Giorgio Agnelli

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Giorgio Agnelli (12 May 1929, in Turin – 11 May 1965, in Rolle) was a member of the Agnelli family.[1][2]

He was the second son of Virginia Agnelli (born Donna Virginia Bourbon del Monte) and of the industrialist Edoardo Agnelli. His brother, Gianni Agnelli, was the head of Fiat until 1996. He studied at Harvard University in the United States. Unlike the other members of the family, he could not participate in industrial and financial activities due to a serious illness. He died at age 35 in a Swiss clinic at Lake Geneva, where he had been treated for a long time.[3] According to the poetess Marta Vio, who was his companion for ten years, Giorgio had long suffered from schizophrenia. They met in 1946 on the beach of Forte dei Marmi, the holiday resort of the Agnelli family.[4]

References[]

  1. ^ Marco Ferrante, Casa Agnelli, pp. 184-189
  2. ^ M. Ripa di Meana e G. Mecucci, Virginia Agnelli, pp. 263-275
  3. ^ M. Ripa di Meana e G. Mecucci, Virginia Agnelli, p. 216
  4. ^ M. Ripa di Meana e G. Mecucci, Virginia Agnelli, p. 223

Further reading[]

  • Marco Ferrante, Casa Agnelli, Mondadori, 2007, ISBN 978-88-04-56673-1
  • Giancarlo Galli, Gli Agnelli, il tramonto di una dinastia, Mondadori, Edizione 2003, ISBN 88-04-51768-9
  • Alan Friedman, Agnelli and the network of italian power, Mandarin Paperback (Octopus Publishing Gr.), London, 1988, ISBN 0-7493-0093-0
  • Angiolo Silvio Ori, Storia di una dinastia - Gli Agnelli e la Fiat, Editori Riuniti, Roma, 1996 ISBN 88-359-4059-1
  • Marina Ripa di Meana e Gabriella Mecucci, Virginia Agnelli, Argelato (BO), Minerva Edizioni, 2010, ISBN 978-88-7381-307-1
  • Gigi Moncalvo, Agnelli segreti, Vallecchi, 2012, ISBN 978-88-8427-236-2
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