Domenico Tempio
| Domenico Tempio | |
|---|---|
![]() Portrait of Domenico Tempio by Giuseppe Gandolfo  | |
| Born | 
August 22, 1750 Catania, Italy  | 
| Died | 
February 4, 1821 (aged 70) Catania, Italy  | 
| Language | Italian/Sicilian | 
| Spouse | Francesca Longo | 
| Children | one daughter | 
Domenico Tempio (1750–1821) was an Italian writer who mainly wrote in the Sicilian language or dialect. During his lifetime, he was considered a major poet, and was much praised, but after his death his work was largely forgotten, until a reawakening of interest following the second world war.[1] His poem La Caristia ("The famine"), describing a famine and rioting in Catania in 1797-98, is regarded as his major work.[2]
Works
- Operi di Duminicu Tempiu catanisi (1814-1815) is a collection of his poetry, edited by Francesco Strano. The best-known poems are L'Odi l'Ignuranza Supra, The Maldicenza sconfitta, Veru Piaciri Lu, The Mbrugghereidi, The Numi Scerra di li, Lu cuntrastu allayed, PACI di Marcuni, Li and Li Pauni Nuzzi.
 - The Caristia (1848), is his most important work, published posthumously by Vincenzo Percolla. It is a poem in twenty cantos.
 - Tempio di Domenico Poesie (1874) is the second edition of his works, with many additions.
 - Erotic poetry was collected in 1926 by Raffaele Corso Di Vincenzo and by Maria and Santo Cali in 1970.
 
References
- ↑ "Domenico Tempio in Enciclopedia di Catania, www.cormorano.net". Retrieved 23 January 2014.
 - ↑ Tempio, Domenico (1 Oct 2010). Poems and fables. introduced and translated by Giovanna Summerfield. Legas. p. 17. ISBN 1-881901-68-8.
 
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Thursday, October 08, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.
