Enrico Cuccia (24 November 1907 – 23 June 2000) was an Italian banker, who was the first and long-term president of Mediobanca SpA, the Milan-based investment bank, and a significant figure in the history of capitalism in Italy.
In 1946, Cuccia was appointed president of Mediobanca when it was founded. Subsequently, he was the first head of the bank, which was initially named as Banca di Credito Finanziaro. In 1982, he retired from the board of Mediobanca and was given the title of honorary president. Antonio Maccanico succeeded him in the post. Cuccia kept an office at the bank until his death in 2000.
Cuccia also served as a personal adviser of the Agnelli family. However, their alliance ended at the end of the 1990s.
However, Cuccia's corpse was stolen on 18 March 2001. The thieves sent a letter, demanding a ransom of $3.5 million to be paid to a foreign bank account. The corpse was found on a mountainside near Turin, and two men arrested in relation to the incident at the end of March. They were convicted and given a suspended sentence in December 2001.
Cuccia never gave interviews and was not commonly seen in public despite his huge influence on the country's finance system. He was interested in philosophy, mysticism and the work of James Joyce.
According to the Italian historian of Freemasonry Aldo Alessandro Mola, Cuccia was initiated to the highest degree of the Gran Loggia d'Italia.Aldo A. Mola. (1992). Storia della Massoneria Italiana, Bompiani, Milan, p. 744 Given that Cuccia was the son-in-law of Alberto Beneduce, a Master Mason, since 1906Vittorio Gnocchini. (2005). L'Italia dei liberi muratori, Erasmo editore, Rome, p. 33 and the Primo Gran Sorvegliante of the Grand Orient of Italy during the presidency of Ernesto Nathan this view becomes more reliable.
Activities
Personal life
Death and burial
Legacy and personality
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