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* [[Anne Fairfax]] (b. 1954), first female architect to receive Arthur Ross Award
* [[Anne Fairfax]] (b. 1954), first female architect to receive Arthur Ross Award
* [[Beatrix Farrand]] (1872–1959), landscape architect
* [[Beatrix Farrand]] (1872–1959), landscape architect
* [[Jessica Farrar]]
* [[Roberta M. Feldman]], educator, University of Illinois, Chicago
* [[Roberta M. Feldman]], educator, University of Illinois, Chicago
* [[Katherine Cutler Ficken]] (1911–1968), first licensed female architect in Maryland (1936)
* [[Katherine Cutler Ficken]] (1911–1968), first licensed female architect in Maryland (1936)
* [[Elizabeth Hirsh Fleisher]] (1892–1975), first registered female architect in Philadelphia
* [[Elizabeth Hirsh Fleisher]] (1892–1975), first registered female architect in Philadelphia
* [[Jean B. Fletcher]] (1915–1965), founding member of the Architects' Collaborative
* [[Jean B. Fletcher]] (1915–1965), founding member of the Architects' Collaborative
* [[Helen Liu Fong]] (1927–2005), Chinese-American architect and interior designer who practiced in Los Angeles, California
* [[Anne Fougeron]] (b. 1954), active in California
* [[Anne Fougeron]] (b. 1954), active in California
* [[Helen French (architect)|Helen French]] (b. 1900), latterly based in San Francisco
* [[Helen French (architect)|Helen French]] (b. 1900), latterly based in San Francisco
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* Alice Hands, co-founder of Gannon and Hands<ref name="Allaback2008" />
* Alice Hands, co-founder of Gannon and Hands<ref name="Allaback2008" />
* [[Sarah P. Harkness]] (b. 1914), president of the [[Boston Society of Architects]]
* [[Sarah P. Harkness]] (b. 1914), president of the [[Boston Society of Architects]]
* [[Georgia Louise Harris Brown]] (1918–1999), second African American woman to become a licensed architect in the United States
* [[Jane Hastings]] (b. 1928), own firm in Seattle; first female chancellor of the AIA College of Fellows
* [[Jane Hastings]] (b. 1928), own firm in Seattle; first female chancellor of the AIA College of Fellows
* [[Margo Hebald-Heymann]], 1960s graduate, contributed to Terminal One, Los Angeles Airport
* [[Margo Hebald-Heymann]], 1960s graduate, contributed to Terminal One, Los Angeles Airport
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* [[Elinor Mead Howells]] (1837–1910), artist, architect, aristocrat
* [[Elinor Mead Howells]] (1837–1910), artist, architect, aristocrat
* [[Ada Louise Huxtable]] (1921–2013), architecture critic
* [[Ada Louise Huxtable]] (1921–2013), architecture critic
* [[Joyce Hwang]], American architect and urban planner


====I====
====I====
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* [[Elizabeth Pattee]] (b. 1893)<ref name="Allaback2008" />
* [[Elizabeth Pattee]] (b. 1893)<ref name="Allaback2008" />
* [[Juliet Peddle]] (1899–1979), first women architect licensed in Indiana
* [[Juliet Peddle]] (1899–1979), first women architect licensed in Indiana
* [[Maria Pellot]] (b. 1971), Puerto-Rican American architect and urban planner
* [[Nelle Peters]] (1884–1974), prolific architect in Kansas City
* [[Nelle Peters]] (1884–1974), prolific architect in Kansas City
* [[Carolyn Peterson]], Texas preservation architect and [[Fellow_of_the_American_Institute_of_Architects|Fellow]] of the [[American Institute of Architects]]
* [[Eleanore Pettersen]] (1916–2003), one of the first female architects in New Jersey
* [[Eleanore Pettersen]] (1916–2003), one of the first female architects in New Jersey
* [[Alberta Pfeiffer]] (1899–1994), one of the first female architects in Illinois
* [[Alberta Pfeiffer]] (1899–1994), one of the first female architects in Illinois
* [[Marjorie Pierce]] (1900–1999), architect who practiced in Massachusetts
* [[Elizabeth Plater-Zyberk]] (b. 1950), co-founder of Miami's Duany Plater Zyberk & Company; academic
* [[Elizabeth Plater-Zyberk]] (b. 1950), co-founder of Miami's Duany Plater Zyberk & Company; academic
* [[Linda Pollari]], active in Los Angeles
* [[Linda Pollari]], active in Los Angeles
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* [[Isabel Roberts]] (b. 1874), member of the architectural design team in the Oak Park Studio of [[Frank Lloyd Wright]]
* [[Isabel Roberts]] (b. 1874), member of the architectural design team in the Oak Park Studio of [[Frank Lloyd Wright]]
* [[Annie Rockfellow]] (1866–1954), prolific architect in Tucson, Arizona
* [[Annie Rockfellow]] (1866–1954), prolific architect in Tucson, Arizona
* [[Rocio Romero]] (b. 1971), Chilean-American architect
* [[Karla Rothstein]] (born 1966), German American architect, educator, active in New York City
* [[Karla Rothstein]] (born 1966), German American architect, educator, active in New York City
* [[Sigrid Lorenzen Rupp]] (1943–2004), German-born architect in Silicon Valley
* [[Sigrid Lorenzen Rupp]] (1943–2004), German-born architect in Silicon Valley
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* [[Adèle Naudé Santos]], based in San Francisco, focus on low-income housing
* [[Adèle Naudé Santos]], based in San Francisco, focus on low-income housing
* [[Gertrude Sawyer]] (1895–1996), early female architect in Maryland and Washington D.C.
* [[Gertrude Sawyer]] (1895–1996), early female architect in Maryland and Washington D.C.
* [[Cathy Simon]], San Francisco Bay Area architect
* [[Norma Merrick Sklarek|Norma Sklarek]] (1926-2012), first black female licensed architect in the US<ref name="About10" />
* [[Norma Merrick Sklarek|Norma Sklarek]] (1926-2012), first black female licensed architect in the US<ref name="About10" />
* [[Chloethiel Woodard Smith]] (1910–1992), architect and urban planner in Washington, D.C.
* [[Chloethiel Woodard Smith]] (1910–1992), architect and urban planner in Washington, D.C.
* [[Laurinda Hope Spear]] (b. 1950), co-founder of Arquitectonica
* [[Laurinda Hope Spear]] (b. 1950), co-founder of Arquitectonica
* [[Margaret Fulton Spencer]] (1882–1966), second woman to become a member of the American Institute of Architects
* [[Margaret Fulton Spencer]] (1882–1966), second woman to become a member of the American Institute of Architects
* [[Lenore Thomas Straus]]
* [[Sharon E. Sutton]] (b. 1941), African American architect and architectural educator and [[Fellow_of_the_American_Institute_of_Architects|Fellow]] of the [[American Institute of Architects]]
* [[Patricia Swan]] (1924–2012), active in Calgary, Alberta, and Denver, Colorado
* [[Patricia Swan]] (1924–2012), active in Calgary, Alberta, and Denver, Colorado
Salami Ahmed built the first mosque in the world


====T====
====T====
* [[Marilyn Jordan Taylor]] (1949), partner of Skidmore, Owings & Merrill, founder of Transport and Airport Design Division
* [[Hilda Taba]] (1902–1967), architect, theorist, and educator
* [[Marilyn Jordan Taylor]] (b. 1949), partner of Skidmore, Owings & Merrill, founder of Transport and Airport Design Division *
* [[Jane Thompson]], principal of Thompson Design Group
* [[Jane Thompson]], principal of Thompson Design Group
* [[Martha Cassell Thompson]] (1925-1968) African-American architect and chief restoration architect for the [[National Cathedral]]
* [[Martha Thorne]] (born 1953), educator, curator, writer, executive director of the [[Pritzker Architecture Prize|Pritzker Prize]]
* [[Martha Thorne]] (born 1953), educator, curator, writer, executive director of the [[Pritzker Architecture Prize|Pritzker Prize]]
* [[Billie Tsien]], partner Tod Williams Billie Tsien Architects
* [[Billie Tsien]], partner Tod Williams Billie Tsien Architects
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====V====
====V====
*[[Margaret Van Pelt Vilas]] (1905–1995), opened a practice in New Haven, Connecticut in 1958
* [[Margaret Van Pelt Vilas]] (1905–1995), opened a practice in New Haven, Connecticut in 1958
*[[Shirley Jane Vernon]] (1930-2011), architect and architectural educator in Pennsylvania, was a Fellow of the American Institute of Architects
* [[Shirley Jane Vernon]] (1930-2011), architect and architectural educator in Pennsylvania, was a [[Fellow_of_the_American_Institute_of_Architects|Fellow]] of the [[American Institute of Architects]]
* [[Lauretta Vinciarelli]] (1943–2011), artist, architect, and architectural educator


====W====
====W====
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* [[Emily Williams (architect)|Emily Williams]] (1869–1942), pioneering female architect in San Jose and San Francisco
* [[Emily Williams (architect)|Emily Williams]] (1869–1942), pioneering female architect in San Jose and San Francisco
* [[Beverly Willis]] (b. 1928), influential in design development, active mainly in San Francisco
* [[Beverly Willis]] (b. 1928), influential in design development, active mainly in San Francisco
* [[Alda Heaton Wilson]] (1873–1960), architect and civil engineer from Iowa
* [[Zelma Wilson]] (1918–1996), active mainly in California
* [[Zelma Wilson]] (1918–1996), active mainly in California
* [[Marjorie Wintermute]] (1919–2007), active in Oregon
* [[Marjorie Wintermute]] (1919–2007), active in Oregon
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====Y====
====Y====
* [[Georgina Pope Yeatman]] (1902–1982), active in Philadelphia
* [[Georgina Pope Yeatman]] (1902–1982), active in Philadelphia
* [[Florence Yoch]], (1890–1972), landscape architect active in California
* [[Meejin Yoon]], (b. 1972), Korean-American architect and designer, co-founder of [[Höweler+Yoon]]
* [[Helen Binkerd Young]] (1877–1959), early New York architect and architectural educator
* [[Helen Binkerd Young]] (1877–1959), early New York architect and architectural educator



Revision as of 22:27, 3 March 2017

The following is a list of women architects by nationality — notable women who are well known for their work in the field of architecture.

Africa

Egypt

Kenya

Nigeria

South Africa

  • Sarah Calburn (b. 1964), own practice, residential projects and Johannesburg's Momo Gallery
  • Sophia Gray (1814–1871), first female architect in South Africa
  • Linda Mvusi (born c.1955), actress, architect, owns her own firm
  • Kate Otten (b. 1964), own practice, community libraries, the waterfront development at Tzaneen
  • Anya van der Merwe, Cape Town architect

Uganda

Zambia

Asia

Azerbaijan

Bangladesh

China

  • Huang Hui
  • Lin Huiyin (1904–1955), first known Chinese female architect
  • Jing Liu (b. 1981), co-founder of the New York design office SO-IL
  • Lu Wenyu, who's husband Wang Shu won the Priztker Prize for the work the duo completed together in their firm (and who's sole attribution of the prize generated some controversy[3])

India

Iraq

Iran

  • Farshid Moussavi (b. 1965), Iranian-British founder of Farshid Moussavi Architecture

Israel

Japan

Lebanon

  • Amale Andraos, dean of the Colombia Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation.

Mongolia

Nepal

Chandra lekha Kayastha, Jyoti Sherchan, Dan Heera Tuladhar, Sudha Shrestha, Anju Malla, Bindu Shrestha, Rajani Joshi, Ira shrestha,.........more than 300 numbers.. Smita Shrestha Munu Pandey Shrestha

Pakistan

  • Yasmeen Lari (b. circa 1941), the country's first female architect

Palestine

Saudi Arabia

  • Nadia Bakhurji, interior architect, holds several administrative positions

Singapore

Sri Lanka

.((Aruna Govindan Kotteyil)) Set up the first ethical practice in 1993 .

Taiwan

  • Xiu Zelan (b. 1925), Taiwan's first female architect

Thailand

Turkey

Australasia

Australia

New Zealand

  • Kate Beath (1882–1979), probably the first female architect in New Zealand
  • Gill Matthewson (fl from 1984), architect, educator, writer

Europe

Albania

Austria

  • Maria Auböck (born 1951), architect, educator, specializing in landscape architecture
  • Ella Briggs (1880–1977), early Austrian female architect and interior decorator
  • Margarete Schütte-Lihotzky (1897–2000), first Austrian female architect
  • Lilia Skala (1896–1994), graduated in and practiced architecture before becoming an actress
  • Laura P. Spinadel (born 1958), principal at BUSarchitektur & BOA büro für offensive aleatorik
  • Silja Tillner (born 1960), principal at Architekten Tillner & Willinger
  • Liane Zimbler (1892–1987), possibly the first European woman to graduate in architecture, in Austria; practiced in the United States from 1938 to age 90

Belarus

Belgium

Bosnia and Herzegovina

  • Dijana Alić (born 1950s), architect and academic living in Australia
  • Vesna Bugarski (1930–1992), first female architect in Bosnia-Herzegovina[6]
  • Selma Harrington (b. 1955), interior design, president of the Architects' Council of Europe

Bulgaria

Croatia

Czech Republic

Denmark

Estonia

Finland

  • Aino Aalto (1894–1949), first wife of Alvar Aalto using the Functionalist style, later turning to interiors
  • Elissa Aalto (1922–1994), second wife of Alvar Aalto, with whom she designed the opera house in Essen
  • Elsa Arokallio (1892–1982), after her husband died, ran her own business
  • Elsi Borg (1893–1958), after graduating in 1919, designed a hospital and a church
  • Hilda Hongell (1867–1952), possibly the first woman in Finland to run her own practice
  • Signe Hornborg (1862–1916), possibly the first qualified female architect in the world
  • Eva Kuhlefelt–Ekelund (1892–1984)
  • Kristiina Lassus (born 1966), designer
  • Wivi Lönn (1872–1966), several notable buildings; first woman to be granted title of professor by Finnish Association
  • Martta Martikainen-Ypyä (1904–1992), designed many public buildings alone or with husband Ragnar Ypyä
  • Raili Pietilä (b. 1926), closely cooperated with husband Raili Pietilä
  • Kaija Siren (1920–2001), worked with her husband Heikki Siren

France

Germany

Greece

Hungary

Iceland

Ireland

  • Angela Brady (b. circa 1957), elected president of the UK's RIBA in 2011
  • Yvonne Farrell (b. 1951), co-founder of award-winning Grafton Architects in Dublin
  • Eileen Gray (1878–1976), lived and worked primarily in France
  • Selma Harrington (b. 1955), see Bosnia and Herzegovina
  • Caroline O'Donnell (b. circa 1974), winner of PS1 MoMA's Young Architects Program (New York) 2013
  • Sheila O'Donnell (b. 1953), co-founder of O’Donnell + Tuomey Architects; designed several award-winning buildings around Dublin

Italy

  • Paola Antonelli (b. 1963), senior curator of the department of architecture & design at The Museum of Modern Art (MoMA), New York City
  • Luisa Anversa Ferretti (b. 1926), architect, interior designer, also academic
  • Maria Laura Arlotti (b. 1955), founding partner of ABDR architects
  • Gae Aulenti (b. 1927), architect, interior designer and industrial designer
  • Lina Bo Bardi (1914–1992), moved to Brazil after the war and became a naturalized Brazilian citizen[9]
  • Cini Boeri (b. 1924), architect, interior designer and industrial designer
  • Plautilla Bricci (1616–1690), architect and painter in and near Rome
  • Anna Castelli Ferrieri, architect and industrial designer
  • Alessandra Cianchetta (born 1971), founding partner of AWP Paris, large-scale urban redevelopment
  • Uga De Plaisant, (1917–2004), architect, partner of Giuseppe Perugini
  • Silvana De Stefano, architect and sculptor
  • Doriana Mandrelli Fuksas, founding partner of Fuksas Studio in Rome
  • Stefania Filo Speziale (1905–1988), first women to graduate from an architecture program in Naples
  • Maria Giuseppina Grasso Cannizzo, own studio in Vittoria, Sicily
  • Giulia Guarino (1897–1985), see Uruguay
  • Franca Helg, (1920–1989), architect and designer
  • Anna Maria Indrio (b. 1943), see Denmark
  • Elena Luzzatto (1900–1983), first women to graduate from an architecture program in Italy
  • Rosaria Piomelli (b. 1937), architect and academic
  • Guendalina Salimei (b. 1962), own studio in Rome, also academic
  • Teresa Sapey (b. 1962), own studio in Madrid, also academic
  • Afra Scarpa (b. 1937), of Afra and Tobia Scarpa
  • Benedetta Tagliabue (b. 1963), based in Barcelona, Spain
  • Laura Thermes (b. 1943), own studio in Rome with Franco Purini, also academic
  • Patricia Viel (b. 1962), founding partner of Antonio Citterio and Partners
  • Paola Viganò (b. 1961), architect and urban planner, own studio in Milan
  • Lauretta Vinciarelli (1943–2011), artist, architect, educator

Luxembourg

Montenegro

Netherlands

Norway

Portugal

Poland

Romania

  • Maria Cotescu, (1896–1980), one of the first women architects of Romania. Built the National railway industrial complex.
  • Henrieta Delavrancea, (1897–1987) one of the first female architects admitted to the Superior School of Architecture in Bucharest
  • Virginia Andreescu Haret, (1894–1962), first female graduate in architecture and first female Romanian Architectural Inspector General
  • Anca Petrescu (b. 1949), architect and politician

Russia

Serbia

  • Ksenija Bulatović (b. 1967), various educational and commercial buildings, also academic
  • Jelisaveta Načić (1878–1955), first female architect in Serbia
  • Olja Ivanjicki (1931–2009), versatile artist in sculpture, poetry, design, architecture and writing

Slovenia

Spain

Sweden

  • Anna Branzell (1895–1983), Norwegian-born Swedish architect, first woman to graduate in architecture in Sweden
  • Léonie Geisendorf (born 1914), Polish-born Swedish architect working in Stockholm
  • Mia Hägg (b. 1970), her firm Habiter Autrement is based in Paris
  • Margit Hall (1901-1937), first woman in Sweden to graduate in architecture as an ordinary student
  • Agnes Magnell (1878–1966), first woman accepted to the architecture program at the Royal Institute of Technology; was not allowed to graduate since she was accepted on exception; designed the water tower in Sala in 1903[10]
  • Greta Magnusson-Grossman (1906–1999), furniture designer and architect
  • Pernilla Ohrstedt (born 1980), London-based Swedish architect
  • Brita Snellman (1901–1978), first woman to graduate in architecture at the Royal Institute of Technology (in 1924)
  • Inga Varg (born 1952), working on urban planning, interior design and architecture
  • Ingeborg Wærn Bugge (1899–1991), early Swedish graduate, residential buildings, schools, renovation

Switzerland

Turkey

  • Leman Tomsu (1913–1988), one of the first Turkish women to qualify as an architect in 1934

United Kingdom

North America

Belize

  • Esther Ayuso (1958), first female architect of Belize. Specializes in hospital design. was born in Venezuela
  • Sue Courtenay (born mid-1970s), first female president of the Federation of Caribbean Association of Architects

Canada

Dominican Republic

  • Margot Taule (1920–2008), first registered professional engineer and architect in the Dominican Republic

Jamaica

  • Nadine Isaacs, (1942–2004) first female head of the Jamaican Institute of Architects and Caribbean School of Architecture
  • Verma Panton, (1936–2015) first female architect of Jamaica and of the Anglo-Caribbean

Mexico

Puerto Rico

United States

This list of United States women architects includes notable women architects with a strong connection to the United States, i.e. born in the USA, located in the USA, or known primarily for their work in the USA.

A

B

C

D

E

  • Keller Easterling (b. 1959), architect, urbanist and writer
  • Judith Edelman (1923–2014), co-founder of Edelman Sultan Knox Wood/Architects
  • Julie Eizenberg FAIA, co-founded firm Koning Eizenberg in Santa Monica, California in 1981
  • Merrill Elam, active in Atlanda, Georgia, co-founded her own firm in 1984

F

G

H

I

J

K

L

M

N

  • Sarah Nettleton (b. 1950), architect, landscape designer, active in Minneapolis
  • Edith Northman (b. 1893), one of Southern California's first women architects

O

P

R

S

T

V

W

Y

Z

  • Astra Zarina (1929–2008), architect and academic
  • Zoka Zola, Croatian-born American architect, active in Chicago since 1990

South America

Argentina

Brazil

Chile

Colombia

  • Luz Amorocho (b. 1922) first woman to graduate with a degree in architecture in Colombia; Director of Planning at the National University of Colombia from 1966-1988

Uruguay

  • Giulia Guarino (1897-1985), Italian-born architect, first woman architect in South America [25]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Adenowo: Branding Nigeria Through Architecture", Sunday Magazine, The Guardian (Nigeria), 15 December 2013. Retrieved 13 January 2013.
  2. ^ a b c d e Jackie Craven. "10 Great Women Architects". About.com. Retrieved 4 February 2012.
  3. ^ Hawthorne, Christopher. "Pritzker Prize goes to Wang Shu, 48-year-old Chinese architect". LA Times. Retrieved 18 February 2017.
  4. ^ "Cheong Koon Hean". Singapore Women's Hall of Fame. Retrieved 11 October 2015.
  5. ^ a b c Biographies of Women Architects in the United States, Association for Research on the City and Housing (Paris). Retrieved 2012-02-04.
  6. ^ Vesna Bugarski (1930-1992) in memoriam
  7. ^ Sokolina, Anna. "In Memoriam: Milka Bliznakov, 1927–2010". Slavic Review. 70 (2/2011): 498–499.
  8. ^ Eva Jiricna RA, Royal Academy of Arts. Retrieved 2012-02-04.
  9. ^ Zeuler R.M. de A. Lima, "Lina Bo Bardi", New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 2013. ISBN 9780300154269
  10. ^ http://www.gamlavattentornet.se/Site/Arkitektur.html
  11. ^ "Women as architects". Architectural Association Journal. March 1918.
  12. ^ "Biriukova, Alexandra". Canadian Women Artists History Iniative. Concordia University. 3 June 2013. Retrieved 11 October 2015.
  13. ^ Grierson, Joan, ed. (2008), For the Record: The First Women in Canadian Architecture, Dundurn Press, p. 40, ISBN 978-1-55002-820-1
  14. ^ "Winnipeg Architecture Foundation". www.winnipegarchitecture.ca. Retrieved 2017-01-25.
  15. ^ Sanderson, Kay (1999). 200 Remarkable Alberta Women. Calgary: Famous Five Foundation. p. 46.
  16. ^ Joan Grierson (Ed.), For the Record: The First Women in Canadian Architecture, Dundurn Group Ltd. (2008), page 11. ISBN 978-1550028201.
  17. ^ "Elizabeth Carter Brooks (1867-1951)". The New Bedford Historical Society, Inc. Retrieved 12 October 2015.
  18. ^ a b c d e Sarah Allaback (23 May 2008). The first American women architects. University of Illinois Press. ISBN 978-0-252-03321-6. Retrieved 4 February 2012.
  19. ^ "Profile: Los Angeles' Cultural Heritage Commission" (PDF). Office of Historic Resources. 1 (2). Los Angeles City Planning Department: 3. April 2007. Retrieved 16 October 2015.
  20. ^ Cassell, Charles Irvin (2004). "Alberta Jeannette Cassell Butler". In Wilson, Dreck Spurlock (ed.). African American Architects: A Biographical Dictionary 1865-1945. New York: Routledge. pp. 86–87. ISBN 0415929598.
  21. ^ Miss Fay Kellogg, architect, dies, The New York Times, July 12, 1918. Retrieved 2012-02-03.
  22. ^ Tom Mallory (2011). "Top 10 Buildings: Women in Architecture". Architecture. Huffington Post. Retrieved 4 February 2012.
  23. ^ [1]
  24. ^ Henderson, D'Ann Sue Denton (30 September 1999). "Georgia Louise Harris Brown". The Washington Post. Retrieved 14 October 2015.
  25. ^ Del Mese, Massimo (31 January 2009). "Eboli – Battipaglia: Giulia Guarino, una donna da ricordare".