Cesare MatteiCount Cesare Mattei (Bologna, 11 January 1809 – Grizzana Morandi, 3 April 1896) was an Italian politician, man of letters and homeopath.[1]
BiographyCesare Mattei was born in Bologna on 11 January 1809 in the wealthy family, and grew up in contact with the greatest thinkers of the time such as Minghetti and Paolo Costa. In 1837 he was one of the founders of the Cassa di Risparmio in Bologna. He received the title of count in 1847 from Pope Pius IX for a land donation in that of Comacchio which would have helped the Papal States to stop the Austrian advance. He was appointed Deputy to the Enlistment Council of the Bolognese Civic Guard with the rank of lieutenant colonel and chief of the General Staff, a position which was later abandoned as he was elected, in 1848, deputy to the Parliament of Rome. In 1850, after the death of his mother due to a tumor, he decided to retire from political life to devote himself to the study of medicine. He bought the land where the ruins of the ancient fortress of Savignano stood and on 5 November of the same year he laid the first stone of the castle that he would call " Rocchetta", where he settled definitively starting from 1859. Going beyond the theories of Hahnemann (founder of homeopathy) he elaborated a new medical theory which he called Electrohomeopathy and in 1881, although opposed by [clarification needed], began the production of electro-homeopathic remedies exporting them also abroad. A central warehouse was born in Bologna and another 26 authorized deposits worldwide which grew to 107 in 1884, among the most important those in Belgium, United States of America, Haiti and China. In the years 1887/1888, erroneous financial speculations of his nephew Luigi Mattei, predestined heir and co-owner of almost all the properties, caused a very serious economic crisis to the family. Unable to cope with the debts and the very high rates of the usurers, many assets were auctioned. The ruin threatened to overwhelm all the patrimony, including the Rocchetta. He decided to disinherit his grandson and managed to partially heal the situation, assisted by his collaborator Mario Venturoli (1858–1937), whom he adopted in 1888 as a sign of gratitude. In 1895, now elderly and paranoid by the constant disputes with doctors allopathic, due to a misunderstanding with his daughter-in-law (suspected of having tried to kill him by serving him a poisoned coffee), he chased her away and Mario from the castle and later disinherited them. He died on 3 April 1896 at the age of 87.[2] The coffin was transported to the small church of Savignano with the honor of Porretta's music and about 2000 people following. On 14 April 1896, an Office was celebrated with 60 priests and more than 6000 people, who crowded into the spaces around the church to pay homage to him.[3] Electro homeopathy after MatteiIn 1904, Venturoli managed to be co-heir with his nephews, finished the work at the Rocchetta, modernized houses and villas and continued the electro-homeopathic activity. In 1906, as expressly requested in his will, his remains were taken to Rocchetta and buried in the chapel. In 1914, despite his death, the deposits increased again and became 266 all over the world. In 1937, Mario Venturoli died and his widow, Giovanna Maria Longhi, who also inherited.[4][5] PublicationsMattei illustrated his principles in numerous publications, many were translated into different European languages:
with electromyopathy, Casale Monferrato 1878; 2nd ed., Bologna 1881;
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