April 2, 1725 - Casanova
His name became synonymous with seduction, but Casanova's actual career was built on a broader architecture of deception — false titles, fabricated esoteric knowledge, and the systematic cultivation of wealthy patrons across European courts. The autobiography that made him famous was itself a carefully constructed performance, blending genuine adventure with self-mythology. His inclusion here rests less on any single act than on the sustained, calculated exploitation of trust across decades and borders.
From Wikipedia
Giacomo Girolamo Casanova (; Italian: [ˈdʒaːkomo dʒiˈrɔːlamo kazaˈnɔːva, kasa-]; 2 April 1725 – 4 June 1798) was an adventurer and writer who was born in the Republic of Venice and travelled extensively throughout Europe. He is chiefly remembered for his autobiography, written in French and published posthumously as Histoire de ma vie ("The Story of My Life"). That work has come to be regarded as a unique and provocative source of information on the customs and norms of European social life in the 18th century.
Born to a family of actors, Casanova studied law at the University of Padua and received minor orders in the Catholic Church with a view towards pursuing a career as a canon lawyer. However, he had no enthusiasm for the law or vocation for the church, and he soon abandoned those plans and launched instead upon an itinerant life as a gambler, violinist, confidence trickster, and man of letters. Throughout his life, Casanova obtained money and other advantages from various aristocratic patrons by pretending to possess alchemical, cabbalistic, and magical secret knowledge. Among other exploits, Casanova escaped from the Piombi prison, to which he had been confined by order of the Venetian Council of Ten for offenses against religion and morals, and later helped convince the authorities of the Kingdom of France to establish a state lottery as a source of revenue.
Casanova, who often misrepresented himself as an aristocrat, used a variety of pseudonyms, including Baron or Count of Farussi (his mother's maiden name) and the invented title Chevalier de Seingalt (French pronunciation: [sɛ̃ɡɑl]).
Further reading
- Casanova
A richly entertaining and definitive biography tracing Casanova's remarkable journey from impoverished origins to his fame as a libertine, writer, and self-invented genius in 18th-century Europe.
View on Amazon → - Adventurer
Celebrated biographer Leo Damrosch delivers a fast-paced, nuanced portrait of Casanova as an adventurer, opportunist, and man of insatiable appetites.
View on Amazon → - The Story of My Life
A compelling new selection of Casanova's own unfinished memoirs, capturing the adventures of history's most notorious lover and a masterful storyteller.
View on Amazon →
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