Angelo Mauri Explained

Office:Minister of Agriculture
Term Start:July 1921
Term End:February 2022
Birth Date:21 December 1873
Death Place:Candia Lomellina, Kingdom of Italy
Party:People's Party
Alma Mater:University of Genoa
Children:11

Angelo Mauri (1873–1936) was an Italian journalist, economist, academic and anti-Fascist politician. He briefly served as the minister of agriculture between 1921 and 1922. Due to his anti-Fascist views and activities, he resigned from his teaching post in 1933.

Early life and education

Mauri was born in Milan on 21 December 1873. His father was a school director, and his mother, Maria Tentorio, was from Como region. He obtained a degree in law from the University of Genoa. He also received a degree in philosophy in 1896. He was part of the Catholic movement and worked for Catholic publications during his university studies.

Career and activities

Mauri started his career as a journalist and established a magazine Italia nuova in 1900. He served as president of the Italian Catholic University Federation from 1900 to 1904.[1] He was elected to the provincial council in Milan in 1902. Mauri took part in the establishment of another Milan-based magazine entitled La Rassegna sociale of which other founders were Umberto Benigni and Filippo Meda.[1] Mauri moved to Turin in October 1903 to run a Catholic newspaper Il Momento which he held until 1906. He was elected to the Parliament in 1904 becoming one of the first Catholic deputies. He was close to Archbishop Giacomo Della Chiesa, future Pope Benedict XV.[2] Mauri was one of the founders the People's Party in 1919 and elected as a deputy the same year.[1] [3] After the election he served as the deputy president of the Parliament.[4]

Mauri was appointed minister of agriculture in the cabinet led by Prime Minister Ivanoe Bonomi in July 1921.[3] [4] The cabinet resigned in February 1922, and his tenure ended.[3] [4] He and other two anti-Fascist members of the Parliament were removed from office in October 1926.[5] He worked as a professor of economics at different higher education institutions until his resignation in 1933 when the Fascist government required all university lecturers to join the National Fascist Party.[5]

Mauri was the author of several books on land reclamation and agronomics.[4]

Personal life and death

Mauri married Lisa Meda on 12 December 1900. They had a son, and his wife died in 1903. He married Maria Cappa Legora in Turin on 14 November 1904, and they had ten children.

Mauri died in Candia Lomellina on 17 November 1936.[6]

Notes and References

  1. Daniela Saresella. Christianity and Socialism in Italy in the Early Twentieth Century. 10.1017/S0009640715000517. Church History. 2015. 588. 84. 3. 155462689 .
  2. John F. Pollard. The Pope, Labour, and the Tango: Work, Rest, and Play in the Thought and Action of Benedict XV (1914-22). 10.1017/S0424208400014868. Studies in Church History. 2002. 37. 376. 163918339.
  3. Encyclopedia: Màuri, Angelo. it. Treccani.
  4. News: Walter Littlefield. The New Pontiff and "White International". 21 July 2023. The New York Times. 12 February 1922. 97.
  5. Book: Giovanni Pavanelli. Giulia Bianchi. Massimo M. Augello. Marco E.L. Guidi. Fabrizio Bientinesi. An Institutional History of Italian Economics in the Interwar Period. The Economics Profession and Fascist Institutions. 2020. Palgrave Macmillan. Cham. 148,153. 2. https://hdl.handle.net/handle/2318/1758060. The Italian Economists as Legislators and Policymakers During the Fascist Regime. Palgrave Studies in the History of Economic Thought . 10.1007/978-3-030-38331-2_5. 2318/1758060 . 978-3-030-38330-5 . 219882776 .
  6. Encyclopedia: Guido Formigoni. Mauri, Angelo. 2008 . Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani. it. 72.