Alcide De Gasperi

   

Alcide De Gasperi

Alcide De Gasperi (born 3 April 1881 in Pieve Tesino in the Province of Trent, Austria-Hungary (now part of Italy); died 19 August 1954 in Sella di Valsugana in the same province) was an Italian statesman and politician. He is considered to be one of the Founding Fathers of the European communities, along with the Frenchman Robert Schuman and the German Konrad Adenauer.

De Gasperi studied philosophy and literature in Vienna, and afterwards he was became a journalist. In 1911 he became a Member of Parliament in the Austrian Reichsrat. In 1919 he was one the founders with Don Luigi Sturzo of the Popular Party, or Partito Popolare; starting in 1921 he was an MP for the party, and later party leader and Secretary-General.

De Gasperi served a 16-month jail sentence as an anti-fascist. After his release in 1931 he worked in the library of the Vatican; there, in 1943 during the Second World War, he organized the establishment of the first (and at the time, illegal) Christian Democracy party, or Democrazia Cristiana, drawing upon the ideology of the Popular Party. From 1945 to 1953 he was the prime minister of eight successive Christian Democratic governments.

See also

  • De Gasperi-Gruber Agreement
  • Alcide de Gasperi - one of the EU's founding fathers (http://www.ueitalia2003.it/EN/Presidenza/roma1957_2003/DeGasperi.htm) Page from the Italian presidency of the EU showing how Alcide de Gasperi fits into the European Union history.
  • Alcide de Gasperi Biography (http://www.uwgb.edu/galta/333/bios98/gasp.htm) A biography by a student of the University of Wisconsin




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