Francesco Saverio Salfi


Francesco Saverio Salfi or Franco Salfi was an Italian writer, politician and librettist.

Biography

An ordained priest, he distinguished himself with his ability to compose verses at a very young age at Accademia Cosentina. In 1786, he wrote an essay that argues against popular beliefs related to the 1783 Calabrian earthquakes. He was opposed by the ecclesiastical authorities as a result.
In 1787, he settled in Naples where he taught literary disciplines, had contacts with the Enlightenment intellectuals and began to progressively move away from the Church. In 1788, on the occasion of the refusal to pay the Chinea to the Papal State by the government of Ferdinand IV of Naples, he wrote a satire against the papal state and in favor of Neapolitan politics.
In 1792, he was one of the intellectuals who met with French Admiral Latouche-Tréville in Naples and entered the Neapolitan Patriotic Society. In 1794, in order to avoid a trial, he escaped from Naples to Genoa, where he abandoned his ecclesiastical habit, and then to Milan, where he shortened his name to "Franco" and actively collaborated with the Republican Lombardy's Political Thermometer. In this period he devoted himself to the theater, paying attention to the language of the people. In addition to the satire of General Colli, for example, he translated the first part of the Declaration of 1789 into a play.