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Mattei (other)
Mattei may refer to: * Mattei (surname) * Mattei, California * Mattei family, noble Roman family * ''The Mattei Affair'' (Italian: ''Il Caso Mattei''), a 1972 film * Mattei sarcophagus I, known as Mattei I * Electrohomeopathy Electrohomeopathy, Electrohomoeopathy, or Mattei cancer cure is a derivative of homeopathy invented in the 19th century by Count Cesare Mattei. The name is derived from a combination of ''electro'' (referring to an electric bio-energy content supp ..., also Mattei cancer cure See also * Matteis, surname {{disambiguation ...
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Mattei (surname)
Mattei is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: *Members of the Mattei family of Italian nobility including: **Muzio Mattei ***Ciriaco Mattei (Muzio's nephew) ***Girolamo Mattei (Ciriaco's brother and a cardinal) ***Asdrubale Mattei (Ciriaco's brother) ****Girolamo Mattei, Duca di Giove (Asdrubale's son) ****Luigi Mattei (Asdrubale's son) *Bruno Mattei, Italian movie director *Enrico Mattei, Italian public administrator who created ENI *Fernando Matthei, Chilean airforce commander and junta member *Evelyn Matthei, Chilean right-wing politician *Janet Akyüz Mattei (1943–2004), Turkish-American astronomer and former director of the American Association of Variable Star Observers *Ugo Mattei, professor at the University of Torino * Olga Elena Mattei, Colombian Poet *Peter Mattei, Swedish operatic baritone *Stanislao Mattei Stanislao Mattei, O.F.M. Conv. (10 February 1750, in Bologna – 17 May 1825, in Bologna), was an Italian Conventual Franciscan friar who was a note ...
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Mattei Family
200px, Cortile Mattei di Giove The House of Mattei was one of the most powerful noble families of Rome during the Middle Ages and early modern era, holding high positions in the papal curia and government office. The family amassed significant art collections under art enthusiasts such as Ciriaco Mattei. The Mattei gave eight Cardinals to the Catholic Church, among them Girolamo Mattei (1586), Gaspare Mattei (1643), Alessandro Mattei (1803), Mario Mattei (1832), Lorenzo Girolamo Mattei (1833) and (as late as 1875) Ruggero Luigi Emidio Antici Mattei. The founder of one powerful branch of the Mattei was Giovanni Giacomo Mattei. History Mattei family lines reportedly went back to an early Roman family, the Papareschi, and their ancestors included Pope Innocent II (1130–1143). In the 1350s the family moved to the Rione Sant Angelo, and they eventually built six residences in the block called the ''Isola Mattei''. The Mattei established themselves in politics and banking and ...
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The Mattei Affair
''The Mattei Affair'' ( it, Il Caso Mattei) is a 1972 film directed by Francesco Rosi. It depicts the life and mysterious death of Enrico Mattei, an Italian businessman who in the aftermath of World War II managed to avoid the sale of the nascent Italian oil and hydrocarbon industry to US companies and developed them in the Eni, a state-owned oil company which rivaled the 'Seven Sisters (oil companies), seven sisters' for oil and gas deals in North Africa, Northern African and Middle Eastern countries. The film shared the ''Palme d'Or, Grand Prix'' with ''The Working Class Goes to Heaven'' at the 1972 Cannes Film Festival. Italian star Gian Maria Volonté was the leading actor in both films. The film is an innovative wikt:hybrid, hybrid of documentary and fiction, representing Francesco Rosi's concept of cine-inchieste (film investigation). The flashback structure shows the influence of ''Citizen Kane'' and Rosi's ''Salvatore Giuliano (film), Salvatore Giuliano'' (1962). Rosi rema ...
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Mattei Sarcophagus I
The sarcophagus with hunting scenes, known as Mattei I, is an ancient Roman sarcophagus of the 3rd century, displayed at the palazzo Mattei in Rome. It is 1.31m high. Description From the age of Caracalla onwards, carved sarcophagus production shows a kind of reaction to the "pittoricism" of examples from the preceding era (late 2nd-early 3rd century), such as the Portonaccio sarcophagus), with a return to richer plasticity, as is also documented in Roman portraiture between 215 and 250. Hugely influenced by their use in the Eastern Empire and the Middle East, hunting scenes in Roman art had started to become popular in Hadrianic art and the popularity of their use on sarcophagi spread thanks to Caracalla's predilection for Alexander the Great and his hunts (the Mattei example is one of the earliest with such scenes). In the Roman world it acquired a new meaning as a signifier of military values, as shown by the ''Virtus-Roma'' figure in Amazonian dress standing behind the mounte ...
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Electrohomeopathy
Electrohomeopathy, Electrohomoeopathy, or Mattei cancer cure is a derivative of homeopathy invented in the 19th century by Count Cesare Mattei. The name is derived from a combination of ''electro'' (referring to an electric bio-energy content supposedly extracted from plants and of therapeutic value, rather than electricity in its conventional sense) and ''homeopathy'' (referring to an alternative medicinal philosophy developed by Samuel Hahnemann in the 18th century). Electrohomeopathy has been defined as the combination of electrical devices and homeopathy. Lucrative for its inventor and popular in the late nineteenth century, electrohomeopathy has been described as "utter idiocy". Like traditional homeopathy, it is regarded by the medical and scientific communities as pseudoscience and its practice as quackery. History and criticism Electrohomeopathy was devised by Cesare Mattei (1809–1896) in the latter part of the 19th century. Mattei, a nobleman living in a castle in the v ...
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