Ippolito Nievo
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Ippolito Nievo (Italian pronunciation: [ipˈpɔːlito ˈnjɛːvo; ˈnjeː-]; 30 November 1831 – 4 March 1861) was an Italian writer, journalist and patriot. His Confessions of an Italian is widely considered the most important novel about the Italian Risorgimento.[1]
Life
Nievo was born and raised in Padua, during the time the Veneto region was ruled by the Austrian Empire. His father was a lawyer. Nievo studied law at the University of Padua, but upon graduating, he refused to join his father's profession as it would imply submission to the Austrian government. He was politically inspired by Giuseppe Mazzini's thought and wanted to join the struggle for the independence of Veneto and a united Italy.
In 1860 he fought with Giuseppe Garibaldi's , who, after having defeated the Bourbon army in Sicily and Southern Italy, gave those regions to the King of Sardinia Victor Emmanuel II. On 18 February 1861, in fulfilment of Nievo's hopes, Italy was unified under the House of Savoy. Shortly afterwards, in March, Nievo died in a shipwreck in the Tyrrhenian Sea.
Ippolito Nievo appears in the Umberto Eco novel The Prague Cemetery. In this novel, Nievo's ship was secretly blown up by the fictional protagonist Simonini in order to destroy the financial documents.
An extensive archive of Nievo's correspondence has remained, such as 72 letters to the love of his early years Matilde Ferrari. In the last years of his life, Nievo was in love with Caterina Curti Melzi, a noble woman from an ancient Lombard family. Her relative Pier-Ambrogio Curti also was a close friend of Nievo.[2][3]
Confessions of an Italian
Nievo is best known for his novel Confessions of an Italian, an abridged English translation of which appeared under the title The Castle of Fratta in 1957, with a full translation by Frederika Randall including an introduction by Lucy Riall later published by Penguin in 2014. Written between December 1857 and August 1858, the work is in twenty-three chapters. Nievo died before it could receive its final editing. Nievo himself did not find a publisher, and it was only in 1867, six years after the writer's death, that the novel was published under the title Confessioni di un ottuagenario (Confessions of an octogenarian). The author's original title, by which the book is now generally known, was Le Confessioni d'un italiano, but this seemed to be too "political" for the times.
The novel is both historical (its background is events in Italy in the last decades of the 18th century and the first half of the 19th century) and psychological, being based upon the memories of "Carlo Altoviti", the main character and first-person narrator. It is widely considered the most important novel about the Italian Risorgimento.
Influences
There are similarities between W. M. Thackeray's earlier novel The History of Henry Esmond and Confessions of an Italian, both in the fundamental structure of the plot, in the psychological outlines of the main characters, in frequent episodes and in the use of metaphors.[4]
Other works
Nievo wrote also poetry (Versi, 1854–55), short stories, mainly set in the countryside of Friuli, the region where Nievo lived as a young boy, and novels (Il conte pecoraio, Angelo di bontà, Il barone di Nicastro, Il Varmo).
His political engagement was reflected in two essays: Venezia e la libertà d'Italia (1860) and Frammento sulla rivoluzione nazionale (published 1929).
Commemoration
The Italian Regia Marina ("Royal Navy") destroyer Ippolito Nievo was named in his honor.
References
- ^ "Ippolito Nievo, scrittore e patriota". Retrieved 6 December 2018.
- ^ Zangrandi 2016.
- ^ Mengaldo 2017.
- ^ University's final Thesis presented in Bocconi University of Milan by Lea Slerca with prof. Claudio Gorlier as a supervisor, published in 1970 in "Studi e ricerche di letteratura inglese e americana" ed. Cisalpino
Sources
- Zangrandi, Alessandra (2016). Stile e racconto nelle lettere di Ippolito Nievo. Libreria Universitaria. ISBN 978-88-6292-737-6.
- Mengaldo, Pier Vincenzo (2017). "Intorno all'epistolario di Nievo". Universita di Bologna.
Further reading
- Chamber's Encyclopedia Volume 10 page 35
- Giulio Ferroni, Profilo storico della letteratura italiana, Einaudi scuola, Milan, 1992
External links
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