Amintore Fanfani - politician
Former prime minister who was Kennedy's inspiration
Amintore Fanfani, a long-serving politician who was six times Italy’s prime minister and had a vision of an Italy run by a powerful centre-left alliance of his own Christian Democrat party and the socialists, was born on this day in 1908. A controversial figure in that he began his political career as a member of Mussolini’s National Fascist Party, he went on to be regarded as a formidable force in Italian politics, in which he was active for more than 60 years. Throughout his career, or at least the post-War part of it, he was committed to finding a “third way” between collective communism and the free market and became a major influence on centre-left politicians not only in Italy. The American president John F Kennedy told colleagues that it was reading Fanfani’s book, Catholicism, Protestantism and Capitalism, that persuaded him to dedicate his life to politics. Read more…
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Beatrice Cenci - Roman heroine
Aristocrat's daughter executed for murder of abusive father
Beatrice Cenci, the daughter of an aristocrat whose execution for the murder of her abusive father became a legendary story in Roman history, was born on this day in 1577 in the family's palace off the Via Arenula, not far from what is now the Ponte Garibaldi in the Regola district. Cenci's short life ended with her beheading in front of Castel Sant'Angelo on 11 September, 1599, with most of the onlookers convinced that an injustice had taken place. Her father, Francesco Cenci, had a reputation for violent and immoral behaviour that was widely known and had often been found guilty of serious crimes in the papal court. Yet where ordinary citizens were routinely sentenced to death for similar or even lesser offences, he was invariably given only a short prison sentence and frequently bought his way out of jail. Read more…
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Ugo Foscolo – poet
Revolutionary who expressed his feelings in verse
Writer Ugo Foscolo was born Niccolò Foscolo on this day in 1778 on the island of Zakynthos, now part of Greece, but then part of the Republic of Venice. Foscolo went on to become a revolutionary who wrote poetry and novels that reflected the feelings of many Italians during the turbulent years of the French revolution, the Napoleonic Wars and Austrian rule. His talent was probably not sufficiently appreciated until after his death, but he is particularly remembered for his book of poems, Dei Sepolcri - Of the Sepulchres. After the death of his father, Andrea, who was an impoverished Venetian nobleman, the family moved back to live in Venice. Foscolo went on to study at Padova University and by 1797 had begun to write under the name Ugo Foscolo. While at University he took part in political discussions about the future of Venice and was shocked when Napoleon handed it over to the Austrians in 1797. Read more…
1783 Calabria Earthquakes
Series of powerful tremors killed at least 35,000
The Calabrian peninsula of southwest Italy was waking up to the unfolding horror of a sequence of five deadly earthquakes on this day in 1783. A major tremor destroyed the town of Oppido Mamertina in what is now the province of Reggio Calabria on 5 February, killing almost 1,200 residents, followed by another just after midnight on 6 February, setting off a tsunami that claimed still more lives. The effects of the first quake - which has been classified at an estimated 7.0 on the Richter magnitude scale - were felt over a much wider area, however, with countless land and rockslides. The whole of the island of Sicily is said to have shaken. In total, it is thought some 180 villages were effectively destroyed, with far more buildings reduced to rubble than remained standing. The city of Messina, on the northeast tip of Sicily, was seriously hit and many casualties were reported there also. Read more…
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Girolamo Benivieni – poet
Follower of Plato, Dante and Savonarola
The poet Girolamo Benivieni, who turned Marsilio Ficino’s translation of Plato’s Symposium into verse, was born on this day in 1453 in Florence. His poem was to influence other writers during the Renaissance and some who came later. As a member of the Florentine Medici circle, Benivieni was a friend of the Renaissance humanists Ficino, Giovanni Pico della Mirandola and Angelo Poliziano, commonly known as Politian. Ficino translated The Symposium in about 1474 and wrote his own commentary on the work. Benivieni summarised Ficino’s work in the poem De lo amore celeste - Of Heavenly Love. These verses then became the subject of a commentary by Pico della Mirandola. As a result of all these works, Platonism reached such writers as Pietro Bembo and Baldassare Castiglione and the English poet, Edmund Spencer. Read more…
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Book of the Day: Catholicism, Protestantism, and Capitalism, by Amintore Fanfani
Amintore Fanfani belonged to the long tradition of Italian Social Catholicism, a movement shaped by papal social teaching and concerned with the moral and social consequences of modern capitalism. This tradition questioned the moral individualism of capitalist society, emphasised the social duties of economic life, and sought to articulate a Catholic alternative to both laissez‑faire capitalism and Marxist socialism. In Catholicism, Protestantism, and Capitalism - originally published in Italy in 1935 as Cattolicesimo e protestantesimo nella formazione storica del capitalismo - Fanfani set out to examine: the essence of capitalism; how religious doctrines shaped economic behaviour, and why Protestant regions historically aligned more closely with capitalist development; and why Catholic teaching traditionally resisted certain capitalist assumptions, especially regarding profit, usury and moral obligations. He argued that capitalism was not simply an economic system but a mentality - a way of viewing work, profit, and society - that Catholic doctrine historically discouraged, emphasising communal welfare and moral limits on economic activity.Amintore Fanfani was an Italian politician and statesman who served as 32nd prime minister of Italy for five separate terms. He was one of the best-known Italian politicians after the Second World War.

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