Giuseppe Maria Giulietti
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Giuseppe Maria Giulietti (December 28, 1847 – May 25, 1881) was an Italian soldier, geographer and explorer. He was born in a wealthy family in Casteggio, province of Pavia.
He enrolled in the Corpo Volontari Italiani (Italian Volunteers Corps) which fought against the Austrians in 1866, during the Italian independence wars. Later he was called by Giacomo Doria for his expedition to save the Antinori expedition in Shewa, a principality of Ethiopia.
Afterwards he led several explorations in that country. During the last of them, he was killed by the Afar tribes, together with and thirty-one seamen of the ship in the southern Afar Depression. The location of the massacre was identified by and his two Italian associates as the Tio waterhole in 1928, who erected a cairn to mark the spot. The explorers were then threatened by the local Afar who believed that they would then exact revenge for the deaths over a generation ago, and Nesbitt was able to talk their way out of certain death only with great difficulty.[1]
In his memory, Raimondo Franchetti named the lake he discovered in 1929 "Lake Giulietti" (also known as Lake Afrera).
Giulietti's memoirs were published in 1882.
References[]
- ^ Nesbitt, Hell-Hole of Creation: The Exploration of Abyssinian Danakil (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1935), pp. 300-326
- 1847 births
- 1881 deaths
- Explorers of Africa
- Italian soldiers
- Italian explorers
- Italian geographers
- People from the Province of Pavia
- 19th-century Italian people
- 19th-century geographers