Stefano Siglienti

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Stefano Siglienti
Stefano Siglienti.jpg
Minister of Finance
In office
June 1944 – December 1944
Prime MinisterIvanoe Bonomi
Personal details
Born17 January 1898
Sassari
Died5 April 1971(1971-04-05) (aged 73)
Rome
NationalityItalian
Political partyAction Party
Spouse(s)Ines Berlinguer
Children4
Parent(s)Alberto Siglienti (father)
Francesca Conti (mother)

Stefano Siglienti (1898 – 1971) was an Italian banker and politician who served as the minister of finance from 18 June until 12 December 1944. He held several banking posts until his death.

Early life and education[]

Hailed from intellectual bourgeois family Siglienti was born in Sassari on 17 January 1898 to Alberto Siglienti, a lawyer, and Francesca Conti.[1] He received a law degree in 1921.[2]

Career and activities[]

Following graduation from high school Siglienti began to work at a local bank in Sassari.[2] He took part in World War I as a second lieutenant and was decorated by the King in July 1918 due to his activities in the war.[2] He was one of the founders of the Action Party in Sardinia.[3] From 1923 he began to work at the Sardinian Land Bank of which he would become deputy director general in 1945.[2] In 1925 he moved to Rome and contributed to the publications, including Il Mondo and Il Becco Giallo.[1] In 1929 he involved in the formation of Giustizia e Libertà (GL), an anti-fascist resistance movement, together with Riccardo Bauer, Ugo La Malfa and Raffaele Mattioli.[2]

On 19 November 1943 Siglienti was arrested by the Schutzstaffel and was kept in the Regina Coeli prison.[1] He managed to escape from the prison through the assistance of his wife, Ines, who had also been involved in the clandestine struggle against Fascist rule.[2] Therefore, Siglienti was saved from being one of the victims of the massacre which would take place a few days later on 24 March 1944.[2] He was appointed minister of finance in June 1944 to the cabinet led by Prime Minister Ivanoe Bonomi and was in office until December 1944.[1]

From 1 March to 10 December 1945 he worked as the commissioner of the Banca IMI and then became its president in December 1945.[2] The same year he was also named a member of the Consulta Nazionale.[3] In September 1945 he was appointed president of the Italian Banking Association which he held until 1971.[1]

Personal life and death[]

Siglienti married Ines Berlinguer, sister of politician Mario Berlinguer, in September 1924.[1] They had a son and three daughters: Sergio (1926–2020),[4] Lina, Laura and Francesca.[2]

Siglienti died in Rome on 5 April 1971.[2]

References[]

  1. ^ a b c d e f Sandro Gerbi (1994). "Un banchiere nella Resistenza romana: Stefano Siglienti, 1943-44". Belfagor. 49 (4): 433–453. JSTOR 26147184.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Giandomenico Piluso (2018). "Siglienti, Stefano" (in Italian). Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani (Volume 92).
  3. ^ a b "Sigliènti, Stefano" (in Italian). Treccani. Retrieved 22 January 2022.
  4. ^ Constantino Cossu (20 May 2020). "La morte di Sergio Siglienti, da Sassari ai vertici Comit: il grande banchiere che amava il mare di Stintino". La Nuova (in Italian). Retrieved 22 January 2022.

External links[]

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