📖 Sobre Pasquale
Pasquale é a forma italiana de Pascal (do latim Paschalis, 'da Páscoa'), profundamente enraizado na cultura do sul da Itália; imortalizado na ópera pelo Don Pasquale de Donizetti (1843), uma das obras-primas da opera buffa italiana, e na história por Pasquale Paoli, cuja constituição corsa de 1755 foi um dos primeiros documentos democráticos fundadores da Europa.
📍 Detalhes
- OrigemItalian/Latin
- Gênero♂ Masculino
- SignificadoVariant of Pascal. Born at Easter
🔀 Variantes e Nomes Relacionados
⭐ Pessoas Famosas
- Pasquale Paoli — Corsican patriot and statesman (1725–1807), who drafted the Constitution of Corsica in 1755 — one of the earliest democratic constitutions in European history, predating the American Constitution by three decades; admired by Rousseau, Boswell, and Franklin; he led Corsican independence until the French annexation of 1769, and became one of the great symbols of small-nation self-determination in European history.
- Don Pasquale (Donizetti opera) — Comic opera in three acts by Gaetano Donizetti, premiered in Paris on January 3, 1843; one of the supreme masterpieces of Italian opera buffa, it tells the story of a wealthy old bachelor named Pasquale who is outwitted by his young ward and her lover; celebrated for its melodic sparkle and perfect comic construction, it is one of the most frequently performed Italian operas and the work most responsible for embedding the name Pasquale in musical consciousness.
- Pasquale Stanzione — Italian Baroque painter (c. 1585–1656), one of the leading artists of 17th-century Naples; known for his majestic altarpieces and his synthesis of Caravaggesque realism with a more classical, restrained style; his works — including the Martyrdom of Saint Januarius and numerous canvases for Neapolitan churches — represent the golden age of Neapolitan Baroque painting.
- Pasquale in Italian naming culture — The name Pasquale is one of the most characteristic masculine names of southern Italy, particularly in Campania, Calabria, and Sicily, where it has been given to sons born in the Easter season for centuries; it appears in Neapolitan folk songs, dialect literature, and popular culture as the quintessential ordinary Italian man — warm, earthy, and rooted in the rhythms of Italian Catholic tradition.