Angeliki Palli

Angeliki Palli (1798 1875) was a Greek-Italian writer, translator and early feminist.

The daughter of a rich Greek merchant,[1] she was born in Livorno, Tuscany and grew up in the Greek community there. She spoke Greek, French and Italian. Palli wrote tragedies, dramas, short stories, romantic novels and poems.[2] In 1851, she published a feminist essay targeted at young mothers Discorso di una donna alle giovani maritote del suo paese.[3] One of the themes in her work was the Greek struggle for independence from the Turks.[2] She married the Italian politician Giampaolo Bartolomei.[1]

Palli translated works by William Shakespeare, Victor Hugo and by French and Greek poets into Italian.[2]

Her literary salon attracted intellectuals of the time including Ugo Foscolo, Lord Byron, Alessandro Manzoni, Andreas Kalvos, Alphonse de Lamartine, Giovanni Battista Niccolini, Giuseppe Mazzini and Firmin Didot.[1]

References

  1. 1 2 3 Fauré, Christine (2004). Political and Historical Encyclopedia of Women. pp. 244–45. ISBN 1135456917.
  2. 1 2 3 Uglow, Jennifer S; Hinton, Frances; Hendry, Maggy (1999). The Northeastern Dictionary of Women's Biography. p. 415. ISBN 155553421X.
  3. Olsen, Kirstin (1994). Chronology of Women's History. p. 127. ISBN 0313288038.


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