Hi guys, welcome back to ItalianPod101.com, my name is Desy, mi chiamo Desy, mi chiamo Desy, |
and in this video we're going to talk about famous historical figures in Italy. |
5 figure storiche in Italia |
Of course there are so many, just think about arts and literature, for example, but in this |
video we're going to see five of them. |
First one we're talking about Giulio Cesare. |
The one you know by the name Giulio Caesar, I'd say, even though it's funny to notice |
that in Latin it was supposed to be read as Caeser, so with the hard sound C. |
He's not only famous for his life, but especially for his death. |
He was born in 100 B.C., so I would say he's the oldest that we're talking about, and he's |
famous for being a general, a commander of the army, that at that time was not of the |
Roman Empire yet. |
In fact, Giulio Cesare is famous because he contributed, he started basically the rise |
of Roman Empire. |
Even though it was Octavian, also known as Augusto, that actually made it a reality. |
So he was a famous dictator in the end, because when the government asked him after the Gallic |
War to step down from his role as a commander, he refused that and just led a civil war that |
actually led him to take control of Rome. |
But then he was too much in control, I'd say, and a lot of people didn't really like it, |
and that's how he died. |
Before dying, though, I think a lot of you know him thanks to Il Calendario Romano, |
so the calendar that we use nowadays, the Roman calendar with all the festivities and |
holidays, yes, that's thanks to him. |
Also he's famous for being lover of Cleopatra, you know, Queen of Egypt, and maybe not everyone |
knows that he also suffered of epilepsy. |
As I was saying before, he wasn't really liked by everyone, so the legend history says |
that he was stabbed by a group of around 60 men, among which there were Cassius and Brutus, |
and he was stabbed 23 times, 23 volte. |
A famous quote from him is in Latin, actually, people say that that's what he said last |
like before dying, and it goes like |
which means even you, Brutus, my son, and nowadays those words, not all of them but |
just too quokwe, so even you, is used to express surprise for maybe being betrayed |
or anyway not having expectations met, sometimes even in an ironical way, but yeah, that's |
where it comes from, too quokwe. |
Anche tu, Brutus, figlio mio. |
Then let's talk about a man who lived 1.500 years later, actually, we're talking about |
Cristoforo Colombo, he was born in 1451 in Genoa. |
Actually a lot of people claim, people and countries then claimed his nativity saying |
that he was from Spain or Portugal or even other cities like Alessandria in Liguria and |
Piedmont, which is Piedmont and Liguria region in Italy, said that he was born there, but |
there are written sources that confirm that he was born in Genoa. |
He began his career as a sailor, so marinaio, and then became known as esploratore. |
As everyone knows, he thought he would actually reach Asia by crossing the ocean, but in the |
end, as we all know, he discovered America. |
So the 12th October of 1942 is the day that is known as la scoperta delle Americhe. |
It's funny to notice that in Italian we say that as in plural, so discovery of Americas, |
because then we divided it in like south and north. |
For that reason also a lot of places actually take name from him, like Colombia itself, the |
country, it's after Columbus. |
The names of his three ships are really famous, la Nina, la Pinta, e la Santa Maria. |
Nina, which is the little one, la Pinta, and la Santa Maria, holy Mary. |
They were three caravel, which are a kind of veliero, shipboat. |
He then died in 1506, after some more explorations that he attempted, but weren't really as successful. |
Around the same years, actually the year after, another important person was born, I'm talking |
about Leonardo da Vinci in 1452, Leonardo da Vinci. |
He's known to be an inventor, inventore, artista, artist, also a scientist, scienziato. |
We can say that his career started in Florence when he was working at the workshop of Verrocchio, |
who was an artist, who was of course his teacher. |
In Florence he also worked a lot for Lorenzo il Magnifico, the Magnificent from Famiglia |
Medici, and then he moved around a lot, so he also went to Pavia, Mantua, Venice, of course |
Rome and so on. |
From 1503 to 1506 he worked at his most famous masterpiece, La Gioconda, which is a portrait, |
un ritratto, which was the trend of the moment, we can say, but he was also a civil engineer, |
un ingegnere civile, made a lot of prototypes, prototipi, such as the flying machine, |
which wasn't the plane yet, but also a philosopher, he also studied the human body |
and so many other things, and that's why he's known as the genius of Renaissance, |
il genio del rinascimento. |
Leonardo da Vinci, il genio del rinascimento, è morto nel 1519. |
Leonardo da Vinci, the genius of Renaissance, died in 1519. |
Another important historical period is il risorgimento, which could be mistaken for |
Renaissance as well, because it also means rebirth, risorgimento, but it actually took |
place 300 years later. |
A relevant character from this period is Giuseppe Garibaldi, born in Nice in 1807. |
He was a generale e condottiero, so general and commander, known as the |
eroe dei due mondi, the hero of two worlds, which are Europe and South America. |
He led a lot of missions, but the one that made him the most famous, at least in Italy, |
is la spedizione dei mille, the expedition of the thousand. |
In 1860, so as the name said, there were thousands of people, actually even more than |
thousands, but that's how we remember them by, thousands of people led by Giuseppe Garibaldi, |
volunteers actually, went to the kingdom of Sicily, il regno delle due Sicilie, |
il regno delle due Sicilie, because it was the two Sicilies at that time, fought against |
the army and population as well, and in the end they unified it to the kingdom of Italy, |
which was just about to be born at that time. |
So he's famous for being the unifier of Italy. |
In fact, the word Garibaldino, Garibaldino, it's an adjective that comes from the word |
Garibaldi, so Giuseppe's surname, in the beginning it just identified someone who |
fought with him, but then it also meant someone who was really heroic and someone that achieved |
the big goal without having a proper structure supporting him, Garibaldino, and that's where |
it comes from, because basically he just went with volunteers, so not even a proper army, |
but still managed to unify the kingdom of Italy. |
At that time though, Italy wasn't all Italian, there were still territories that were on their |
own, such as Venice and Rome, so he also tried to do the same thing with Rome, but in that case |
it was a failure, and that's known as la sconfitta di Aspromonte, where Aspromonte is just the name |
of the mountain. |
At that time, in fact, the capital city of Italy was Turin and then it moved to Florence. |
When he died in 1882, his last words are known to be |
Muoio con il dolore di non vedere redente Trento e Trieste. |
So I die with the pain of not seeing Trento and Trieste united to the kingdom of Italy, |
so not to see the redemption of Trento and Trieste. |
And that's why in almost every city in Italy, the biggest street or square is named after |
Garibaldi. |
Lastly, I want to talk about a man that had nothing to do with wars, because a lot of the |
ones we saw did, and that is really famous for being the best comic actor. |
I'm talking about Totò, even though his real name was Antonio de Curtis. |
His art name is Totò. |
He was born in Naples in 1898, and he's known as il Principe della Risata, so the Prince of Laughs, |
Laughs Prince, because he's the symbol of Italian comedy. |
Comicità Italiana. |
So he's an attore, actor, attore, but also a poet, poeta, poeta. |
He used to work in theater, al teatro, and cinema as well, al cinema, cinema. |
He was so famous that when he died in 1967, he actually got three funerals in different |
cities so that everyone could go and see him one last time. |
For two hours, the city stopped, the shops closed, and even the traffic was closed so |
that people could actually walk behind the funeral car. |
Some of his most famous titles are 47, Morto che parla, so 47, the dead who speaks, which |
refers to Tombola, which is a game where we have meanings, different meanings for each |
number, in this case, 47, morto che parla. |
A famous phrase from this movie is, e io pago, e io pago, so and I pay, and I pay. |
It's also a satirical movie. |
Another famous quote from this movie is, e io pago, e io pago, so and I pay, and I |
Another famous quote is, c'è chi può, e chi non può, there is a who can and who can't, |
c'è chi può, e chi non può, e io può, and I can, which of course is not grammarly correct |
because otherwise it would be, and io posso, but he uses io può, like a poetic license. |
You may know him from his famous gag, I'm always talking about movies that were |
still in black and white, but when he sells La Fontana di Trevi, so Trevi's fountain |
to a tourist, La Fontana di Trevi, go watch it if you haven't. |
So those were the top five historical figures in Italy. |
I hope you enjoyed and you learned something that you didn't know. |
Thank you for watching and if you want to learn even more about Italy and Italian, |
click the link in the description and download our PDF lessons. |
I'll see you soon! Bye bye! Ciao ciao! |
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