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  1. The pseudonym was used as well by the great Italian economist Luigi Einaudi, who expressed his liberal beliefs in two series of letters signed 'Junius': the former published in 1920, the latter in 1944, while he was living as a refugee in Switzerland.

  2. D'Auria, M 2012, ‘Junius and the ‘President Professor’: Luigi Einaudi’s European Federalism’. in M Hewitson & M D'Auria (eds), Europe in crisis : intellectuals and the European idea, 1917-1957.

    • Matthew D'Auria
    • Mark Hewitson, Matthew D'Auria
    • 2012
    • Berghahn Books
  3. Between the end of the war and the early 1920s, the Corriere published other letters by Junius.4 Behind the pseudonym was the future president of the Italian Republic, Luigi Einaudi.

    • Matthew D'auria
  4. The pseudonym was used as well by the great Italian economist Luigi Einaudi, who expressed his liberal beliefs in two series of letters signed 'Junius': the former published in 1920, the latter in 1944, while he was living as a refugee in Switzerland.

  5. Ludovico Maria Enrico Einaudi OMRI (Italian: [ludoˈviːko eiˈnaudi] ⓘ; born 23 November 1955) is an Italian pianist and composer. Trained at the Conservatorio Verdi in Milan, Einaudi began his career as a classical composer, later incorporating other styles and genres such as pop , rock , folk , and world music .

  6. Junius, the pseudonym of the still unidentified author of a series of letters contributed to Henry Sampson Woodfall’s Public Advertiser, a popular English newspaper of the day, between Jan. 21, 1769, and Jan. 21, 1772.

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  8. Whoever the writer was, he wrote under other pseudonyms before, during and after the period between January 1769 and January 1772. He acknowledged that he had written as “Philo-Junius,” and there is evidence that he was identical with “Veteran,” “Nemesis” and other anonymous correspondents of the Public Advertiser.

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