Ricerche Simili:
Infobox President
honorific-prefix =
Senator
name =
Carlo Azeglio Ciampi
image = Ciampi ritratto.jpg
imagesize = 180px
order =
10th President of Italy
primeminister =
Massimo D'Alema Giuliano Amato Silvio Berlusconi
term_start = 18 May 1999
term_end = 15 May 2006
predecessor =
Oscar Luigi Scalfaro
successor =
Giorgio Napolitano
order2 = 73rd
Prime Minister of Italy
term_start2 = 28 April 1993
term_end2 = 10 May 1994
predecessor2 =
Giuliano Amato
successor2 =
Silvio Berlusconi
president2 =
Oscar Luigi Scalfaro
order3 =
Italian Minister of Tourism
primeminister3 = ''himself''
term_start3 = 28 April 1993
term_end3 = 10 May 1994
successor3 = Domenico Fisichella
predecessor3 =
Margherita Boniver
order4 =
Italian Minister of the Interior
primeminister4 = ''himself''
term_start4 = 19 April 1994
term_end4 = 10 May 1994
successor4 =
Roberto Maroni
predecessor4 =
Nicola Mancino
order5 = Italian Minister of Exchequer, Budget and Economy Programming
primeminister5 =
Romano Prodi Massimo D'Alema
term_start5 = 17 July 1996
term_end5 = 13 May 1999
successor5 =
Giuliano Amato
predecessor5 =
Lamberto Dini ''as Minister of exchequer''
Mario Arcelli ''as Minister of budget and economy programming''
order6 =
Governor of Banca d'Italia
term_start6 = 1979
term_end6 = 1993
predecessor6 = Paolo Baffi
successor6 =
Antonio Fazio
order7 =
Senator for Life
term_start7 = 18 May 2006
term_end7 = ''Lifetime''
birth_date =
birth_place =
Livorno, Italy
nationality =
Italian
profession =
Economist Politician
religion =
Roman Catholicism
alma_mater =
Scuola Normale Superiore di Pisa University of Pisa
residence = Rome, Italy
children =
spouse = Franca Pilla
party =
Democratic Party
Carlo Azeglio Ciampi (; born 9 December 1920
) is an Italian politician and banker. He was the
73rd Prime Minister of Italy from 1993 to 1994 and was the
sixtieth President of the Italian Republic from 1999 to 2006. He is currently a
Senator for life in the
Italian Senate.
Biography
Education
Ciampi was born in
Livorno (
Province of Livorno).
After receiving a degree in
literature in 1941 from the
Scuola Normale of Pisa, one of the country's most prestigious
universities, he was called to military duty in
Albania as a lieutenant. On 8 September 1943, the date of the
armistice with the Allies, he refused to remain in the
Fascist Italian Social Republic, and took refuge in
Abruzzo, in
Scanno. He subsequently managed to pass the lines and reach
Bari, where he joined the
Partito d'Azione (and thus the
Italian resistance movement).
In 1946 he married Franca Pila. That same year, he obtained a degree in
law from the
University of Pisa and began working at the
Banca d'Italia. He also inscribed to
CGIL, a member of which he remained until 1980.
Oxford University awarded him an
Honorary Doctor of Civil Law degree in March 2005.
Career in the Banca d'Italia
In 1960, he was called to work in the central administration of the
Banca d'Italia, where he became Secretary General in 1973, Vice Director General in 1976, and Director General in 1978. In October 1979, he was nominated Governor of the Banca d'Italia and President of the Ufficio Italiano Cambi, positions he filled until 1993.
Prime Minister
From April 1993 to May 1994, he was the Italian
Prime Minister overseeing a
technical government. Later, as Treasury Minister from 1996 to May 1999 in the governments of
Romano Prodi and
Massimo D'Alema, he was credited with adopting the
euro currency. He personally chose the Italian design for the 1-euro coin, whereas all others were left to a television vote among some candidates the ministry had prepared. (See also:
Italian euro coins)
Ciampi chose the
Vitruvian man of
Leonardo da Vinci, on the symbolic grounds that it represented man as a measure of all things, and in particular of the coin: in this perspective,
money was at the service of man, instead of its opposite. The design also fitted very well on the
bimetallic material of the coin.
President of Italy
Ciampi was elected with a broad majority, and was the second president ever to be elected at the first ballot (when there is a requirement of a two-thirds majority) in a joint session of the
Chamber of Deputies, the
Italian Senate and representatives of the Regions.
He usually refrained from intervening directly into the political debate while serving as President. However, he often addressed general issues, without mentioning their connection to the current political debate, in order to state his opinion without being too intrusive. His interventions have frequently stressed the need for all parties to respect the constitution and observe the proprieties of political debate. He was generally held in high regard by all political forces represented in the parliament. The possibility of persuading Ciampi to stand for a second term as President - the so-called ''Ciampi-bis'' - was widely discussed, despite his advancing age, but it was officially dismissed by Ciampi himself on 3 May 2006, just a few days before
his mandate expired. Ciampi resigned as President before the swearing-in ceremony of his successor,
Giorgio Napolitano.
As President, Ciampi was not considered to be close to the positions of the
Vatican and the
Catholic church, in a sort of alternance after the devout
Oscar Luigi Scalfaro. He has often praised
patriotism, not always a common feeling in Italy because of its abuse by the
Fascist regime; Ciampi, however, seems to want to stress
self-confidence rather than
nationalism.
On 5 May 2005, he received the
Charlemagne Award of the city of
Aachen. On 15 June 2005, he was awarded an
honorary doctorate by the
École Normale Supérieure of Paris.
On 1 May 2008, he attended
Charlemagne Award of the city of
Aachen.
References
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