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List of southern Italians

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List of southern Italians

This is a list of notable southern Italians.

Contents

Architects

  • Pirro Ligorio (c. 1510 – 1583), was a famous architect of the late Italian Renaissance.
  • Giacomo del Duca (c. 1520 – 1604), architect, sculptor, garden designer and assistant to Michelangelo.
  • Filippo Juvarra (1678–1736), architect of the late baroque and early rococo periods.
  • Filippo Raguzzini (1690–1771), was an architect. A master of Roman Rococo.
  • Rosario Gagliardi (1698–1762), was one of the leading architects working in the Sicilian Baroque.
  • Luigi Vanvitelli (1700–1773), "architect whose enormous Royal Palace at Caserta was one of the last triumphs of the Italian Baroque."
  • Giovanni Battista Vaccarini (1702–1768), "leading architect of the Sicilian Baroque."
  • Antonio Rinaldi (с. 1709 – 1794), was a famous "architect who taught and worked extensively in St. Petersburg for over thirty years during his career."
  • Vincenzo Sinatra (1720–1765), "worked as a stone cutter, a capomaestro, a tax estimator, and an architect in the city of Noto in southeastern Sicily."
  • Carlo Rossi (1775–1849), architect, was one of the last great exponents of Neoclassicism in Saint Petersburg.
  • Ernesto Basile (1857–1932), was an architect, teacher and designer, son of Giovan Battista Filippo Basile.
  • Simon Rodia (1879–1965), was an architect. His most famous creation are the Watts Towers.
  • Clorindo Testa (1923–2013), was a renowned architect and artist, famous for designing The National Library in Buenos Aires.
  • Chess players

  • Paolo Boi (1528–1598), was a chess player. "He is widely considered the 3rd unofficial chess champion of the world from 1587–1598."
  • Giovanni Leonardo Di Bona (1542–1587), was a "Neapolitan lawyer and one of the strongest players of his time."
  • Giulio Cesare Polerio (c. 1550 – c. 1610), was a master who made significant contributions to chess analysis and theory.
  • Alessandro Salvio (c. 1570 – c. 1640), was a "chess player who was considered by many to be the 4th unofficial world champion between the years 1598 and 1620."
  • Pietro Carrera (1573–1647), was a priest, chess player and author from Militello, Sicily.
  • Gioachino Greco (c. 1600 – c. 1634), also known as Il Calabrese, was "the most famous [chess] player of the seventeenth century."
  • Fabiano Caruana (born 1992), is a former chess prodigy. One of the youngest grandmasters of all times.
  • Cinematography

  • Elvira Notari (1875–1946), "was the first Italian female filmmaker."
  • Ricciotto Canudo (1877–1923), was a writer, critic and film theoretician, lived in Paris from about 1902.
  • Rudolph Valentino (1895–1926), an actor who was idolized as the "Great Lover" of the 1920s.
  • Frank Capra (1897–1991), motion-picture director who was the most prominent filmmaker of the 1930s, during which he won three Academy Awards as best director.
  • Totò (1898–1967), was a comedian, film and theatre actor, writer, singer and songwriter. He has been compared to such figures as Buster Keaton and Charlie Chaplin.
  • Eduardo De Filippo (1900–1984), one of the twentieth century's greatest playwrights, was also an original interpreter of his plays and a cinema actor as well.
  • Vittorio De Sica (1901–1974), film director and actor. His Shoeshine, The Bicycle Thief, and Umberto D. are classics of postwar Italian neorealism.
  • Peppino De Filippo (1903–1980), was a comic actor of the screen and stage.
  • Amedeo Nazzari (1907–1979), real name Salvatore Amedeo Buffa, was a famous actor from Sardinia.
  • Ennio Flaiano (1910–1972), "screenwriter, playwright, novelist, journalist, and drama critic."
  • Dino De Laurentiis (1919–2010), was "one of the most colorful, prolific, and successful producers in the contemporary motion picture business."
  • Vincent Gardenia (January 1920 – 1992), was a performer who had an award-winning career as a character actor on stage, films and television.
  • Ugo Pirro (April 1920 – 2008), was a scriptwriter who co-wrote two Oscar-winning films.
  • Adolfo Celi (July 1922 – 1986), "gained renown as a 'renaissance' man of theater and films, doing triple duty as an actor, writer and director."
  • Francesco Rosi (November 1922), is a film director, best known for his masterpiece Salvatore Giuliano.
  • Nanni Loy (1925–1995), film director. He was well known for his film The Four Days of Naples, which was nominated in 1963 for an Oscar for Best Foreign Film.
  • Pasqualino De Santis (1927–1996), was a cinematographer. In 1969, he earned an Academy Award for his superb photography of Franco Zeffirelli's Romeo and Juliet.
  • Bud Spencer (born 1929), an actor and filmmaker. He is best known for starring in multiple action and western films together with his longtime film partner Terence Hill.
  • Ettore Scola (born 1931), is among the most daring, creative, innovative, and committed of the great Italian writer-directors.
  • Pier Angeli (19 June 1932 – 1971), was a popular actress in the fifties. She received an Oscar nomination and won a Golden Globe.
  • Marisa Pavan (19 June 1932), actress and twin sister of Pier Angeli. She won a Golden Globe and was nominated for an Oscar for her work in The Rose Tattoo.
  • Sophia Loren (born 1934), film actress. She won a best actress Academy Award for Two Women. Other films include Marriage Italian Style.
  • Claudia Cardinale (born 1938), is an actress who appeared in some of the most prominent European films of the 1960s and 1970s.
  • Ruggero Deodato (born 1939), is a film director, actor and screenwriter, famous for his 1980 film Cannibal Holocaust.
  • Dario Argento (born 1940), is a film director known for his mastery of the horror genre. Deep Red along with Suspiria is one of the best Argento films.
  • Gianni Amelio (born 1945), one of Italy's most revered modern directors, whose 1992 film The Stolen Children won the Special Jury Prize at the Cannes Film Festival.
  • Michele Placido (born 1946), is an internationally known actor and director.
  • Gabriele Salvatores (born 1950), is best known as the director of the war drama Mediterraneo, which won the Oscar for Best Foreign language Film in 1992.
  • Massimo Troisi (1953–1994), was an actor, film director, and poet. He is internationally known due to the success of the movie Il Postino.
  • Ornella Muti (born 1955), is an actress, known for Oscar, Flash Gordon, and Un couple épatant.
  • Giuseppe Tornatore (born 1956), film director and screenwriter. He earned international acclaim in 1988 with his second film, Cinema Paradiso.
  • Giuliana De Sio (born 1957), is an actress, known for The Pool Hustlers, The Wicked, and Scusate il ritardo.
  • Mauro Fiore (born 1964), Academy Award-winning cinematographer for Avatar.
  • Valeria Golino (born 1965), is a famous actress, known to a large audience for her interest in different types of genres of movies and roles.
  • Paolo Sorrentino (born 1970), film director and screenwriter. Internationally known for his film The Great Beauty.
  • Giovanna Mezzogiorno (born 1974), is an actress and producer, known for Facing Windows, Vincere, and The Last Kiss.
  • Mafia

  • Vito Cascioferro (1862–1943), was a member of the Inglese Mafia family in Palermo, Sicily, and had fled to New York in 1900 to avoid a murder charge.
  • James Colosimo (1877–1920), "crime czar in Chicago from about 1902 until his death, owner of plush brothels, saloons, and a nightclub."
  • Johnny Torrio (1882–1957), was a gangster who became a top crime boss in Chicago.
  • Joe Masseria (17 January 1886 – 1931), "leading crime boss of New York City from the early 1920s until his murder in 1931."
  • Frank Nitti (27 January 1886 – 1943), a gangster who was Al Capone's chief enforcer and inherited Capone's criminal empire when Capone went to prison in 1931.
  • Frank Costello (1891–1973), nicknamed "The Prime Minister of the Underworld," he became one of the most powerful and influential mob bosses in American history.
  • Joe Profaci (October 1897 – 1962), was "one of the most powerful bosses in U.S. organized crime from the 1940s to the early 1960s."
  • Lucky Luciano (24 November 1897 – 1962), mobster who is credited as the father of modern organized crime in the United States.
  • Vito Genovese (27 November 1897 – 1969), was one of the most powerful figures in the history of organized crime in the United States.
  • Carlo Gambino (August 1902 – 1976), was the most powerful crime figure in the United States before his death in 1976.
  • Albert Anastasia (September 1902 – 1957), was one of the most ruthless and feared Cosa Nostra mobsters in U. S. history.
  • Antonio Macrì (c. 1902 – 1975), was a historical and charismatic boss of the 'Ndrangheta.
  • Michele Navarra (5 January 1905 – 1958), doctor and Mafia boss in Corleone; murdered in 1958 by his fosterson, Luciano Leggio.
  • Joseph Bonanno (18 January 1905 – 2002), was a mafioso who became the boss of the Bonanno crime family.
  • Luciano Leggio (1925–1993), was a criminal and leading figure of the Sicilian Mafia.
  • Tommaso Buscetta (1928–2000), was an influential Sicilian mafioso from Palermo.
  • Salvatore Riina (born 1930), is a member of the Sicilian Mafia. The most powerful member of the criminal organization in the early 1980s.
  • Giuseppe Calò (born 1931), is a Sicilian Mafia boss, also known as the "Mafia's cashier."
  • Bernardo Provenzano (born 1933), is a member of the Sicilian Mafia. The boss of bosses of the entire Sicilian Mafia until his arrest in 2006.
  • Giuseppe Morabito (born 1934), is a criminal and a historical boss of the 'Ndrangheta.
  • Benedetto Santapaola (born 1938), better known as Nitto is a prominent mafioso from Catania.
  • Stefano Bontade (1939–1981), was an influential member of the Sicilian Mafia.
  • Raffaele Cutolo (born 1941), is a crime boss and the charismatic leader of the Nuova Camorra Organizzata.
  • Leoluca Bagarella (February 1942), is a member of the Sicilian Mafia.
  • Salvatore Lo Piccolo (July 1942), is a Sicilian mafioso and one of the most powerful bosses of Palermo.
  • Luigi Giuliano (born 1949), is a former Camorrista who was the boss of the powerful Giuliano clan, based in the district of Forcella, Naples.
  • Francesco Schiavone (January 1953), is an influential member of the Camorra.
  • Paolo Di Lauro (August 1953), is a crime boss, leader of the Di Lauro Clan, a Camorra crime organization.
  • Edoardo Contini (born 1955), is a Camorra boss. He is the founder and head of the Contini clan.
  • Giovanni Brusca (born 1957), is a former member of the Sicilian Mafia.
  • Michele Zagaria (born 1958), is a boss of the Camorra clan Casalesi.
  • Matteo Messina Denaro (born 1962), is a Sicilian mafioso. According to Forbes magazine he is among the ten most wanted criminals in the world.
  • Antimafia

  • Joseph Petrosino (1860–1909), a police detective who was killed by the Mafia in Palermo in 1909.
  • Cesare Terranova (1921–1979), a magistrate and member of the Italian parliament who was murdered by the Mafia.
  • Libero Grassi (1924–1991), a Palermo small businessman who had made public his refusal to pay protection money, was killed outside his home.
  • Rocco Chinnici (January 1925 – 1983), an investigative magistrate, was killed by the Mafia in the summer of 1983.
  • Giuseppe Fava (September 1925 – 1984), was a writer, journalist, playwright, and Antimafia activist who was killed by the Mafia.
  • Pio La Torre (1927–1982), the Communist member of parliament, and author of the law which bears his name on combating the Mafia, was killed in 1982.
  • Pino Puglisi (1937–1993), was a parish priest in Palermo, well known for his Antimafia position.
  • Giovanni Falcone (1939–1992), was an Antimafia magistrate. He was killed along with his wife and three bodyguards.
  • Paolo Borsellino (1940–1992), was an Antimafia prosecutor who was killed by a Mafia car bomb in Palermo.
  • Pietro Grasso (born 1945), former Antimafia magistrate, was born in Licata, on 1 January 1945.
  • Giuseppe Impastato (1948–1978), was a political activist who opposed the Mafia that ordered his murder in 1978.
  • Rosario Livatino (1952–1990), a brave young Antimafia prosecutor who was killed by Mafia.
  • Rita Atria (1974–1992), was a key witness in a major Mafia investigation in Sicily. A powerful symbol of the fight for truth, justice, and the defeat of the Mafia.
  • Roberto Saviano (born 1979), is a writer and journalist. Author of Gomorrah, a best-selling exposé of the Camorra Mafia in Naples.
  • Economists

  • Ferdinando Galiani (1728–1787), also called Abbe Galiani, was a man of letters, economist and wit, friend of the Parisian philosophes.
  • Enrico Barone (1859–1924), was "a mathematical economist and disciple of Vilfredo Pareto."
  • Francesco Saverio Nitti (1868–1953), was an "economist, promoter of southern economic development, and liberal leader."
  • Ignazio Visco (born 1949), was Chief Economist and Director of the Economic Department of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (1997–2002).
  • Engineers

  • Luigi Giura (1795–1865), was an engineer and architect. He built the magnificent bridge in the Garigliano, the first suspended iron bridge built in Italy.
  • Nicola Romeo (1876–1938), an engineer and entrepreneur, was the founder of Alfa Romeo.
  • Giovanni Agusta (1879–1927), an aviation engineer, was the founder of Agusta, now part of AgustaWestland.
  • Corradino D'Ascanio (1891–1981), was an aeronautical engineer who prior to designing the Vespa, designed the first production helicopter for Agusta.
  • Giuseppe Gabrielli (1903–1987), was an "aeronautical and mechanical engineer."
  • Explorers

  • Henri de Tonti (1649/50 – 1704), explorer and colonizer, companion of the Sieur de La Salle during his North American explorations.
  • Umberto Nobile (1885–1978), aeronautical engineer and Arctic explorer. He was one of the first men to fly over the North Pole.
  • Fashion designers

  • Elsa Schiaparelli (1890–1973), was one of the most highly renowned fashion innovators in the period leading up to World War II.
  • Salvatore Ferragamo (1898–1960), was a famous shoe designer, founder of the company that bears his name.
  • Rocco Barocco (born 1944), is a fashion designer who has registered his name as a trademark in several countries in the field of fashion, design and accessories.
  • Gianni Versace (1946–1997), was a fashion designer known for his daring fashions and glamorous lifestyle.
  • Donatella Versace (born 1955), is one of best known names in fashion today. She is the younger sister of the late designer Gianni Versace.
  • Domenico Dolce (born 1958), is a famous fashion designer. He is the co-founder of Dolce & Gabbana.
  • Ennio Capasa (born 1960), is a fashion designer and founder of Costume National.
  • Fashion models

  • Valeria Marini (born 1967), is a model, actress, showgirl, and fashion designer.
  • Maria Grazia Cucinotta (July 1968), is a model, actress, producer, and screenwriter.
  • Roberta Capua (December 1968), is a former model and television personality.
  • Mara Carfagna (born 1975), is a former model and showgirl and current Italian politician.
  • Alessia Fabiani (born 1976), is a model, showgirl, and TV presenter.
  • Manuela Arcuri (born 1977), is a model, actress, and television host.
  • Elisabetta Canalis (born 1978), is a model, actress, and showgirl.
  • Elisabetta Gregoraci (born 1980), is a model and TV personality.
  • Giorgia Palmas (March 1982), is a model and actress.
  • Valeria Bilello (May 1982), is a model and actress.
  • Eva Riccobono (born 1983), is a model and actress.
  • Miriam Leone (born 1985), is a model, TV presenter, and actress.
  • Raffaella Fico (born 1988), is a model and showgirl.
  • Military figures

  • Bohemond I of Antioch (c. 1058 – 1111), was prince of Otranto and prince of Antioch, one of the leaders of the First Crusade, who conquered Antioch.
  • Maio of Bari (1115–1160), was the Grand Admiral of William I of Sicily between 1154 and 1160.
  • Roger of Lauria (c. 1245 – 1305), admiral of Aragon and Sicily, was "the most prominent figure in the naval war which arose directly from the Sicilian Vespers."
  • Roger de Flor (1267–1305), was a Knight Templar and military adventurer, Grand Duke and Caesar of the Byzantine Empire.
  • Angelo Tartaglia (1350 or 1370 – 1421), was a great soldier of fortune, captain of the Papal Army, lord of Lavello and Toscanella.
  • Giorgio Basta (1544–1607), was a celebrated general who won fame in campaigns in Eastern Europe, and wrote on military affairs.
  • Domenico Millelire (1761–1827), was a Sardegna's fleet captain. He gave the first defeat to Napoleon Bonaparte.
  • Pietro Colletta (1775–1831), "Neapolitan general and historian, served in the Neapolitan artillery against the French in 1798."
  • Guglielmo Pepe (1783–1855), was a "general and liberal patriot who fought for Italian independence."
  • Carlo Pisacane (1818–1857), "military figure, patriot, social commentator, and theorist."
  • Enrico Cosenz (1820–1898), was a soldier, born at Gaeta on 12 January 1820, served in the Neapolitan artillery against the Austrians in 1848.
  • Armando Diaz (1861–1928), was a general. As a reward for his military successes, he was named Duke of Victory in 1921 and appointed marshal in 1924.
  • Giulio Douhet (1869–1930), was an army general and "the father of strategic air power."
  • Giovanni Messe (1883–1968), was a soldier, later politician and likely the most distinguished Italian Field marshal.
  • Fulco Ruffo di Calabria (1884–1946), was a World War I flying ace (20 victories).
  • Luigi Rizzo (1887–1951), was the famous naval officer who sank the Austrian dreadnought Szent István in June 1918.
  • Achille Starace (1889–1945), was a "veteran of the First World War and national secretary of Mussolini's Fascist Party between 1931 and 1939."
  • Tito Minniti (1909–1935), was an aviator. He is still commemorated in his hometown every year as a military hero.
  • Salvo D'Acquisto (1920–1943), was a carabiniere who sacrificed his own life to save the lives of 22 civilian hostages at the time of the Nazi occupation.
  • Missionaries

  • John of Montecorvino (1247–1328), "was the first Catholic missionary to Asia."
  • Alessandro Valignano (1539–1606), was a "Jesuit missionary who helped introduce Christianity to the Far East, especially to Japan."
  • Giordano Ansaloni (1598–1634), a Sicilian missionary, who in 1632 visited Japan, where he was put to death in 1634.
  • Lodovico Buglio (1606–1682), was a "Jesuit missionary in China."
  • Francis de Geronimo (1642–1716), was a Jesuit priest and missionary also known as Francis Jerome.
  • Matteo Ripa (1682–1746), was a missionary, painter, and founder of the Collegio dei Cinesi in Naples.
  • Angelo Zottoli (1826–1902), was born in Acerno. He came to China in 1848 and spent all his missionary life in Zikawei, Shanghai.
  • Musicians

  • Carlo Gesualdo (1560–1613), composer famed for his chromatic madrigals and motets.
  • Sigismondo d'India (c. 1582 – 1629), was the most important composer active in Sicily during the early part of the 17th century.
  • Luigi Rossi (c. 1597 – 1653), was a Baroque composer of chamber cantatas, operas, and church music.
  • Francesco Provenzale (c. 1626 – 1704), "Neapolitan composer – one of the driving forces behind the establishment of Neapolitan opera – and teacher."
  • Alessandro Scarlatti (1660–1725), prolific and influential composer of the Baroque era.
  • Michele Mascitti (1664–1760), violinist and Baroque composer. He was considered comparable to Corelli and Albinoni.
  • Pietro Filippo Scarlatti (1679–1750), was a composer, organist, and choirmaster who was a prominent member of the Italian Baroque School.
  • Francesco Durante (1684–1755), was a leading composer of church music in the early 18th century, as well as an internationally renowned teacher in Naples.
  • Domenico Scarlatti (1685–1757), harpsichordist and composer. His harpsichord sonatas are highly distinctive and original.
  • Nicola Porpora (1686–1768), composer. He was a prominent master of the Neapolitan operatic style.
  • Leonardo Vinci (1690–1730), "composer who was one of the originators of the Neapolitan style of opera."
  • Francesco Feo (1691–1761), was a composer lauded by Reichardt in 1791 as "one of the greatest of all composers of church music in Italy."
  • Leonardo Leo (1694–1744), prolific composer, teacher, and conservatory administrator.
  • Farinelli (1705–1782), "legendary soprano castrato, composer of arias and keyboard works, and theatrical producer."
  • Egidio Duni (1708–1775), was one of the chief opéra comique composers of his day.
  • Caffarelli (1710–1783), was a mezzo-soprano castrato. "As a singer he was ranked second only to Farinelli with an enchanting voice and fine execution."
  • Niccolò Jommelli (1714–1774), composer of religious music and operas, notable as an innovator in his use of the orchestra.
  • Ignazio Fiorillo (1715–1787), was a "composer of fourteen operas, symphonies, sonatas, an oratorio and church music; pupil of Leo and Durante."
  • Tommaso Traetta (1727–1779), was an opera composer who in some senses anticipated Gluck's reforms of the medium.
  • Niccolò Piccinni (1728–1800), was better known for his comic operas, though he was equally adept in the realm of opera seria.
  • Giovanni Paisiello (1740–1816), composer of operas admired for their robust realism and dramatic power.
  • Domenico Cimarosa (1749–1801), operatic composer. He wrote almost 80 operas, which were successfully produced in Rome, Naples, Vienna, and St. Petersburg.
  • Niccolò Antonio Zingarelli (1752–1837), was "one of the principal Italian composers of operas and religious music of his time."
  • Ferdinando Carulli (1770–1841), was an important guitarist, composer and teacher.
  • Mauro Giuliani (1781–1829), was "the most important guitarist and composer of guitar music of his time."
  • Michele Carafa (1787–1872), was "one of the most prolific opera composers of his day."
  • Luigi Lablache (1794–1858), was a well-known bass of the Classical and early Romantic eras.
  • Saverio Mercadante (1795–1870), was an important opera composer who studied at the Naples Conservatory and began composing in 1819.
  • Salvadore Cammarano (March 1801 – 1852), was among the most prolific writers for Italian romantic opera.
  • Vincenzo Bellini (November 1801 – 1835), composer of operas. His most notable works were Norma and La sonnambula, and I puritani.
  • Federico Ricci (1809–1877), was a famous composer, brother of Luigi Ricci.
  • Giovanni Matteo Mario (1810–1883), Cavaliere di Candia, better known simply as Mario, was a world-famous opera singer.
  • Errico Petrella (1813–1877), was an influential opera composer.
  • Gaetano Braga (1829–1907), was an eminent cellist and composer who lived mainly in London and Paris.
  • Luigi Denza (February 1846 – 1922), was the composer of the immortal Neapolitan Piedigrotta song Funiculì, Funiculà.
  • Paolo Tosti (April 1846 – 1916), eminent composer of songs, was born in Ortona, Abruzzi, on 9 April 1846.
  • Giuseppe Martucci (1856–1909), "was a pioneer in restoring instrumental music to a place of prominence in nineteenth-century operatic Italy."
  • Ruggero Leoncavallo (1857–1919), composer and librettist who wrote the opera Pagliacci.
  • Eduardo di Capua (1865–1917), was the composer of several of the greatest Neapolitan songs, including 'O sole mio, Maria, Marì, and I' te vurria vasà.
  • Francesco Cilea (1866–1950), composer whose operas are distinguished by their melodic charm.
  • Umberto Giordano (1867–1948), composer. His most famous work is the richly melodic Andrea Chénier. Fedora and Madame Sans-Gêne are also well known.
  • Vittorio Monti (1868–1922), was "an eminent composer, mandolinist and conductor."
  • Enrico Caruso (1873–1921), was considered one of the greatest singers in the history of opera. He "is for many the Italian tenor par excellence."
  • Franco Alfano (March 1875 – 1954), was an "eminent composer and teacher."
  • Leonardo De Lorenzo (August 1875 – 1962), was one of the world's foremost flutists.
  • Giuseppe Anselmi (1876–1929), was a gifted lyrico-spinto tenor of Sicilian birth.
  • E. A. Mario (1884–1961), was a prolific author of songs in dialect and in Italian (La leggenda del Piave, Vipera, and Balocchi e profumi to mention only a few).
  • Tito Schipa (1888–1965), tenor. He sang in Italy from 1910, specializing in lyrical roles.
  • Maria Caniglia (1905–1979), was "the leading Italian lyric-dramatic soprano of the 1930s."
  • Licia Albanese (born 1913), operatic soprano who was a great favorite of Arturo Toscanini.
  • Carlo Maria Giulini (1914–2005), "was the leading Italian conductor of his generation."
  • Renato Carosone (1920–2001), was a cabaret singer. A key figure in Italian music, Carosone recorded the 1957 hit Torero.
  • Giuseppe Di Stefano (1921–2008), lyric tenor who was hailed as one of the finest operatic tenors of his generation.
  • Domenico Modugno (1928–1994), singer, songwriter, and actor. He was best known for singing the international hit Volare, which Modugno co-wrote.
  • Dalida (1933–1987), was a singer, achieved immense popularity on the international pop and disco music scene between the 1950s and the 1980s.
  • Adriano Celentano (born 1938), is a celebrated singer, actor, comedian, and director. He is the best-selling male Italian singer.
  • Peppino di Capri (born 1939), is one of the most famous Italian songs in the world.
  • Nicola Di Bari (born 1940), is a celebrated pop singer. He won the Sanremo Music Festival in 1971 and 1972.
  • Riccardo Muti (July 1941), is a "conductor in the old style – fiery, demanding, and charismatic."
  • Salvatore Accardo (September 1941), is considered one of the greatest violin talents of the Italian school of the 20th century.
  • Mario Trevi (November 1941), is a well-known Neapolitan singer.
  • Albano Carrisi (born 1943), is one of the most celebrated singers of Italian modern music.
  • Franco Battiato (born 1945), is one of the most important avant-garde composers.
  • Salvatore Sciarrino (April 1947), "is one of Europe's most prolific composers."
  • Mia Martini (September 1947 – 1995), pseudonym of Domenica Berté, was a popular and critically acclaimed Italian singer.
  • Rino Gaetano (1950–1981), was an original and innovative singer and musician, who died prematurely in a car crash.
  • Massimo Ranieri (born 1951), pop singer and actor. He is a big name in music in Italy.
  • Mango (1954–2014), "Italian rock fusion innovator".
  • Pino Daniele (1955–2015), is a famous Neapolitan singer.
  • Raf (born 1959), singer and songwriter. He is the author of the original version of "Self Control."
  • Fabio Biondi (March 1961), is a violinist and conductor most renowned for his interpretation of the Italian baroque repertoire.
  • Anna Oxa (April 1961), is a singer. She won the Sanremo Music Festival twice, in 1989 with Ti lascerò and in 1999 with Senza pietà.
  • Gigi D'Alessio (born 1967), is a popular singer and Neapolitan singer-songwriter.
  • Salvatore Licitra (1968–2011), was a tenor known in his Italian homeland as the "new Pavarotti" for his potent voice and considerable stamina.
  • Ildebrando D'Arcangelo (born 1969), is a bass-baritone. He "has established himself as one of the most exciting singers of his generation."
  • Caparezza (born 1973), is the pseudonym of Michele Salvemini. He is a famous Apulian rapper.
  • Carmen Consoli (born 1974), is a singer-songwriter. One of Italy's leading popular musicians.
  • Painters

    Main articles: Neapolitan painters and Sicilian painters

  • Niccolò Antonio Colantonio (c. 1420 – c. 1460), was a painter. "The leading figure at the court of King René of Anjou at Naples."
  • Antonello da Messina (c. 1430 – 1479), was one of the most groundbreaking and influential painters of the quattrocento.
  • Girolamo Alibrandi (1470–1524), was a distinguished painter, called "the Raphael of Messina."
  • Scipione Pulzone (c. 1542 or 1543 – 1598), was a painter. "He painted historical and religious subjects and was a celebrated portraitist."
  • Mario Minniti (1577–1640), was a painter. "With Alonzo Rodriguez he represents the most direct Sicilian response to the new art of Caravaggio."
  • Battistello Caracciolo (1578–1635), was an important Neapolitan follower of Caravaggio – and only a few years younger.
  • Massimo Stanzione (c. 1586 – c. 1656), was a talented painter. This earned him the nickname of "Napolitan Guido Reni."
  • Andrea Vaccaro (May 1600 – 1670), was a tenebrist painter.
  • Aniello Falcone (November 1600 – 1656), was a painter known principally for his depictions of battlefields.
  • Pietro Novelli (1603–1647), was a renowned painter otherwise known as il Monrealese.
  • Francesco Cozza (1605–1682), was a painter of the Baroque period. He was born at Stilo, in Calabria.
  • Mattia Preti (1613–1699), painter. One of the most talented southern artists, who did much of his best work for the Knights of Malta.
  • Salvator Rosa (1615–1673), painter and polymath. His best-known paintings represent scenes of wild, un trammeled nature, populated with small genre figures.
  • Bernardo Cavallino (1616–1656), was a famous Neapolitan painter of the first half of the 17th century.
  • Antonio de Bellis (c. 1616 – c. 1656), was a painter. "He worked primarily in Naples in a formidable naturalistic style deeply influenced by Jusepe de Ribera."
  • Giuseppe Recco (June 1634 – 1695), "was the most celebrated Neapolitan still-life painter of his day."
  • Luca Giordano (October 1634 – 1705), painter and draughtsman. He was one of the most celebrated artists of the Neapolitan Baroque.
  • Francesco Solimena (1657–1747), was one of the great Italian artists of the Baroque era.
  • Sebastiano Conca (1680–1764), was a Neapolitan painter and a pupil of Solimena.
  • Corrado Giaquinto (1703–1765), was a famous Rococo painter.
  • Giuseppe Bonito (1707–1789), was a painter. "One of the most influential artists of the Neapolitan school in the 18th century."
  • Vito D'Anna (1718–1769), was a painter. One of the most important artists of Sicily.
  • Gaspare Traversi (c. 1722 – 1770), an important Neapolitan painter, was the creator of elegant and sometimes raucous genre scenes.
  • Domenico Morelli (1826–1901), was a leading exponent of the Neapolitan school of painting in the second half of the 19th century.
  • Francesco Lojacono (1838–1915), was a Sicilian landscape and seascape painter.
  • Giacomo Di Chirico (1844–1883), painter. He was one of the most elite Neapolitan artists of the 19th century.
  • Giuseppe De Nittis (1846–1884), was an influential painter. "Early in his career he was associated with the Macchiaioli."
  • Francesco Paolo Michetti (1851–1929), was "one of the most important painters of the second half of the 19th century."
  • Eliseu Visconti (1866–1944), was one of the most important painters in Brazil in the early 20th Century.
  • Joseph Stella (1877–1946), was a painter. He is best known for his cubist- and futurist-inspired paintings executed in the years around 1920.
  • Mario Sironi (1885–1961), painter, sculptor, architect, stage designer and illustrator.
  • Giorgio de Chirico (1888–1978), painter, writer, theatre designer, sculptor and printmaker. De Chirico was one of the originators of pittura metafisica.
  • Michele Cascella (1892–1989), was a painter, ceramist, and lithographer. In 1937 he won the gold medal at the Paris Exposition Universelle.
  • Antonio Sicurezza (1905–1979), was a famous painter, born at Santa Maria Capua Vetere, in Campania.
  • Renato Guttuso (1912–1987), painter. "He was a forceful personality and Italy's leading exponent of Social Realism in the 20th century."
  • Antonio Cardile (1914–1986), was an artist of the Roman School of painting.
  • Luigi Malice (born 1937), is a famous painter and sculptor.
  • Mimmo Paladino (born 1948), is a painter, sculptor and printmaker. He was a key figure in the so-called Transavantgarde movement.
  • Silvio Vigliaturo (born 1949), is a master of glass-fusing, famous for his paintings, sculptures, stained-glass windows and floors.
  • Francesco Clemente (born 1952), painter and draftsman. He worked collaboratively with other artists such as Jean-Michel Basquiat and Andy Warhol.
  • Political figures

    Main articles: Politicians of Abruzzo, Politicians of Molise, Politicians of Campania, Politicians of Apulia,

    Politicians of Basilicata, Politicians of Calabria, Politicians of Sicily, and Politicians of Sardinia

  • Roger II of Sicily (1095–1154), was "the most able ruler in 12th-century Europe."
  • Frederick II, Holy Roman Emperor (1194–1250), also known as Frederick II of Sicily, was one of the most brilliant rulers of the Middle Ages.
  • Manfred, King of Sicily (1232–1266), effective king of Sicily from 1258, during a period of civil wars and succession disputes between imperial claimants and the House of Anjou.
  • Marianus IV of Arborea (1329–1376), called the Great, was the Giudice of Arborea from 1347 to his death.
  • Eleanor of Arborea (1347–1404), reconquered Sardinia, sustaining a two years' war against the Aragonese, and distinguished herself as a legislator.
  • Ladislaus of Naples (1377–1414), was a skilled political and military leader, protector and controller of Pope Innocent VII.
  • Cardinal Mazarin (1602–1661), was a political genius and priest, later cardinal, who served as the chief minister of France from 1642 until his death.
  • Francesco Crispi (1818–1901), was a statesman. He was among the key figures of Italy's unification in 1860.
  • Vittorio Emanuele Orlando (1860–1952), was a statesman and prime minister during the concluding years of World War I.
  • Luigi Sturzo (1871–1959), was a Catholic political leader and leading opponent of Fascism.
  • Enrico De Nicola (1877–1959), was a "member of parliament and first head of state of the Italian republic."
  • Carlo Tresca (1879–1943), was a newspaper editor, anarchist, and early opponent of Italian fascism.
  • Antonio Segni (1891–1972), was a statesman, twice premier (1955–1957, 1959–1960), and fourth president (1962–1964) of Italy.
  • Giovanni Leone (1908–2001), was a politician and statesman. Professor of the law of criminal procedure. Prominent member of the Christian Democratic Party.
  • Aldo Moro (1916–1978), was a prominent leader of Italy's Christian Democratic Party. In 1978 he was kidnapped and then murdered by the Red Brigades.
  • Emilio Colombo (1920–2013), was a political leader. He is "credited with having written much of the Treaty of Rome, which established (1958) the European Economic Community."
  • Enrico Berlinguer (1922–1984), was secretary of the Italian Communist Party from 1972 to his sudden death in 1984.
  • Giorgio Napolitano (born 1925), also known as King George, is a politician and former lifetime senator, the 11th President of Italy since 2006.
  • Francesco Cossiga (1928–2010), was a politician, the 43rd Prime Minister and the eighth President of the Italian Republic.
  • Popes

  • Pope Victor III (c. 1026 – 1087), original name Daufer, was pope from 1086 to 1087.
  • Pope Gregory VIII (c. 1100/1105 – 1187), original name Alberto di Morra, was pope from 25 October to 17 December 1187.
  • Pope Celestine V (1215–1296), original name Pietro Angelerio, was pope from 5 July to 13 December 1294, the first pontiff to abdicate.
  • Pope Urban VI (c. 1318 – 1389), original name Bartolomeo Prignano, was pope from 1378 to 1389.
  • Pope Innocent VII (1336–1406), original name Cosimo de' Migliorati, was pope from 1404 to 1406.
  • Pope Boniface IX (c. 1350 – 1404), original name Piero Tomacelli, was pope from 1389 to 1404.
  • Pope Paul IV (1476–1559), original name Gian Pietro Carafa, was pope from 1555 to 1559.
  • Pope Innocent XII (1615–1700), original name Antonio Pignatelli, was pope from 1691 to 1700.
  • Pope Benedict XIII (1650–1730), original name Pietro Francesco Orsini, was pope from 1724 to 1730.
  • Saints

  • Nicodemus of Mammola (c. 900 – 990), was a Calabrian ascetic and monastic founder.
  • Nilus the Younger (910–1005), was a monk, abbot, and founder of Italo-Greek monasticism in southern Italy.
  • Alferius (930–1050), was an abbot and saint. He was the founder of the monastery of La Trinità della Cava, located at Cava de' Tirreni.
  • John Theristus (1049–1129), was a Benedictine monk, called Theristus (or "Harvester").
  • Constabilis (c. 1070 – 1124), was an abbot. Constabilis built the town of Castellabate, where he is now venerated as patron.
  • Saint Rosalia (1130–1166), is the patron saint of Palermo.
  • John of Capistrano (1386–1456), was "one of the greatest Franciscan preachers of the 15th century."
  • Francis of Paola (1416–1507), was a mendicant friar and the founder of the Roman Catholic Order of Minims.
  • Eustochia Smeralda Calafato (1434–1485), was a Franciscan abbess of Messina.
  • Andrew Avellino (1521–1608), was a Theologian, founder of monasteries, and friend of St. Charles Borromeo.
  • Benedict the Moor (1526–1589), ex-slave born in Sicily of African parents. A Franciscan friar, he was canonized by Pope Pius VII in 1807.
  • Camillus de Lellis (1550–1614), was a Catholic priest, founder of the Ministers of the Sick.
  • Francis Caracciolo (1563–1608), was a Catholic priest, founder with Father Augustine Adorno of the Clerics Regular Minor.
  • Humilis of Bisignano (1582–1637), was a Franciscan monk born in Bisignano.
  • Joseph of Cupertino (1603–1663), was a Franciscan mystic. Also known as Joseph of Copertino.
  • Bernard of Corleone (1605–1667), converted swordsman and saint from Sicily.
  • Giuseppe Maria Tomasi (1649–1713), was a Cardinal, noted for his learning, humility, and zeal for reform.
  • Francis Fasani (1681–1742), was a Franciscan, also called Francis of Lucera.
  • Alphonsus Maria de' Liguori (1696–1787), doctor of the church, one of the chief 18th-century moral theologians.
  • Ignatius of Laconi (1701–1781), was a "Franciscan mystic and confessor, also called Francis Ignatius Peis."
  • Mary Frances of the Five Wounds (March 1715 – 1791), a saint, was born in Naples, Italy.
  • Felix of Nicosia (November 1715 – 1787), a Capuchin monk, was known in his time for his gifts of charity and humility.
  • Gerard Majella (1726–1755), was a religious. He is the patron of expectant mothers.
  • Gaetano Errico (1791–1860), was a priest and founder of the Congregation of the Missionaries of the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary.
  • Caterina Volpicelli (1839–1894), was a nun, "foundress of the Servants of the Sacred Heart."
  • Filippo Smaldone (1848–1923), was a priest of the archdiocese of Lecce, Italy; and founder of the Congregation of the Salesian Sisters of the Sacred Hearts.
  • Annibale Maria di Francia (1851–1927), was a religious and founder of religious congregations.
  • Giuseppe Moscati (1860–1927), was an influential physician. He gave his wages and skills to caring for the sick and the poor and was a model of piety and faith.
  • Gaetano Catanoso (1879–1963), was a cleric who encouraged Marian and Eucharistic devotion and vocations to the priesthood.
  • Pio of Pietrelcina (1887–1968), priest and saint of the Roman Catholic Church.
  • Maria Gabriella Sagheddu (1914–1939), "is called the saint of unity because she offered her life in the cause of ecumenism."
  • Scientists

  • Trotula (fl. 11th – 12th centuries), was a physician, obstetrician, gynaecologist, health planner and experimenter, responsible for major advances in female medicine.
  • Luca Gaurico (1475–1558), was "perhaps the most renowned astrologer of the first half of the sixteenth century."
  • Bartolomeo Maranta (1500–1571), was a physician and botanist. He is remembered in the name of the prayer plant – Maranta leuconeura.
  • Giovanni Filippo Ingrassia (1510–1580), was Professor of Anatomy and Medicine in Naples, and later in Palermo. He discovered the stapes in 1546.
  • Aloysius Lilius (c. 1510 – 1576), was a medic and astronomer responsible for the Gregorian Calendar.
  • Giambattista della Porta (1535–1615), Renaissance scientist and polymath. His first and most internationally famous work was Magia Naturalis.
  • Fabio Colonna (1567–1640), naturalist, was a member of the Accademia dei Lincei.
  • Marco Aurelio Severino (1580–1656), wrote the "First Test of Surgical Pathology." He was also the first to include illustrations of pathological lesions in his books.
  • Giovanni Battista Zupi (c. 1590 – 1650), astronomer who discovered that Mercury had orbital phases.
  • Giovanni Battista Hodierna (1597–1660), was an astronomer, mathematician, and scientist at the court of the duke of Montechiaro.
  • Giovanni Alfonso Borelli (1608–1679), was an extremely influential scientist and polymath.
  • Agostino Scilla (1629–1700), was a painter, paleontologist, and geologist. He inaugurated "the modern scientific study of fossils."
  • Paolo Boccone (1633–1704), was "one of the leading Sicilian naturalists of the time."
  • Tommaso Campailla (April 1668 – 1740), physician. He fought syphilis rheumatism in a "modern" way, using the "guaiacum barrels" or "vapour stovens" that he had invented.
  • Gjuro Baglivi (September 1668 – 1707), was a scientist, professor at the Sapienza in Rome.
  • Leonardo Ximenes (1716–1786), physicist, astronomer, geographer and hydrographer from Trapani, founded the Ximenes Observatory in Florence in 1756.
  • Vincenzo Petagna (1734–1810), was a "physician, entomologist, and professor of botany." The plant Petagnaea gussonei is named in his honour.
  • Domenico Cotugno (1736–1822), "was a Neapolitan physician and was the first to provide descriptions of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and sciatica."
  • Bernardino da Ucria (9 April 1739 – 1796), was a Franciscan friar with an interest in botany and the Linnean system of classification.
  • Domenico Cirillo (10 April 1739 – 1799), was an eminent botanist and student of medicine from Naples.
  • Alessandro Cagliostro (1743–1795), adventurer, magician, and alchemist. "One of the greatest occult figures of all time."
  • Giuseppe Saverio Poli (1746–1825), was "one of the leading scientists of Naples."
  • Tiberius Cavallo (1749–1809), was "one of the best known experimental scientists of his time."
  • Guglielmo Gasparrini (January 1803 – 1866), was a botanist who is noted for his study on the cultivation of the sweet potato.
  • Giovanni Spano (March 1803 – 1878), was "the most important Sardinian archaeologist and linguist of the 19th century."
  • Luigi Palmieri (1807–1896), physicist and meteorologist, inventor of the mercury seismometer.
  • Raffaele Piria (1814–1865), a chemist, was "the first to successfully synthesize salicylic acid." The active ingredient in aspirin.
  • Ferdinando Palasciano (1815–1891), was a physician whose work is considered crucial to having helped lay the foundations of the International Red Cross.
  • Filippo Parlatore (1816–1877), was born at Palermo; Director of the Royal Museum of Natural History at Florence and Professor of Botany.
  • Agostino Todaro (1818–1892), was a lawyer and botanist at Palermo.
  • Annibale de Gasparis (1819–1892), was an astronomer. He won the Gold Medal of the Royal Astronomical Society in 1851.
  • Stanislao Cannizzaro (1826–1910), was an influential chemist. In 1853 he discovered the reaction known as Cannizzaro's reaction.
  • Francesco Todaro (1839–1918), was an anatomist. He described a fibrous extension of the Eustachian valve, now referred to as the Tendon of Todaro.
  • Emanuele Paternò (1847–1935), was a chemist, discoverer of the Paternò–Büchi reaction.
  • Carlo Emery (1848–1925), was Professor of Zoology at the University of Cagliari in 1878 and later Professor of Zoology at the University of Bologna.
  • Vincenzo Cerulli (1859–1927), was an astronomer. "He was especially known for his work on Mars and Venus, and his discovery of the planetoid 704 Interamnia."
  • Giuseppe Oddo (1865–1954), was a chemist and co-discoverer of the Oddo-Harkins rule.
  • Vincenzo Tiberio (1869–1915), physician and researcher, was a precursor of penicillin studies.
  • Orso Mario Corbino (1876–1937), a renowned physicist who was a founder of the Rome School of Nuclear Physics. He discovered the Corbino effect.
  • Gaetano Crocco (1877–1968), was a leading aeronautical scientist in the middle of the 20th century.
  • Antonino Lo Surdo (1880–1949), was a physicist and co-discoverer of the Stark effect.
  • Amedeo Maiuri (1886–1963), was a renowned archaeologist "famous for his excavations at Pompeii."
  • Giuseppe Brotzu (1895–1976), was a pharmacologist and politician. He is very well known for his discovery of cephalosporin.
  • Enrico Fermi (1901–1954), was a genius. Of significant note, since the 1980s, he has been frequently called the "last universal physicist."
  • Ettore Majorana (1906–1938), "was a genius, a prodigy in arithmetic, a portent of insight and thinking power, the most profound and critical mind at the physics building."
  • Renato Dulbecco (1914–2012), was a virologist who shared a Nobel Prize in 1975 for his role in drawing a link between genetic mutations and cancer.
  • Antonino Zichichi (born 1929), is a theoretical physicist and emeritus professor at the University of Bologna.
  • Michele Parrinello (born 1945), is a physicist. One of the fathers of the Car–Parrinello method.
  • Silvio Micali (born 1954), is a theoretical computer scientist. He has received the Turing Award, the Gödel Prize, and the RSA Award (in encryption).
  • Mathematicians

  • Barlaam of Seminara (c. 1290 – c. 1348), "bishop of Geraci, studied in Constantinople and wrote on computing, astronomy, the science of numbers, algebra, and Book II of Euclid."
  • Giordano Vitale (1633–1711), was a mathematician. He is best known for his theorem on Saccheri quadrilaterals.
  • Ernesto Cesàro (1859–1906), was a prolific mathematician and professor at the universities of Palermo and Naples.
  • Giuseppe Lauricella (1867–1913), was an analyst and mathematical physicist.
  • Francesco Paolo Cantelli (1875–1966), was a mathematician. He is remembered through the Borel–Cantelli lemma, the Glivenko–Cantelli theorem, and Cantelli's inequality.
  • Michele Cipolla (1880–1947), was a mathematician, mainly specializing in number theory.
  • Leonida Tonelli (April 1885 – 1946), mathematician; worked on the calculus of variations.
  • Mauro Picone (May 1885 – 1977), was a mathematician. He is known for the Picone identity and for the Sturm-Picone comparison theorem.
  • Giacomo Albanese (1890–1948), was a mathematician. In advanced abstract mathematics, the concept of albanese variety refers to him.
  • Francesco Tricomi (1897–1978), was a professor in Torino and a prolific researcher in classical mathematical analysis.
  • Renato Caccioppoli (1904–1959), was an outstanding mathematician who carried out seminal work on linear and nonlinear differential equations.
  • Gaetano Fichera (1922–1996), was one of the great Italian masters of mathematics.
  • Ennio de Giorgi (1928–1996), was a brilliant mathematician. He solved 19th Hilbert problem on the regularity of solutions of elliptic partial differential equations.
  • Carlo Cercignani (1939–2010), was a well-known mathematician in the field of kinetic theory. He received the Humboldt Prize in 1994.
  • Mariano Giaquinta (born 1947), is a mathematician. In 1990 he was awarded with Humboldt research award and in 2006 with the Amerio prize.
  • Sculptors

  • Nicola Pisano (c. 1220/1225 – c. 1284), also known as Nicholas of Apulia, was the founder of modern sculpture.
  • Niccolò dell'Arca (c. 1435/1440 – 1494), was an early Renaissance sculptor, most probably of Apulian origin.
  • Giovanni da Nola (1478–1559), was "one of the most important sculptors in the Italian High Renaissance."
  • Girolamo Santacroce (c. 1502 – c. 1537), Neapolitan sculptor, architect and medallist, was active in Naples, where he produced statues, altars and funerary monuments.
  • Gian Lorenzo Bernini (1598–1680), artistic polymath. He was "perhaps the greatest sculptor of the 17th century and an outstanding architect as well."
  • Dionisio Lazzari (1617–1689), was a sculptor and architect from Naples.
  • Giacomo Serpotta (1652–1732), was a master stucco sculptor.
  • Gaetano Giulio Zumbo (1656–1701), "sculptor of the celebrated Plague waxworks, was the most enigmatic artist in the Florence of the last Medicis."
  • Domenico Antonio Vaccaro (1678–1745), "was one of the leading Neapolitan sculptors of the first half of the 18th century."
  • Giuseppe Sanmartino (1720–1793), arguably the finest sculptor of his time.
  • Alfonso Balzico (1825–1901), was a famous sculptor. In 1900 he won the gold medal at the Exposition Universelle, Paris, with the statue Flavio Gioia.
  • Vincenzo Ragusa (1841–1927), taught sculpture from 1876 to 1882, and introduced European fine arts to Japan.
  • Vincenzo Gemito (1852–1929), was the greater sculptor of Neapolitan impressionism.
  • Ettore Ximenes (1855–1926), was a renowned sculptor whose work was associated with Brazilian nationalism.
  • Mario Rutelli (1859–1941), was a well-known sculptor who has made a number of works on display around Italy.
  • Umberto Boccioni (1882–1916), was an influential futurist theoretician, painter, and sculptor.
  • Francesco Messina (1900–1995), was one of the most important Italian sculptors of the 20th century.
  • Costantino Nivola (1911–1988), was "a painter, designer, and sculptor" born in Orani who became famous especially in the United States.
  • Emilio Greco (1913–1995), was a sculptor of bronze and marble figurative works, primarily female nudes and portraits.
  • Pietro Consagra (1920–2005), was an abstract sculptor known for his works in iron and bronze.
  • Arturo Di Modica (born 1941), is a sculptor. He is best known for his iconic sculpture, Charging Bull (also known as the Wall Street Bull).
  • Writers and philosophers

    Main articles: Sicilian writers and Sardinian Literary Spring

  • John Italus (fl. 11th century), was a Neoplatonic philosopher of Calabrian origin.
  • Goffredo Malaterra (fl. 11th century), a Benedictin and historian, was the author of De rebus gestis Rogerii et Roberti, which chronicles the history of the Normans in Italy.
  • Ibn Hamdis (c. 1056 – c. 1133), was the greatest Arab-Sicilian poet. He "considered himself a Sicilian."
  • Joachim of Fiore (c. 1135 – 1202), mystic, theologian, biblical commentator, and philosopher of history. In 1196 he founded the order of San Giovanni in Fiore.
  • Pietro della Vigna (c. 1190 – 1249), was a "jurist, poet, and man of letters." An exponent of the formal style of Latin prose called ars dictandi.
  • Thomas of Celano (c. 1200 – c. 1265), was a Franciscan Friar, poet, and hagiographical writer. He probably composed the sequence Dies Irae and its celebrated plainsong.
  • Thomas Aquinas (1225–1274), genius, philosopher, and theologian. The major works of Aquinas include the Summa Theologica and the Summa contra Gentiles.
  • Giacomo da Lentini (fl. 13th century), poet. He is traditionally credited with the invention of the sonnet.
  • Antonio Beccadelli (1394–1471), was a scholar and poet born in Palermo, who was known for his fine Latin verse.
  • Masuccio Salernitano (1410–1475), was a poet who wrote Il Novellino, a collection of fifty short stories.
  • Iovianus Pontanus (1426–1503), was "a famous humanist and poet."
  • Julius Pomponius Laetus (1428–1497), was a great writer, humanist, and founder of the Accademia Romana.
  • Jacopo Sannazzaro (1456–1530), a "poet whose Arcadia was the first pastoral romance."
  • Thomas Cajetan (1469–1534), "was the most renowned Dominican theologian and philosopher in the sixteenth century."
  • Bernardino Telesio (1509–1588), philosopher. He was a leader in the Renaissance movement against medieval Aristotelianism.
  • Lorenzo Scupoli (c. 1530 – 1610), was a writer, philosopher, and priest of the Theatine Congregation. He was the author of the great classic, The Spiritual Combat.
  • Caesar Baronius (1538–1607), was an ecclesiastical historian, cardinal of the Roman Catholic Church. His best known work are his Annales Ecclesiastici.
  • Antonio Veneziano (1543–1593), was the greatest poet of the Sicilian cinquecento.
  • Torquato Tasso (1544–1595), a genius, was the "greatest Italian poet of the late Renaissance."
  • Giordano Bruno (1548–1600), philosopher and polymath whose theories anticipated modern science.
  • Giambattista Basile (1566–1632), soldier, public official, poet, and short-story writer.
  • Tommaso Campanella (1568–1639), was a philosopher, polymath, and child prodigy. He is best remembered for his socialistic work The City of the Sun.
  • Giambattista Marino (1569–1625), "poet, founder of the school of Marinism (later Secentismo), which dominated 17th-century Italian poetry."
  • Lucilio Vanini (1585–1619), a famous philosopher and free-thinker who was burnt at the stake for the atheism of his publications.
  • Gemelli Careri (1651–1725), was a famous writer and traveler. Author of Giro Del Mondo (1699).
  • Giovanni Vincenzo Gravina (1664–1718), was "an eminent jurist and writer, born at Roggiano [Gravina], in Calabria."
  • Giambattista Vico (1668–1744), was a philosopher and polymath who is recognized today as a forerunner of cultural anthropology, or ethnology.
  • Raimondo di Sangro (1710–1771), was a writer, polymath, and Grand Master of Naples's first Masonic lodge.
  • Antonio Genovesi (1713–1769), was a priest, professor of philosophy, and pioneer in ethical studies and economic theory.
  • Giovanni Meli (1740–1815), was a poet and man of letters. He is "commonly considered one of the most important dialect poets of eighteenth-century Italy."
  • Francesco Mario Pagano (1748–1799), politician, jurist and writer, was professor of law at the university of Naples.
  • Pasquale Galluppi (1770–1846), was an epistemologist and moral philosopher, was born in Tropea.
  • Gabriele Rossetti (1783–1854), was a patriotic poet, commentator on Dante. Professor of Italian at King's College London, 1831–47.
  • Michele Amari (1806–1889), was a patriot, historian and orientalist, author of Storia dei Musulmani di Sicilia (History of the Muslims of Sicily) 1854.
  • Girolamo de Rada (1814–1903), was a poet and writer, founding father of Arbëresh literature and culture.
  • Ferdinando Petruccelli della Gattina (1815–1890), was a revolutionary and writer. One of the greatest journalists of the 19th century and a pioneer of modern journalism.
  • Francesco de Sanctis (March 1817 – 1883), critic, educator, and legislator. He was the foremost Italian literary historian of the 19th century.
  • Bertrando Spaventa (June 1817 – 1883), historian of philosophy, was a major force in the tradition of Italian Hegelianism.
  • Goffredo Mameli (1827–1849), was a poet and patriot of the Risorgimento. Author of the Italian national anthem, Inno di Mameli, popularly known as Il Canto degli Italiani.
  • Luigi Capuana (1839–1915), novelist, journalist, critic, and the leading theorist of Italian verismo.
  • Giovanni Verga (1840–1922), novelist, short-story writer, and playwright, most important of the Italian verismo school of novelists.
  • Salvatore Farina (1846–1918), was a novelist. He enjoyed great popularity in his lifetime, to the point that many critics referred to him as the "Italian Charles Dickens."
  • Errico Malatesta (1853–1932), was an anarchist writer and revolutionary. His most important works are Anarchy and Fra Contadini (Between peasants).
  • Gaetano Mosca (1858–1941), was a jurist, philosopher, and proponent of the theory of élite domination.
  • Nicola Zingarelli (1860–1935), was a philologist and man of letters. The founder of the Zingarelli Italian dictionary.
  • Federico De Roberto (1861–1927), was a renowned verismo writer. His best-known work is I Vicerè (The Viceroys) 1894.
  • Gabriele D'Annunzio (1863–1938), "poet, novelist, dramatist, short-story writer, journalist, military hero, and political leader."
  • Benedetto Croce (1866–1952), "historian, humanist, and foremost Italian philosopher of the first half of the 20th century."
  • Luigi Pirandello (1867–1936), playwright, novelist, and short-story writer, winner of the 1934 Nobel Prize for Literature.
  • Grazia Deledda (1871–1936), novelist and short-story writer. She was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1926.
  • Gaetano Salvemini (1873–1957), was a writer, historian, and politician who fought for universal suffrage and the uplift of the Italian South.
  • Giovanni Gentile (1875–1944), major figure in Italian idealist philosophy, politician, educator, and editor.
  • Emilio Lussu (1890–1975), was a writer and politician, minister in the first Republican governments.
  • Antonio Gramsci (1891–1937), a writer and polymath. He was one of the most important Marxist thinkers in the 20th century.
  • Corrado Alvaro (1895–1956), novelist and journalist whose works investigated the social and political pressures of life in the 20th century.
  • Giuseppe Tomasi di Lampedusa (1896–1957), novelist. Internationally renowned for his work, The Leopard, published posthumously in 1958.
  • Julius Evola (1898–1974), was a philosopher and polymath. The historian Mircea Eliade described him as "one of the most interesting minds of the war [WW I] generation."
  • Leonida Repaci (1898 - 1985), novelist. He won the Bagutta Prize in 1933 and was one of the originators of the Viareggio Prize.
  • Ignazio Silone (1900–1978), novelist, short-story writer, and political leader. Internationally known for his novel Fontamara.'
  • Nicola Abbagnano (July 1901 – 1990), a famous philosopher. He "was the first and most important Italian existentialist."
  • Salvatore Quasimodo (August 1901 – 1968), poet, critic, and translator. He received the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1959.
  • Lanza del Vasto (September 1901 – 1981), was a writer, philosopher, and follower of Gandhi's movement for non-violence.
  • Vitaliano Brancati (1907–1954), was a writer of ironic and sometimes erotic novels.
  • Elio Vittorini (July 1908 – 1966), novelist, translator, and critic. Conversations in Sicily, which clearly expresses his antifascist feelings, is his most important novel.
  • Tommaso Landolfi (August 1908 – 1979), was a writer of fiction and literary critic.
  • Alfonso Gatto (1909–1976), renowned poet who was also an editor, journalist, and cultural broadcaster.
  • Elsa Morante (1912–1985), was one of the most important novelists of the postwar period, author of the bestseller La storia.
  • Gesualdo Bufalino (1920–1996), was a "novelist who, saw his literary career blossom after his retirement from teaching in 1976."
  • Leonardo Sciascia (1921–1989), writer noted for his metaphysical examinations of political corruption and arbitrary power.
  • Italo Calvino (1923–1985), journalist, short-story writer, and novelist. One of the most important Italian fiction writers in the 20th century.
  • Andrea Camilleri (6 September 1925), popular novelist who was formerly a theatre director and television producer in Rome.
  • Luciano De Crescenzo (born 1928), is one of the most popular Neapolitan writers.
  • Vincenzo Consolo (1933–2012), was one of the most important Italian writers of the 20th century.
  • Gavino Ledda (born 1938), is a Sardinian shepherd and self-taught student who became a famous writer.
  • Giulio Angioni (born 1939), writer and anthropologist. He is the author of about twenty books of fiction and a dozen volumes of essays in anthropology.
  • Erri De Luca (born 1950), is one of the most important contemporary Italian writers.
  • Caterina Davinio (born 1957), is a poet, writer, and new media artist. Initiator of Italian Net-poetry in 1998.
  • Other notables

  • Claudio Acquaviva (1543–1615), was a Jesuit priest, fifth general of the Society of Jesus, 1581–1615.
  • Carlo Pellegrini (1839–1889), famous Victorian caricaturist, who lived in England from 1864 until his death.
  • Diomede Falconio (1842–1917), Cardinal, apostolic delegate to the United States, was born 20 September 1842, in Pescocostanzo, Abruzzi.
  • Giovanni Passannante (1849–1910), was an anarchist who attempted to assassinate King Umberto I of Italy.
  • Benito Jacovitti (1923–1997), was a comic artist, probably best known for his Wild West humor series Cocco Bill.
  • Eugenio Barba (born 1936), is a theatre director, an actor trainer and a writer.
  • Achille Bonito Oliva (born 1939), is an art historian, critic, and founder of the Transavantgarde artistic movement.
  • Sergio Marchionne (born 1952), is chief executive officer of Fiat S.p.A and of Fiat Group Automobiles S.p.A.
  • Antonio Serra (born 1963), comics writer. He is one of the creators of Nathan Never.
  • Floria Sigismondi (born 1965), is a photographer and director.
  • Luca Parmitano (born 1976), is a European Space Agency (ESA) astronaut and a Major of the Italian Air Force.
  • References

    List of southern Italians Wikipedia