Agostino Codazzi Explained

Agostino Codazzi
Birth Name:Giovanni Battista Agostino Codazzi Bartolotti
Birth Date:12 July 1793
Birth Place:Lugo, Italy
Death Place:Agustín Codazzi, Cesar, Granadine Confederation
Nationality:Italian, Venezuelan
Occupation:Explorer, engineer, geographer, cartographer, ethnographer, naturalist, governor, soldier
Signature:Firma Agustín Codazzi.svg
Notable Works:Atlas Físico y Político de la República de Venezuela (1840)

Giovanni Battista Agostino Codazzi (alternatively known in Latin America as Agustín Codazzi; 12 July 1793 – 7 February 1859) was an Italo-Venezuelan soldier, scientist, geographer, cartographer, and governor of Barinas (1846–1847). He made his main investigations and cartographic work in Venezuela and Colombia, thereby creating for both countries a complete set of maps and statistics after the tumultuous years following independence from the Spanish Empire.

Biography

Codazzi was born in the Italian city of Lugo. Since young he appreciated the ideals of the French Revolution and, after his studies at the military academy "Scuola di Artiglieria" of Pavia, actively served in the Napoleon Army.

With the defeat of Napoleon in 1815 Codazzi moved away from Italy and after some travels went to Venezuela, where he offered his military knowledge to Simon Bolivar.[1]

Successively he received the task of mapping the area of the Maracaibo Lake and the borders between Venezuela, Colombia and Ecuador. The Venezuelan government named him Colonel and ordered the creation of an Atlas of Venezuela, a task that gave him international fame (in Paris Codazzi was awarded in 1842 the Legion of Honor by the King of France, on behalf of the French Academy of Science).

Agustin Codazzi meanwhile took the Venezuelan citizenship from president José Antonio Páez and became Governor of Barinas, a region of southwestern Venezuela. In those years his academic activity of geographer was continuously interrupted by his duties as a military commander, suffocating many revolts.

Codazzi even promoted the creation in the 1840s of the Colonia Tovar, a small German settlement in the Venezuelan central mountains that still exists today and has become one of the main tourist attractions near Maracay.

With the fall of Páez, after a military insurrection, Codazzi was forced to escape to Cúcuta (Colombia), where he continued his geographic and mapping activity with military duties for the Colombian government.

In 1852 Codazzi did a scientific and cartographic inspection of Panama for the British government: in 1854, even if with no official mention of Codazzi's work, the Panama Canal project was done following exactly his indications and route.

Codazzi died of malaria in February 1859 at the small town of Espíritu Santo in the Colombian mountains, in the arms of his friend Manuel María Paz, while he was mapping the area for the Comisión Corográfica.[2] The town where he died has been renamed "Aldea Codazzi", and now is a city with a population of nearly 70,000 inhabitants.

Venezuela honored the memory of Agustin Codazzi placing his remains inside the National Pantheon of Venezuela in 1942, where he is considered one the Heroes of Venezuela.

Colombia's national geographical and cartographical institute, a government agency, is named after Agustin Codazzi (Instituto Geográfico Agustin Codazzi).

Works

This is a list of main works of Agostino Codazzi:

Maps in his Memorias

Maps while in Venezuela

Maps while in Nueva Granada (actual Colombia)

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://www.codazzi.mitreum.net/it/biografia/biografia.php Biography (in Italian)
  2. Web site: La obra pictórica de Manuel María Paz y la Comisión Corográfica . 3 Sep 2011 . Tobar Gómez . Oscar . Spanish .