Vittoria Aganoor

Vittoria Aganoor
Born 26 May, 1855
Padova,
Died April 9, 1910(1910-04-09) (aged 54)
Nationality Italian of Armenian descent
Occupation poet

Vittoria Aganoor (Armenian: Վիկտորիա Աղանուր, 26 May 1855 – 9 April 1910) was an Italian poet with Armenian ancestry. She is considered a "minor but important figure in nineteenth century poetry".[1]

Biography

She was born in Padova, the seventh child of Edoardo Aganoor and Giuseppina Pacini. Her father's family was wealthy Armenian nobility. They had moved to Persia in the eleventh century, settling in Julfa. Later on, acting on the advice of Mechitarist fathers, the family migrated to live in Paris. In France, they founded two notable educational institutions for Armenian nobility: The Collège Raphaël in Paris, followed by the Collegio Moorat in Venice.[2]

Vittoria's parents married in 1847 and moved to Padova. There they took up residence in the 'Casa degli Armeni', or 'House of the Armenians', in Prato della Valle. It was here that Vittoria, along with her four sisters, spent her childhood and adolescence.[2]

Many Italian celebrities, such as Andrea Maffei or Antonio Fogazzaro, visited their home when she was a child. In 1876 she went living to Naples, where she met Enrico Nencioni, who helped her with her poetry, although she wrote letters more often to Domenico Gnoli.[1][3] She was very emotionally dependent on her family because of her depressive moods and although she was a precocious writer, she did not publish her first book, Leggenda eterna, until 1900. In 1901, she married Guido Pompilj, a well-known member of parliament,[4] and later the Italian Undersecretary of State.[5] Together they went to Perugia. She died from surgery in Rome on 9 April 1910, aged 54.[1]

Her husband, heartbroken by her death, committed suicide shortly thereafter next to her corpse.[1][6]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 Katharina M. Wilson (1991). An Encyclopedia of Continental Women Writers. Taylor & Francis. pp. 7–. ISBN 978-0-8240-8547-6.
  2. 1 2 "Aganoor Pompilj, Vittoria (1855–1910)". University of Chicago Library. Retrieved 4 March 2013.
  3. Rinaldina Russell (1 January 1994). Italian Women Writers: A Bio-bibliographical Sourcebook. Greenwood Publishing Group. pp. 4–. ISBN 978-0-313-28347-5.
  4. Gaetana Marrone; Paolo Puppa (2007). Encyclopedia of Italian Literary Studies: A-J. Taylor & Francis. pp. 6–. ISBN 978-1-57958-390-3.
  5. Hugh Chisholm (1913). The Britannica Year-book 1913: A Survey of the World's Progress Since the Completion in 1910 of the Encyclopaedia Britannica. Encyclopaedia britannica Company, limited. pp. 1053–.
  6. "Italian Deputy a Suicide". Washington Post. 9 May 1910. Retrieved 2 November 2015.


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