Ferruccio Lamborghini, Italian industrialist (b. April 28, 1916, Cento, Italy--d. Feb. 20, 1993, Perugia, Italy), founded a luxury car company that produced some of the fastest, most expensive, and sought-after sports cars in the world. Lamborghini worked as a mechanic in the Italian army during World War II, and after the war he started a tractor company to build farm implements using recycled parts from Allied army surplus and abandoned German tanks. In 1963 he opened a state-of-the-art factory to manufacture a sports car that would challenge the top-ranked Ferrari high-performance cars. The innovative Lamborghini 350GT debuted that year, and three years later the company surprised the automobile industry with the Miura, a low-slung, V-12 two-seater that could exceed 298 km/h (185 mph). By the end of the 1960s Lamborghini’s luxury sports cars were in demand by sports car enthusiasts and by celebrities impressed with the cars’ quality and panache. In 1973 Lamborghini sold his share of the firm and retired to a country estate in Umbria, where he established an automobile museum, cultivated grapes, and produced premium table wine.
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