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Ernesto Nathan

Ernesto Nathan
Ernesto Nathan.jpg
Mayor of Rome
In office
25 November 1907 – 10 June 1914
Preceded by Cesare Salvarezza
Succeeded by Fausto Aphel
Personal details
Born (1848-10-05)5 October 1848
London, United Kingdom
Died 9 April 1921(1921-04-09) (aged 72)
Rome, Italy
Nationality English-Italian
Political party Historical Left (1870-1889)
Radical Party (1889-1921)
Residence Rome, Lazio, Italy
Profession Politician
Religion Judaism

Ernesto Nathan (5 October 1848 – 9 April 1921) was an English-Italian Jewish politician, and mayor of Rome, Italy from November 1907 to December 1913.

Nathan was born in London in 1848 to Sara Levi, an Italian from Pesaro, and Mayer Moses Nathan, a naturalised Briton of German origin, both of Jewish heritage. His father died when Ernesto was 14.

He spent his youth in Florence, Lugano, Milan and Sardinia, where he was called to administer a cotton mill. In these years he was attracted by the revolutionary ideas of Giuseppe Mazzini, and in 1870, at 25, he moved to Rome as administrator of La Roma del Popolo. His house in Rome became a center of literarian and political debate, with figures like Giosuè Carducci and Francesco Crispi Nine years later he was member Parliament for Crispi's left-wing party. In 1888 he obtained Italian citizenship.

In 1887 he became a member of the Masonic Grande Oriente d'Italia, of which he was named Grand Master in 1899 and later in 1917.

In April 1889, Nathan was elected in the Town Council of Rome, and was elected mayor of the city in November 1907. He retained the charge until 1913, and was elected for a second time in November 1911.

The first mayor of Rome who did not belong to the land-owning elite which had controlled politics in the city until then, and motivated by a deep belief in the importance of a secular, ethical politics, Nathan tried to regulate as much as possible the intense building programs that had erupted all around the city after it became the capital of Italy in 1871. He also strove to promote a secular education system, at a time when education in Rome was still dominated by Catholic institutions. He opened more than 150 kindergartens. The 40th anniversary commemoration of the Capture of Porta Pia in 1910 heightened tension between Nathan's anticlerical administration and the Holy See.


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