Itinerary edited by UNIVERSITY OF PERUGIA
Orazio Antinori was born in Perugia on 23 October 1811, to Marquis Gaetano Antinori and Tommasa Bonaini Boldrini (Fig. 1). In 1828, he studied Natural Sciences at the College of the Benedictine Fathers at the Abbey of San Pietro in Perugia (Fig. 2). In 1837 he moved to Rome, the capital of the Papal States, to escape provincial life and seek better job opportunities. Between 1837 and 1841 he collaborated with Carlo Luciano Bonaparte (Paris 1803 - Paris 1857), Prince of Canino, in the writing and publication of the books Iconografia della fauna italica (Iconography of Italian Fauna) and Conspectus generum avium (Fig. 3). In 1848, he enlisted as an Officer in the Papal Army to fight against the Austrians in Northern Italy, and during the battle of Cornuda, in the Treviso Hills, he was shot in his right arm. Faithful to the liberal cause and Mazzinis ideas, he returned to Rome and contributed to the flight of Pius IX. He also defended the "Roman Republic" against French troops.
The victory and entry of French troops into the city led to the fall of the Roman Republic and the dissolution of the military units. The inclusion of his name in the French proscriptions and the consequent fear of reprisals forced him to flee, his first time outside of Italy, and so began his long exile ... ..which only ended in 1861. The first part of his exile was spent in Greece, where he stayed in Athens for several months. After Greece he moved to the Ottoman Empire , first in Constantinople (Istanbul) and then in Smyrna (Izmir), where he worked with the Swiss consul Guido Gonzenbach, founder of an Export House for zoological specimens for European museums (Fig. 4 ). From Smyrna he travelled in search of zoological specimens, both inland, in the heart of Anatolia all the way to Syria, and towards the eastern Mediterranean islands (Samos, Rhodes, Crete, Cyprus) and Malta. On 9 May 1859, he moved to Egypt (Figs. 5, 6) and then to Sudan, in Khartoum, which he reached after a long and arduous journey across the Bayuda Desert (SahraBayyudah). In Khartoum he met many other European travellers and adventurers, some of whom were interested in the trade of natural gums and resins (frankincense, myrrh and gum arabic), ivory, ostrich feathers and coffee. He used Khartoum as his base for several years, traveling to the distant and remote Darfur, Shinar and the borders with Abyssinia (Gallabat, on the River Atbarah, and Ar Rusayris, on the Blue Nile). In 1860, again from Khartoum, he set off on his first Great Expedition to the heart of the continent, going up the White Nile River to its confluence with the Bahr el Ghazal (River of Gazelles), together with Savoyard Alessandro Vayssière and Lucchese Carlo Piaggia (Badia di Cantignano LU 1827 - Karkoggi 1882). The three men set sail on Vayssières boat with the intention of reaching the "Land of the Niam-Niam", a population that at the time was considered particularly "primitive" and "mysterious" (Fig. 7). Unfortunately, after reaching Nguri they were forced to give up their attempt due to unfavourable weather conditions. Nguri was the southernmost town and the closest that Antinori had ever been to the equator. In 1861 he returned to Khartoum, where he learned that the Italian political situation had changed profoundly and that Rome and Umbria had become integral parts of the New Kingdom ruled by the House of Savoy, with King Vittorio Emanuele II on the throne! Therefore, after having scraped together enough money to make the long journey, he left Khartoum to return to Italy, ending his period of exile. He landed in Italy in 1861 and settled in Turin, where he sold his precious Ornithological Collection to the State for 20,000 Liras (... which was then divided up between various museums!). He donated his Ethnographic Collection to the University of Perugias Museum (Fig. 8). In 1863 he joined the Freemasons and in 1864 was elected a member of the "Grand Orient of Italy". In 1863, together with Ornithologist Tommaso Salvadori (Porto San Giorgio 1835 - Turin 1923), he went to Sardinia to carry out naturalistic observations and collect new zoological specimens for his collections. In 1866, for both naturalistic and archaeological reasons, he went to Tunisia. In 1867, once back in Italy, he moved to Florence, the new capital of the Kingdom of Italy and during the "Florentine period", together with Cristoforo Negri and Cesare Correnti, he founded the Italian Geographic Society, becoming its Director and carrying out the role of General Secretary. In 1869 he returned to Egypt, in the role of Official Representative of the Italian Government for the grandiose inauguration of the Opening of the Suez Canal (Fig. 9). On this occasion he made a few trips down the Nile, getting as far as Nubia. In 1870, together with the famous Florentine botanist Odoardo Beccari (Florence 1843- 1920) and Arturo Issel (Genoa 1842- 1922), he travelled from the shores of the Red Sea (Massawa) to the province of Bogos, where he remained on his own; he was later joined by Carlo Piaggia. In 1872 he returned to Italy, to Florence, to cover various roles on behalf of the Italian Geographic Society. In 1875 he returned to Tunisia to head a scientific mission in the region of Chotts and to explore the oases in South-Central Tunisia (Fig. 10). Various distinguished people took part in this trip, including the Perugian scholar Giuseppe Bellucci (Perugia 1844 Perugia 1921). Back in Italy, in 1876 he was nominated to head the Great Expedition to the Equatorial Lakes by the Italian Geographic Society. After a public meeting and a farewell banquet in Rome on 7 March 1876, he left for Naples, where at 8 pm the following day, at the age of 65, he embarked on the ship "Arabia" together with engineer Giovanni Chiarini and the organiser Lorenzo Landini, and set sail for Abyssinia (Fig. 11). The Group arrived at the port of Zeilah on 3 August 1876, where they were forced to stay for about a month and a half due to problems with local authorities. On 19 June 1876, the Expedition, with 70 camels and 125 cases, left Zeilah for Scioa (Shéwa). There were countless and unforeseen adventures and "mishaps" during the expedition into the heart of the Abyssinian Highlands. In 1877, King Menelik gave Antinori 95 acres for the establishment of a Geographic Station in LétMarefià, the first Italian "Centre for Naturalistic Studies" founded outside Italy (Fig. 12). At midnight on 26 August 1882, Orazio Antinori died at the LétMarefià station at the age of 71. Antinori's body was buried beneath an ancient Sycamore tree on the green LétMarefià plateau, where the mound with his remains still exists (Fig. 13). Naturalist-traveller, Patriot and freedom fighter for the Risorgimento, co-founder of the Italian Geographic Society, "father" of Italian explorers in Africa, founder of the first Italian Scientific Studies Centre" outside Italy, collector of natural history specimens, taxidermist, donator of naturalist collections to numerous important Italian museums (Regional Museum of Natural Sciences in Turin, the University of Pavias Natural History Museum, the "Giacomo Doria" Natural History Museum in Genoa, the University of Florences Zoological Museum , the University of Florences Tropical Herbarium Studies Centre, the University of Perugias Natural History Museum, the Zoological Museum in Rome).
Antinori was one of the first European naturalists to carry out field studies on the environments, flora and fauna of the inner regions of the Horn of Africa. In recognition of his pioneering studies, specific taxonomic terms for many examples of Northeast African fauna have been dedicated to him. Antinoris cultural relations and his friendships with some of the best-known Italian naturalists-travellers and explorers of the time, such as Carlo Luciano Bonaparte, Giacomo Doria, Odoardo Beccari, Tommaso Salvadori, Arturo Issel, Luigi Maria DAlbertis, Carlo Piaggia, Antonio Cecchi, Giovanni Chiarini, Giuseppe Bellucci and many more, meant that these areas of interest were shared with these prominent figures, helping us to better understand the history and evolution of scientific thought and Italian naturalistic museology, as well as the history of Italian exploration on other continents and our countrys contribution to the "discovery" of the world's biodiversity.
1811 Born in Perugia
1828 Began his studies at the College of the Benedictine Fathers at the Abbey of San Pietro in Perugia
1837 Moved to Rome
1837/1841 Collaborated with Luciano Bonaparte in the writing and publication of the books Iconografia della fauna italica (Iconography of Italian Fauna) and Conspectus generum avium
1848 Fought against the Austrians in Cornuda
1849 Fought to defend the Roman Republic
1849 With the fall of the Roman Republic, he fled into exile, first to Greece and then Constantinople
1849/1859 He continued his exile in the Ottoman Empire
1859 Moved to Cairo and crossed Egypt and the Sudan, going up the Nile to arrive in Bahr el Ghazal (River of Gazelles), together with Lucchese explorer Carlo Piaggia
1861 His exile ended and he returned to Italy
1863 Travelled to Sardinia with his ornithologist friend Tommaso Salvadori
1866 Travelled to Tunisia where he visited archaeological sites and areas of naturalistic interest
1867 Founded the Italian Geographic Society together with Cesare Correnti and Cristoforo Negri
1869 Participated in the grandiose inauguration of the Opening of the Suez Canal as Official Representative of the Italian Government
1870 Travelled to the province of Bogos (today Eritrea) with his botanist friend Odoardo Beccari
1872 Returned to Italy
1875 Returned to Tunisia for the second time
1876 Left for the Great Expedition in the Kingdom of Shéwa, in Abyssinia
1877 Founded the Italian Geographic Station in LétMarefià
1877/1881 Made several exploratory trips in Shéwa, using LétMarefià as his base
1882 Died in LétMarefià
2013 Barili A., Gentili S., Romano B., 2013. "Orazio Antinori (Perugia 1811 Lét Marefià 1882) e la biodiversità degli Altopiani dEtiopia". Natura Soc. It. Sci. Nat. Museo civ. Stor. Nat. Milano, 2013, 103 (1): 19-32. 2011 Mazzotti S., 2011. Esploratori perduti. Codice Edizioni, Torino, 239 pp. 2010 Barili A., Rossi R., Gentili S., Romano B., "Lèt Marefià il luogo ove riposano i sapienti. Sulle orme del naturalista perugino Orazio Antinori (Perugia 1811 Lét Marefià 1882) alla riscoperta della biodiversità dellantico Regno di Shewa (Ethiopia)". Ali&no editrice, Perugia, 2010, 167 pp. Cerreti C., Barili A., Rossi R., Barocco R., Gentili S., Romano B., Raffaelli M., Tardelli M., Carbone L., Bozzato S., 2010. "LItalia, lEtiopia e Lét Marefià". Bollettino della Società Geografica Italiana, 3 (1): 169-202. 2009 Barili A., Gentili S., 2009. "Le collezioni esotiche di Storia Naturale di Orazio Antinori (1811-1882) e di Giulio Cicioni (1844-1923) conservate presso lUniversità degli Studi di Perugia". - Museologia scientifica Memorie, 4 /2009: 24. 2008 Barili A., Lapiana F., Gentili S., 2008. "La raccolta ornitologica di Orazio Antinori a Perugia. Un esercizio di memoria". Museologia scientifica Meorie, 2008, 2: 186-191. Barili A., Rossi R., Gentili S., Romano B., "Lét Marefià: il luogo ove riposano i sapienti". - Sul Livello del Mare, 2008b, 31: 40-45. 2007 Mancini M. C., "La spedizione della Società Geografica Italiana in Tunisia". In: Bonetti F., Mancini M. C. (eds.), La spedizione della Società Geografica Italiana nelle immagini di Lodovico Tuminello (pp. 7-16). FPM.Com Edizioni, Roma, 2007. Barili A., Gentili S., Romano B., "Un naturalista perugino nel Corno dAfrica". - ali&no editrice, Perugia, 2007. 2006 Rossi R., Barili A. & Gentili S., "I Primati delle collezioni scientifiche dellumbria". In Le Collezioni Primatologiche Italiane a cura di E. Bruner & S. Gippoliti, Istituto Italiano di Antropologia, Roma, 2006, pp. 133-170 2005 Settesoldi L., Tardelli M., Raffaelli M., "Esploratori Italiano nellafrica Orientale fra il 1870 ed il 1930. Missioni Scientifiche con Raccolte Botaniche Rilievi Geografici ed Etnografici". Centro Studi Erbario Tropicale, Firenze, 2005. 1992 Silvano Ambrogi, "Un arabo perugino. Vita e viaggi di Orazio Antinori in Egitto e nellEtiopia di Menelik", Torino, ERI, 1992. 1985 Migliorini E., "Orazio Antinori e la stazione di Lét Marefià", Napoli, 1985. 1984 Cardelli Antinori A., "Orazio Antinori, viaggiatore perugino dellottocento". In: Castelli E. (eds.), Orazio Antinori in Africa Centrale 1859 1861 (pp. 12-17). Soprintendenza Archeologica per lUmbria, Perugia, 1984. 1979 Zavatti S., "Uomini verso l'ignoto - Gli esploratori del Mondo", Gilberto Bagaloni Editore, Ancona, 1979. 1967 Zavatti S., "Dizionario degli esploratori e delle scoperte geografiche", Feltrinelli, Milano, 1967. 1961 R. Battaglia, "Antinori Orazio", in: AA. VV., Dizionario biografico degli italiani, Istituto della Enciclopedia italiana, Roma, Ammirato-Arcoleto, vol. XV, 1961, pp. 464-467. 1955 E. Leone, "Le prime ricerche di una colonia e la esplorazione geografica, politica ed economica", in: Ministero degli Affari Esteri, Comitato per la documentazione dellopera dellItalia in Africa, LItalia in Africa, II, Roma, 1955, pp. 124-131, docc. Nn. 9 e 9 bis a pp. 284-88.
| 1952 G. Pugliesi, "Chi è? DellEritrea". Dizionario Biografico, Agenzia Regina, Asmara, 1952, ad vocem, p. 18. 1942 R. Micaletti, "I grandi umbri: Orazio Antinori", in: Rassegna di Cultura militare, VIII, 1942, pp. 480-1486. 1941 Traversi L., "Let-Marefià, prima stazione geografica italiana nello Scioa e le nostre relazioni con lEtiopia (1876-1896)". Unione Editoriale dItalia, Roma, 1941. M. C. Biscottini, "La spedizione Antinori e la fine del Massaia in Etiopia", in: Giornale di politica e letteratura, XVII, 1941, pp. 242-280.1935 L. Traversi, "Orazio Antinori", in: Rivista delle Colonie, marzo 1935, n. 3, pp. 223-237. 1931 C, Zaghi, "Orazio Antinori", in: Oltremare, V, 1931, pp. 322-326. A. Della Valle, "Pionieri italiani nelle nostre colonie", Roma-Voghera, 1931, pp. 57-63. 1898 Bellucci G., "Sulla collezione etnografica Antinori", Perugia, V. Santucci, 1898. 1886 Cecchi A., "Da Zeila alla frontiera del Caffa", Roma, E. Loescher & C., 1886. 1885 P. Amat di San Filippo, "Gli illustri viaggiatori italiani", Roma, 1885, pp. 527-546. 1884 Landini L., "Due anni in Africa col Marchese Orazio Antinori. Memorie". Tipografia dello Stabilimento S. Lapi, Città di Castello, 1884. 1883/1884 P. Pavesi, "Spedizione italiana nell'Africa equatoriale. - Risultati zoologici, Aracnidi del Regno di Scioa", Vol. XX, 1883-1884, pag. 5. 1883 G. Antinori, "Il Marchese Orazio Antinori e la spedizione geografica italiana nellAfrica equatoriale", Perugia, 1883. G. Bellocci, Orazio Antinori, in: Bollettino della Società Geografica Italiana, s. 2, VIII, 1883, pp. 488-507. 1882 O. Baratieri, "Necrologio di Orazio Antinori", in: Nuova Antologia, XVII (1882), pp. 320-333. M. Camperio, "Commemorazione del Marchese Orazio Antinori", in: LEsploratore, VI, 1882, pp. 425-429. 1881 G. Cora, "Note cartografiche sulla reggenza di Tunisi", in: Cosmos, vol. 6, 1880-1881, pp.425-432. S. Martini-Bernardi," La baia dAssab e le rivelazioni sullesito dellultimo periodo della spedizione in Africa", Firenze, 1881. 1880 Oberthur, C. "Spedizione italiana nell'Africa equatoriale. - Risultati zoologici, i Lepidotteri", Vol. XV, 1880, pag. 129. 1876 Issel A., "Viaggio nel Mar Rosso e tra i Bogos", Milano, Treves, 1876. Cora, G. "Spedizione Italiana nellAfrica equatoriale", in: Cosmos, vol. 3, 1875-1876, pp. 275-277. Cora, G. "Spedizione di O. Antinori, O. Beccari, A. Issel nel Mar Rosso e sulle Falde nord dellAbissinia", in: Cosmos, vol. 3, 1875-1876, nello stesso volume: Nota cartografica La Baia di Assab, pp. 408-409. 1867 De Gubernatis E., "Lettere sulla Tunisia e specialmente sulle provincie di Susa e Monastir con aggiunta di due lettere archeologiche di Orazio Antinori", Firenze, Tip. Civelli, 1867. |
Documentary sources
Antinoris original travel notebooks and texts conserved in the Italian Geographic Societys archives and Historical Library in Palazzina Mattei at Villa Celimontana in Rome; documents and publications from the University of Perugias Historical Archive and the National Archaeological Museum of Umbria (MANU); original catalogues of the specimens in the University of Perugias Zoological Museum; original labels from the University of Perugias historic zoological collections; original catalogues and labels of Antinoris Herbarium botanical specimens , conserved in the University of Florences Botanical Museum.