P. Villari
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Pasquale Villari (3 October 1827 – 11 December 1917) was an Italian historian and politician.


Early life and publications

Villari was born in Naples and took part in the risings of 1848 there against the
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s and subsequently fled to Florence. There he devoted himself to teaching and historical research in the public libraries with the object of collecting new materials on Girolamo Savonarola. He published the fruits of his researches in the ''Archivio Storico Italiano'' in 1856, and in 1859 he published the first volume of his ''Storia di Girolamo Savonarola e de' suoi tempi'', in consequence of which he was appointed professor of history at
Pisa Pisa ( , or ) is a city and ''comune'' in Tuscany, central Italy, straddling the Arno just before it empties into the Ligurian Sea. It is the capital city of the Province of Pisa. Although Pisa is known worldwide for its leaning tower, the cit ...
. A second volume appeared in 1861, and the work, which soon came to be recognized as an Italian classic, was translated into various foreign languages. It was followed by a work of even greater critical value, '' Niccolò Machiavelli e i suoi tempi'' (1877–82). In the meanwhile Villari had left Pisa and was transferred to the chair of philosophy of history at the Institute of Studii Superiori in Florence, and he was also appointed a member of the council of education (1862). He served as a juror at the
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of that year in London, and contributed an important monograph on education in England and Scotland.


Enters politics

In 1869 he was appointed under-secretary of state for education, and shortly afterwards was elected member of parliament, a position which he held for several years. In 1884 he was appointed senator, and became vice-president of the senate in 1887. In 1891-1892 he was minister of education in the Marchese di Rudini's first cabinet, and introduced valuable reforms into the curriculum of the schools. In 1893-1894 he collected a number of essays on Florentine history, originally published in the Nuova Antologia, under the title of I primi due secoli della storia di Firenze, and in 1901 he produced ''
Le Invasioni Barbariche in Italia ''Le Invasioni Barbariche in Italia'' is Professor Pasquale Villari's popular account of the barbarian invasions of the Roman Empire from the Antonines to the coronation of Charlemagne Charlemagne ( , ) or Charles the Great ( la, Carol ...
'', a popular account in one volume of the events following the dissolution of the Roman empire.


Other works

Among his other literary works may be mentioned: ''Saggi Critici'' (1868); ''Arte, Storia, e Filosofia'' (Florence, 1884); ''Scritti varii'' (Bologna, 1894); another volume of ''Saggi Critici'' (Bologna, 1896); and a volume of ''Discussioni critiche e discorsi'' (Bologna, 1905), containing his speeches as president of the Dante Alighieri Society. His most important political and social essays are collected in his ''Lettere Meridionali ed altri scritti sulla questione sociale in Italia'' (Turin, 1885), and ''Scritti sulla questione sociale in Italia'' (Florence, 1902). ''The Lettere Meridionali'' (originally published in the newspaper ''L'Opinione'' in 1875) produced a deep impression, as they were the first exposure of the real conditions of southern Italy. Many of his works were translated into English by his wife,
Linda White Mazini Villari Linda White Mazini Villari (née White) (1836–1915) was an author and translator. She translated many of the works of her second husband, Pasquale Villari, into English. She was the widow of Vicenzo Mazini and the daughter of James White. Famil ...
, with whom he had
Luigi Villari Luigi Villari (1876–1959), son of Pasquale Villari Pasquale Villari (3 October 1827 – 11 December 1917) was an Italian historian and politician. Early life and publications Villari was born in Naples and took part in the risings of 1848 ther ...
. His stepdaughter, Costanza, married the artist William Stokes Hulton. They had two daughters, Gioconda Mary Hulton and Edith Teresa Hulton. Edith Teresa Hulton became the 8th Lady Berwick of Attingham Park in Shropshire upon her marriage to Thomas Henry Noel-Hill, 8th Lord Berwick, in 1919.


Family

His younger brother
Emilio Villari Emilio Villari (25 September 1836 – 20 August 1904) was an Italian experimental physicist and a professor at the University of Bologna and later Naples who contributed to studies on electromagnetism after whom is named the Inverse magnetostrictiv ...
became a physicist.


Notes


References

* ;Attribution *


External links

* {{DEFAULTSORT:Villari, Pasquale 1827 births 1917 deaths 20th-century Italian historians Italian politicians 19th-century Neapolitan people Recipients of the Pour le Mérite (civil class) University of Pisa faculty Members of the Prussian Academy of Sciences Corresponding Fellows of the British Academy 19th-century Italian historians Writers from Naples