22 June 2026

Leonardo Loredan - Doge of Venice

Strong ruler steered Venice through wars and established first Ghetto

Giovanni Bellini's Portrait of  Doge Leonardo Loredan
Giovanni Bellini's Portrait of 
Doge Leonardo Loredan
One of the most important Doges to reign over Venice in its 1,100 years of history, Leonardo Loredan died on this day in 1521 in the city, where he also had been born.

As a wartime ruler of the Most Serene Republic, his extraordinary cunning and ability to construct Machiavellian plots against Venice’s many powerful opponents, saved his beloved city from potential downfall.

Loredan was born into a noble Venetian family in 1436 and had a classical education.  In accordance with the traditions of his family, he then focused on trade with Africa and the Levant, to add to the family’s fortune.

He began his political ascent as a lawyer in a legal magistracy concerned mainly with financial scandals and bankruptcies. This he followed by occupying positions such as Sage of the College, Sage of the Terrafirma, Cameriengo (or treasurer) di Comun, Podestà of Padua, ducal councillor for Cannaregio, and Procurator of Saint Mark.

In 1481, he married Giustina Giustiani, also known as Morosina Giustiani, with whom he had nine children. Her influential family is believed to have played a significant part in his election as the 75th Doge of Venice in 1501.

His reign began with the disastrous Second Ottoman War, which he was able to settle after  two years, but only at the cost of losing territory. Then he had a dispute with Pope Julius II, which escalated into the 1509 War of the League of Cambrai. Venice was fighting against both the Pope and France, and was defeated.

However, in 1513, Loredan formed a military alliance with the French King Louis XII against the Pope, which they won decisively. Venice was able to regain some of its lost territory and the Pope was forced to pay back a large amount of money owed to the Loredan family.

Unfortunately, Loredan fell and injured his leg in 1514, and his health was to deteriorate from then on.

In 1516, Loredan arranged a truce with the Holy Roman Emperor Maximilian I and was able to regain Verona. The end of war celebrations in Venice that year were to be the high point of Loredan’s reign as Doge. He also bought titles and offices for his children and relatives, making the most of his influence while he had it.

Girolamo Campagna's statue of Leonardo Loredan is part of his tomb
Girolamo Campagna's statue of
Leonardo Loredan is part of his tomb
It was under Loredan’s rule, in 1516, that a decree was enacted to formally isolate the Jews in Venice. The first Ghetto in the world was created, from which all others have derived their names.

Loredan’s last years as Doge were filled with financial and political scandals, some caused by rival families. Meanwhile, his health deteriorated further and he died in pain, suffering from gangrene, in 1521.

He was interred in the Basilica di Santi Giovanni e Paolo, at first in a simple grave which no longer exists. But in 1572, a monumental tomb was erected for him in the basilica, adorned with marble Corinthian columns.

Among the many portraits and paintings of Loredan, the most famous is the Portrait of Doge Leonardo Loredan, painted by Giovanni Bellini in about 1501, which is now in the National Gallery in London.

One of his descendants, Francesco Loredan, became the 116th Doge of Venice in 1752, and after his death he was interred in Leonardo Loredan’s tomb.

Another of his descendants, Pietro Loredan, was the 84th Doge between 1567 and 1570.

Pietro Loredan also established a winery in the Veneto, which is still known for its celebrated robust and powerful Capo di Stata red wine.

The Campo di Gheto Nuovo, the main square in the fashionable Ghetto quarter in Venice
The Campo di Gheto Nuovo, the main square in
the fashionable Ghetto quarter in Venice

Travel tip:

A decree creating Venice’s historic Ghetto was pronounced by Leonardo Loredan in 1516. It meant that the Jewish population of the city, who were already obliged to live under restrictions since the 13th century, were forced to move to an island in the northwestern part of the Cannaregio sestiere and could not live in any other district. There are a number of theories about how it came to be known as the Ghetto, the most plausible of which is that the area was known to Venetians by the dialect word geto - foundry - as it used to be home to a factory making heavy iron cannons for the Venetian fleet. The word may have acquired an ‘h’ in its spelling to reflect its mispronunciation by the early inhabitants, mainly German Jews, who incorrectly gave it a hard ‘g’ rather than the soft one of the dialect. At some time later, it acquired a second ‘t’, although street signs in Venice have only one. The freedom of the rest of the city was not restored to the Jewish population until 1797, when the French Army, commanded by Napoleon Bonaparte, occupied Venice and forced the dissolution of the Republic. The Ghetto’s gates were removed, with Jews given the same status as other citizens.

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The Basilica di Santi Giovanni e Paolo in Venice, where Loredan and many other Doges are buried
The Basilica di Santi Giovanni e Paolo in Venice,
where Loredan and many other Doges are buried
Travel tip:

Leonardo Loredan was buried in the Basilica di Santi Giovanni e Paolo in the Castello district. The Basilica is known in Venice as San Zanipolo, and is in the Campo Santi Giovanni e Paolo. The land was donated to the Dominicans by Doge Jacopo Tiepolo after he dreamt of a flock of white doves flying over it. One of the largest churches in Venice, it has the status of a minor basilica. It has many works by Veronese in the Chapel of the Rosary, as well as paintings by Lorenzo Lotto and sculptures by Pietro Lombardo.  Outside is a statue of Bartolomeo Colleoni, a Bergamo condottiero (mercenary) and a former captain-general of the Republic of Venice, sculpted by Andrea del Verrocchio. A total of 25 of Venice’s Doges are buried there, among them Tiepolo himself.

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More reading:

The Ghetto - Venice’s Jewish quarter

Jacopo Tiepolo, the Doge who granted land for beautiful churches

Ludovico Manin - the last Doge of Venice

Also on this day:

1427: The birth of political adviser and businesswoman Lucrezia Tornabuoni

1633: Galileo Galilei convicted of heresy

1930: The birth of mountaineer Walter Bonatti


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21 June 2026

21 June

Pier Luigi Nervi - architect

Striking designs from football stadiums to churches

The brilliant structural engineer and architect Pier Luigi Nervi was born on this day in 1891 in Sondrio, an Alpine town in northern Lombardy at the heart of the Valtellina.  Nervi made his mark with a number of strikingly original designs at home and abroad and was noted both for his innovative use of reinforced concrete and his multi-dimensional designs, which enabled him to create structures that were both strong and elegant.  His major works in Italy include the Palazzo del Lavoro in Turin, the bell tower of the Chiesa del Sacro Cuore in Florence and the Papal Audience Hall at the Vatican City, as well as a number of important sports facilities.  The Stadio Artemio Franchi (formerly the Stadio Communale) in Florence - home of the Fiorentina football club - was one of his first important projects and he designed several stadia for the Rome Olympics in 1960. Read more…

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Pope Paul VI

Pontiff who helped wartime prisoners

Giovanni Battista Enrico Antonio Maria Montini was elected as Pope Paul VI on this day in 1963 in Rome.  He succeeded Pope John XXIII and immediately re-convened the Second Vatican Council which had automatically closed after Pope John’s death.  Pope Paul then implemented its various reforms and as a result had to deal with the conflicting expectations of different Catholic groups.  Following his famous predecessor Saint Ambrose of Milan, Pope Paul named Mary as the Mother of the Church.  He described himself as ‘a humble servant for a suffering humanity’ and demanded changes from the rich in North America and Europe in favour of the poor in the third world.  Pope Paul had been born in Concesio near Brescia in 1897 and was ordained a priest in Brescia in 1920. He took a doctorate in Canon Law in Milan. Read more…


Paolo Soleri - architect

Italian greatly influenced by Frank Lloyd Wright

The groundbreaking architect and ecologist Paolo Soleri was born on this day in 1919 in Turin.  Soleri is largely remembered for the Arcosanti project, an experiment in urban design in the Arizona desert that was like no other town on the planet, a unique fusion of architecture and ecology.  Originally conceived as providing a completely self-sufficient urban living space for 5,000 people when it began in 1970, only about five per cent of the proposed development was ever completed.  At its peak, Arcosanti’s population barely exceeded 200 yet the buildings Soleri erected in accordance with his vision are still there, rising from the desert as an assortment of concrete blocks, domes and soaring vaults, resembling a cross between the remains of some ancient civilisation and a set from Star Wars.  It has never been abandoned, however, although Soleri died in 2013. Read more…

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Alessandro Cavriani - naval commander

Heroic officer who sacrificed his own life

Naval commander Alessandro Cavriani, who posthumously received Italy’s highest military honour after sacrificing his own life to prevent his ailing ship falling into enemy hands in World War Two, was born on 21 June, 1911 in the city of Mantua in Lombardy.  Cavriani, who had risen to the rank of corvette captain in the Italian Royal Navy during World War Two, was lieutenant commander of the destroyer Ugolino Vivaldi soon after Italy had signed the 1943 Armistice with the Allies.  The Vivaldi and her sister ship, the Antonio da Noli, on September 9, were ordered to set sail from Genoa to Civitavecchia, the large port north of Rome, where they were to pick up King Vittorio Emanuele III and his government and take them to La Maddalena in Sardinia, to prevent their being captured by the advancing German army.  Read more…

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Book of the Day: Pier Luigi Nervi (The Minimum), by Tullia Iori

Tullia Iori’s Pier Luigi Nervi (The Minimum) is a compact, scholarly monograph that introduces Nervi’s architectural and structural achievements with clarity and precision. It is one of the most accessible academic overviews of his work, especially if you want a concise, image‑rich introduction grounded in the history of structural engineering. The volume surveys Nervi’s major works (built and unbuilt), his writings, and critical reception. It blends biography, project summaries, and visual documentation. The author integrates Nervi’s own technical writings, giving insight into his philosophy of reinforced concrete, prefabrication, and structural elegance.  The book includes strong visual material, making it useful for architectural historians and engineers alike.

Tullia Iori is Professor of Technical Architecture at the University of Rome Tor Vergata.  Her research focuses on the history of construction, structural engineering, and conservation of modern architecture.

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20 June 2026

20 June

Gian Galeazzo Sforza - Duke of Milan

Ruler who never truly held power

Gian Galeazzo Sforza, the third member of the Sforza family to have the title Duke of Milan, was born on this day in 1469 in Abbiategrasso, a town in the Po Valley about 22km (14 miles) north of Milan.  He was the sixth Duke of Milan in all, the title having previously been the property of the Visconti family.  However, Gian Galeazzo had only a short life and never truly held any power, having inherited the Duchy at the age of seven when his father, Galeazzo Maria Sforza, was assassinated in the porch of Basilica di Santo Stefano Maggiore in Milan, on December 26, 1476, where he was attending a celebration for the Festa di San Stefano.  Gian Galeazzo could not legally inherit the Duchy until he reached the age of majority, which in Renaissance times was 14. Until then, Milan would be ruled by his mother, Galeazzo Maria’s widow, Bona of Savoy.  Read more…

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Luigi de Magistris - politician

Popular and progressive Mayor of Naples

Luigi de Magistris, who was Mayor of Naples for 10 years following a shock win in the 2011 local elections, was born on this day in 1967.  A former public prosecutor with a reputation for standing up against corruption and organised crime, De Magistris was the Member of the European Parliament for Southern Italy between 2009 and 2011, when he ran for Italy of Values, the centre-left party founded by another former magistrate, Antonio di Pietro.  He stood in the 2011 mayoral elections in Naples with the support of minor parties on the left and the right and won in the second round of voting with 65 per cent of the vote, defeating Gianni Lettieri, the candidate for a centre right coalition led by Silvio Berlusconi’s People of Freedom party.  In office, De Magistris faced difficult times because of the city’s precarious financial situation. Read more…

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Armando Picchi - footballer

Star defender captained ‘La Grande Inter’

The footballer Armando Picchi, who was captain of the Inter-Milan team of the 1960s known as La Grande Inter and one of Italian football’s most accomplished players in the libero position, was born on this day in 1935 in the Tuscan port of Livorno.  Under his captaincy, the Inter side managed by the Argentina-born coach Helenio Herrera won the European Cup twice as well as three Serie A titles and two Intercontinental Cups between 1963 and 1966.  After retiring as a player at 34, Picchi embarked on a coaching career of his own, but after his progress with Varese and hometown club AS Calcio Livorno earned him the chance to take the helm at Juventus his life was cut tragically short in 1971, when he developed an aggressive form of cancer and died just three months after being diagnosed.  Picchi grew up 30km (19 miles) south of Livorno in the coastal resort of Vada.  Read more…


Giannina Arangi-Lombardi – opera singer

Soprano’s superb voice was captured in early recordings

Soprano Giannina Arangi-Lombardi was born on this day in 1891 in Marigliano near Naples in Campania.  She studied singing at the Conservatory of San Pietro a Majella in Naples and made her debut on the stage in Rome in 1920. Arangi-Lombardi sang mezzo-soprano roles for the next three years at theatres in Rome, Sicily, Parma, Florence and Naples.  She then underwent further study and returned to the stage as what is known as a spinto soprano, a singer who can reach the high notes of the lyric soprano but can also achieve dramatic climaxes with her voice.  Arangi-Lombardi’s second debut, this time as a soprano, was in 1923. The first time she sang the role of Aida in Verdi's opera of the same name the audience was stunned by her voice and her fame quickly spread.  She appeared on stage at Teatro alla Scala in Milan for the first time in 1924. Read more…

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Valerio Evangelisti - novelist

Writer's stories of the Inquisition are bestsellers

The bestselling novelist Valerio Evangelisti, best known for his science fiction, fantasy, historical novels and horror stories, was born in Bologna on this day in 1952.  He is famous in Italy for his series of novels featuring the inquisitor Nicolas Eymerich and for the Magus trilogy, all of which have been translated into many languages.  Eymerich is a real historical character, a member of the order of the Dominicans and of the Spanish Inquisition who was born in 1320 in Girona, Catalonia.  Evangelisti portrays him as a cruel and ruthless man who acts without mercy to protect the Catholic Church against threats of both natural and supernatural origin.  Evangelisti uses the Eymerich novels to investigate the mysterious phenomena in medieval Europe that strategically influenced the great historical events of the time. Read more…

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Book of the Day: Italian Dynasties: The Great Families of Italy from the Renaissance to the Present Day by Edward Burman

Italian Dynasties covers every major Renaissance power family in one volume.  It includes dedicated chapters on the Sforza, Visconti, Medici, Este, Gonzaga, and others. The book focuses on political power, cultural patronage, military influence, and the personalities that shaped Renaissance Italy and places the Sforza within the broader ecosystem of Italian princely families. The Colonna, Malatesta and Farnese also have their own chapters. Italian Dynasties is essentially a tour through the great ruling families of Renaissance Italy, each chapter giving you a compact political history, a sense of personality and power, and the cultural legacy they left behind. It’s not a dry genealogical dictionary - it reads more like a sequence of vivid portraits of courts, cities, and the people who shaped them.

Edward Burman, who grew up in Cambridge and studied at the University of Leeds, spent some years living in Italy, where he studied art, learnt Italian, and wrote articles for an English-language newspaper. He has written a number of books on occult subjects and Italian culture and taught in the universities of L’Aquila and Bologna.

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19 June 2026

19 June

Pier Angeli - Hollywood star

Actress hailed for talent and beauty died tragically young

The actress Pier Angeli, a Hollywood star in the 1950s and 60s, was born on this day in 1932 in Cagliari, Sardinia.  She won awards in Italy and in America at the start of her career, when she was likened by some critics to the Swedish-born star Greta Garbo.  Described by the actor Paul Newman as "the most beautiful Italian actress of the century", Angeli was also a fixture in the gossip columns.  Linked romantically with a number of Hollywood's leading male actors, she dated Kirk Douglas and became close to the celebrated 'rebel' James Dean before marrying another star, the Italian-American actor and singer, Vic Damone.  It would be the first of two marriages.  She had a son, Perry, with Damone but they divorced after four years.  A second marriage, to the Italian composer, Armando Trovaioli, produced another son, Andrew, but they also divorced.  Read more…

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Francesco Moser - Giro d’Italia winner

Only two riders have won more road races

The cycling champion Francesco Moser, winner of the 1984 Giro d’Italia and the 1977 World road racing championship among 273 road victories in his career, was born on this day in 1951 in Palù di Giovo, a village about 10km (6 miles) north of Trento in northern Italy.  Only the great Belgians Eddy Merckx (525) and Rik Van Looy (379) won more road races than Moser, who was at his peak during the late 1970s and early 1980s.  One of his proudest achievements was to break Merckx’s record for the greatest distance covered in one hour.  He became renowned as a specialist in the so-called Monuments, the five road races among what are generally termed the Classics considered to be the oldest, hardest and most prestigious one-day events in cycling.  Of those events, Moser won the Paris-Roubaix three times, the Giro di Lombardia twice and the Milan-San Remo once.  Read more

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Marisa Pavan - actress

Twin sister of tragic star Pier Angeli

The actress Marisa Pavan, whose twin sister Pier Angeli was a Hollywood star in the 1950s and 1960s, was born on this day in 1932 as Maria Luisa Pierangeli in Cagliari, Sardinia.  Pavan’s career ran parallel with that of her sister, who was born 20 minutes before her, but she rejected the re-invention as an ultra-glamorous starlet that Pier Angeli underwent within the Hollywood studio system.  She turned roles down when she felt they did not have enough substance and did not hesitate to sack agents if she felt they were putting her forward for unsuitable parts.  She refused to sign up to any one studio.  Her biggest success was The Rose Tattoo, the 1955 film adaptation of a Tennessee Williams play in which she played the daughter of the central character, played by Anna Magnani - with whom she is pictured - one of postwar Italian cinema’s most respected actresses. Read more…


Luca Pacioli - mathematician and geometrist 

Friar who became known as ‘Father of Accounting’

Luca Pacioli, the Franciscan friar and mathematician who would become known as the ‘Father of Accounting’, died on this day in 1517 in Sansepolcro, a town in eastern Tuscany in the province of Arezzo.  Taking advantage of the development of the printing press, Pacioli is thought to have published at least 10 mathematical textbooks, of which the best known is his Summa de arithmetica, geometria, Proportioni et proportionalita - usually known as simply Summa.  Published in Venice in 1494, it was a comprehensive treatise of every aspect of mathematical knowledge that had been explored and the first to include a printed description of the double-entry bookkeeping system, widely used by Venetian merchants. The principals he outlined in Summa still influence business practices today.  Read more…

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Francesco Baracca – flying ace

Italy’s most successful First World War fighter pilot

Italy’s top fighter pilot of the First World War, Francesco Baracca, died in action on this day in 1918.  He had been flying a strafing mission against Austro-Hungarian ground troops in support of an Italian attack on the Montello Hill, about 17km (11 miles) north of Treviso in the Veneto, on which he was accompanied by a rookie pilot, Tenente Franco Osnago.  They split from one another after being hit by ground fire but a few minutes later, Osnago saw a burning plane falling from the sky.  Witnesses on the ground saw it too. Osnago flew back to his base but Baracca never returned.  Only when the Austro-Hungarian troops were driven back was the wreckage of Baracca’s Spad VII aircraft found in a valley.  His body was discovered a few metres away.  A monument in his memory was later built on the site. Read more…

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Book of the Day: Pier Angeli: A Fragile Life, by Jane Allen 

This work is the first full-length biography of actress Anna Maria Pierangeli, from her early life in Italy to her death at the age of 39. She was discovered by Vittorio De Sica and soon after starred in her first film, Domani e troppo tardi (Tomorrow Is Too Late), which began her meteoric rise to fame in Italy. She arrived in Hollywood in 1950 at the age of 18, and the first thing MGM did was change her name to Pier Angeli and predict great things for its newest actress.  Pier Angeli: A Fragile Life covers her seven year career with MGM, her two unhappy marriages to Vic Damone and Armando Trovajoli, her love for her children Perry and Andrew, her brief and stormy relationship with James Dean, her dependent relationships with her mother and such stars as Kirk Douglas, Richard Attenborough and Debbie Reynolds, and the mystery surrounding her death.

Writer and psychologist Jane Allen lives in Bowral, New South Wales, Australia. She is the author of A Walk Through Blue Poppies: The Letters of Eric Shipton to Margaret Bradshaw 1934-1974, a book of children's stories, and The Judge's Cat, a novel of Victorian family life.

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