Academic became Padua University professor
Historian
Gaetano Cozzi, who became an expert on the statesman Paolo Sarpi and taught at Padua
University in the 1960s, was born on 15 September 1922 in Zero Branco in the
province of Treviso in the Veneto.
Although
confined to a wheelchair for most of his adult life, Cozzi became famous
internationally because of his research into the life of Sarpi, and his own
writing about the relationship between law and society in Italy.
Cozzi grew
up in Legnano, a municipality of Milan, and went to military school. At the age
of 20, he became a second lieutenant in the Alpine troops. While attending a
training school in Parma he was kicked by a horse and suffered a leg wound. A
vaccine injected into him to treat the wound caused a serious infection and
although his condition stabilised after a few months he was left paralysed in
his lower limbs.
He had to
have frequent periods in hospital, but his medical treatment, rather than
demoralising him, stimulated him intellectually. He began to take an interest
in politics and came into contact with the Liberal Party in Italy. He contributed
to the Resistance in 1943, while lying in his hospital bed, by writing for
Italian newspapers that carried propaganda pieces.
Despite
being paralysed, Cozzi prepared to take his University exams and he graduated
in History of Italian Law at the University of Milan in 1949. His thesis was about
the writer Paolo Sarpi, and the relationship between the state and the church
in Italy.
Cozzi moved
to Venice to continue his research, even though life was difficult for him
there because of his disability. After the founding of the Institute for the
History of Venetian Society and State, he was appointed its secretary in 1955.
His first
book, about Niccoló Contarini, who was the Doge of Venice in 1630, had to be dictated
by Cozzi to his mother in 1958 because his illness had once again forced him to
lie in bed.
Cozzi was
appointed to teach history at the Faculty of Foreign Languages and Literature
in Venice and while attending a meeting at the Giorgio Cini Foundation in 1960,
he met Luisa Zille, an expert in Philology, who he married in 1962 in Venice.
He later collaborated with his wife to edit the Complete Works of Paolo Sarpi.
In 1966, Cozzi
was appointed by the prestigious University of Padua to teach Medieval and Modern
History at their faculty of Political Sciences.
Cozzi was a
prolific writer about criminal justice and prisons in the Venetian republic and
he also wrote The History of Venice, published in two volumes in 1986 and 1992.
In 1987, he became
a board member of the newly established, Treviso based, Benetton Foundation for
Studies and Research.
Cozzi’s writing
and research had to be interspersed with long periods in hospital because of
complications with his health. He suffered a further blow when his wife, Luisa,
who was suffering from depression, took her own life in 1995.
His teaching
career came to an end in 1998 with a ceremony at Ca’ Foscari in Venice, where
he was awarded the title of Professor Emeritus.
The
historian died in 2001 in Venice at the age of 78. He was buried in the
cemetery at Zero Branco next to his wife, Luisa. His gravestone bears the
inscription: ‘Still together, always together.’
Zero Branco is
a comune in the province of Treviso, located about 37 kilometres from Padua. Casa
Luisa e Gaetano Cozzi in Via Milan is now a cultural centre in the countryside
outside Zero Branca, having been bequeathed to Fondazione Benetton in Gaetano
Cozzi’s will. It is now an eight-hectare complex consisting of a former
farmhouse, rustic outbuildings, and agricultural land, which is used by the
Benetton Foundation for agricultural research.
A library
houses Cozzi’s documents and archives, which are made available to scholars. Luisa’s
Bechstein piano is preserved there and musical activities take place at Casa
Cozzi in her memory.
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