment to Protestantism, but of a carefully thought out hostility to doctrinal religion. Paolo Sarpi: Between Renaissance and Enlightenment serves to cast new light on the man and his work, as well as on the intellectual history of his age. While some historians have sought to deny the existence of systematic unbelief in Sarpi's day, others have found evidence of a radical, popular tradition. This book seeks, through its account of Sarpi's beliefs, to penetrate the hypocrisy which contemporaries agreed characterised the age, and to lay the foundations for a new understanding of the intellectual origins of unbelief.David Wootton is the author of Power, Pleasure, and Profit, of The Invention of Science, of Galileo: Watcher of the Skies, and of Bad Medicine: Doctors Doing Harm Since Hippocrates.



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