Humanities •
Giuseppe De Felice Giuffrida, Italian politician and journalist, was elected the first Socialist mayor of Catania in 1902. •
Mario Rapisardi, Italian poet and translator, taught at the university in the 1870s. "Love truth more than glory, more than peace, more than life. Make it your sword and your shield." •
Luigi Capuana, writer, journalist, literary critic and theorist. He taught literature in the early years of the 20th century. •
Giovanni Verga, Italian realist writer, author of the
Cavalleria Rusticana and
I Malavoglia. •
Santo Mazzarino, leading 20th-century historian of ancient Rome and Greece. •
Vitaliano Brancati, Italian novelist and screenwriter, winner of the 1950
Bagutta Prize. •
Elémire Zolla, Italian essayist, philosopher and historian of religion, taught linguistics in the late 1960s. •
Vincenzo Ortoleva, Professor of Classical Philology •
Raoul Vecchio, Engineer and architect.
Sciences •
Mario Pieri, mathematician, taught descriptive, projective and higher geometry from 1900 to 1908 and supervised 6 doctoral students with dissertations in algebraic geometry. See
The Legacy of Mario Pieri in Geometry and Arithmetic, Birkhäuser (
E.A. Marchisotto & J.T. Smith) (2007). •
Giuseppe Mercalli, inventor of the Mercalli Scale of earthquake intensity, was professor of geology in the late 1880s. •
Annibale Ricco, named Chair of Astrophysics in 1890, was the first director of the Catania Observatory. He was also Chancellor of the university from 1898 to 1900. The crater Ricco on the Moon as well as the asteroid
18462 Ricco are named for him. •
Guido Fubini, author of Fubini's theorem, was a professor of mathematics in the early years of the 20th century. The asteroid,
22495 Fubini, is named in his honor. •
Remo Ruffini, former assistant professor at
Princeton University (1971–74), was professor of theoretical physics from 1976 to 1978. He was named Space Scientist of the Year in 1992. •
Paolo Maffei, director of the Catania Observatory from 1975 to 1980, was one of the pioneers of infrared astronomy. He discovered 2 galaxies,
Maffei 1 and
Maffei 2 in 1967. A main belt asteroid,
18426 Maffei, is also named for him. •
Giuseppe Colombo, physicist and astronomer, NASA consultant and early proponent of tethered satellites. Asteroid
10387 Bepicolombo is named in his honor, as is the
Colombo Gap, a 150 km gap in the C ring of the planet Saturn. •
Napoleone Ferrara, molecular biologist, winner of the 2010
Lasker-DeBakey Clinical Medical Research Award, is a 1981 graduate of the Faculty of Medicine. == Institutes ==