NEW - Quintino Sella - economist, scientist and mountaineer
Statesman who laid financial foundations for unified Italy
Quintino Sella, a politician and economist widely credited with building the foundations for economic stability in post-unification Italy, was born on this day in 1827 in Mosso, a small town in the province of Biella in northern Piedmont. Sella served as Minister of Finance under three governments between 1862 and 1872. The newly unified Italy inherited an enormous budget deficit from the collection of disparate regional states that preceded it, but Sella was instrumental in steering the country toward fiscal stability by enforcing rigorous public spending cuts, securing early land tax payments, and pushing through the controversial "grist tax" - a tax on flour - to balance the national budget. He also influenced the shape of the new nation by persuading the king, Victor Emmanuel II, to seize control of Rome in 1870 when the French garrison that was protecting the independence of the city under Pope Pius IX was withdrawn. Read more…
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Gian Carlo Menotti - composer and librettist
Founded Spoleto festival after finding fame in the United States
Gian Carlo Menotti, who wrote more than two dozen operas and founded the annual Festival dei Due Mondi in Spoleto, was born on this day in 1911 in the village of Cadegliano-Viconago, on the Swiss-Italian border. A prodigiously talented child who began to write music at the age of seven, Menotti was sent to study at the Curtis Institute of Music in Philadelphia as a teenager and settled in the United States. For many years he was the partner - professionally and in life - of the brilliant American composer, Samuel Barber. Menotti wrote the libretto for Barber’s 1957 work Vanessa, which is regarded as one of the 20th century’s finest operas. Two of Menotti’s own operas, The Consul (1950) and The Saint of Bleecker Street (1955), won Pulitzer Prizes. He created the Festival dei Due Mondi in 1957 out of a desire to make his mark in the country of his birth. Read more…
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Giacomo Barozzi da Vignola - architect
Legacy of beautiful Renaissance buildings throughout Italy
One of the great architects of the 16th century, Giacomo Barozzi da Vignola, died on this day in 1573 in Rome. Often referred to simply as Vignola, the architect left the world with a wealth of beautiful buildings and two acknowledged masterpieces, the Villa Farnese at Caprarola and the Church of the Gesù in Rome. Along with Andrea Palladio and Sebastiano Serlio, Vignola was responsible for spreading the style of the Italian Renaissance throughout Europe. He was born at Vignola near Modena in Emilia-Romagna in 1507. He began his career as an architect in Bologna and then went to Rome to draw Roman temples. He was invited to Fontainebleau to work for King Francois I, where it is believed he first met the Bolognese architect, Serlio. Back in Italy he designed the Palazzo Bocchi in Bologna and then moved to Rome to work for Pope Julius III. Read more…
Michele Amari – politician, historian, and writer
Scholarly revolutionary became a leading translator of mediaeval Arabic
Patriotic Sicilian revolutionary Michele Amari was born on this day in 1806 in Palermo. Amari published a history in 1842 of the War of the Sicilian Vespers, was a minister in the Sicilian revolutionary government in 1848, and was part of Garibaldi’s revolutionary cabinet in Sicily in 1860. He embraced the cause of Italian unification and helped prepare Sicilians for the annexation of Sicily by the Kingdom of Sardinia. During his later years, he served as a Senator of the new Kingdom of Italy. A grandson of the third Count Amari of Sant’Adriano, he grew up in an aristocratic household. The title had been acquired in 1772 by one of his ancestors, who had held the hereditary office of the administrator of the royal tobacco monopoly. Michele Amari lived with his grandfather in the centre of Palermo after his father, Ferdinando, had financial problems caused by his gambling. Read more…
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Vittorio De Sica - film director
Oscar-winning maestro behind 1948 classic Bicycle Thieves
Vittorio De Sica, the director whose 1948 film Bicycle Thieves is regarded still as one of the greatest movies of all time, was born on this day in 1901 in Sora in Lazio. Bicycle Thieves, a story set in the poverty of post-War Rome, was a masterpiece of Italian neorealism, the genre of which the major figures, in addition to De Sica, were Luchino Visconti, Roberto Rossellini and Giuseppe de Santis and, to a smaller degree, Federico Fellini. The movie was one of four that landed Academy Awards for De Sica. Another neorealist movie, Shoeshine (1948), won an honorary Oscar, while Bicycle Thieves won a special award as an outstanding foreign language film before the Best Foreign Language Film category was introduced. De Sica would later win Oscars in that section for Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow (1963) and The Garden of the Finzi-Continis (1970). Read more…
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1990 World Cup - Italy’s consolation prize
Azzurri beat England for third place
Italy beat England 2-1 in Bari to claim third place in the World Cup finals, of which they were the host nation, on July 7, 1990. It was a small consolation for the team, managed by Azeglio Vicini, who had played some of the best football of all the competing nations to reach the semi-finals, only to be held to a 1-1 draw by Argentina in Naples and then lose the match on a penalty shoot-out. Their heartbreak mirrored that suffered by England, who had also suffered a defeat on penalties in their semi-final against West Germany in Turin. Many neutrals believed that Italy and England would have been more worthy finalists, particularly in retrospect after West Germany had beaten Argentina by a penalty five minutes from the end of 90 minutes in a match of cynical fouls and attritional football that is seen as the poorest World Cup final in the competition’s history. Read more…
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Book of the Day: The Force of Destiny: A History of Italy Since 1796, by Christopher Duggan
The greatness of Italy's culture and way of life have had a powerful attraction for many generations of visitors. This has created an overwhelming sense that Italy is a fundamentally benign and easy going country. The Force Of Destiny, Christopher Duggan's immensely enjoyable book, lays waste to this idea. While sharing everyone's enthusiasm for Italy as a place, he strongly distinguishes this from its political role over the past two centuries, which has been both vicious and ruinous for Europe as a whole. Verdi's great opera, The Force Of Destiny, one of the key works celebrating Italy's wish for independence, also points to Italy's fundamental problem. Throughout the 19th century Italy struggled to unite under one rule all Italian speakers, throwing aside a multitude of corrupt old rulers and colonial occupiers. Through all these struggles, the politicians of Italy felt impelled by a 'force of destiny' hideously at odds with Italian reality. After immense struggle and with endless sacrifices, a united Italy was at last created which proved to be as impoverished, backward and marginal as it had been before. The resentments this created fed into Italy's overwhelmingly destructive role, as colonial predator, as a faithless and ruinous element in the First World War: these resentments in turn led to the rise of Mussolini who, far more than Hitler, wrecked the European order in the '20s and '30s. It was only the humiliation and disaster of the Second World War that, at last, made Italy into a reasonably 'normal' and constructive country.The late Christopher Duggan was a world-leading historian of Modern Italy. Professor of Italian History at the University of Reading when he died in 2015, his books include A Concise History of Italy, Francesco Crispi: 1818-1901 and Fascist Voices: Mussolini’s Italy 1919-1945.


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