Concept in Definition ABC
Miscellanea / / July 04, 2021
By Javier Navarro, in Mar. 2018
To say that a man is a casanova means that he is a conqueror with a knack for seducing women. In Spanish another equivalent term is used, donjuán.
Despite being synonymous words, they have a very different origin, since donjuán refers to a character literary created by Tirso de Molina, while Casanova alludes to a historical figure of the eighteenth century, Giocomo Casanova. Both are considered as the archetype of the seductive man.
The real Casanova
In the literature and the movie theater the figure of Casanova has appeared with different shades. At times, he is portrayed as a sexual depraved and at times as a cultured and refined man who likes to surround himself with women.
If we want to know his life as it was, it is necessary to resort to the protagonist's literary sources, specifically his autobiography "Historia de mi vida", a work that in the nineteenth century was included in the Index of Forbidden Books of the Catholic Church.
We know that Casanova was born in the Italian city of Venice in 1725 and that he died in Bohemia at the age of 73, a time when the average age was around 40.
He physically he was a tall man with a strong complexion, but his face was not particularly handsome.
He traveled all over Europe and had personal relationships with the intellectuals of his time. He was a cultured person, as he had knowledge of classical culture, astronomy, math, music and medicine. His mother tongue he was Italian but he was fluent in French.
He led a hectic and intense life, as he participated in various duels, was imprisoned for gambling debts and for practicing magic, he escaped from prison on several occasions, started businesses and maintained an intense literary activity.
Some researchers maintain that Casanova was engaged in espionage for the Venetian court and that his travels and love affairs were a good alibi to keep his true secret. identity.
His relationship with women and his later years
His autobiography and some testimonies from the time allow us to offer some information about the Casanova womanizer. It is estimated that he had intimate relationships with more than 120 women from all walks of life. His mistresses considered him a very educated, attentive and generous man (there is no negative testimony about his behavior with women).
In the final stage of his life he ended up working as a modest librarian for a wealthy nobleman in the Czech town of Duchcov. In recent years his health worsened and he focused on literary creation, especially his autobiography.
Some scholars of his work maintain that one of his literary creations, "Icosameron", could have been partially plagiarized by Jules Verne in his famous novel "Journey to the Center of the Earth".
Photo: Fotolia - CurvaBezier
Themes in Casanova