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{{Infobox Person |
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| name = Giovanni Giacomo Casanova Albanase |
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| image = Casanova ritratto.jpg |
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| image_size = 240px |
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| birth_date = [[April 2]], [[1725]] |
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| birth_place = [[Venice]] |
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| death_date = [[June 4]], [[1798]] (aged {{age|1725|4|2|1798|6|4}}) |
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| death_place = [[Duchcov|Dux]], [[Bohemia]] |
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| parents = Gaetano Giuseppe Casanova <br> Zanetta Farussi |
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}} |
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{{Essay-like|article|date=December 2007}}{{Refimprove|date=November 2007}} |
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''' Giovanni Giacomo Casanova Albanase de Seingalt''' ([[April 2]], [[1725]] – [[June 4]], [[1798]]) was a [[Venice|Venetian]] adventurer and [[author]]. His autobiography, ''[[Histoire de ma vie]]'' (''Story of My Life''), is regarded as one of the most authentic sources of the customs and norms of European social life during the 18th century.{{Fact|date=November 2007}} |
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So famous a womanizer was the Italian-born libertine Giacomo Casanova that, a full two centuries after his death, his name remains synonymous with the art of seduction. But for the years he spent in the employ of [[Count Waldstein of Bohemia]] as a librarian, Casanova, "the world's greatest lover"{{Fact|date=November 2007}} — at one-time the company of European royalty, popes and cardinals, and man known to the likes of [[Voltaire]], [[Goethe]] and [[Mozart]] — would have been consigned to obscurity. As it was, he barely found the peace to write his memoirs. |
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==Biography== |
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===Early years=== |
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Giovanni Giacomo Casanova was born in [[Venice]] in 1725 to actress Zanetta Farussi, wife of actor Gaetano Giuseppe Casanova, cousin to [[Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart]]'s [[librettist]] [[Lorenzo Da Ponte]], a convert from judaism. Giacomo was the first of six children, being followed by Giovanni Alvise (1730–1795), Faustina Maddalena (1731–1736), Maria Maddalena Antonia Stella (1732–1800), Gaetano Alvise (1734–1783), and Francesco (1737–1803). Because of his mother's profession, many have suspected that some or all of these were fathered by men other than her husband{{Fact|date=December 2007}}. Casanova himself suspected his biological father to have been Michele Grimani{{Fact|date=December 2007}}, who was a member of the patrician family that owned the San Samuele theatre where Zanetta and Gaetano had worked: however, in his autobiography he did not mention this. |
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His father having died when he was eight, Giacomo grew very close to his grandmother Marzia Baldissera while his mother, with six children to feed, kept her five youngest at home and sent Casanova to [[boarding school]] in [[Padua]] on his ninth birthday, supposedly for the good of his health. She returned to Venice: Casanova would not see her again for a year. She was able to afford boarding school because before Gaetano died in 1733 he had appealed to the Grimanis to take care of his family. At boarding school, young Giovanni showed great academic promise and quickly became his teacher's favourite. He was naturally quick-witted, with an intense appetite for knowledge and a perpetually inquisitive mind. It was also here that he came into contact with the opposite sex for the first time when his teacher's younger sister apparently [[masturbated]] him at the age of eleven. At the age of sixteen he lost his virginity in the arms of two sisters who, according to his account, threw themselves at him. Also at age sixteen, he obtained his doctorate in Law from the [[University of Padua]], where he had studied moral philosophy, chemistry, mathematics, and law. He was keenly interested in medicine and later became a physician. |
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===In Venice and elsewhere=== |
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In 1740 Casanova was back in [[Venice]] where he started his clerical law career in the church as an [[abbé]]. By now he had become something of a dandy — tall and dark, his long hair powdered, scented, and elaborately curled. He quickly ingratiated himself (something he was to do all his life) with a 76-year old Venetian senator, Alvise Gasparo Malipiero, the owner of [[Palazzo malipiero|Palazzo Malipiero]]. Malipiero moved in the best circles and taught young Casanova a great deal about good food and wine and how to behave in society. He never spent much time on his church career, due to his restless nature and preoccupation with sex. |
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His career in the church was short and tainted by scandals. After he left the church, he bought a commission to become a low ranking military officer for the [[Republic of Venice]], and went to [[Constantinople]] after which he was stationed a short period on [[Corfu]]. He found his advancement too slow and boring and soon abandoned his military career. Back in Venice, he became a violinist in the San Samuele theatre, which was still owned by Grimani. At the age of 21, he saved the life of a Venetian nobleman of the Bragadin family, who became his life-long patron and raised Casanova to the status of a wealthy gentleman. Casanova left Venice in 1748, due to another scandal, this time about a freshly buried corpse dug up in order to play a practical joke — the victim went into a coma, never to recover — and charges of rape against a young girl, of which he was later acquitted. |
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===Fugitive and chevalier=== |
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[[Image:calonghi.jpg|thumb|right|170px|Portrait of Casanova by Pietro Longhi]] |
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Having spent time in [[Paris]], [[Dresden]], [[Prague]], and [[Vienna]], he returned to his home town of Venice in 1753. In July 1755, at age thirty, he was arrested and convicted for his interest in magic ([[witchcraft]]) by the [[Inquisitori di Stato]] in Venice, and imprisoned in "I piombi" ("The Leads"), a famous prison attached to the [[Doge's palace]]. Casanova was sentenced to five years but was informed of neither trial nor sentence. Casanova hints at knowing his crime, dismisses it, and does not openly acknowledge it in his memoirs. On the [[November 1|first of November]] 1756, he escaped from what was one of the most secure prisons of his time: no inmate before Casanova had successfully escaped.<ref name="Casanova-prisons">{{fr icon}} {{cite book | author =Giacomo Casanova | title =Histoire de ma fuite des prisons de la République de Venise qu'on appelle les Plombs | year =1787 | editor = | pages = | publisher =Shonfeld | location =Leipzig | id = | url = | format = | accessdate = }}</ref> He fled to [[Paris]], where he arrived on the same day ([[January 5]] [[1757]]) that [[Robert-Francois Damiens]] made an attempt on the life of [[Louis XV]] — some sources say literally minutes afterwards, though others argue the time of day. |
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In Paris he became one of the trustees of the first [[state lottery]], an enterprise that allowed him to gather a large fortune. A protégé of Marquess [[Jeanne d'Urfé]], he pretended to be a [[Rosicrucian]] and an [[alchemist]], a role that allowed him to meet some of the most prominent figures of the era. Among them were [[Madame de Pompadour]], [[Count of St Germain]], [[Jean le Rond d'Alembert|d'Alembert]] and [[Jean-Jacques Rousseau]]. In 1758 he was entrusted with a mission of selling state bonds in [[Amsterdam]]. He succeeded and the following year was rich enough to found a silk manufactory. However, much of his wealth was lost on constant affairs with his female workers. For his debts Casanova was imprisoned at [[Fort-l'Éveque]], but was liberated four days afterwards, on insistence of Marquess d'Urfé. He sold the rest of his belongings and acquired another mission to Holland. This time, however, he failed and he had to flee to [[Stuttgart]], where he lost the rest of his fortune. On one night he lost 4000 [[Louis (coin)|Louis]]: this is roughly one million [[euros]] by modern standards.<ref name="Günther">{{en icon}} {{cite web | author=Hartmut Günther | title=The Casanova Tour | publisher=Casanova Magazine | year=2002 | work=Giacomo Casanova | url=http://www.giacomo-casanova.de/catour16.htm#conditions | accessdate = 2006-10-27 }}</ref> |
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He was yet again arrested for his debts, but managed to escape to [[Switzerland]], where he initially intended to become a Catholic monk. However, he changed his mind and instead visited [[Albrecht von Haller]] and [[Voltaire]]. In 1760, Casanova started styling himself the [[Chevalier]] de Seingalt, a name he would increasingly use for the rest of his life. On occasion, he would also call himself Count de Farussi (using his mother's maiden name). When [[Pope Clement XIII]] presented Casanova with the [[Papal Orders of Chivalry|Papal Order]] of the [[Order of the Golden Spur|Éperon d'Òr]]<!-- Should be the correct link: fix if not.-->, Casanova was overjoyed that he could at last honestly call himself a Chevalier. In 1761, Casanova represented [[Portugal]] at the [[Augsburg Congress]], which [[France]] had organized in an attempt to end the [[Seven Years' War]]. |
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During his lifetime, Casanova traveled extensively over Europe and managed to visit all its capitals, being expelled from many due to various scandals. In 1766, he was expelled from [[Warsaw]] due to a pistol duel with Count Colonel [[Franciszek Ksawery Branicki]] over an Italian actress, a ladyfriend of theirs. Both were wounded. It was one of more than a few duels Casanova would fight in his life. |
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Casanova was permitted to return to Venice in 1774 after eighteen years' exile, but was expelled again in 1783 after writing a vicious satire poking fun at Venetian nobility, in it he made his only public statement that Grimani was his true father. |
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===Retirement=== |
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Casanova retired in 1785 by becoming the librarian to Count Joseph Karl von Waldstein, a [[chamberlain]] of the emperor, in the [[Castle of Dux]], [[Bohemia]] (now [[Duchcov]] Castle, [[Czech Republic]]). It was at the Castle of Dux that he wrote his autobiography. His last years were dull, painful, boring, and frustrating for Casanova. Although he got on well with the Count, the Count had his own preoccupations and had little time for his librarian, often ignoring him at meals and failing to introduce him to important visiting guests. Casanova was thoroughly disliked by most of the other inhabitants of the Castle of Dux and the servants were often spiteful to the old man.{{Fact|date=July 2007}} His Memoirs were still being compiled at the time of his death, although a letter by him in 1792 states that he was reconsidering his decision to publish them believing his story was despicable and he would make enemies by writing the truth about his affairs. Casanova died on [[June 4]], [[1798]]. His last words are said to be "I have lived as a philosopher and I die as a Christian".{{Fact|date=November 2007}} |
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===Casanova's other desires=== |
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Although best known for his prowess in seduction, he was recognised by his contemporaries as an extraordinary person. [[Prince Charles de Ligne]], a great Austrian statesman who knew most of the prominent individuals of the age, thought that Casanova was the most interesting man he had ever met and said of him, "there is nothing in the world of which he is not capable".{{Fact|date=November 2007}} Count Lamberg wrote that he knew "few persons who can equal him in the range of knowledge and, in general, of his intelligence and imagination".{{Fact|date=November 2007}} |
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During Casanova's numerous travels he encountered notable figures such as [[Pope Clement XIII]], [[Catherine the Great]], [[Frederick the Great]] (who afterwards commented on his good looks), [[Madame de Pompadour]], [[Crebillon]], who was also his French teacher, [[Voltaire]], [[Benjamin Franklin]], and many others. He was present at the premiere of [[Mozart]]'s [[Don Giovanni]] and possibly made last-minute revisions to [[Lorenzo Da Ponte]]'s libretto{{Fact|date=December 2007}}. Although Casanova took the role of businessman, diplomat, spy, politician, philosopher, magician, and writer, with more than twenty books and several plays credited to his name (including a translation of the [[Iliad]] and a history of [[Poland]] — ''"Istoria della turbolenze della Polonia"'') — most of which were generally admired — for the greater part of his life he was a stranger to work, living largely on his quick wits, luck, social charm, and the money freely given to him by others. |
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===Sinner or sinned against=== |
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Judith Summers' biography of Casanova paints a different picture of him than the traditional one. She describes how he was attracted to strong minded women who presented him with an intellectual as well as a romantic challenge. He did not pursue sex for its own sake and if he had nothing to say to a woman, rarely wanted to sleep with her. She also puts forward the theory that among his 200 plus lovers were many women who took advantage of his kindness, generosity, and vulnerability. |
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A story to which there is more than seems at first glance is the gorgeous nun who slipped Casanova a note suggesting he meet her in private. Casanova waxed lyrical about tasting the [[forbidden fruit]] and trespassing on the rights of [[Bridal theology|the omnipotent husband]]. However, it transpired that the nun, M.M, was a sexual predator beholden to [[François de Bernis]], the French ambassador, who was fully complicit of the seduction of Casanova and who most likely [[voyeur|observed their first tryst]] from a secret chamber. Casanova fell deeply in love with M.M; however, she always put the ambassador first and outdid Casanova in her sexual extremism by [[lesbianism|seducing]] his female fourteen-year-old former lover, first into a [[Ménage à trois|three-in-a-bed]] romp including herself and Casanova, and then with the ambassador. The debauchery of this young girl he had loved sickened Casanova, but he was so in love he colluded. |
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Nor was the nun the only one to take advantage of Casanova's nature. The greatest love of his life, Henriette, as he called her (her real name was most likely Adelaide de Gueidan{{Fact|date=December 2007}}), took advantage of him to secure passage to [[Parma]], was ensconced in the finest accommodation at his expense, then abandoned him with the instruction that if they were to meet in future he was not to acknowledge that he had known her. That she was on the run from a husband who intended her for a convent due to her infidelity and that Casanova had first encountered her in the arms of a Hungarian soldier she had enlisted to assist her passage to Parma did not seem to prepare him for the outcome. Though 'adopted' by a rich Venetian senator whose life he had saved, and with a small private income, Casanova was by no means rich and the maids and language teachers he had hired for Henriette had decimated his finances. He sought solace in sex in Paris, at one point keeping twenty lovers in twenty apartments. |
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The most devastating blow was yet to come, however. Marianne de Charpillon was a fresh-faced courtesan of sixteen being touted around [[London]] by her family in the hope of finding a suitor rich enough to support them all. With only a basic grasp of English and — it would seem — of the wiles of women, Casanova was captivated by the French-speaking courtesan. She teased, tormented, and tantalised him, being set up in a house in [[Chelsea, London|Chelsea]] along the way, yet still not succumbing to his physical advances. On one occasion she curled up into a ball making penetration impossible and driving the furiously frustrated Casanova almost to rape. Yet, when he would attempt to distance himself from her, she pursued, lavishing gifts on him. He even forgave her indiscretions: upon catching her ''in flagrante'' with her male hairdresser, he smashed the house up before being reduced to a penitent submissive in a matter of minutes by this teenager, despite being a supposedly worldly man in his thirties. Ultimately she ruined his confidence in women and in himself, which goes some way towards explaining why the man whose name would become synonymous with lovers spent the last sixteen years of his life as a broken man working as a librarian in a remote corner of [[Bohemia]]. |
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It is alleged that his only revenge on Marianne de Charpillon before fleeing London was to buy a parrot, teach it to say "Charpillon is a greater whore than her mother!", and resell the parrot in the market.{{Fact|date=November 2007}} |
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Unusual for his time, Casanova was [[egalitarian]] towards the sexes.{{Fact|date=September 2007}} He accepted women as his equals and was non-judgmental about their behavior, according them the same status to do as they wished as he did men.{{Fact|date=September 2007}} |
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===Quotations=== |
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"I am writing ''My Life'' to laugh at myself, and I am succeeding."<ref>Casanova, G: Personal correspondence to Johann Ferdinand Opiz. [[January 10]], [[1791]]</ref> |
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==Works== |
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[[Image:Casanova 1788.jpg|thumb|right|200px|Casanova in 1788]] |
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*1752 - ''[[Zoroastro]], tragedia tradotta dal Francese, da rappresentarsi nel Regio Elettoral Teatro di Dresda, dalla compagnia de' comici italiani in attuale servizio di Sua Maestà nel carnevale dell'anno MDCCLII.'' [[Dresden|Dresda]]. |
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*1753 - ''La Moluccheide, o sia i gemelli rivali''. Dresda |
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*1769 - ''Confutazione della Storia del Governo Veneto d'[[Amelot de la Houssaie]]'', [[Amsterdam]] (Lugano). |
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*1772 - ''Lana caprina. Epistola di un licantropo''. [[Bologna]]. |
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*1774 - ''Istoria delle turbolenze della Polonia''. [[Gorizia]]. |
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*1775 - ''Dell'Iliade di Omero tradotta in ottava rima''. [[Venice|Venezia]]. |
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*1779 - ''Scrutinio del libro "[[Eloges de M. de Voltaire par différents auteurs]]"''. Venezia. |
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*1780 - ''Opuscoli miscellanei - Il duello - Lettere della nobil donna Silvia Belegno alla nobildonzella Laura Gussoni''. Venezia. |
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*1781 - ''Le messager de Thalie''. Venezia. |
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*1782 - ''Di aneddoti viniziani militari ed amorosi del secolo decimoquarto sotto i dogadi di [[Giovanni Gradenigo]] e di [[Giovanni Dolfin]]''. Venezia. |
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*1782 - ''Né amori né donne ovvero la stalla ripulita''. Venezia. |
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*1786 - ''Soliloque d'un penseur'', Prague chez [[Jean Ferdinande noble de Shonfeld]] imprimeur et libraire. |
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*1787 - ''Histoire de ma fuite des prisons de la République de Venise qu'on appelle les Plombs''. Ecrite a Dux en Boheme l'année 1787, [[Leipzig]] chez le noble de Shonfeld. |
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*1788 - ''Icosaméron ou Histoire d'Edouard, et d'Elisabeth qui passèrent quatre vingts un ans chez les Mégamicres, habitans aborigènes du Protocosme dans l'intérieur de notre globe'', traduite de l'anglois par Jacques Casanova de Seingalt Vénitien Docteur ès loix Bibliothécaire de Monsieur le comte de Waldstein seigneur de Dux Chambellan de S.M.J.R.A. A Prague à l'imprimerie de l'école normale. |
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*1790 - ''Solution du probleme deliaque'' démontrée par Jacques Casanova de Seingalt, Bibliothécaire de Monsieur le Comte de Waldstein, seigneur de Dux en Boheme e c., [[Dresden]], De l'imprimerie de C.C. Meinhold. |
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*1790 - ''Corollaire à la [[duplicatoin of the cube|duplication de l'Hexaèdre]]'' donné à Dux en Bohème, par Jacques Casanova de Seingalt, [[Dresden]]. |
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*1790 - ''Démonstration géometrique de la duplication du cube. Corollaire second'', [[Dresden]]. |
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*1794 - ''[[Histoire de ma vie]]'', first fully published by F.A. [[Brockhaus]], [[Wiesbaden]] and Plon, [[Paris]]. 1960 |
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*1797 - ''A [[Leonard Snetlage]], Docteur en droit de l'Université de [[Göttingen|Gottingue]], Jacques Casanova, docteur en droit de l'Universitè de [[Padoue]]''. |
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==In popular culture== |
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[[Image:Tennant.jpg|thumb|180px|[[David Tennant]] as Casanova.]] |
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*''[[Casanova (music)|Casanova]]'', a piece for Cello and Winds by [[Johan de Meij]] |
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*''[[Casanova (opera)|Casanova]]'', an Opera by [[Johann Strauss II| Johann Strauss Jr.]] |
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*''[[Casanova in Bolzano]]'', a 1940 novel by [[Sándor Márai]] |
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*''[[Casanova (1971 TV serial)|Casanova]]'', a 1971 BBC Television serial |
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*''[[Fellini's Casanova]]'', a 1976 feature film by [[Federico Fellini]] starring [[Donald Sutherland]] |
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*''[[Casanova (1987 TV movie)|Casanova]]'', a 1987 [[TV movie]] starring [[Richard Chamberlain]] and [[Marina Baker]][http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0092730/]. |
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*''[[Casanova (2005 TV serial)|Casanova]]'', a 2005 BBC Television serial featuring [[David Tennant]] as young Casanova and [[Peter O'Toole]] as the older Casanova. |
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*''[[Casanova (film)|Casanova]]'', a 2005 feature film featuring [[Heath Ledger]], [[Sienna Miller]] and [[Charlie Cox]]. |
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*''[[Casanova (1918 film)|Casanova]]'', a 1918 Hungarian film featuring [[Béla Lugosi]] |
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* 'Casanova', a 2007 play by [[Carol Ann Duffy]] and [http://www.toldbyanidiot.org/ Told By An Idiot] theatre company starring [[Hayley Carmichael]] as a female Casanova |
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*''[[Casanova (album)|Casanova]]'', a ''The Divine Comedy'' album |
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*''Casanova in Hell'', a song by UK group [[Pet Shop Boys]], from their 2006 album ''[[Fundamental (Pet Shop Boys album)|Fundamental]]'' |
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*''Chris "Casa Nova" Ostreicher'', a character from the 1999 film [[American Pie (film)|American Pie]]. |
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*''The R&B music group, [[Levert]],'' had a number one single in 1987 titled "Casanova". |
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* Russian TV series The Formula Of Love (Формула Любви) |
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*In the [[Kurt Vonnegut]] novel ''[[Mother Night]]'', the main character writes a book titled "The Monogamous Casanova", referring to his own Casanovic relationship with a single woman. |
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*''La Nuit de Varennes'', a 1982 film featuring [[Marcello Mastroianni]]. |
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*A Ty [[Beanie Baby]] bear was released in December 2006 named Casanova, as a symbol for Valentine's Day and the man who shared this name. |
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*An abductor and killer of young women who calls himself 'Casanova' appears the 1997 feature film ''[[Kiss the Girls (film)|Kiss the Girls]]'' based on the book by James Patterson. |
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*In an episode of Relic Hunter, Sydney and Nigel search for a book which apparently contains the secrets of Casanova's sexual charm. |
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*''Casanova in Bohemia'', a sympathetic and gently ribald novel about Casanova's last years at Dux, Bohemia; by [[Andrei Codrescu]] (2002; Free Press, Simon & Schuster). |
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*[http://wiki.lspace.org/wiki/Casanunda Giamo Casanunda] is a dwarvish character appearing in several of the [[Discworld]] novels by fantasy writer and satirist [http://www.terrypratchettbooks.com/ Terry Pratchett]. Casanunda's personality and predilections (as well as his punnish name) are obviously inspired by the historical Casanova. |
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*In an episode of [[That '70s Show]], after [[Eric Forman|Eric]] is caught masturbating in a bathroom, his father remarks, "Well, if it isn't Casanova- the man who seduced ''himself''. |
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*The song Orchestra of Wolves seems to be based loosely on Casanova, a song on the album [[Orchestra of Wolves]] by [[Gallows (band)]] |
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*A song titled "My Casanova", by the European pop group [[Smile.dk]] |
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*[[Carol Ann Duffy|Carol Ann Duffy's]] play ''[[Casanova (play)|Casanova]]'' was produced at the [[Lyric Hammersmith]] in London. In the play, Casanova is portrayed as a woman. |
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*A Dutch book by Arthur Japin titled "Een Schitterend Gebrek" about the life of Lucia, the love of his life |
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==Notes and references== |
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<!--This article uses the Cite.php citation mechanism. If you would like more information on how to add references to this article, please see http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Cite/Cite.php --> |
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<div class="references-small"> |
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::'''In-line:''' |
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<references/> |
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::'''Biography:''' |
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# {{en icon}} {{cite book | author =Derek Parker | coauthors = | title = Casanova| year =2002 | editor = | pages = | chapter = | chapterurl = | publisher =Sutton Publishing | location =London | id =ISBN 0-7509-3182-5 }} |
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# {{pl icon}} {{cite book | author =Roberto Gervaso | coauthors = | title =Casanova | year =1990 | editor = | pages = | chapter = | chapterurl = | publisher =Państwowy Instytut Wydawniczy | location =Warsaw | id =ISBN 83-06-01955-5| url = | format = | accessdate = }} |
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</div> |
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==See also== |
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*[[Histoire de ma vie]] (Story of my Life) — Casanova's autobiography. |
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*[[Manon Balletti]], Casanova's lover of lovers. |
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==External links== |
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{{wikiquote}} |
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* http://www.dickinson.edu/~emery/Casanova.htm |
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* http://www.kirjasto.sci.fi/casanova.htm |
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* [http://etext.library.adelaide.edu.au/c/casanova/c33m Memoirs] |
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* [http://romance-books.classic-literature.co.uk/memoirs-of-jacques-casanova/ Memoirs of Jacques Casanova] |
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* {{gutenberg author| id=Giacomo+Casanova | name=Giacomo Casanova}} |
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*[http://www.minicizotti.it/html/english/shows.html Magic Lantern Show] The Life of Giacomo Casanova |
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* [http://www.sexualfables.com/the_whores_revenge.php Casanova's Encounter with la Charpillon] |
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*[http://www.nawas.org Nathan Waicunas Society] Nathan Waicunas Society |
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*[http://en.comodo.it/history_condom.php Casanova and Condoms] |
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Casanova, Giacomo}} |
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[[Category:1725 births]] |
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[[Category:1798 deaths]] |
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[[Category:Autobiographers]] |
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[[Category:People from Venice (city)]] |
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[[Category:Italian writers in French]] |
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[[Category:Italian memoirists]] |
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[[Category:Italian librarians]] |
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[[Category:Seduction theorists]] |
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[[Category:Escapees]] |
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[[Category:People acquitted of sex crimes]] |
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[[ar:جاكومو كازانوفا]] |
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[[bg:Джакомо Казанова]] |
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[[he:ג'קומו קזנובה]] |
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[[la:Iacobus Hieronymus Chassanaeus]] |
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[[tr:Giacomo Giralomo Casanova]] |
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[[vec:Giacomo Casanova]] |
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[[zh:贾科莫·卡萨诺瓦]] |