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Rosselli, Amelia

LC control no.n 80040776
Descriptive conventionsrda
LC classificationPQ4839.O7
Personal name headingRosselli, Amelia
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Variant(s)Pincherle Rosselli, Amelia
Pincherle Moravia, Amelia
Moravia, Amelia Pincherle
Pincherle, Amelia
Associated countryItaly
LocatedFrance Switzerland England Larchmont (N.Y.) Italy
Birth date1870-01-16
Death date1954-12-26
Place of birthVenice (Italy)
Place of deathFlorence (Italy)
Field of activityChildren's stories Playwriting German literature--Translations into Italian Anti-fascist movements--Italy Feminism
Profession or occupationAuthors Dramatists Translators Political refugees Feminists
Playwrights
Special noteDo not confuse with her grandaughter, the poet of the same name, who lived from 1930-1996.
Found inHer Felicità perduta, 1901.
Modern drama by women, 1880s-1930s, 1996: p. 44 (Amelia Rosselli, 1870-1954) p. 46 (born in Venice)
Her Anima, c1997: t.p. (Amelia Pincherle Rosselli) p. 7 (b. Amelia Pincherle Moravia, Jan. 16, 1870)
Wikipedia, Italian version, viewed November 20, 2014: Amelia Pincherle (b. Venice, 16 January 1870, d. Florence, 26 December 1954; writer, dramatist, and Italian anti-Fascist; returned to Italy in June 1946)
The two Amelia Rosselli, via Italian Cultural Institute of New York website, January 17, 2019, viewed online April 23, 2019 (Amelia Rosselli, born Amelia Pincherle, was born in Venice in 1870; playwright, translator, activist in the burgeoning women's movement, as well as author of books for children; after the murder of her sons, in 1937, Amelia gathered the two widows and seven children, and led the family to exile in France, Switzerland, and England, and finally to the US)
   <https://iicnewyork.esteri.it/iic_newyork/en/gli_eventi/calendario/2019/01/le-due-amelie-serie-esilio-e-creativita.html>
Wikipedia, April 23, 2019: Amelia Rosselli (her grandmother Amelia Pincherle Rosselli, a Venetian Jewish feminist, playwright, and translator from a family prominent in the Italian Risorgimento, the movement for independence)
On translating Amelia Rosselli, April 20, 2015, via Centro Primo Levi website, viewed online April 23, 2019: biography (the Rosselli extended family moved to Switzerland, England and finally, in 1940, to the United States. The family settled in Larchmont, New York; returned to Italy in 1946)
   <https://primolevicenter.org/printed-matter/on-amelia-rosselli/>
Associated languageita