Talk:Giuseppe Tomasi di Lampedusa

Latest comment: 1 year ago by Jmabel in topic Coat of arms

Untitled

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I've translated the Italian-language article. It is possible that I've made some minor errors: my Italian is not fluent, but I already knew enough about the subject that I wasn't liable to get anything too far wrong. Still, if someone more bilingual wants to verify this, it would be appreciated.

Tomasi di Lampedusa was a great writer and there is an excellent English-language translation of "The Leopard.", highly recommended book. The film is worth seeing, too, but can be a bit slow if you don't already know the story or the actual history: a lot of it is allusive and depends on the viewer already knowing who the factions are. -- Jmabel 00:24, 27 Jan 2004 (UTC)

title

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the explanation of the title refers to a different animal than the gattopardo page, which one is cooect? Romanista 14:04, 3 August 2006 (UTC)Reply

Well spotted! (I’ve edited the article a little.) It can hardly be the ocelot. The serval, though was a bit more local—there are still some north of the Sahara. Whether there were ever any on Sicily (or even on the island of Lampedusa, which is a bit relevant), I don’t know. But then that is only marginally relevant if we are thinking in heraldic terms: noone worries about whether there were ever unicorns in Scotland, or lions in England. But it would be extremely odd if either of their coats of arms included a wombat! —Ian Spackman 15:32, 4 August 2006 (UTC)Reply

ISBNs

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Do we really need the ISBNs of Italian and English language editions of The Leopard, especially in the introducitry paragraph? Apart from being visually intrusive, this information is far from impartial as there is more than one English language edition available (don't know the Italian situation). If they must be listed, all editions should be given, preferably at the bottom of the article as 'additional' information: certainly not promionent in the main body of the text. 81.156.127.16 14:27, 14 March 2007 (UTC)Reply

Agreed that the lead paragraph is a poor place for this. - Jmabel | Talk 06:50, 4 April 2007 (UTC)Reply
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My recent additions

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I've added a lot recently from David Glmour's biography The Last Leopard (Q120066204), which was the first to have the benefit of access to Tomasi di Lampedusa's papers, including his and Licy's diaries and various other unpublished writings. I've removed several statements that I could be nearly certain were erroneous (for example, there were some definitely wrong dates), and added {{citation needed}} on ones that may be true but where I can't bear them out from the Gilmour book.

I'm sure there is much more that can be done here, but would strongly recommend that if anyone wants to dispute Gilmour as a source anything factual (as against his literary judgements) they should come with a source that post-dates Gilmour's 1988 work. Anything earlier was quite likely just writing from less information: several places in his book he singles out things that earlier writers got wrong because they lacked access to the relevant materials. - Jmabel | Talk 01:05, 1 July 2023 (UTC)Reply

Coat of arms

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Wikidata, the Italian-language Wikipedia, and many other Wikipedias show a very different coat of arms than the one currently shown in this article.

Jmabel | Talk 03:10, 2 July 2023 (UTC)Reply