Arcangelo Ghisleri
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Arcangelo Ghisleri (5 September 1855 - 19 August 1938)
Ghisleri was born in Cascina Sant'Alberto, near Persichello in the commune of Persico Dosimo, Italy.
A well known geographer by profession, he created numerous maps of Africa. As a journalist, he was part of a wave of philisophically positivist and politically progressive writers who carried the mantle of Mazzini's republican nationalism in the late 19th century. From 1887 to 1890 he founded and edited the review 'Cuore e Critica' which, together with the journals La rivista repubblicana and L'educazione politica, was important in definining the republican ideology of the times. Politicallly, Ghisleri was close to the revolutionary movements of his time: in 1895 he was one of the founders of the Italian Republican Party.
His friend and fellow radical Filippo Turati took over the journal in 1891 and renamed in Critica Sociale, moving it quickly into a socialist direction.
Ghisleri was not a systematic ideologist: a systematic version of his republican ideology is best exemplified in the work of Giovanni Conti.
Ghisleri died in Bergamo in 1938.
[edit] Source
Translation of Italian Wikipedia article[1]