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    • Italian historian and political philosopher

      • Giuseppe Ferrari (born March 7, 1811, Milan, Kingdom of Italy—died June 2, 1876, Rome) was an Italian historian and political philosopher who is best known for his study of Italian revolutions.
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  2. 6 days ago · Giuseppe Ferrari (born March 7, 1811, Milan, Kingdom of Italydied June 2, 1876, Rome) was an Italian historian and political philosopher who is best known for his study of Italian revolutions. After receiving his doctorate in law at the University of Pavia (1831), Ferrari wrote two books on political thought and published a complete edition ...

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. Giuseppe Ferrari (7 March 1812 – 2 July 1876) was an Italian philosopher, historian and politician. Biography. He was born at Milan, studied law at Pavia and graduated in 1831.

  4. Giuseppe Ferrari (jōōzĕp´pā fār-rä´rē), 1812–76, Italian philosopher and politician. A thorough skeptic in metaphysics, he devoted himself to the more active aspects of social, political, and historical philosophy. From his self-imposed exile in France (1837–59), he exerted influence on the Risorgimento.

  5. GEOGRAPHICAL NAMES. GIUSEPPE FERRARI (1812-1876), Italian philosopher, historian and politician, was born at Milan on the 7th of March 1812, and died in Rome on the 2nd of July 1876. He studied law at Pavia, and took the degree of doctor in 1831. A follower of Romagnosi (d. 1835) and Giovan Battista Vico, his first works were an article in the ...

  6. Overview. Giuseppe Ferrari. (1811—1876) Quick Reference. (1811–76). Milanese philosopher and politician with republican ideals, who believed in a federalist solution for Italy and drew on the ideas of Romagnosi and Vico. He spent some years in ... From: Ferrari, Giuseppe in The Oxford Companion to Italian Literature » Subjects: Literature.

  7. May 11, 2021 · 225. Views. 0. CrossRef citations to date. 0. Altmetric. Articles. Towards a more natural structure of Italy? The federalist thought of Carlo Cattaneo, Giuseppe Ferrari, Alberto Mario and Gaetano Salvemini. Rafał Lis. Pages 421-437 | Published online: 11 May 2021. Cite this article. https://doi.org/10.1080/01916599.2021.1921006. Full Article.

  8. Mar 9, 2022 · Mamiani was also supported by Giuseppe Ferrari (in Biblioteca italiana, XX (1835), tome lxxviii, pp. 381–401), Michele Parma (in Ricoglitore italiano e straniero, II (1835), part ii, pp. 625–685), and Vincenzo Gioberti, who considered the Rinnovamento a confirmation of the theory of the supremacy of the Italians in the field of ...

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