30 January 2026

30 January

NEW - Ferdinando Fontana – journalist and playwright

Prolific writer produced the words for Puccini’s early operas 

The dramatist Ferdinando Fontana, who is remembered chiefly for being the writer of the libretti for the first two operas written by Giacomo Puccini, was born on this day in 1850 in Milan.  He became a journalist as a young man to help provide for his younger sisters, and while he was working for the newspaper Corriere di Milano he wrote two plays in Milanese dialect which were both successes.  Through his interest in the Scapigliatura artistic movement, Fontana became a versatile writer. The word scapigliato means ‘unkempt’ or ‘dishevelled’ and the movement was the equivalent of the French Bohemian idea. Fontana also produced poems, travel books, and articles for the Milanese daily newspaper Corriere della Sera.  After being introduced by the composer Amilcare Ponchielli to the young Giacomo Puccini, he agreed to write the libretti for his early operas Le Villi and Edgar.  Read more…

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Bernardo Bellotto – landscape painter

Venetian artist blessed with uncle Canaletto’s talent

The landscape artist Bernardo Bellotto, a nephew and pupil of the masterful view painter Canaletto, was born on this day in 1721 in Venice, the city that brought fame to his illustrious uncle.  Bellotto painted some Venetian scenes but travelled much more extensively than his uncle and eventually became best known for his work in northern Europe, and in particular his views of the cities of Vienna, Warsaw and Dresden.  His work was notable for his use of light and shadow and his meticulous attention to detail.  His paintings of Warsaw became a point of reference for architects involved with the reconstruction of the city after the Second World War, so precise was he in terms of perspective and scale and the intricacies of architectural features.  Born in the parish of Santa Margherita in Venice, Bellotto was related to Giovanni Antonio Canal – Canaletto’s birth name – through his mother, Canaletto’s sister, Fiorenza Canal.  Read more…

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Elsa Martinelli – actress

Tuscan beauty was spotted by Kirk Douglas

Actress and former model Elsa Martinelli was born Elisa Tia on this day in 1935 in Grosseto.  She moved to Rome with her family as a teenager and was discovered by designer Roberto Capucci in 1953 while working as a barmaid in the city.   Her stunning looks helped her to become a successful fashion model and she eventually began playing small parts in films.  As Elsa Martinelli she appeared in Claude Autant-Lara’s Le Rouge et Le Noir in 1954.  Her first important role came a year later when Kirk Douglas is said to have seen her on a magazine cover and told his production company to hire her to appear opposite him in the film, The Indian Fighter.  In 1956 she won the Silver Bear for Best Actress at the Berlin Film Festival for playing the title role in Mario Monicelli’s Donatella.  Martinelli married Count Franco Mancinelli Scotti di San Vito and they had a daughter.  Read more…


Carlo Maderno - architect

Facade of St Peter's among most notable works

The architect Carlo Maderno, who has been described as one of the fathers of Italian Baroque architecture, died on this day in 1629 in Rome.  His most important works included the facades of St Peter’s Basilica and the other Roman churches of Santa Susanna and Sant’ Andrea della Valle.  Although most of Maderno's work was in remodelling existing structures, he had a profound influence on the appearance of Rome, where his designs also contributed to the Palazzo Quirinale, the Palazzo Barberini and the papal palace at Castel Gandolfo.  One building designed and completed under Maderno's full control was the church of Santa Maria della Vittoria in the Sallustiano district.   Maderno was born in 1556 in the village of Capolago, on the southern shore of Lake Lugano in what is now the Ticino canton of Switzerland. Read more…

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Hyacintha Mariscotti – saint

Noblewoman gave up luxurious lifestyle to help the poor

Hyacintha Mariscotti, an Italian nun of the Third Order Regular of Saint Francis, died on this day in 1640 in Viterbo in Lazio.  Pope Pius VII canonised her in 1807 and her feast day is now celebrated on 30 January every year.  Hyacintha, known as Santa Giacinta Marescotti in Italian, was born in 1585 into a noble family living in the castle of Vignanello in the province of Viterbo and was baptised as Clarice.  Her father was Count Marcantonio Marescotti, her mother Countess Ottavia Orsini, whose father built the famous gardens of Bomarzo.  The young Clarice was sent with her sisters to the monastery of Saint Bernardino to be educated by the nuns of the Franciscan Third Order Regular. When their education was complete, her elder sister, Ginevra, chose to enter the community as a nun. Clarice had set her sights on marrying the Marchese Capizucchi, but he chose her younger sister, Ortensia, instead.  Read more…

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Feast of Saint Martina of Rome

The day Pope Urban VIII’s own hymns are sung

The feast day of Saint Martina of Rome, who was martyred by the Romans in 228, is celebrated every year on this day.  Martina is now a patron saint of Rome and the patron saint of nursing mothers.  She was the daughter of an ex-consul, one of the chief magistrates of the Roman Republic, but became an orphan while still young.  Described at the time as a noble and beautiful virgin who was charitable to the poor, she openly testified to her Christian faith.  She was persecuted during the reign of Emperor Alexander Severus and arrested and commanded to return to idolatry, the worship of false gods.  When she refused she was whipped and condemned to be devoured by wild beasts in the amphitheatre. When she was miraculously untouched by the animals she was thrown on to a burning pyre from which she is also said to have escaped unhurt. Read more…

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Book of the Day: Puccini: His Life and Works, by Julian Budden

Blending astute musical analysis with a colourful account of Giacomo Puccini's life, this is an illuminating look at some of the most popular operas in the repertoire, including Manon Lescaut, La bohème, Tosca, Madama Butterfly, and Turandot. Julian Budden provides an illuminating look at the process of putting an opera together, the cut-and-slash of 19th-century Italian opera - the struggle to find the right performers for the debut of La bohème, Puccini's anxiety about completing Turandot (he in fact died of cancer before he did so), his animosity toward his rival Ruggero Leoncavallo (whom he called Leonasino or "lion-ass"). Puccini: His Life and Works provides an informative analysis of the operas themselves, examining the music act by act. He highlights, among other things, the influence of Richard Wagner on Puccini - alone among his Italian contemporaries, Puccini followed Wagner's example in bringing the motif into the forefront of his narrative, sometimes voicing the singer's unexpressed thoughts, sometimes sending out a signal to the audience of which the character is unaware. Budden paints an intriguing portrait of Puccini the man - talented but modest, a man who had friends from every walk of life: shopkeepers, priests, wealthy landowners, fellow artists. Affable, well mannered, gifted with a broad sense of fun, he rarely failed to charm all who met him.

Julian Budden is one of the world's foremost scholars of Italian opera and author of a monumental three-volume study of Giuseppe Verdi's works. 

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Ferdinando Fontana – journalist and playwright

Prolific writer produced the words for Puccini’s early operas 

Ferdinando Fontana (left), with Puccini in a photograph taken in around 1885
Ferdinando Fontana (left), with Puccini
in a photograph taken in around 1885
The dramatist Ferdinando Fontana, who is remembered chiefly for being the writer of the libretti for the first two operas written by Giacomo Puccini, was born on this day in 1850 in Milan.

He became a journalist as a young man to help provide for his younger sisters, and while he was working for the newspaper Corriere di Milano he wrote two plays in Milanese dialect which were both successes.

Through his interest in the Scapigliatura artistic movement, Fontana became a versatile writer. The word scapigliato means ‘unkempt’ or ‘dishevelled’ and the movement was the equivalent of the French Bohemian idea. Fontana also produced poems, travel books, and articles for the Milanese daily newspaper Corriere della Sera.

After being introduced by the composer Amilcare Ponchielli to the young Giacomo Puccini, he agreed to write the libretti for his early operas Le Villi and Edgar.

Fontana had been forced to abandon his studies after the death of his mother and had to go to work to keep himself and his sisters. After having a series of menial jobs, he got a job as a proof reader for Corriere di Milano, where he first became involved with journalism and literature.


He travelled from New York to San Francisco with a journalist colleague and while he was in America he met the editor of an Italian language newspaper, to which he later contributed features.

Fontana wrote a libretto for an opera, Odio, that was being planned by Ponchielli but never actually composed, after which he wrote two libretti for the composer Alberto Franchetti.

Puccini was studying under Ponchielli at the Milan Conservatory at the time and the composer invited the young Puccini to stay at his villa, where he introduced him to Ferdinando Fontana.

The music and libretto for Le Villi, Puccini's debut operatic work
The music and libretto for Le Villi,
Puccini's debut operatic work
The writer’s first libretto for Puccini was for Le Villi, Puccini’s first stage work, which was a big success after its premiere at Teatro Dal Verme in Milan in 1884.

Fontana went on to have a prolific writing output, and an article in 1886 in La Stampa recorded that at that time, the music for 13 libretti by Fontana were in the process of being composed as operas by 12 different composers.

It was while staying in an hotel in Caprino Bergamasco run by a fellow librettist that Fontana wrote the libretto for Puccini’s opera Edgar, which premiered in 1889. 

This, unfortunately, was not as successful as Le Villi. Puccini made several revisions but could not redeem the opera, which he eventually effectively disowned, although he blamed himself as much as Fontana.

The publisher Guilio Ricordi, who had commissioned a second opera from Puccini as a result of the success of his first, came under pressure to drop him after the disappointing reception for Edgar, which might have spelled the end of Puccini’s career. Happily, Ricordi stuck with him and was rewarded with Manon Lescaut, for which the libretto was written by Luigi Illica and Giuseppe Giacosa, which proved to be one of his most popular and enduring works. 

Fontana also translated foreign libretti for performances in Italy, including Franz Lehar’s Die lustige Witwe - The Merry Widow. 

Fontana was a committed socialist and took part in the demonstrations in Milan in 1889, which led to the massacre of protestors by troops led by General Fiorenzo Bava-Beccaris.

The massacre was part of a crackdown on Milanese citizens protesting about rising food prices, particularly bread, which had become so expensive due to wheat shortages that it was unaffordable for many families.  Official government figures put the number of deaths at 80, although some estimates claimed up to 400 people may have been killed.

During the repressions that followed the massacres, Fontana fled to Switzerland where he settled in Montagnola, a small town near Lugano. He was supported by local Liberal radicals, but as his health deteriorated, he reduced his literary output.  He died in Lugano in 1919 at the age of 69.

Corriere della Sera's headquarters in Via Solferini,
its Milan offices since the early 20th century
Travel tip:

Corriere della Sera, one of Italy’s main daily newspapers with a circulation of around 250,000, has had its headquarters in the same buildings In Milan since the beginning of the 20th century, and therefore it is popularly known as "the Via Solferino newspaper", after the street where it is still located, which connects Porta Garibaldi with the Brera district, about 1.5km (1 mile) north of the city’s cathedral and the Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II. When the newspaper was founded in 1876, it was produced in a building directly facing the Galleria. Its earliest editorial offices operated right beside the Galleria’s Piazza della Scala entrance. This proximity meant that the newspaper grew up literally on the edge of Milan’s most symbolic civic space, and the two became intertwined in the city’s cultural identity. As the name indicates, it was originally an evening paper. During the Fascist regime in Italy, it broadly supported Mussolini but tried to distance itself from the deposed dictator after World War Two, for a while going under the title of Il Nuovo Corriere della Sera, a name that it kept until 1959. Nowadays, its political agenda could be described as centre-right. 

The Chiesa di San Biagio in Caprino Bergamasco, the town where Fontana wrote his libretto for Edgar
The Chiesa di San Biagio in Caprino Bergamasco,
the town where Fontana wrote his libretto for Edgar
Travel tip:

Caprino Bergamasco, where Fontana was based when he wrote the libretto for Edgar, is a quiet hill town at the southern edge of the province of Bergamo in Lombardy, made up of clusters of old stone houses against a backdrop of of gentle slopes and cultivated fields, described as a town in which life moves at a measured pace, anchored by the rhythms of agriculture. The town has viewpoints that look towards the Adda valley on one side and the first foothills of the Bergamasque Alps on the other. It is the home of the Collegio Convitto Celana, an historic seminary that has long been associated with religious education and cultural life in the area. The parish church, the Chiesa di San Biagio, has some attractive frescoes and traditional Lombard religious architecture.  Nearby attractions include the Paderno d’Adda Iron Bridge - an engineering landmark spanning the Adda River, and Montevecchia - a hilltop village and nature reserve offering panoramic views and hiking trails.

More reading:

How Puccini took the baton from Giuseppe Verdi as Italy’s most celebrated composer

Giulio Ricordi, the music publisher who took the credit for ‘discovering’ Puccini

How Milan’s bread riots led to the assassination of Umberto I

Also on this day:

228: The death of Saint Martina of Rome

1629: The death of architect Carlo Maderno

1640: The death of Saint Hyacintha Mariscotti

1721: The birth of Venetian painter Bernardo Bellotto

1935: The birth of actress Elsa Martinelli


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29 January 2026

29 January

Fire at La Fenice

Oldest theatre in Venice keeps rising from the ashes

La Fenice, the world famous opera house in Venice, was destroyed by fire on this day in 1996.  It was the third time a theatre had been burnt down in Venice and it took nearly eight years to rebuild.  The theatre had been named La Fenice - the Phoenix - when it was originally built in the 1790s, to reflect that it was helping an opera company rise from the ashes after its previous theatre had burnt down.  Disaster struck again in 1836 when La Fenice itself was destroyed by fire but it was quickly rebuilt and opened its doors again in 1837.  The American writer, Donna Leon, chose La Fenice to be the main location in her first novel featuring Commissario Guido Brunetti, published in 1992.  But in January 1996, approximately four years after Leon’s novel, Death At La Fenice, was published, the theatre burnt down again, making front page news all over the world.  Read more…

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Bomb destroys Archiginnasio anatomical theatre

Historic facility hit in 1944 air raid

The historic anatomical theatre of the Palazzo Archiginnasio, the original seat of the University of Bologna, was almost completely destroyed in a bombing raid on the city by Allied forces on this day in 1944.  The northern Italian city was a frequent target during the final two years of the conflict because of its importance as a transport hub and communications centre.  The wing of the palazzo housing the anatomical theatre, built between 1636 and 1638, took a direct hit on the night of January 29.  Although it is unlikely that the university - the oldest in the world - was a specific target, bombing was much less precise 75 years ago and collateral damage was common and often widespread.  As well as its importance in the history of medical research, the anatomical theatre was notable as an art treasure. Read more…


Luigi Nono - avant-garde composer

Venetian used music as a medium for political protest

The Italian avant-garde composer Luigi Nono, famous for using music as a form of political expression, was born in Venice on this day in 1924.  Nono, whose compositions often defied the description of music in any traditional sense, was something of a contradiction in that he was brought up in comfortable surroundings and had a conventional music background.  His father was a successful engineer, wealthy enough to provide for his family in a large house in Dorsoduro, facing the Giudecca Canal, while his grandfather, a notable painter, inspired in him an interest in the arts.  He had music lessons with the composer Gian Francesco Malipiero at the Venice Conservatory, where he developed a fascination for the Renaissance madrigal tradition, before going to the University of Padua to study law.  Read more…

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Felice Beato – war photographer

Venetian-born adventurer captured some of first images of conflict

Felice Beato, who is thought to be one of the world’s first war photographers, died in Florence on this day in 1909.  He was 76 or 77 years old and had passed perhaps his final year in Italy, having spent the majority of his adult life in Asia and the Far East.  Although he was from an Italian family it was thought for many years that he had been born on the island of Corfu and died in Burma. However, in 2009 his death certificate was found in an archive in Florence, listing his place of birth as Venice and his place of death as the Tuscan regional capital.  Beato photographed the Crimean War in 1855, the aftermath of the Indian Rebellion in 1857 and the final days of the Second Opium War in China in 1860, later travelling with United States forces in Korea in 1871 and with the British in the Sudan. Read more…

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Book of the Day: Death at La Fenice (A Commissario Brunetti Mystery), by Donna Leon

The twisted maze of Venice's canals has always been shrouded in mystery. Even the celebrated opera house, La Fenice, has seen its share of death ... but none so horrific and violent as that of world-famous conductor, Maestro Helmut Wellauer, who was poisoned during a performance of La traviata. Even Commissario of Police, Guido Brunetti, used to the labyrinthine corruptions of the city, is shocked at the number of enemies Wellauer has made on his way to the top - but just how many have motive enough for murder? The beauty of Venice is crumbling. But evil is one thing that will never erode with age. Death at La Fenice saw Donna Leon introduce her detective hero Guido Brunetti in what was described as a “ripping first mystery, as beguiling and secretly sinister as Venice herself.” Brunetti has since appeared in 33 novels, the latest of which, A Refiner's Fire, was released in 2024.

A New Yorker of Irish/Spanish descent, Donna Leon first went to Italy in 1965, returning regularly over the next decade or so while pursuing a career as an academic.  Leon has received both the CWA Macallon Silver Dagger for Fiction and the German Corrine Prize for her novels featuring Commissario Guido Brunetti. 

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28 January 2026

28 January

Simonetta Vespucci – Renaissance beauty

Noblewoman hailed as embodiment of female perfection

Simonetta Vespucci, a young noblewoman who became the most sought-after artist’s model in Florence in the mid-15th century, is thought to have been born on this day in 1453.  Born Simonetta Cattaneo to a Genoese family, she was taken to Florence in 1469 when she married Marco Vespucci, an eligible Florentine nobleman who was a distant cousin of the explorer and cartographer Amerigo Vespucci.  She quickly became the talk of Florentine society. Soon known as La Bella Simonetta, she captivated painters and young noblemen alike with her beauty.  It is said that, shortly before her arrival, a group of artists had been discussing their idea of the characteristics of perfect female beauty and were stunned, on meeting Simonetta, to discover that their idealised woman actually existed.  It is thought the model for the female figure standing on a shell in Sandro Botticelli’s masterpiece, The Birth of Venus, may have been her. Read more…

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Paolo Gorini – scientist

Teacher invented technique for preserving corpses

Mathematician and scientist Paolo Gorini, who made important discoveries about organic substances, was born on this day in 1813 in Pavia.  He is chiefly remembered for preserving corpses and anatomical parts according to a process he invented himself. His technique was first used on the body of Giuseppe Mazzini, the politician and activist famous for his work towards the unification of Italy.  Gorini was orphaned at the age of 12, but thanks to financial help from former colleagues of his father, who had been a university maths professor, he was able to continue with his studies and he obtained a mathematics degree from the University of Pavia.  He paid tribute in his autobiography to his private teacher, Alessandro Scannini, who he said first inspired his interest in geology and volcanology.  Gorini went to live in Lodi, just south of Milan, in 1834, where he became a physics lecturer at the local Lyceum.  Read more…

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Gianluigi Buffon – goalkeeper

Record-breaking footballer played at top level until 45

Former Juventus goalkeeper Gianluigi Buffon was born on this day in 1978 in Carrara in Tuscany.  Widely considered by football experts at his peak to be the best goalkeeper in the world, he was known for his outstanding ability to stop shots.  He holds the record for the most clean sheets, both in Serie A and the national side, and he has won numerous awards.  Now aged 46, Buffon retired from international football after Italy failed to qualify for the 2018 World Cup finals in Russia, having played a record 176 times for the Azzurri, and ended his professional career in 2023.  Buffon, whose nickname is Gigi, was born into a family of athletes. His mother, Maria, was a discus thrower and his father, Adriano, was a weightlifter. His two sisters both played volleyball for the Italian national team and his uncle was a prominent basketball player.  Read more…


Francesco de’ Pazzi - banker

Medici rival at heart of Pazzi Conspiracy

The banker Francesco de’ Pazzi, a central figure in the Pazzi Conspiracy that sought to overthrow the Medici family as the rulers of Florence, was born on this day in 1444.  De’ Pazzi killed Giuliano de’ Medici, stabbing him to death during mass at the Florence Duomo as the conspirators attempted to seize control.  But Giuliano’s brother, Lorenzo the Magnificent, with whom he was joint ruler, escaped with only minor wounds.  Simultaneously, other conspirators rode into the Piazza della Signoria declaring themselves the liberators of the city. Yet the people of Florence were loyal to the Medicis and attacked them.  Within hours, despite Lorenzo appealing for calm, an angry mob determined to exact revenge had hunted down and killed more than 30 conspirators or suspected conspirators, including Francesco.  Read more…

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Giovanni Alfonso Borelli – physiologist and physicist

Neapolitan was the first to explain movement

The scientist who was the first to explain muscular movement according to the laws of statics and dynamics, Giovanni Alfonso Borelli, was born on this day in 1608 in Naples.  Borelli was also the first to suggest that comets travel in a parabolic path.  He was appointed professor of mathematics at Messina in 1649 and at Pisa in 1656. After 1675 he lived in Rome under the protection of Christina, the former Queen of Sweden. She had abdicated her throne in 1654, had converted to Catholicism and gone to live in Rome as the guest of the Pope.  Remembered as one of the most learned women of the 17th century, Christina became the protector of many artists, musicians and intellectuals who would visit her in the Palazzo Farnese, where she was allowed to live by the Pope.  Borelli’s best known work is De Motu Animalium - On the Movement of Animals. Read more…

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Giorgio Lamberti - swimming champion

The first Italian male swimmer to win a World championship gold

Swimming world champion Giorgio Lamberti was born on this day in 1969 in Brescia in Lombardy.  Lamberti won 33 gold medals in the Italian swimming championships, six at the Mediterranean Games and three in the European championships, but the pinnacle of his career came in Perth in 1991, when he became the first Italian male to win a gold at the World championships.  In the 200m freestyle event, which was his speciality, he beat Germany’s Steffen Zesner by just under a second in a time of 1min 47.27 sec.  His success came almost two decades after Novella Calligaris had become the first Italian woman to win a World championship gold when she took the 800m freestyle title.  Lamberti was already a force in 200m freestyle, having two years earlier set a world record for the event of 1:46.69 in winning gold at the European championships in Bonn in 1989. Read more…

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Book of the Day: Botticelli, by Frank Zöllner

This celebration of the life and art of the Renaissance genius presents Sandro Botticelli's complete paintings and offers a comprehensive and thoroughly up-to-date study of his work.  Botticelli is one of the most admired artists of the Renaissance period and his seductive Venus and graceful Primavera are among the world s most recognisable works of art. This catalogue raisonné of Botticelli's paintings offers more than two hundred full-colour illustrations and meticulous scholarship by the distinguished Renaissance art historian Frank Zöllner , described by The Financial Times, when reviewing this book s previous edition, as a fabulous, accessible scholar; his book Botticelli has luscious reproductions and exquisite detail. Presented in chronological order, the facts of Botticelli’s life and career are insightfully discussed against the background of the artistic upheaval that marked the Renaissance period. The artist’s reinterpretations of ancient myths as well as his religious paintings are thoughtfully explored in this sumptuously illustrated volume, which will please scholars and delight lovers of fine art books everywhere.

Frank Zöllner is a German art historian. He is among the leading authorities on Renaissance art, in particular the life and works of Leonardo da Vinci.

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