- Giorgio Levi Della Vida
Giorgio Levi Della Vida (
August 22 ,1886 ,Venice -December 25 ,1967 ,Rome ) was an ItalianJewish linguist who focused onHebrew ,Arabic , and otherSemitic languages , as well as on the history and culture of theNear East .Born in
Venice to a Jewish family originally from Ferrara, he moved with his family first toGenoa and then to Rome, from whose university he graduated in 1909 with the HebraistIgnazio Guidi . Immediately after graduation, he participated in numerous research expeditions toCairo ,Athens (for the Italian School of Archaeology), andCrete . He returned definitively to Rome in 1911, where he worked with the great historian of the Near East,Leone Caetani , on the editorial staff of the "Annals of Islam". He developed strong ties of friendship withMichelangelo Guidi , the son of Ignazio and himself an illustriousIslamist , as well as withGaetano De Sanctis ,Ernesto Buonaiuti ,Giorgio Pasquali ,Luigi Salvatorelli , and the Barnabite priestGiovanni Semeria . Since he was always deeply interested in problems of religion, he used his connections with Father Semeria and Ernesto Buonaiuti (excommunicated for his Modernist convictions) to undertake some of the biblical studies neglected by the completely secular basis of his cultural upbringing.From 1914 to 1916 Levi Della Vida headed the department of Arabic Language and Literature at the Eastern University of Naples. During the First World War, he acted as an interpreter, achieving the rank of
lieutenant . Afterwards, he was assigned to the department of Semitic Philology at theUniversity of Torino , a post he held only from the end of his military service until 1919. In 1920 he went to work forIgnazio Guidi at the University of Rome as a professor ofHebrew and ComparativeSemitic Languages .In those years he began to collaborate with some newspapers: he wrote for the Roman daily
Il Paese , which ceased publication at the end of 1922, after its offices were destroyed by Fascist "squadristi ". Levi Della Vida was, in his turn, also a victim of aggression on the part of the Fascists. At the invitation of Salvatorelli, who was the associate managing editor, he began to contribute toLa Stampa , where he testified to the political climate in Rome in the days following the passing ofGiacomo Matteotti . On occasion, he also had contact with various leaders of the anti-Fascist opposition, includingGiovanni Amendola ,Carlo Sforza andClaudio Treves . In 1924, he became president of the National Union of Liberal and Democratic Forces, founded by Amendola, and the following year he signed theManifesto of Anti-Fascist Intellectuals . By his autobiographical testimony, he claims not to have been particularly interested in political activism; however, he was convinced that such a time of crisis, when Italy was faced with the rise of Fascism, required every citizen to assume responsibility.In the 1920s he made the acquaintance of
Giovanni Gentile , another professor in Rome, and he began to collaborate with him on the "Enciclopedia Treccani" as an expert in Hebrew and other Semitic languages.He was one of the twelve Italian university professors who refused to pledge the oath of loyalty to the Fascist leader and regime imposed by article 18 of the Ordinary Law on
August 28 ,1931 . Following this refusal, the next year Levi Della Vida was expelled from his post at the university. He continued, however, his collaboration with the "Enciclopedia Treccani", of which he was the editor of the entry onHebraism , among others. After that, he was assigned by theVatican Library to catalog its treasury of Arabic manuscripts, from which he culled a first selection for publication in 1935, followed by a second thirty years later.After the promulgation of the
racial laws , in 1939 he fled to the United States, where he was offered teaching posts at theUniversity of Pennsylvania inPhiladelphia as well as at theUniversity of San Diego inCalifornia , at whose library he would generously endow a university chair later in his life, as a sign of gratefulness for the hospitality.He returned to Italy in 1945, where he was reinstated to his post at the University of Rome, where he taught Muslim history and culture until his retirement in 1959. In 1947 he was elected a member of the
Accademia dei Lincei . He died in Rome in 1967 at the age of 81, after a brief illness.The University of California Los Angeles has dedicated an editorial series in his name: "The Giorgio Levi Della Vida Series in Islamic Studies." They also reward the best studies in Islamic culture with the "Giorgio Levi Della Vida Award."
Publications
Levi Della Vida's interests and linguistic research spanned vast areas including Semitic philology, Jewish and Islamic history, the Punic alphabet, and Syriac literature:
* "Gli ebrei: storia, religione, civiltà", Messina-Roma, 1924;
* "Storia e religione nell'Oriente semitico", Roma, 1924;
* "Elenco dei manoscritti arabo-islamici della Biblioteca Vaticana: Vaticani, Barberiniani, Borgiani, Rossiani", Città del Vaticano, 1935;
* "Ricerche sulla formazione del più antico fondo dei manoscritti orientali della Biblioteca Vaticana", Citta del Vaticano, 1939;
* "Secondo elenco dei manoscritti arabi islamici della Biblioteca Vaticana". Città del Vaticano, 1965;
* "Arabi ed Ebrei nella storia", Napoli, 1984;
* "Iscrizioni puniche della Tripolitania, 1927-1967". Roma, 1987;
* "Visita a Tamerlano: saggi di storia e letteratura", Napoli, 1988;
* "Aneddoti e svaghi arabi e non arabi", Milano-Napoli, 1959.In addition to his scholarly publications, he also penned an autobiography in 1966, the recently reedited "Fantasmi ritrovati" (Napoli, Liguori, 2004).
Bibliography
*
Francesco Gabrieli , "La storiografia arabo-islamica in Italia", Napoli, Guida, 1975, pp. 63-71;
* IDEM, "Orientalisti del Novecento", Roma, Istituto per l'Oriente C. A. Nallino, 1993, pp. 33-38;
*S. Moscati , "Ricordo di G. Levi Della Vida", Roma, 1968;
*H. Goetz , "Il giuramento rifiutato: i docenti universitari e il regime fascista", Firenze, La nuova Italia, 2000;
*G. Boatti , "Preferirei di no. le storie dei dodici professori che si opposero a Mussolini", Torino, Einaudi, 2001;
* "Dizionario del fascismo", a cura diV. de Grazia eS. Luzzatto , Torino, Einaudi, 2003External links
* http://dio.sagepub.com/cgi/content/abstract/51/4/59 (English)
* http://www.liguori.it/autore_pop.asp?autore=Giorgio_Levi_Della_Vida
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