Paolo Emilio Taviani | |
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Italian Minister of Defense | |
In office August 17, 1953 – July 1, 1958 |
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Prime Minister |
Giuseppe Pella Amintore Fanfani Mario Scelba Antonio Segni Adone Zoli |
Preceded by | Giuseppe Codacci Pisanelli |
Succeeded by | Antonio Segni |
Italian Minister of the Interior | |
In office February 21, 1962 – June 21, 1963 |
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Prime Minister | Amintore Fanfani |
Preceded by | Mario Scelba |
Succeeded by | Mariano Rumor |
In office December 4, 1963 – June 24, 1968 |
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Prime Minister | Aldo Moro |
Preceded by | Mariano Rumor |
Succeeded by | Franco Restivo |
In office July 7, 1973 – November 23, 1974 |
|
Prime Minister | Mariano Rumor |
Preceded by | Mariano Rumor |
Succeeded by | Luigi Gui |
Personal details | |
Born |
Genoa, Italy |
6 November 1912
Died | 18 June 2001 | (aged 88)
Nationality | Italian |
Political party | Christian Democracy |
Spouse(s) | Vittoria Festa |
Children | Ferdinando, Cesare, Ida, Giuseppe, Andrea, Elide, Pietro, Paolo |
Profession | Politician |
Religion | Roman Catholic |
Signature |
Paolo Emilio Taviani (6 November 1912 – 18 June 2001) was an Italian political leader, economist and historian of the career of Christopher Columbus.
He was a partisan leader in Liguria, a Gold Medal of the Resistance, then a member of the Consulta (National Assembly gathered to direct the transformation of the monarchy into a Republic) and the Constituent Council, later of the Italian Parliament from 1948 until his death. Several times minister in the Republic’s governments. He was author of studies on economics and important works on Christopher Columbus, University professor and journalist.
“Eminent political and government figure who for decades continued to bear witness to the diversity of ideals that inspired the Resistance” (Giorgio Napolitano, President of the Republic of Italy).
Taviani was born in Genoa on November 6, 1912. His mother, Elide Banchelli, was an elementary school teacher. His father, Ferdinando, was a headmaster and one of the founders of the Genoese section of the Italian People's Party (1919). After graduating from the Classical “Liceo”, Taviani went on to university where he earned a law degree in 1934. The same year he obtained his journalist’s license and began working for various Catholic oriented newspapers. In 1936 he obtained a second degree in social sciences from the prestigious Scuola Normale Superiore of Pisa ( Collegio Mussolini i.e. present day Sant'Anna School of Advanced Studies) and in 1939 he earned a third degree in Letters and Philosophy from the Catholic University of Milan. The next year he was professor of History and Philosophy in the public “Licei” as well as assistant lecturer in Geography at the University of Genoa. From 1943 he was professor of Demographics in the Faculty of Law in Genoa.
Already in secondary school Taviani joined the catholic group that was most sensitive to social issues. At university he became head of the Genoese branch of FUCI (Federazione Universitaria dei Cattolici Italiani). Following the Lateran Pacts, Taviani, a young man at the time, shared in the illusion that Fascism might one day evolve into a movement for social justice inspired by Catholic values. Consequently, at the age of 18 he joined the PNF. But the fascists’ belligerent policies and, above all, the racial laws of 1938 shattered that illusion. By the eve of the war, Taviani was firmly in the camp of the anti-fascists. On July 27, 1943 just before the fall of the regime, Taviani founded in Liguria the section of the “Partito-Cristiano-Sociale Democratico” (later Christian Democracy, DC) bringing together young people from the Christian Social Movement with the older members of the People's Party.