Giuseppe Salvago Raggi

Giuseppe Salvago Raggi
Italian Ambassador to China
In office
1899–1901
Preceded byRenato De Martino
Succeeded byVitale Giovanni Gallina
Italian Governor of Eritrea
In office
1907–1915
Preceded byFerdinando Martini
Succeeded byGiovanni Cerrina Feroni
Italian Governor of Somaliland
In office
1906–1907
Preceded byLuigi Mercatelli
Succeeded byTommaso Carletti
Personal details
Born17 May 1866
Genoa, Italy
DiedFebruary 28, 1946(1946-02-28) (aged 79)
Molare, Italy

Giuseppe Salvago Raggi (17 May 1866 – 28 February 1946) was an Italian diplomat, born in Genoa. He was the son of Paris Maria Salvago and Violante Raggi. His father was After his mother's death in 1867, he acquired Raggi as his second surname in January 1881, "in memory of his mother".[1] His father, a landowner with a Catholic-liberal orientation, was a deputy in the Tenth Legislature.

Giuseppe Salvago Raggi graduated on 29 May 1887 from the School of Social Sciences in Florence, which his father had helped to found. The school represented the pinnacle of training for the ruling class and in particular for the diplomatic class. After a suggestion from his father, he travelled to different countries in the Middle East. He documented these journeys in his Lettere dall'Oriente (Letters from the East). Back in Italy, began his diplomatic career in 1889.

Signatories of the Boxer Protocol. Giuseppe Salvago Raggi (second from the seated left) among those visible in the photo.

He was ambassador of Italy to China (1899–1901) and France. He was the Italian colonial governor of Somaliland (1906–1907) and Eritrea (1907–1915). He is best known for signing the Boxer Protocol on behalf of the Kingdom of Italy.

  1. ^ Olindo de Napoli, SALVAGO RAGGI, Giuseppe Maria, on treccani.it. URL consulted on 25 August 2024.