List of personalities from Biasca

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Coat of arms of Biasca

This list contains personalities born in Biasca and those who had their sphere of activity in Biasca without having been born there. The list does not claim to be complete.

Personalities

Ippolito Monighetti ( Karl Brjullow , 1840)
Ivan Monighetti
  • Vilfredo Orelli (* around 1160 in Locarno ; † before July 25, 1205 ibid), first Podestà (rector) of Biasca
  • Enrico Orelli (* around 1260 in Locarno; † before January 9, 1311 ibid), son of Simone, Podestà von Biasca
  • Giacomo Bianchi (* around 1275 in Biasca?; † after 1312 there), priest, provost of Biasca in 1312
  • Giovanni Battista Pellanda (* 1541 in Biasca; † March 9, 1615 ibid), landowner, governor, knight of the golden spur . The Casa Cavalier Pellanda is a cultural center and museum
  • Giovanni Basso (born May 1552 in Airolo ; † October 13, 1629 in Biasca), archbishop vicar
  • Camillo Procaccini (1561-1629), painter
  • Antonio Moro (* 1597 in Milan? † December 21, 1662 in Biasca), Oblate , Provisitator of the Ambrosian Valleys.
  • Costantino Monighetti (born September 21, 1818 in Biasca; † February 22, 1895 ibid), lawyer, Ticino Grand Councilor and Council of States
  • Ippolito Monighetti (1819–1878), architect
  • Fabrizio Maffi (born October 2, 1868 in San Zenone al Po , † February 23, 1955 in Cavi di Lavagna ), Italian doctor and politician
  • Carlo Maggini (born January 15, 1877 in Giornico , † August 19, 1941 in Bellinzona ), lawyer, editor and politician
  • Charles Maggini (* 1894 in San Benito ( California ), † 1982 in San José (California) ), from Val Pontirone , rodeo world champion
  • Giovanni Laini (1899–1986) from Biasca, humanities scholar, writer
  • Aldo Forni (born August 30, 1901 in Biasca; † June 5, 1911 ibid), Ticino Grand Councilor, judge of the Court of Appeal
  • Alfredo Leber (born March 16, 1902 in Biasca; † November 11, 1983 in Lugano ), priest, editor, director of the newspaper Giornale del Popolo , doctor honoris causa of the Pontifical Lateran University
  • Guido Calgari (1905–1969), politician, university professor and writer
  • Aleardo Pini (1907–1958), lawyer and politician
  • Vittorio Castelnuovo (* 1915 in Osogna ; † September 2005 in Biasca), Swiss singer, accordionist and composer
  • Plinio Cioccari (born January 25, 1918 in Biasca, † December 5, 2008 San Nazzaro TI ), politician
  • Bruno Heiz (born October 27, 1918 in Biasca; † December 3, 2012 in Basel ), painter, graphic artist, draftsman, wall painter
  • Cerere Columberg (* 1920 in Biasca; † November 15, 1999 ibid), politician, pacifist,
  • Raffaella Columberg (born April 19, 1926 in Biasca; † May 10, 2007 there), ceramicist, politician, pacifist
  • Lauro Tognola (* 1933 in Locarno ; † December 1, 2016 ibid), high school teacher, writer, journalist, former director of the Locarno Teachers' College, President of the Alliance française lived in Cugnasco , President of the Fondazione Volkart
  • Massimo Pini (1936–2003), lawyer and politician
  • Ivano Gianola (born February 16, 1944 in Biasca), architect
  • Giuseppe Vaccaro (born October 26, 1944 in Satriano ), painter, draftsman, sculptor
  • Ivan Monighetti (* 1948), cellist
  • Daniele Dell'Agnola (* 1976), SUPSI lecturer, writer, musician, playwright

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Daniela Pauli Falconi: Vilfredo Orelli. In: Historical Lexicon of Switzerland . December 1, 2008 , accessed December 25, 2019 .
  2. ^ Daniela Pauli Falconi: Enrico Orelli. In: Historical Lexicon of Switzerland . December 19, 2008 , accessed December 25, 2019 .
  3. Celestino Trezzini : Giacomo Bianchi. In the Historical-Biographical Lexicon of Switzerland. P. 221 (PDF digitized version , accessed on October 9, 2017)
  4. ^ Daniela Pauli Falconi: Giovanni Battista Pellanda. In: Historical Lexicon of Switzerland . November 23, 2009 , accessed February 17, 2020 .
  5. ^ Daniela Pauli Falconi: Giovanni Basso. In: Historical Lexicon of Switzerland . May 2, 2002 , accessed January 13, 2020 .
  6. ^ Maria Foletti Fazioli: Camillo Procaccini. In: Sikart (status: 2009) , accessed on January 17, 2016
  7. Gianna Ostinelli Lumia: Antonio Moro. In: Historical Lexicon of Switzerland . January 26, 2009 , accessed December 7, 2019 .
  8. ^ Fabrizio Mena: Costantino Monighetti. In: Historical Lexicon of Switzerland . February 22, 2008 , accessed January 13, 2020 .
  9. Fabrizio Maffi (Italian) at ti.ch/can/oltreconfiniti (accessed on July 25, 2016.)
  10. Pasquale Genasci: Carlo Maggini. In: Historical Lexicon of Switzerland . March 2, 2010 , accessed January 13, 2020 .
  11. ^ Charles Maggini (Italian) at ti.ch/can/oltreconfiniti (accessed November 4, 2016).
  12. Alessandro Martini: Giovanni Laini. In: Historical Lexicon of Switzerland . December 6, 2006 .
  13. ^ Alberto Lepori, Fabrizio Panzera (ed.): Uomini nostri. Trenta biography di uomini politici. Armando Dadò Editore, Locarno 1989, p. 19.
  14. ^ Fabrizio Panzera: Alfredo Leber. In: Historical Lexicon of Switzerland . August 2, 2006 , accessed January 13, 2020 .
  15. ^ Alberto Lepori, Fabrizio Panzera (ed.): Uomini nostri. Trenta biography di uomini politici. Armando Dadò Editore, Locarno 1989, p. 21.
  16. Vittorio Castelnuovo (Italian) at rsi.ch/rete-uno/showcase (accessed on September 18, 2017).
  17. Plinio Cioccari (French) on unil.ch/elitessuisses (accessed on April 14, 2017)
  18. Bruno Heiz. In: Sikart , accessed February 3, 2016
  19. Cerere Columberg (Italian) on archividonneticino.ch (accessed on October 12, 2016)
  20. Marcella Snider Salazar: Columberg, Raffaella. In: Sikart (as of: 2018), accessed on January 13, 2019. (Italian)
  21. ^ Tognola (Italian) in bibliomedia.ch, accessed December 27, 2015.
  22. ^ Fondazione Volkart
  23. ^ Giuseppe Vaccaro. In: Sikart
  24. Daniele Dell'Agnola (Italian) in bibliomedia.ch, accessed on 24 December 2015