8 September 2025

8 September

Ludovico Ariosto – poet

Writer led the way with spirituality and humanity

The man who coined the term humanism - umanesimo - Ludovico Ariosto, was born on this day in 1474 in Reggio Emilia.  He became famous after his epic poem, Orlando furioso, was published in 1516.  It is now regarded by critics as the finest expression of the literary tendencies and spiritual attitudes of the Italian Renaissance.  Ariosto chose to focus on the strengths and potential of humanity, rather than upon its role as subordinate to God, which led to the Renaissance humanism movement.  His family moved to live in Ferrara when he was just ten years old and the poet has said he always felt ferrarese.  His father insisted he studied law but afterwards Ariosto followed his natural instincts to write poetry.  When his father died in 1500, Ariosto had to provide for his four brothers and five sisters and took the post of commander of the Citadel of Canossa. Read more…

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Michelangelo’s David

Masterpiece emerged from an abandoned block of marble

A huge statue of the Biblical hero David, sculpted by Michelangelo, was unveiled in Piazza della Signoria in Florence on this day in 1504.  The 5.17m (17ft) high statue was placed outside the Palazzo Vecchio, the seat of civic government in Florence. The sculpture symbolised the defence of civil liberties in the republic of Florence, which at the time was an independent city state threatened on all sides by rival states. It was thought that the eyes of David were looking towards Rome and seemed to have a warning glare.  David is regarded as one of Michelangelo’s masterpieces. He was sculpted from a block of Carrara marble originally designated to be one of a series of prophets for Florence Cathedral. The marble was worked on by two artists before being abandoned and left exposed to the elements in the yard of the Cathedral workshop.  Read more…

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Matteo Strukul – writer

Author is published worldwide in 20 languages

Writer and journalist Matteo Strukul, best known for his best-selling historical novels about the powerful Medici family, was born on this day in 1973 in Padua (Padova) in the Veneto region.  Strukul’s first novel was a dark thriller set in the Veneto, which was published in 2011 in Italian as La ballata di Mila. The novel was translated into English and issued in 2014 as The Ballad of Mila.  He then wrote four historical novels set in Florence between the 15th and 17th centuries following the rise of the house of Medici, which all became best sellers in Italy and have sold more than 500,000 copies worldwide. The first novel, I Medici, una dinastia al potere, was awarded the Premio Bancarella in 2017. This prestigious award has been won in the past by Ernest Hemingway, Boris Pasternak, Umberto Eco, and Ken Follett.  Read more…

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Magda Olivero - soprano

Singer who performed into her 80s and lived to 104

The opera singer Magda Olivero, who became known as the last verismo soprano, died on this day in 2014. She was almost halfway through her 105th year, having been born in 1910.  Olivero became associated with the works among others of Francesco Cilea, Pietro Mascagni, Umberto Giordano and Franco Alfano, all of whom she actually worked with in person, her longevity providing a 21st century link with the world of 19th century Italian opera. She missed the chance to know and work with Giacomo Puccini only narrowly, the composer passing away at the age of 66 when Olivero was 14.  Born in Saluzzo in Piedmont, Olivero made her operatic debut eight years after Puccini’s death in a radio production in Turin in 1932. She gave her last stage performance 49 years later in 1981, although even that was not the end of her career.  Read more…

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Book of the Day: Orlando Furioso, Part One, by Ludovico Ariosto. Introduced and translated by Barbara Reynolds

One of the greatest epic poems of the Italian Renaissance, Orlando Furioso is an intricate tale of love and enchantment set at the time of the Holy Roman Emperor Charlemagne's conflict with the Moors. When Count Orlando returns to France from Cathay with the captive Angelica as his prize, her beauty soon inspires his cousin Rinaldo to challenge him to a duel - but during their battle, Angelica escapes from both knights on horseback and begins a desperate quest for freedom. This dazzling kaleidoscope of fabulous adventures, sorcery and romance has inspired generations of writers - including Spenser and Shakespeare - with its depiction of a fantastical world of magic rings, flying horses, sinister wizardry and barbaric splendour. Part Two is available from the same publisher.

Barbara Reynolds was an English scholar of Italian Studies, lexicographer and translator. She wrote and edited several books concerning Dorothy L Sayers and was president of the Dorothy LSayers Society. She died at the age of 100 in April 2015.

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7 September 2025

7 September

NEW - Guido Bentivoglio - cardinal, historian and diplomat

17th century ambassador who set standards for modern statecraft

The cardinal, archbishop and papal nuncio Guido Bentivoglio, an important figure in the development of modern international diplomacy, died on this day in 1644 in Rome.  Born in 1579 in Ferrara, Bentivoglio’s life was notable for having helped reset the Vatican’s approach to international relations, both through his astute and pragmatic methodology and his influential writings. His most notable written work, Della Guerra di Fiandra, is regarded as setting a new standard for historical writing. Published between 1632 and 1639, it documented in great detail what Bentivoglio  had learned from his eight years as papal nuncio in Flanders after decades of civil war between Habsburg rebels and the region’s Spanish rulers.  Bentivoglio’s blend of political acumen and ecclesiastical authority enabled him to navigate the religious and political tensions of a region divided between Catholic and Protestant powers. Read more… 

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Genoa Cricket and Football Club

Italy's historic first football club

Italy's oldest surviving football club was founded on this day in 1893 in Genoa.  Originally named Genoa Cricket and Athletic Club, it was established by British Consular officials and for a number of years football was a minor activity.  Initially, Italians could not be members.  Football became more its focus after an English maritime doctor, James Spensley, arrived in Genoa in 1897 and organised a match against Football Club Torinese, which had been formed in Turin in 1894. Spensley insisted the club's rules be altered to allow Italians to play.  The match took place in January 1898 and although the attendance was only around 200 spectators, it was deemed a success by those who took part, particularly the Turin side, who won.  After a return match, plans were drawn up to form an Italian Football Federation and to organise a first Italian Championship. Read more… 

Giuseppe Gioachino Belli – poet

Sonnet writer satirised life in 19th century Rome

The poet Giuseppe Gioachino Belli was born on this day in 1791 in Rome and was christened Giuseppe Francesco Antonio Maria Gioachino Raimondi Belli.  He was to become famous for his satirical sonnets written in Romanesco, the dialect of Rome.  After taking a job in Civitavecchia, a coastal town about 70km (44 miles) northwest of Rome, Belli’s father moved the family to live there, but after he died - of either cholera or typhus - his wife returned to Rome with her children and took cheap lodgings in Via del Corso.  Living in poor circumstances, Belli began writing sonnets in Italian at the suggestion of his friend, the poet Francesco Spada.  In 1816, Belli married a woman of means, Maria Conti, and went to live with her in Palazzo Poli, the palace that forms the backdrop to the Trevi Fountain. This gave him the freedom to develop his literary talents. Read more…

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Kidnapping of Pope Boniface VIII

When the Pope was slapped down by a disgruntled landowner

An army, representing King Philip IV of France and the anti-papal Colonna family, entered Anagni in Lazio and captured Pope Boniface VIII inside his own palace on this day in 1303.  The Pope was kept in custody for three days and was physically ill-treated by his captors until the local people rose up against the invaders and rescued him.  Boniface VIII returned to Rome, but he was physically and mentally broken after his ordeal and died a month later.  The Pope had been born Benedetto Caetani in Anagni in 1230. He became Pope Boniface VIII in 1294 after his predecessor abdicated. He organised the first Catholic Jubilee Year to take place in Rome in 1300 and founded Sapienza University in the city in 1303, the year of his death.  But Boniface VIII is mainly remembered for his conflicts with Philip IV of France.  Read more…

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Book of the Day: Galileo, by John L Heilbron

Just over 400 years ago, in 1610, Galileo published the Siderius nuncius, or Starry Messenger, a 'hurried little masterpiece' in John Heilbron's words. Presenting to the world his remarkable observations using the recently invented telescope - of the craters of the moon, and the satellites of Jupiter, observations that forced changes to perceptions of the perfection of the heavens and the centrality of the Earth - the appearance of the little book is regarded as one of the greatest moments in the history of science. It was also a point of change in the life of Galileo himself, propelling him from professor to prophet.  But this is not the biography of a mathematician. Certainly he spent the first half of his career as a professor of mathematics and has been called 'the divine mathematician'. Yet he was no more (or less) a mathematician than he was a musician, artist, writer, philosopher, or gadgeteer. This fresh lively biography of the 'father of science' paints a rounded picture of Galileo, and places him firmly within the rich texture of late Renaissance Florence, Pisa, and Padua, amid debates on the merits of Ariosto and Tasso, and the geometry of Dante's Inferno - debates in which the young Galileo played an active role. Galileo's character and career followed complex paths, moving from the creative but cautious humanist professor to a 'knight errant, quixotic and fearless', with increasing enemies, and leading ultimately and inevitably to a clash with a pope who was a former friend.

John Lewis Heilbron was an American historian of science best known for his work in the history of physics and the history of astronomy. He was Professor of History and Vice-Chancellor Emeritus at the University of California, Berkeley.

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Guido Bentivoglio - cardinal, historian and diplomat

17th century ambassador who set standards for modern statecraft

Cardinal Guido Bentivoglio, as painted in  1623 by the Flemish artist, Anthony van Dyck
Cardinal Guido Bentivoglio, as painted in 
1623 by the Flemish artist, Anthony van Dyck
The cardinal, archbishop and papal nuncio Guido Bentivoglio, an important figure in the development of modern international diplomacy, died on this day in 1644 in Rome.

Born in 1579 in Ferrara, Bentivoglio’s life was notable for having helped reset the Vatican’s approach to international relations, both through his astute and pragmatic methodology and his influential writings.

His most notable written work, Della Guerra di Fiandra, is regarded as setting a new standard for historical writing. Published in multiple volumes between 1632 and 1639, it documented in great detail what Bentivoglio had learned from his eight years as papal nuncio in Flanders after decades of civil war between Habsburg rebels and the region’s Spanish rulers.

Bentivoglio’s blend of political acumen and ecclesiastical authority, enabling him to navigate the religious and political tensions of a region divided between Catholic and Protestant powers, came to the fore during this time.

Della Guerra di Fiandra and his earlier work, Relazioni in tempo delle sue nunziature, provided observations of his terms as papal nuncio in both Flanders and France. They became points of reference for historians and diplomats for many years to come and added considerably to the understanding of European politics.

Ironically, given his reputation for enlightened moderation, Bentivoglio is also remembered as having been a member of the panel of cardinals who in 1633 condemned the scientist Galileo Galilei to be burned at the stake - a sentence later commuted to indefinite house arrest - after the Inquisition had found him guilty of heresy.  


Born on September 4, 1579, Bentivoglio hailed from the Ferrara branch of the influential Bentivoglio family of Bologna, the younger son of the marchese, Cornelio Bentivoglio. His upbringing was steeped in humanist education, preparing him for a life of ecclesiastical service and cultural sophistication.

A Spanish edition of Bentivoglio's seminal work, The War in Flanders
A Spanish edition of Bentivoglio's
seminal work, The War in Flanders

Bentivoglio attended university in Ferrara and Padua, where in 1598 he received a doctorate in both civil and canon law. During his time in Padua, it is thought Bentivoglio attended mathematics lessons in which, somewhat ironically, his tutor was Galileo, who was a professor at the University of Padua between 1592 and 1610. 

After completing his doctorate, Bentivoglio returned to Ferrara, where he met Pope Clement VIII, who was visiting the city. Clement saw in him an individual of enormous potential and asked him to return to Rome with him as his private chamberlain.

Clement VIII died in 1605 but his successor, Pope Paul V, was similarly impressed with Bentivoglio and appointed him titular archbishop of Rhodes in May 1607, despite not having yet received the sacred orders. The appointment was to give him appropriate credentials to be nuncio at the court of the Archdukes Albert and Isabella in the Netherlands, a position to which he was appointed a month later. 

After nine years in Flanders, Bentivoglio was transferred to Paris as nuncio in France, where he witnessed the volatile regency of Marie de’ Medici, the supposed assassination of the powerful Italian-born politician Concino Concini, and the rise of Louis XIII. His reports provided Rome a clear-eyed view of French politics, balancing ecclesiastical interests with diplomatic realism.

In both positions, in Flanders and France, Bentivoglio’s style was marked by restraint, observation, and cultural sensitivity. He navigated Protestant-Catholic tensions with tact, often prioritizing long-term influence over short-term victories.

Elevated to cardinal by Pope Gregory XV, Bentivoglio became Protector of France at the Vatican, a role that positioned him as a key intermediary between the French crown and the Holy See and which he kept from 1621 to 1641. 

The Inquisition hearing in 1633 that found the great scientist, Galileo Galilei, guilty of heresy
The Inquisition hearing in 1633 that found the
great scientist, Galileo Galilei, guilty of heresy
He also served as a patron of the arts, commissioning works from painters such as Anthony van Dyck, and collecting tapestries and manuscripts.

Particularly enthusiastic about supporting northern European artists  working in Rome, he commissioned Van Dyck to paint his portrait, while his portrait bust was sculpted by François Duquesnoy, known as Il Fiammingo,  a Flemish sculptor active in Rome.

In the middle of this period came his part in the condemnation of Galileo, who was found guilty of heresy for writing a book that supported the view - for which, he claimed, there was scientific proof - that the sun rather than the earth was the centre of the solar system, as had been put forward by the Polish scientist Nicolaus Copernicus. In orthodox Roman Catholic doctrine, it was regarded as an indisputable fact of scripture that the opposite was true, that the sun moved around the earth. 

In a later collection of his works, Memorie, Bentivoglio expressed sympathy for Galileo's plight, brought on "all by his own fault, for having wanted to bring into print the new opinions about the motion of the Earth against the true accepted sense of the Church". 

It seems possible, given the Catholic Church’s struggle with emerging science, that Bentivoglio was torn between his intellectual leanings and his institutional loyalties. Nonetheless, his signature was on the decree.

Some may be tempted to believe, though, that Bentivoglio might have been an influence in the comparative leniency extended to Galileo. 

The astronomer, mathematician, philosopher and engineer – often described as ‘the father of modern science’ - could have been burned at the stake but was given the option of life imprisonment provided he recanted his findings as “abjured, cursed and detested”, to which he agreed with great reluctance.

The following day, his sentence of imprisonment was commuted to house arrest, after which Galileo was allowed to live at his villa at Arcetri, near Florence, for the remaining nine years of his life.

The 14th century Estense Castle dominates the central part of the city of Ferrara
The 14th century Estense Castle dominates the
central part of the city of Ferrara
Travel tip:

Bentivoglio’s home city of Ferrara, about 50 km (31 miles) northeast of Bologna, was ruled by the Este family between 1240 and 1598. Building work on the magnificent Estense Castle in the centre of the city began in 1385 and it was added to and improved by successive rulers of Ferrara until the end of the Este line.  The castle was purchased for 70,000 lire by the province of Ferrara in 1874 to be used as the headquarters of the Prefecture.   Ferrara is also notable for Palazzo dei Diamanti, a palace in Corso Ercole I d’Este, that takes its name from the 8500 pointed diamond shaped stones that stud the façade, diamonds being an emblem of the Este family. It was designed by Biagio Rossetti and completed in 1503. The palace now houses the Pinacoteca Nazionale di Ferrara on its first floor.

Find a hotel in Ferrara

The anatomical theatre at the University of Padua attracts curious visitors
The anatomical theatre at the University
of Padua attracts curious visitors
Travel tip:

The founding of the University of Padua is officially recorded to have taken place in 1222 but this was actually the first time it was mentioned in an historical document, which means it is certainly older. Only the University of  Bologna, founded in 1088, is older. Padua’s university was formed, in fact, when a large group of students and professors left the University of Bologna in search of more academic freedom. The first subjects to be taught were law and theology. The main university building, Palazzo del Bò in Via VIII Febbraio in the centre of Padua, used to house the medical faculty. You can take a guided tour to see the lectern used by Galileo when he taught at the university between 1592 and 1610. The university buildings also house nine museums, a botanical garden and the oldest surviving permanent anatomical theatre in Europe, built in around 1595 and which used to hold public dissections, which attracted scientists and artists in large numbers, keen to enhance their knowledge of the human body.

Search places to stay in Padua

More reading: 

What led Galileo Galilei to be convicted of heresy by the Catholic Church

How Scipione Borghese, nephew of Pope Paul V, used his position to acquire wealth to buy art

Pope Gregory XV, the last pontiff to issue a papal ordinance against witchcraft 

Also on this day: 

1303: Pope Boniface VIII captured by King Philip IV of France

1791: The birth of poet Giuseppe Gioachino Belli

1893: The founding in Genoa of Italy’s oldest surviving football club


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6 September 2025

6 September

Nino Castelnuovo - actor

Starred in sumptuous French musical and TV adaptation of literary classic

The actor Nino Castelnuovo, best known for playing opposite a young Catherine Deneuve in a Palme d’Or-winning French musical and as the star of a celebrated TV adaptation of Alessandro Manzoni’s classic novel I promessi sposi (The Betrothed), died on this day in 2021 at the age of 84.  Castelnuovo’s talent came to the fore during a golden age of Italian cinema, working with leading directors such as Luchino Visconti, Vittorio De Sica, Pietro Germi, Luigi Comencini and Pier Paolo Pasolini, and starring opposite such luminaries as Alberto Sordi, Monica Vitti and Claudia Cardinale.  Yet it was the visually beautiful, deeply sentimental French musical, Le parapluies de Cherbourg - The Umbrellas of Cherbourg - that had catapulted him to fame in 1964. Castelnuovo played the handsome Guy, a mechanic, who is in love with Deneuve’s character, Geneviève. Read more…

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Giovanni Fattori - painter

Landscape artist who painted Risorgimento battle scenes 

The painter Giovanni Fattori, who campaigned to free Italy from Austrian domination and captured Risorgimento battle scenes on canvas, was born on this day in 1825 in Livorno.  Fattori became a leading member of a group of Tuscan painters known as the Macchiaioli, who have been described as the Italian equivalent of the French Impressionists but whose images were more sharply defined.  The group, largely comprising painters from a working class background, saw themselves more as a social movement who expressed themselves through art.  Born into a modest household in Livorno, Fattori’s family hoped he would seek a qualification in commerce that would equip him to prosper in the city’s trade-based economy.  But his skill in sketching persuaded them instead to apprentice him in 1845 to Giuseppe Baldini, a local painter of religious themes.  Read more…

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Andrea Camilleri – author

Creator of Inspector Montalbano

Writer and film producer Andrea Camilleri, who died in 2019, was born on this day in 1925 in Porto Empedocle in Sicily.  Famous for creating the fictional character Inspector Montalbano, Camilleri is a prolific, best-selling novelist who has generated worldwide interest in the culture and landscapes of Sicily.  Camilleri studied literature and although he never completed his course he began to write poems and short stories. He became a director and a screenwriter. He worked on several television productions for RAI, including the Inspector Maigret series.  He wrote his first novel in 1978 but it was not until 1992 that one of his novels, La stagione della caccia - The Hunting Season - became a bestseller.  In 1994 Camilleri published La forma dell’acqua - The Shape of Water - which was the first novel to feature the character of Inspector Montalbano. Read more…


Francesco I d’Este – Duke of Modena

Military leader left legacy of fine architecture

Francesco I, Duke of Modena, who was to be immortalised in a bust by the sculptor, Gian Lorenzo Bernini, was born on this day in 1610 in Modena in Emilia-Romagna.  He is remembered as a skilful military commander, who enriched Modena with the building of the Ducal Palace.  Francesco was the eldest son of Alfonso III d’Este and Isabella of Savoy and became Duke of Modena in 1629 after the death of his mother had prompted his grieving father to abdicate in order to take religious vows and become a Capuchin Friar in Merano.  During the next two years about 70 per cent of the inhabitants of Modena were killed by the plague.  The Duke’s father, now known as Fra’ Giambattista da Modena, tried to help the dying and went about preaching during the outbreak of plague, before retiring to a convent built by Francesco for him in Castelnuovo in Garfagnana.  Read more…

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Isabella Leonarda – composer

Devout nun wrote an abundance of Baroque music

Isabella Leonarda, a nun who was one of the most productive women composers of her time, was born on this day in 1620 in Novara.  Leonarda’s published work spans a period of 60 years and she has been credited with more than 200 compositions.  She did not start composing regularly until she was in her fifties, but noted in the dedication to one of her works that she wrote music only during time allocated for rest, so as not to neglect her administrative duties within the convent.  Leonarda was the daughter of Count Gianantonio Leonardi and his wife Apollonia. The Leonardi were important people in Novara, many of them church and civic officials.  Leonarda entered the Collegio di Sant’Orsola, a convent in Novara, when she was 16 and rose to a high position within the convent.  Her published compositions began to appear in 1640. Read more…

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Book of the Day: The Betrothed, by Alessandro Manzoni. Translated by Michael F Moore

Italy's greatest novel and a masterpiece of world literature, The Betrothed chronicles the unforgettable romance of Renzo and Lucia, who endure tyranny, war, famine, and plague to be together.  Published in 1827 but set two centuries earlier, against the tumultuous backdrop of 17th-century Lombardy during the Thirty Years' War, The Betrothed is the story of two peasant lovers who want nothing more than to marry. Their region of northern Italy is under Spanish occupation, and when the vicious Spaniard Don Rodrigo blocks their union in an attempt to take Lucia for himself, the couple must struggle to persevere against his plots - which include false charges against Renzo and the kidnapping of Lucia - while beset by the hazards of war, bread riots, and a terrifying outbreak of bubonic plague. First and foremost a love story, the novel also weaves issues of faith, justice, power, and truth into a sweeping epic. Groundbreakingly populist in its day and hugely influential to succeeding generations, Alessandro Manzoni's masterwork has long been considered one of Italy's national treasures.

Apart from leaving his indelible mark on Italian literature, Alessandro Manzoni also wrote poems (his most famous, The Fifth of May, on the occasion of Napoleon's death), essays, and two tragedies, The Count of Carmagnola and Adelchi. Manzoni was committed to the cause of Italian independence. Michael F Moore's published translations range from 20th-century classics such as Agostino by Alberto Moravia and The Drowned and the Saved by Primo Levi, to contemporary novels, including Live Bait by Fabio Genovesi and Lost Words by Nicola Gardini.

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