In Venice, the museum opens, telling the Italian adventurer and writer Giacomo Casanova, who is known as the hottest person in history.
The museum of 18th century famous adventurer, buffoon and writer Giacomo Casanova opens. The museum visitors are aiming to show more of Casanova's interest in women's interest.
Giacomo Casanova Museum will not hide Casanova's lustful direction.
In the six-room set, there is a bedroom that features Casanova for a shadow installation that seduces a woman.
The curators are trying to shed some light on other aspects of the Venetian scholar and author, the creator of History of My Life, one of the best memo books of European society in the late 18th century.
The museum opens today at the Palazzo Pesaro Papafava in Venice, on Casanova's birthday.
Who is Giacomo Casanova?
Born in Venice in 1725, Casanova lives at the age of 11 with the daughter of her teacher, her first sexual experience. At the age of 16, he is taking his law doctor at Padua University. After finishing the school, he starts to work as a priest in a church on church law in Venice. Casanova resigns when news of sexual intercourse spreads as a scandal over the church.
Deciding to pursue new adventures, Casanova is starting to work as a soldier in the Republic of Venice and somehow falls to Istanbul as well. He gets bored by the military and quits his job and starts working as a violinist at the biological father's theater. He saves the life of a noble Venetian at the age of 21 and is making a fortune on this.
Casanova, whose name is always involved in the scandal, is wondering about the magician sometime and is being arrested. Casanova, who was sentenced to five years in prison, succeeds in escaping from the famous prison I piombi, whom no one has ever managed to escape. Casanova travels all over Europe throughout his life, but his name is always scandalous, so he is fired from every country he goes to. And he likes it very much, and of course the pleasure is costing him.
Casanova also notes that he was sleeping with 122 women in his autobiography.