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Antonio Capece Minutolo

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Antonio Capece Minutolo
Minister of Police of Kingdom of the Two Sicilies
In office
January 1816 – 27 June 1816
MonarchFerdinand I of the Two Sicilies
Preceded byLuigi de' Medici
Succeeded byFrancesco Patrizi
In office
13 April 1821 – 28 July 1821
MonarchFerdinand I of the Two Sicilies
Preceded byIlario de Blasio
Personal details
Born(1768-03-05)5 March 1768
Naples, Campania, Italy
DiedMarch 4, 1838(1838-03-04) (aged 69)
Pesaro, Papal States
Political partyLegitimists
Spouses
Teresa Gabellini
(m. 1791; died 1821)
Anna Orselli
(m. 1821; died 1836)
Teresa Galluccio
(m. 1836)
Parent(s)Fabrizio Capece Minutolo and Rosalia Capece Minutolo (née di Sangro)
Alma materCollegio Nazareno
ProfessionSoldier, writer
Military service
RankCaptain
Battles/warsNapoleonic Wars

Antonio Capece Minutolo, Prince of Canosa (5 March 1768 – 4 March 1838), was an Italian nobleman, writer, diplomat and statesman, who served as Minister of Police of the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies.

Biography

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Early life

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Antonio Capece Minutolo was born in Naples on 5 March 1768. He belonged to an ancient noble family that had served the kings of Naples since the 13th century.[1] His mother, Rosalia, was the daughter of Raimondo di Sangro, Prince of Sansevero.[2] He studied natural philosophy and the liberal arts at the Nazarene College in Rome.[3] Back in Naples, he frequented literary circles and devoted himself to classical studies.[4] Deeply religious, in 1795 Canosa published a treatise on the dogma of Trinity, in which he confuted deism, arguing that any attempt to rationalize religion ends up destroying its very essence.[5]

Neapolitan Revolution

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Unlike many other young nobles of his time, he remained tenaciously attached to the ancien régime and defended it fervently.[6] After the outbreak of the French Revolution, he took a staunch position in favor of traditional monarchy, and when, in early 1799, the French Army led by Jean-Étienne Championnet approached Naples, he attempted in vain to prevent the proclamation of the Parthenopean Republic.[4]

Canosa has been described as a naive idealist, a disinterested paladin of the ancien régime.[1] Deeply influenced by Montesquieu's works, Canosa defended the rights of aristocracy and ancient feudal institutions and considered the strong presence of intermediary bodies, in particular the feudal nobility, a guarantee against despotism.[7] He regarded the French Revolution as the fatal result of renouncing medieval institutions and beliefs.[8] Coherently with this vision, he criticized absolute monarchies for abusing their power and introducing new taxes and obligations without consulting the representative institution of the estates of the realm. When the royal family left the Kingdom, the feudal parliament of Naples elected him as a member of an “extraordinary deputation for good government and internal tranquility of the city”. In this capacity he refused to recognize the authority of the king's representative, Francesco Pignatelli, claiming the right of the parliament to rule the nation in the absence of the king.[4]

Painting of the Revolution of 1799 with blue-yellow-red tricolours

After the French occupation of Naples he was forced to hide, but a few months later he was arrested, imprisoned in Castel Sant'Elmo and sentenced to death for royalist conspiracy.[4] However, the republic fell before the execution could be carried out, and Canosa was freed from prison by the Sanfedisti only to be sentenced to five years in prison for defending the rights of aristocracy against the king.[4] He was amnestied after the Treaty of Florence (1801).[4]

Exile

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In 1806, the French returned to Naples. While the prince's father, Fabrizio, joined the new regime, the young Canosa followed the court to Sicily, from where he coordinated a secret legitimist network.[4] On 28 February 1807 queen Maria Carolina dispatched him to the island of Ponza to try and raise a rebellion in Naples.[9][10] From Ponza Canosa worked a vast network of secret correspondence, that stretched from Naples all over the kingdom.[11] In 1808 he engaged in a conspiracy to kill Antoine Christophe Saliceti, who served Joseph Bonaparte and Joachim Murat as Minister of Police in the Napoleonic kingdom of Naples between 1806 and 1809.[12] A bomb was placed in his palace and Saliceti narrowly escaped being killed. Several of Canosa's friends were summarily tried and executed in consequence and a bounty was put on his head by the new king.[4] Saliceti allegedly tried to have Canosa poisoned.[13] In 1814 Ferdinand IV sent Canosa on a diplomatic mission to the newly restored Spanish King Ferdinand VII.[14] The mission was successful: Ferdinand VII decidedly supported the restoration of Ferdinand IV on the throne of Naples.[4] The king of Spain was favourably impressed by the young nobleman and awarded him the Great Cross of the Immaculate Conception.[15] At the time of Murat's expedition to Pizzo in 1815, Canosa was sent on a special mission to Calabria with orders to put Murat immediately to death; he was, however, recalled on the receipt of the news that Murat had been captured and executed.[16]

Bourbon Restoration

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Ferdinand I of the Two Sicilies

After the second restoration of the Bourbon dynasty (1816), Canosa was appointed Minister of Police. Canosa was determined to root out any revolutionary threat by purging the justice system, the army, the civil service and the educational system of all those who had compromised themselves with Murat's government.[17] He endeavoured to unleash a massive repression against the Carbonari and Freemasons, and proposed to arm and support the Calderari, a secret society formed early in the century in opposition to the Carbonari.[18] However, his extreme political views made him highly suspect to Metternich who insisted on his removal from Naples.[19] In June 1816 Canosa was forced to resign and banished from the kingdom by his rival Luigi de' Medici, while some of his followers were arrested and tried.[4] He regained the office in 1821, but was quickly dismissed at Metternich's insistence, and the king urged him to leave the country.[20] Canosa thenceforth devoted himself to the fight in defense of the kings and against atheism and subversion. He wrote several pamphlets, books and articles against liberalism and collaborated with politically explicit and combative newspapers, such as La Voce della Verità (The Voice of Truth).[21]

For his reactionary ideas, he was expelled from Tuscany (1830), and he settled in the Duchy of Modena, where the reigning Duke, Francis IV, appointed him his advisor. He began a propaganda campaign in favor of legitimism and against liberalism[22] and established royalist militias, the Battalions of Volontari Estensi, tasked with “maintaining order in the countryside by seconding the active troops in case of need”.[23] In 1835 he moved to the Papal States, where he was employed by Cardinal Tommaso Bernetti to form another counter-revolutionary militia known as the Centurioni.[24] Canosa died in Pesaro on 4 March 1838.[6]

Works

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Notes

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  1. ^ a b Mazzotti 2023, p. 215.
  2. ^ Maturi 1944, p. 347.
  3. ^ Maturi 1944, p. 1.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Postigliola 1975.
  5. ^ Mazzotti 2023, p. 216.
  6. ^ a b Paladino 1930.
  7. ^ Maturi 1944, pp. 7–8.
  8. ^ Acton, Harold (1974). The Bourbons of Naples, 1734-1825. Methuen. ISBN 9780064700078.
  9. ^ Gregory, Desmond (1987). Sicily. The Insecure Base: a History of the British Occupation of Sicily, 1806-1815. Fairleigh Dickinson University Press. p. 43. ISBN 9780838633069.
  10. ^ Maturi 1944, pp. 47–48.
  11. ^ Johnston, R. M. (1904). The Napoleonic Empire In Southern Italy and the Rise of the Secret Societies. Vol. I. London: Macmillan and Co. p. 164.
  12. ^ Maturi 1944, p. 80.
  13. ^ Godechot 1976, p. 270.
  14. ^ See: Del Corno, Nicola (1994). "Un reazionario italiano nella Spagna della Restaurazione. La missione diplomatica del principe di Canosa a Madrid (1814-1815) nelle 'carte Canosa' dell'Archivio Borbone di Napoli". Spagna Contemporanea (5): 157–168. Retrieved 7 June 2024.
  15. ^ Maturi 1944, p. 117.
  16. ^ Johnston, R. M. (1904). The Napoleonic Empire In Southern Italy and the Rise of the Secret Societies. Vol. II. London: Macmillan and Co. p. 48.
  17. ^ Isabella, Maurizio (2023). Southern Europe in the Age of Revolutions. Princeton: Princeton University Press. p. 449. ISBN 9780691181707.
  18. ^ Stites, Richard (2014). The Four Horsemen: Riding to Liberty in Post-Napoleonic Europe. New York: Oxford University Press USA. pp. 132–3. ISBN 9780199978083.
  19. ^ Davis, John Anthony (1988). Conflict and Control: Law and Order in Nineteenth-century Italy. Atlantic Highlands, NJ: Humanities Press International. p. 137.
  20. ^ Di Giovine 2015, pp. 59–60.
  21. ^ See: Del Corno, Nicola (2016). "Modène, figure de proue de la culture réactionnaire en Italie". Siècles (in French). 43: 88–119. doi:10.4000/siecles.3057.
  22. ^ Bertoni 1927, pp. 100–8.
  23. ^ Sossai, Francesco. Modena descritta da Francesco Sossai. Modena: Tip. Camerale, 1841. p.162.
  24. ^ See: Reinerman, Alan J. (1991). "The Failure of Popular Counter-Revolution in Risorgimento Italy: The Case of the Centurions, 1831-1847". The Historical Journal. 34 (1): 21–41. doi:10.1017/S0018246X00013911. JSTOR 2639706.

Bibliography

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