Alfa Romeo Marks 150th Birthday of Founder Nicola Romeo, the Engineer Who Built a Racing Legacy
Nicola Romeo, the engineer who took over A.L.F.A. in 1915 and built it into a racing powerhouse, would have turned 150 today.
150 years
1876
1923 Targa Florio
What Happened
Nicola Romeo was born in Sant'Antimo, near Naples, on April 28, 1876. After earning degrees in civil and electrical engineering, he founded his own company in Milan and, during World War I, took over A.L.F.A. (Anonima Lombarda Fabbrica Automobili), which had been placed into liquidation. Romeo converted the factory to war production, then after the war re-entered the automotive sector with a focus on high-performance sports touring cars and racing.
Nicola Romeo born in Sant'Antimo, near Naples.
Romeo acquires A.L.F.A. and begins industrial reconversion for war production.
Alfa Romeo wins its first major race, the Targa Florio.
Alfa Romeo wins the first World Automobile Championship with the P2 car.
Romeo steps down as managing director of Alfa Romeo.
Under Romeo's leadership, Alfa Romeo brought together exceptional talent like Vittorio Jano and Enzo Ferrari. Jano designed the Grand Prix P2, which propelled Alfa Romeo to international prominence. Romeo saw racing as a way to promote production cars and transfer technology to touring models, a philosophy that defined the brand for decades.
Why this matters
The anniversary highlights the entrepreneurial vision that created Alfa Romeo's identity as a maker of high-performance sports cars and a dominant force in early motorsport.
Terms in This Story
- Biscione
- The heraldic serpent emblem used as Alfa Romeo's logo.
- Targa Florio
- A historic open-road endurance automobile race held in Sicily.
- P2
- A Grand Prix racing car designed by Vittorio Jano that won Alfa Romeo its first World Championship in 1925.
- A.L.F.A.
- Acronym for Anonima Lombarda Fabbrica Automobili, the company that became Alfa Romeo.
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