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The founder is the journalist Vittorio Feltri, while the owner and publisher of the paper is Editoriale Libero S.r.l. [3] In February 2007, some members of the New Red Brigades were arrested on a charge of wanting to fire-bomb the Libero editorial offices in Milan. [4] The paper has been edited by Maurizio Belpietro since August 2009.
Feltri was born in Bergamo, Italy, one of three children of Adele and Angelo Feltri (1906–1949). [2] His father died at the age of 43 of Addison's disease. [2] At 14 and a half, he began working as a bellboy in a crystal shop, then a packaging shop, then took a window dresser course; he gained a political science degree at the University of Bergamo.
In 2004 L'Indice produced a cd-rom ("L'Indice dei libri del mese 1984-2004") including all articles published in the first twenty years of the review. In 2007, L'Indice published a volume entitled “La cultura italiana tra autonomia e potere” (“The Italian Culture between Autonomy and Power”), the proceedings of a conference on the ...
Feltri is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: Vittorio Feltri (born 1943), Italian journalist; Thiago Feltri (born 1985), Brazilian footballer
Vittorio Rossi (3 September 1865, in Venice – 18 January 1938, in Rome) was an Italian philologist and literary historian, best remembered for his literary ...
The clergy sexual abuse scandal is slowly gathering steam in Italy with increasing media coverage, criminal convictions and the launch Monday of an investigative podcast dedicated to a case that ...
Domani is an Italian newspaper published in Rome, Italy.The newspaper was launched by Carlo De Benedetti, former publisher of La Repubblica, in the spring of 2020, after the latter had been sold by his sons to the Agnelli family [1] [2] [3] and, in his view, had started to betray its legacy as Italy's leading progressive newspaper.
It was dedicated to Princess Margaret, who was a nun in the same convent as her mother, for “the obsequies of your most revered mother”. [1] The date of publication, 1605, is often included with the title to differentiate the Officium Defunctorum from Victoria's other setting of the Requiem Mass. With the revisions, Victoria included the ...