Indro Montanelli
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After World War II, Montanelli continued his work at ''Corriere della Sera'', where he started working in 1938, and distinguished himself as a staunch liberal-conservative columnist for many decades. An intransigent, anti-conformist, and anti-communist, he defended the idea of another political right, which was sober, cultured, pessimistic, and distrustful of mass society. In 1977, the Red Brigades terrorist group kneecapped him; years later, he forgave them. He was also a popular novelist and historian, especially remembered for his monumental ''Storia d'Italia'' (''History of Italy'') in 22 volumes.
After leaving the ''Corriere della Sera'' in 1973 due to a perceived turn to the left, Montanelli worked as the editor-in-chief of Silvio Berlusconi-owned newspaper ''il Giornale'' for many years but was opposed to Berlusconi's political ambitions, and quit as editor of ''il Giornale'', which he founded as ''il Giornale nuovo'' in 1974, when Berlusconi officially entered politics in 1994. He returned to the ''Corriere della Sera'' in 1995 and worked there until his death. Both the Italian centre-left and centre-right tried to reclaim his figure; the former, which overlooked his conservatism and anti-communism, emphasized his anti-Berlusconist militancy while the latter, after having portrayed him as a useful idiot of the post-communist left, underplayed his opposition to Berlusconi. Provided by Wikipedia