Carlo Ripa di Meana

Carlo Ripa di Meana (15 August 1929[1] – 2 March 2018)[2][3] was an Italian politician. He was a Member of the European Parliament, a European Commissioner with portfolio for the environment and was environment minister of Italy. He was the leader of the Italian Greens and president of the organization Italia Nostra.

Carlo Ripa di Meana
Minister of the Environment
In office
28 June 1992  9 March 1993
Prime MinisterGiuliano Amato
Preceded byGiorgio Ruffolo
Succeeded byValdo Spini
European Commissioner for the Environment
In office
1983–1993
PresidentJacques Delors
Preceded byStanley Clinton Davis
Succeeded byIoannis Paleokrassas
European Commissioner for the Institutional Reforms, Information Policy, Culture and Tourism
In office
1985–1999
PresidentJacques Delors
Preceded byLorenzo Natali (Information)
Giorgios Contogeorgis (Tourism)
Succeeded byJean Dondelinger
Personal details
Born(1929-08-15)15 August 1929
Pietrasanta, Kingdom of Italy
Died2 March 2018(2018-03-02) (aged 88)
Rome, Italy
Political partyPCI (1948–1958)
PSI (1958–1993)
Greens (1993–2001)
Spouse
(m. 1982; died 2018)

Early life

Ripa di Meana was born on 15 August 1929 in Pietrasanta, Tuscany. His father was Marquis Giulio Ripa di Meana, high official of the grenadiers, while his mother was Fulvia Schanzer, daughter of the senator and minister Carlo Schanzer. He brought noble titles of noblemen of the Marquis of Giaglione, Marquis of Meana, lord of Alteretto and Losa, noble of the lords of the Marquisate of Ceva.[4][5]

Career

In the period between 1953 and 1956, he directed in Prague, on behalf of the Italian Communist Party (PCI), the International Student Union's newspaper, World Student News. In Prague he also met Bettino Craxi. In 1957 he was made bookseller for Feltrinelli.

In the 60s Ripa di Meana joined the Italian Socialist Party and he came in its Central Committee.

In 1970 regional election he was elected in the Regional Council of Lombardy. In 1971 he was among the hundreds of signatories of the open letter published in the weekly L'Espresso on the case of Giuseppe Pinelli, a railroad worker and anarchist who died while being detained by Italian police in 1969, in which police chief Luigi Calabresi was pointed out as responsible for his death. In 2007, in a public assembly, he asked "pardon of Mrs. Calabresi and her children", as a consequence of the subsequent murder of Calabresi in 1972.[6]

In the 1979 European Parliament election he was elected MEP.

From 1973 to 1978 Ripa di Meana was also president of the Venice Biennale.

From 1985 to 1992 he served as European Commissioner for the Environment and for the Culture in the first and second Delors Commission, while in 1992 and 1993 he was Minister of the Environment in the Amato I Cabinet.[7]

From 1993 to 1996 Ripa di Meana was the Spokesperson of the Federation of the Greens, in the 1994 European Parliament election he was again elected MEP, while in 2000 regional election he was elected in the Umbrian Regional Council.

Since 2001 he had been President of the National Landscape Committee.[8]

Personal life

Ripa di Meana was romantically linked to Gae Aulenti.[9] In 1982 he married Marina Punturieri,[4] the former wife of Alessandro Lante della Rovere and mother of the actress Lucrezia Lante della Rovere, in a civil ceremony at Campagnano di Roma. Witnesses were Antonio Giolitti, Bettino Craxi, Alberto Moravia and Goffredo Parise.[10] In 2002 they followed with a religious ceremony at Monte Castello di Vibio, in Umbria. In 2010 the couple adopted a son, Andrea Cardella Ripa di Meana.[11]

Death

Ripa di Meana died in Rome on the afternoon of 2 March 2018, two months after his wife Marina died after a long illness on 4 January 2018.[2][3]

References

  1. John Barry; E. Gene Frankland, eds. (2014). International Encyclopedia of Environmental Politics. Routledge. p. 319. ISBN 978-0-415-75771-3.
  2. "Morto Carlo Ripa di Meana. Due mesi fa l'addio alla moglie Marina" [Carlo Ripa di Meana dies, two months after the farewell to his wife Marina]. Il Messaggero (in Italian). 2 March 2018. Retrieved 2 March 2018.
  3. "È morto Carlo Ripa di Meana, due mesi fa era scomparsa la moglie Marina" [Carlo Ripa di Meana died, two months ago his wife Marina had died]. La Repubblica (in Italian). 2 March 2018. Retrieved 2 March 2018.
  4. Borella, Andrea (2010). Annuario della Nobiltà Italiana. Vol. 2 (XXXI ed.). Teglio: SAGI. p. 1572.
  5. Libro d'oro della nobiltà italiana. Vol. 30 (XXIV ed.). Rome. 2010–2014. p. 482.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  6. "Firmai contro Calabresi, chiedo scusa" [I signed against Calabresi, I apologize]. La Repubblica (in Italian). 13 August 2007. Retrieved 5 January 2012.
  7. "I Governo Amato" [Amato I Cabinet] (in Italian). Government of Italy. Retrieved 5 January 2012.
  8. "Comitato nazionale del paesaggio" [National Landscape Committee] (in Italian). National Landscape Committee website. Retrieved 5 January 2012.
  9. Di Stefano, Paolo (21 February 2011). "L'architettura è un mestiere da uomini ma ho sempre fatto finta di nulla" [Architecture is a profession of men but I have always pretended nothing]. Corriere della Sera (in Italian). Retrieved 3 November 2012.
  10. "Storia proibita degli anni 80. Gli anni ruggenti dei socialisti" [The forbidden history of the 80s. The roaring years of the socialists.]. YouTube (in Italian).
  11. "Marina Ripa di Meana adotta un anconetano... di 48 anni" [Marina Ripa di Meana adopts an Anconetano ... of 48 years old]. Il Resto del Carlino (in Italian). 17 June 2010.
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