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Belli, Domenico

  • https://lccn.loc.gov/no2002110882
  • Person
  • -1627

Bellini, Vincenzo, 1801-1835

  • https://lccn.loc.gov/n80122768
  • Person
  • 1801-1835

The quintessential composer of the Italian bel canto era of the early 19th century, Bellini was born in Catania, Sicily, and was a child prodigy in a highly musical family. His grandfather and father were organists and he produced his first works when still a student at the Naples Conservatory, where his father had sent him. He gained the patronage of an important impresario who commissioned Bianca e Fernando for the Naples opera. The success of this early work led to other commissions.

Bellini had a gift for creating vocal melody at once pure in style and sensuous in expression. His influence is reflected not only in later operatic compositions, including the early works of Richard Wagner, but also in the instrumental music of Chopin and Liszt.

His output includes 9 operas, 6 early songs, 8 symphonies, 7 piano works, an organ sonata and 40 sacred works.

A large amount of what is known about Bellini's life and his activities comes from surviving letters which he wrote to his friend Francesco Florimo, whom he had met as a fellow student in Naples and with whom he maintained a lifelong friendship.

Bellini lived briefly in London, then went to Paris where Rossini’s influence secured him a commission for the Théâtre-Italien. The result was I Puritani, perhaps his most ambitious and beautiful work. He died in Puteaux a few days later after a short illness, aged 34.

Belt, Thomas, 1832-1878

  • n 85118862
  • Person
  • 1832-1878

Thomas Belt was born in 1832, in Newcastle-upon-Tyne, England.

He was an English geologist, naturalist, and author. At a very young age, he became interested in natural history through the Tyneside Naturalists Field Club. In 1852, he went to Australia where he worked at the gold-diggings and acquired a practical knowledge of ore deposits. In 1860, he proceeded to Nova Scotia to take charge of some gold mines. After a serious injury, he returned to England. He published a book entitled “Mineral Veins: An Enquiry into their Origin, Founded on a Study of the Auriferous Quartz Veins of Australia” (1861). In 1862, he was appointed to take charge of some mines in Nicaragua. He documented his experience in the book “The Naturalist in Nicaragua” (1874).

While working in Colorado, he contracted Mountain fever and died on September 21, 1878, in Denver where he is buried.

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