Barbara Berlusconi

Barbara Berlusconi (born 30 July 1984) is one of the daughters of Silvio Berlusconi. She is a business executive, advisor to the board of Fininvest and previously sat on the board of directors of A.C. Milan as vice-chairman and CEO.[1]

Barbara Berlusconi
Born (1984-07-30) 30 July 1984
CitizenshipSwitzerland
Italy
Alma materSan Raffaele University
OccupationAdvisory board of Fininvest
Board member ofA.C. Milan (vice-chairman and CEO, 2011–2013)
Parents
RelativesMarina Berlusconi (sister)
Pier Silvio Berlusconi (brother)
Paolo Berlusconi (uncle)
WebsiteBarbara Berlusconi – Fininvest.it

Early life

Barbara Berlusconi was born in Arlesheim, Basel-Landschaft canton, Switzerland in the summer of 1984, and is the daughter of Silvio Berlusconi and Veronica Lario (who became his second wife, in 1990). Barbara Berlusconi's godfather was Bettino Craxi.[2] She made her formal debut in Paris at the Bal des débutantes in 2001.[3]

Education

Berlusconi completed her primary education at the Steiner school of Milan, in Città Studi.[4] Berlusconi then attended secondary school at the Institute Villoresi College of Monza in Italy, and in July 2010,[4] At 26 years old, Berlusconi obtained her bachelor in Philosophy[5], and gained a first class degree, with 110/110 cum laude, at the Vita-Salute San Raffaele University, founded and run by Don Verzé until 2011.[4]

Fininvest SpA

Since September 2003, Berlusconi has been member of the board of directors of Fininvest SpA.[4]

A.C. Milan

In April 2011, Berlusconi was given a role on the board of directors at A.C. Milan[4] and since 30 November 2013 one of the CEO of the club.[6]

Personal life

Family

Berlusconi is the mother of two sons, Alessandro and Edoardo with Giorgio Valaguzza.[7] Berlusconi resides in Switzerland. She was previously in a relationship with Alexandre Pato.[4][7]

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gollark: It even has autoreconnect.
gollark: It does some websockety things.
gollark: Well, I can copypaste the SPUDNET code out of potatOS.
gollark: Also, in-person teaching does also seemingly generally work somewhat better, and not being able to do much in-person stuff also means you cannot really, say, ask professors questions directly, use... physical objects and stuff there... or socialize with people/do many activities, which is apparently a university thing™.

See also

Notes and references

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