RACING DRIVER

Gaetano Starrabba

1932 - Today

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Prince Gaetano Starrabba di Giardinelli (born 3 December 1932) is an Italian former racing driver. He participated in one Formula One World Championship Grand Prix, racing a Lotus-Maserati at the 1961 Italian Grand Prix on 10 September 1961. He scored no championship points. He also competed in several non-Championship Formula One races. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Gaetano Starrabba is the 627th most popular racing driver (down from 617th in 2019), the 4,141st most popular biography from Italy (down from 4,107th in 2019) and the 98th most popular Italian Racing Driver.

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Among RACING DRIVERS

Among racing drivers, Gaetano Starrabba ranks 627 out of 1,080Before him are Günther Bechem, Rudolf Schoeller, Pier Paolo Bianchi, Kazuki Nakajima, Kenny Acheson, and Jac Nellemann. After him are Eddie Keizan, Pierre-Henri Raphanel, Renato Pirocchi, Mike Sparken, Franco Forini, and Jim Hall.

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Contemporaries

Among people born in 1932, Gaetano Starrabba ranks 509Before him are Anatoli Isayev, Poul Pedersen, Djibril Tamsir Niane, Kiril Rakarov, Kurt Schmid, and Mikhail Ogonkov. After him are John Jakes, Ahmet Berman, Beryl Bainbridge, Alberto Dines, Robert Spitzer, and Coxsone Dodd.

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In Italy

Among people born in Italy, Gaetano Starrabba ranks 4,142 out of 5,161Before him are Guido Bontempi (1960), Mario Aldo Montano (1948), Franco Bertinetti (1923), Giampaolo Pazzini (1984), Stefano Dionisi (1966), and Umberto Colombo (1933). After him are Ugo Colombo (1940), Renato Pirocchi (1933), Caterina Davinio (1957), Vittorio Tamagnini (1910), Paola Cortellesi (1973), and Moise Kean (2000).

Among RACING DRIVERS In Italy

Among racing drivers born in Italy, Gaetano Starrabba ranks 98Before him are Gino Munaron (1928), Ernesto Prinoth (1923), Fabrizio Barbazza (1963), Andrea Chiesa (1964), Marco Apicella (1965), and Pier Paolo Bianchi (1952). After him are Renato Pirocchi (1933), Piero Scotti (1909), Alessandro Pesenti-Rossi (1942), Luigi Piotti (1913), Domenico Schiattarella (1967), and Antonio Giovinazzi (1993).