ABSTRACT
Despite the local reference historiography, the 1821 Piedmont insurrection still lacks a reading that gives due weight to the historical-constitutional aspect. When Carlo Alberto, the “revolutionary” Prince of Carignano, granted the Cádiz Constitution, after the abdication of Vittorio Emanuele I, a crisis began in the secular history of the dynasty and the kingdom of Sardinia: for the first time freedoms and rights of representation broke the direct pledge of allegiance, tipycal of the absolute state, between kings and people. The new political system was not autochthonous but looked to that of Spain, among the many possible models. Using the extensive available bibliography, I analyzed the national and international influences of that short historical season. Moreover I emphasized the social and geographic origin of the leaders of the insurrection (i.e. nobility and bourgeoisie, core and periphery of the State) and the consequences of their actions. Even if the insurrection was brought down by the convergence of the royalist forces and the Austrian army, its legacy weighed on the dynasty. In 1823, during the war between Spain and France, Carlo Alberto became the hero of the Trocadero: a reactionary choice that influenced the future of Savoy. Certainly the shadow of the Cádiz Constitution accompanied Carlo Alberto until 1848, when he granted the Statuto. The pre-unification political season was marked by a more moderate text of the Constitution. Over time, the Cádiz Constitution became a symbol of the freedom and the exiles of 1821 went to fight in Europe for those peoples who were oppressed by the Holy Alliance.
Keywords: Cádiz Constitution; Carlo Alberto of Savoia; monarchy; revolution; repression.
RESUMEN
Aunque no falta una historiografía local de referencia, los movimientos en Piamonte de 1821 todavía carecen de una lectura que otorgue el peso adecuado al aspecto histórico-constitucional. Cuando el revolucionario príncipe de Carignano Carlos Alberto, después de la abdicación de Víctor Emmanuel I, concedió la Constitución abrió una crisis en la historia secular de la dinastía y el reino de Cerdeña: las libertades y los derechos de representación rompieron por primera vez el pacto de fidelidad directa entre el rey y el pueblo característico del Estado absoluto. El nuevo sistema político no era autóctono y, entre los muchos modelos posibles, miraba al de España. Usando la extensa bibliografía disponible, este artículo se adentra en las influencias nacionales e internacionales de ese efímero episodio. Pero no solo eso: también hace hincapié en el origen social y geográfico de los protagonistas de la revolución (entre la nobleza y la burguesía, entre el centro y la periferia del Estado) y las consecuencias de sus acciones. Si la insurgencia fue derribada por las fuerzas realistas convergentes y el ejército austriaco, su legado pesaba sobre la dinastía. En 1823, durante la guerra entre España y Francia, Carlos Alberto se convirtió en el héroe del Trocadero: una elección reaccionaria que influyó en el futuro del monarca de Saboya. Ciertamente la sombra de la constitución de Cádiz acompañó a Carlos Alberto hasta 1848, el año de la concesión del Estatuto. La evolución hacia un texto constitucional más moderado marcará así la temporada política preunitaria. La constitución de Cádiz se convirtió en un símbolo de libertad con el tiempo, y los exiliados de 1821 fueron a luchar en Europa por los pueblos oprimidos por la Santa Alianza.
Palabras clave: Constitución de Cádiz; Carlos Alberto de Saboya; monarquía; revolución; Represión.
CONTENTS
By turning the spotlight on historical events, anniversaries help the scientific community and others to reflect on steps so far taken and to open new avenues of research. The bicentenary of the 1820 and 1821 uprisings cannot but bear fruit in this sense, inserting the phenomenon into the most recent historiographical currents, currents which by now inevitably outline transnational, or, more accurately, global, panoramas. In the context of studies on European sectarian, insurrectional and constitutional movements in the period following the Vienna Congress, Turin, and Piedmont more generally, have remained in the background, or at least isolated. This has not necessarily been due to lack of interest, since from the start thousands of pages have been written about the insurrection of January to April 1821 in the Savoyard States, but rather because the event has for a long time been interpreted as an ephemeral epilogue to an autochthonous event, a parenthesis in Sabaudian history. Somewhat clearer are the political elements that place the Piedmontese uprising within a more general historical process that involved Spain, Portugal, and the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies as well as, in hindsight, the dynamics of the entire European Restoration, as Gonzalo Butrón Prida, Vittorio Scotti Douglas and Hans Späth have ably shown[2].
The fact that Italian high school and university textbooks have dedicated only a few
lines to the Piedmontese insurrection of 1821 Sabbatucci and Vidotto ( Sabbatucci, G. and Vidotto, V. (2009). Storia contemporanea. L’Ottocento. Roma: Laterza.
Lemmi et al. ( Lemmi, F., Egidi, P., Segre, A., Bornate, C. and Luzio, A. (1923). La rivoluzione piemontese dell’anno 1821. Torino: Regia Deputazione sovra gli studi di storia patria per le antiche provincie
e la Lombardia.
Passamonti, E., et al. (1926). La Rivoluzione piemontese dell’anno 1821. Torino: Regia Deputazione sovra gli studi di storia patria per le antiche provincie
e la Lombardia.
Rossi, T. and Demagistris, C. P. (eds.) (1927). La rivoluzione piemontese del 1821. Studi e documenti. Voll. I-II. Torino: Società storica subalpina.
Nada ( Nada, N. (1982). Guglielmo Moffa di Lisio 1791-1877. Il contribuito di un patriota braidese. Bra: Cassa di Risparmio di Bra.
Nada, N. (1991). Il destino degli sconfitti del 1821. In A. Mango (ed.). L’età della Restaurazione in Piemonte e i moti del 1821. Atti del convegno nazionale
di studi per la celebrazione del bicentenario della nascita di Guglielmo Moffa di
Lisio 1791-1991. Bra 12-15 novembre 1991. Savigliano: L’Artistica.
By then, however, there had already appeared the magnum opus on the 1821 Piedmontese
uprising: the meticulous work by Giorgio Marsengo and Giuseppe Parlato which, through
a painstaking examination of the existing bibliography and a systematic scrutiny of
the sources conserved in the Turin State Archive, brought to light hundreds of records
of those involved in the revolt. The work marked a turning point in studies on the
subject, not only for the structured nature of the research, but also for the attempt
to delineate causes and consequences, individual endeavours and common destinies,
social affiliations and lines of action
But in all of this the decisive constitutional question has so far been overshadowed
by two other, admittedly legitimate, questions: on the one hand, the nature of secret
societies in Piedmont, their composition and connections with the Italian sectarian
world, and, on the other, the vacillating attitude of the Prince of Carignano, Charles
Albert, a personage caught between liberal tendencies and absolutist demands. In the
first case, the historiographical question has been justified little by little by
the need to portray the social landscape of the bourgeoisie, and of the liberal nobility
of Savoy overtaken by the national discourse, as the initial nucleus of the nascent
(moderate) Risorgimento ruling class Omodeo ( Omodeo, A. (1940). La leggenda di Carlo Alberto nella recente storiografia. Torino: Einaudi.
Nada, N. (1980). Dallo Stato assoluto allo Stato costituzionale. Storia del regno di Carlo Alberto
dal 1831 al 1848. Torino: Comitato di Torino dell’Istituto per la Storia del Risorgimento italiano.
The Spanish constitution (key element not only at European level Castells ( Castells, I. (1989). La Constitución gaditana de 1812 y su proyección en los movimentos
liberales europeos del primer tercio del siglo xix. Trocadero, 1, 117-132. Available at: https://doi.org/10.25267/Trocadero.1989.i1.08 De Francesco, A. (1998). La Constitución de Cádiz en Nápoles. In J. M. Iñurritegui
and J. M. Portillo Valdés (eds.). Constitución en España: orígenes y destinos (pp. 273-286). Madrid: Centro de Estudios Políticos y Constitucionales.
Scotti Douglas, V. (2001). La Constitución de Cádiz y las Revolución italianas en Turín y Nàpoles de 1820 y 1821.
In A. G. Novales (ed.). La Revolución liberal (pp. 257-262). Madrid: Edicione del Orto.
Fernández Sarasola, I. (2002). La Constitucion española de 1812 y su proyeccion europea
e iberoamericana. Fundamentos, 2, 359-466.
Gil Novales, A. (2011). L’influsso della rivoluzione spagnola del 1820 in Italia e
in Europa. In V. Scotti Douglas (ed.). Spagna e Regno di Sardegna dal 1814 al 1860. Studi, inventari e documenti inediti
(pp. 97-127). Alessandria: Edizioni dell’Orso.
Arnabat Mata, R. (2012). El impacto europeo y americano de la proclamacíon de la constitución
de Cádiz en 1820. Trocadero, 24, 47-64. Available at: https://doi.org/10.25267/Trocadero.2012.i24.04 Rodríguez López-Brea, C. M. (2013). La constitución de Cádiz y el proceso revolucionario
el las Dos Sicilias (1820-1821). Historia Contemporánea, 47, 561-594.
Rodríguez López-Brea, C. M. (2014). El “Viva la Pepa” traspasa fronteras: los retoños
de la Constitución de Cádiz. Revista de Historiografia, 20, 115-138.
Carantoña Álvarez, F. (2014). 1820, una revolución mediterránea. El impacto en España
de los acontecimientos de Portugal, Italia y Grecia. Spagna contemporanea, 46, 21-40.
Corciulo, M. S. (2015). Ascesa e tramonto della costituzione di Cadice nel regno delle
Due Sicilie: luglio 1820-marzo 1821. In F. García Sanz, V. Scotti Douglas, R. Ugolini,
J. R. Urquijo Goitia (eds.). Cadice e oltre: costituzione, nazione e libertà. La carta gaditana nel bicentenario
della sua promulgazione (pp. 583-592). Roma: Istituto per la Storia del Risorgimento italiano.
Eastman, S. and Sobrevilla, P. (eds.) (2015). The rise of Consitutional government in the Iberian atlantic world. The impact of
the Cádiz Constitution of 1812. Tuscaloosa: The University of Alabama Press.
Romano, A. (2015). La Costituzione di Cadice nella penisola italiana: un disegno europeo?
In F. García Sanz, V. Scotti Douglas, R. Ugolini and J. R. Urquijo Goitia (eds.).
Cadice e oltre: costituzione, nazione e libertà. La carta gaditana nel bicentenario
della sua promulgazione (pp. 7-24). Roma: Istituto per la Storia del Risorgimento italiano.
Ferrando Badía ( Ferrando Badía, J. (1959). La constitucion española de 1812 en los comienzos del “Risorgimento”. Roma; Madrid: Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas.
Colombo, P. (1998). Costituzione come ideologia. Le rivoluzioni italiane del 1820-21
e la costituzione di Cadice. In J. M. Portillo Valdés, M. R. Martucci (ed.). La nazione cattolica. Cadice 1812: una costituzione per la Spagna (pp. 131-157). Manduria: Piero Lacaita Editore.
Butrón Prida, G. (2012a). La recepción de la Constitución española de 1812 en la Italia
preunitaria: Cádiz como pretexto y como bandera. Historia y Sociedad, 23, 37-54.
D’Azeglio ( D’Azeglio, M. (1988). Epistolario. Torino: Centro Studi Piemontesi.
On 31 December 1820, New Year’s Eve, members of the Piedmont Senate, of the Chamber
of Accounts, of the Turin city council, and the teaching staff of the university were
gathered, as they were every year, in the Hall of the Swiss Guards of the austere
Royal Palace of Turin. They were all ready to give the sovereign, Victor Emanuel I,
a seasonal greeting with the traditional hand-kiss
There was a moment of extreme embarrassment. The king listened in silence and then
moved on
Certainly, none of this should have given rise to thoughts of a constitution: if anything
it was an alignment with a Napoleonic past, similar to what was happening in Naples,
where many institutions established by Gioacchino Murat had been maintained, or in
the newly created Kingdom of Lombardy-Veneto, where the model of consultative monarchy
had found the right compromise between eighteenth-century Habsburg reformism and the
administration of the Kingdom of Italy under Bonaparte
Indeed, for too long a rumour had been circulating that Turin was not unsympathetic to a constitutional-representative solution. To be sure, it was not in court circles that constitutions were being discussed, but a section of the younger generation of nobles and of the Turin intelligentsia —participant in the Napoleonic administration— had nurtured a desire to bring about a radical change of government, albeit always in deference to the monarchy. They were liberals —such as Santorre di Santarosa, Luigi Provana, Luigi Ornato, Carlo Emanuele Asinari di San Marzano and Cesare Balbo (the last two, respectively sons of the foreign minister and the home affairs minister)— and they pleaded the cause for a constitutional king.
The foreign ambassadors to Turin helped to incubate this development instead of simply
observing, as Charles Albert would remark after the events of 1821. In fact, their
salons were often used as meeting places for a very numerous “society”, in which all
the liberal-thinking foreigners who travelled to Turin became involved
In short, a week after the New Year’s Day when Count Borgarelli sounded the death knells of the reformism of Prospero Balbo, the minister’s son, Cesare, again put pen to paper to write some personal reflections on the “current state of Piedmont”. It was then an unquestionable fact that there was an “expectation” of a representative constitution in Turin: no “private man”, not even “the calmest, most retiring, most alien to public matters doubted it”.
For Cesare Balbo only those in government seemed unwilling to face reality. And yet,
opinions in favour of a constitution had been clearly expressed for six months in
many written works, “not really signed, but neither désavoués by anyone, spread everywhere with amazing speed, read and approved, I don’t mean among
friends, two by two, or in secret societies or private rooms, but in public places
and in the offices and the secretariats of State, in the palace of the King”
It matters little that the action of the offenders had been more light-hearted than
political, the “preventive” military intervention ordered by Revel without consulting
Prospero Balbo, who combined the office of interior minister with that of education,
was a clear sign of schism in the king’s council: between the moderates, like Prospero
Balbo, who were calling for reform, and the reactionaries, like Revel, who were more
realistic than the king and who had been determined to quell any public order problem
for fear of revolution
In the light of the facts, on 17 January Cesare Balbo penned further considerations.
“A faction” had been born and raised in Turin that he did not know whether to call
“carbonari or something else”. The fact was that the secret societies were “widespread
in every class and condition of people” in order to promote the Spanish constitution,
the expulsion of foreigners and the unity of Italy. This had already created a dichotomy
between a constitutional, moderate party and the “faction of the Spanish constitution”
with “extreme” opinions. His conclusion ended with a question mark: “between a government
that does not see, a party that does not act, and a faction that sees and acts, who
will win?”
Young Balbo, at that time a lieutenant-colonel in the Monferrato brigade, spoke with
knowledge of the facts. He had come to know Napoleonic France well and he had also
known Spain well, becoming fascinated by it during his stay in Madrid in 1816-19
as an embassy gentleman alongside his father, who was appointed in loco minister of
the King of Sardinia
In Turin in July 1820 the doctor Michele Gastone —a native of Mondovì and one of the
most active leaders of the democratic conspiracy in northern Italy— had issued to
the “churches” of the sect spread throughout northern Italy an order to work to force
the princes to proclaim the democratic constitution of Spain already established in
Naples
Prospero Balbo was well informed about the whole scene. Thus, while the foreign minister
San Marzano, from the congress of Lubiana, became increasingly convinced of the need
to contain Piedmontese reformism so as to remove the prospect of the Holy Alliance
taking the disastrous decision to intervene militarily (as it was preparing to do
with regard to Naples), the minister of the interior, between January and February
had gone ahead, calculating that he might persuade the sovereign to concede a constitution
in order to avoid the tragedy of a revolution. This was an individual and preventive
initiative which disregarded the anti-constitutional direction of the sovereign and
his council. In collaboration with his son, Prospero Balbo began to study the English,
French, Spanish and Sicilian models. He knew that the French constitution was supported
only by nobles; that the English one (especially in the Sicilian version) had supporters
among the moderate constitutionalists; that the Spanish one, then the most promoted
in Italy partly for nationalist and anti-Austrian reasons, was the least suitable
for the Savoy court due to its “assembly” nature
The political situation within the Kingdom of Sardinia had worsened by the end of
February, when on the 28th, at Pont-de-Beauvoisin, on the Savoy-French border, a carriage belonging to Prince
Emanuele Dal Pozzo della Cisterna, a subject of Savoy, was stopped by the police.
Inside the vehicle, in which the wealthy Milanese merchant Francesco Chimelli was
travelling, were found numerous letters by Dal Pozzo and other exiles (including the
famous Luigi Angeloni) written to various members of the Piedmontese aristocracy linked
to the liberal sectarian world
Equally compromised were some of the most prominent figures of the subalpine army
and aristocracy: from the baron Ettore Perrone di San Martino, a former Napoleonic
officer Marsengo and Parlato ( Marsengo, G. and Parlato G. (1982-1986). Dizionario dei Piemontesi compromessi nei moti del 1821. Torino: Comitato di Torino dell’Istituto per la Storia del Risorgimento italiano.
Bianchi, P. (2015). Perrone, Ettore. In Dizionario biografico degli Italiani, vol. 65. Roma: Istituto della Enciclopedia Italiana. Available at: https://bit.ly/2ZldTOg Ibid.: 170.
But it was clear that the most wanted man was the Prince of Cisterna, member of one
of the richest families in Piedmont who had served Napoleon and Prince Camillo Borghese.
He was acquainted with Benjamin Constant and had close contacts with French liberals
and the Comité directeur, a close friend of Eugenio Bardají (the Spanish embassy was located in Palazzo Cisterna,
his home, in central Turin) Ibid.: 530-531.
For his part the king, on 5 March, commissioned Alessandro Saluzzo, minister of war
and former guardian of the Prince of Carignano during the years of the empire, to
sound out how real was the devotion of Charles Albert to the monarchical cause. Charles
Albert had already secretly met Giuseppe Pecchio, an authoritative Lombard members
of the Società dei Federati Marsengo and Parlato ( Marsengo, G. and Parlato G. (1982-1986). Dizionario dei Piemontesi compromessi nei moti del 1821. Torino: Comitato di Torino dell’Istituto per la Storia del Risorgimento italiano.
De Francesco, A. (2017). Santarosa, Filippo Annibale Santorre De Rossi conte di. In
Dizionario biografico degli Italiani, vol. 90. Roma: Istituto della Enciclopedia Italiana. Available at: https://bit.ly/3jV9xqD Marsengo and Parlato ( Marsengo, G. and Parlato G. (1982-1986). Dizionario dei Piemontesi compromessi nei moti del 1821. Torino: Comitato di Torino dell’Istituto per la Storia del Risorgimento italiano.
Crociani, P. (2015). Lisio, Guglielmo Gribaldi Moffa conte di. In Dizionario biografico degli Italiani, vol. 65. Roma: Istituto della Enciclopedia Italiana. Available at: https://bit.ly/37gAbp4
After the revolution, the prince himself revealed what took place at that meeting:
“they told me that they belonged to societies that had long worked for the independence
of Italy; that all the plans were close to being completed; that I had always shown
great attachment to my country, that I could have no other end than glory, and that
they hoped that I would stand alongside them to obtain from the king a slight concession
that would be but the beginning of future glory”
What is certain is that Charles Albert did not report the conspirators, but instead
merely spoke about them to the war minister, Saluzzo, who, in turn, passed on the
information to Prospero Balbo and to the minister of police, Lodi, who did not lift
a finger
The two did not take this well: by behaving this way the prince would be disgraced
in the eyes of Europe
In all this toing and froing, the constitutional question first surfaced at court
on 9 March, when Prospero Balbo went to Moncalieri and took the opportunity to consult
with the queen, Maria Teresa of Habsburg-Este. Their discussion centred around the
Spanish constitution. Shortly before the queen had lent Countess Balbo, with a request
that she show it to her husband, the widely read treatise, Sulla costituzione di Spagna, by the Swiss ultra-reactionary Karl Ludwig von Haller
But it was no longer the time for theoretical ruminations. The conspirators were ready
to act. Charles Albert managed once more to speak to Santarosa, informing him that
he had taken the necessary precautions to safeguard the king. Santarosa repeated that
the conspiracy was aimed at Austria and that Vittorio Emanuele I had nothing to fear.
But he could understand the prince’s qualms and therefore undertook to give counter-orders
to the provincial garrisons at Alessandria, Fossano and Vercelli, which had been put
on full alert. It was too late. Colonel San Michele, from Fossano, was already ready
to march on Moncalieri at the head of his regiment. And late in the evening of 9 March
at Alessandria Lieut-Colonel Guglielmo Ansaldi of the Savoia brigade Ibid.: 64.
Ibid.: 183.
Ibid.: 86.
Ibid.:19.
The rebellion was about to be mounted not in the capital, but in the main military
garrison of the kingdom: in the shadow of the citadel not far from the border with
the Lombardy-Veneto Kingdom. Charles Albert, along with the minister of war and the
governor of the capital, had a lot to do, going around the barracks to “remind officers
and soldiers of their duties to the king”. But on the same evening, at Alessandria,
Lieut-Colonel Ansaldi took the keys of the citadel from the captain who held them
by arresting the fortress commander, and the morning after, 10 March 1821, Captain
Palma with the insurgent Genoa cavalry regiment stationed in Alexandria called for
the constitution of Spain. With the tricolour raised, a governing junta was immediately
formed for the proclamation of the King of Sardinia as king of Italy and the adoption
of the Gaditan charter Comandini ( Comandini, A. (1900-1901). L’Italia nei cento anni del secolo xix giorno per giorno illustrata (1801-1825). Milano: Vallardi.
Viarengo, A. (2005). Narciso Nada (1925-2004). Rivista Storica Italiana, 5 (2), 666-678.
Livraghi, R. (2012). Ceti dirigenti e governo della città di Alessandria nel lungo Risorgimento (1798-1861).
Lama Mocogno (Mo): Almayer.
The Spanish constitution “thus made its public entrance in Piedmont following the
military uprising of the Alessandria fortress: for a little less than a month [it
would be] at the centre of subalpine political life”
Given the worsening situation, Vittorio Emanuele I returned to Turin in the evening. His council was in a permanent sitting in order to take measures about the bad news arriving from the province: not only had Carlo San Marzano moved to Vercelli in the hope of raising the local military garrison, but Santarosa and Lisio, who left Pinerolo at the head of three hundred cavalrymen and headed for Alexandria, signed and published in Carmagnola a declaration which stated that the Piedmontese army could not abandon its king to the influence of Austria. Thus, by rebelling, they were heeding the needs of the country, vowing to defend the sovereign and the honour of the crown from all enemies. After the governor of Alessandria fled, Santarosa entered the city and assumed control of the army and the national guard.
The king’s council was unable to come up with no other solution than to address the
troops through a manifesto: the Prince of Carignano gave “undoubted proof of his constant
zeal”; it was wrong to say that Austria had asked to occupy fortresses and to demobilise
part of the army; independence was secure so long as the authorities did not perceive
a threat against the monarchy; the king’s pardon was guaranteed to those who returned
immediately to barracks. The manifesto had little effect. On the morning of 11 March,
Captain Vittorio Ferrero
Apart from this episode, which marked the beginning of the revolution in the capital, Sunday 11 March, Prospero Balbo recalled, was the one and only day on which the constitution was spoken about in the Palazzo Reale.
I had always thought it very bad to let any type of concession be torn from us out
of fear, and even worse to allow any constitution to be imposed. And I felt this strongly,
at least as much as my colleagues did. But seeing violence begin in one field, and
fear in the other, and also seeing all the possibility of extremes ills and above
all fearing the Spanish constitution, I thought, among all the choices to take the
one, albeit improbable, that there was some hope of accepting instead another constitution
since all were better than that one. If I had been forced to choose, I would have
been in favour of the Sicilian constitution, which conformed to the English one, but
written in Italian and already guaranteed by England to Sicily, as in fact the English
minister had recently spoken about in parliament. For this reason this morning I gave
Mangiardi [an official in the ministry] that constitution telling him to highlight
its key points for His Majesty’s benefit
It was on the afternoon of 11 March that Prospero Balbo instructed his first secretarial officer, Melchiorre Mangiardi, to formulate a Piedmontese version of the Sicilian constitution, preparing a draft adaptation of the preamble and a draft proclamation to the subjects, in the hope that the provision would curtail the increasingly insistent demand for the Gaditan charter. Even in those hours, Queen Maria Teresa had forcefully opposed the constitution of Spain:
Quant à cette infâme constitution espagnole, je suis d’avis que quand même, en la
refusant, le Roi serait assassiné dans son fauteuil, moi avec lui et vous tous avec
nous, je persisterai à dire qu’il ne faut pas l’accorder. Ce n’est pas que j’ignore
[…] que selon les lois d’Espagne la couronne passerait à mes filles, mais une couronne
qui ne leur appartiendrait pas légitimement, une couronne déshonorée ne me tente pour
elles
Thus not even the clear advantage of overturning the Salic law that would have ensured
the passage of the crown to King Vittorio Emanuele I’s firstborn (Maria Beatrice,
wife of Duke Francesco IV of Modena) rather than to Charles Albert (who, while of
Savoy, belonged to the secondary Carignano branch), made the Gaditan constitution
more palatable for the queen. The single-chamber parliament (expression of popular
sovereignty), the limitation of sovereign prerogatives, as well as the preference
accorded to the charter by the secret societies, were elements too revolutionary for
the Sardinian sovereigns. As such, the fallback solution was that formulated by Mangiardi
on Balbo’s orders, the principal articles of which foresaw the institution of a two-chamber
parliament with legislative power, executive power and power of placet and veto for
the sovereign over parliamentary legislation, judicial autonomy, the promise of a
new code, and tolerance of religious minorities
Balbo had carried on with the work, but nothing had yet been deliberated. On the evening of 11 March there was yet another private council, that in which the queen disparaged the Spanish constitution. According to her, the king should never have to “concede” a constitution but, if anything, to “accept one”. Balbo was not of the same opinion: the verb “accept” made the person of the king subordinate to popular will. In any event, it was in that moment of grave indecision that Balbo proposed the concession of a constitution on the English model. Vittorio Emanuele I gave his assent, inviting the interior minister to produce a draft of the preamble.
But there was considerable constitutional confusion in the council: only the governor
Revel knew that the English constitution was “not written, that is, not compiled all
in a body”. Thus the question of the best solution was once again debated. Balbo advanced
the proposal of granting the Sicilian charter, whereas Vittorio Emanuele I relaunched
the idea of the ancient constitution of the island of Sardinia, which called for periodic
meetings of three “stamenti” (on the model of the States General). The council, however, had doubts about a solution
considered “too gothic”, even though Balbo maintained it could be viable if brought
up to date, since the constitution “had the great advantage of not being either new
or foreign or dictated by others, but already known and observed by the king in an
important part of his states”
It was at that very time, when Vittorio Emanule I was about to sign the edict, that the coup de théâtre happened: San Marzano had returned from Lubiana and asked for an immediate audience. There was total silence as he related what he had heard at the congress of the Holy Alliance: the substance was that the powers would not tolerate revolutions or constitutions of any sort in Italy, and the Austrians already had dozens of battalions on a war footing. This news was enough to prompt the shelving of plans for a constitution since the priority was now that of stifling internal rebellions to avert foreign invasion. But that intention was overtaken by events. While on the morning of 12 March a new proclamation was published by the king placing responsibility on the insurgents for any intervention by the Holy Alliance, which would never have recognised the constitutional movement, the citadel of Turin mutinied. Three canon shots rang out from the fort at one in the afternoon. The three hundred soldiers barricaded within had pronounced themselves in favour of revolution. Commander Des Geneys, who had opposed them, was killed. The Carbonara flag (red, light blue and black), was raised above the ramparts.
Charles Albert was sent to parley with the rebels, who shouted in his face “war against
Austria and Spanish constitution!”. And on his way back, he was surrounded by excited
crowds shouting “long live the constitution!” The cavalry charged the throng, mortally
wounding a woman
It was too much. At midnight Victor Emmanuel I abdicated: in the absence of the heir
—his brother Charles Felix was en route to Modena— he irrevocably renounced the Crown,
appointing his “beloved cousin” Charles Albert as regent of the states. In those hours,
two conspirators belonging to the Società dei Federati presented themselves at Palazzo
Carignano to ask the prince for the proclamation of the constitution of Spain. The
outgoing Balbo, before taking his leave, dispensed lapidary advice: “Three things
I recommend above all: do not accept that constitution; try at all costs to retake
the citadel of Turin; then that of Alessandria”
When it came, 13 March was a chaotic day. With Victor Emmanuel I and his family having
left under escort for Nice, the Kingdom of Sardinia became a powder keg. In Ivrea
the magistrate Alerino Palma di Cesnola, the principal local exponent of the Società
dei Federati, led the revolt that resulted in the proclamation of the Gaditan charter,
on the same day publishing an appeal entitled Friends of the Spanish Constitution!
At that point the twenty-two-year-old Charles Albert had no choice left. After having played for time with a proclamation calling for public peace and order, and now under siege from the crowd and under pressure from the Turin council, he agreed to promulgate the Spanish constitution. On the evening of that fateful day he sent out another manifesto in which, submitting to the will of the new sovereign, Charles Felix, to whom the throne was devolved, and waiting to learn of his intentions as to any change of the fundamental laws of the kingdom, he acted as interpreter of the people who had loudly declared their preference for “a Constitution in keeping with the one in force in Spain”.
In essence, the Gaditan charter would be promulgated and observed as the law of the
state only after those “modifications, which the national Representation, as one with
Your Majesty, [would] deliberate”
Io Carlo Alberto di Savoia, reggente del regno, investito d’ogni autorità al momento
dell’abdicazione di Sua Maestà il Re Vittorio Emanuele, giusta la dichiarazione nostra
dei tredici del corrente mese giuro a Dio, e sopra i Sacrosanti Evangeli di osservare
la Costituzione Politica Spagnuola sotto le due seguenti modificazioni essenziali,
ed inerenti alla condizione di questo regno, analoghe al voto generale della nazione,
ed accettate fin d’ora dalla Giunta Provvisoria cioè: Primo. Che l’ordine della successione
al Trono rimarrà quel egli si trova stabilito dalle antiche Leggi, e consuetudini
di questo Regno, e dai pubblici trattati. Secondo. Che osserverò, e farò osservare
la Religione Cattolica, Apostolica, Romana, che è quella dello Stato, non escludendo
però quell’esercizio di altri culti che fu permesso in sino ad ora; e di più sotto
quelle altre modificazioni, che verranno dal Parlamento Nazionale d’accordo con Sua
Maestà il Re ulteriormente determinate. Giuro altresì di essere fedele al Re Carlo
Felice, così Iddio mi aiuti Ibid.: 1119.
The constitution of Spain thus became a reality in the Savoy monarchy, with only two
changes harking back to tradition as well as others to be determined by the king and
the parliament in the future. Thus on 16 march the royal printers officially published
the text, including the variations. Charles Felix, still in Modena, was informed of
the grave decision taken by the regent in a letter delivered by the squire Sylvain
Costa de Beauregard. Disgusted, he tore up the letter and threw it in the messenger’s
face. He immediately dictated a manifesto for publication in the states of the kingdom,
giving notice that he had first to verify the abdication of his brother and that he
was far from allowing any change in the form of the pre-existing government, and that
he declared “null and void any act of sovereign competence” not signed by Vittorio
Emanuele I or himself Costa de Baeauregard ( Costa de Beauregard, C. A. (1880). Prologue d’un règne. La jeunesse du Roi Charles-Albert. Paris: Plon.
The regent tried to gain time by issuing another proclamation on the 18th, in which he stated that he was working to “enlighten His Majesty […] about the desires
of his people”, given that “His Majesty [was not] fully informed of the situation
of things in his Royal Domains: a natural thing in his absence”
There was no more room for manoeuvre. So, after having appointed the recognised leader of the insurrectional movement, Santorre di Santarosa, minister of war, on the evening of 21 March Charles Albert left the capital as Charles Felix had commanded. He had wanted to place himself at the head of the loyalist troops in order to regain the trust of the king, to act as an intermediary between the monarchy and the rebels, and to appear as the saviour of the country in the face of Austrian prevarication. But he was not given this chance: instead he had to give up the regency, and on 29 March Charles Felix ordered him to leave the kingdom and travel to the court of his father-in-law, Ferdinand III of Habsburg-Lorraine, in Florence. Thereafter, in the power vacuum, the provisional junta under the presidency of Canon Marentini and the government headed by Santarosa remained the revolution’s sole authorities. They kept the Gaditan constitution as an emblem, despite not being able to act according to the principles it embodied. The charter, moreover, had been applauded on 22 March in Genoa, when the city rebelled by forming a municipal constitutional council.
But it was now the endgame. Determined to fight to the end, on 7 April the few remaining
rebel ranks arrived under the walls of Novara. The next day the loyalist troops began
to bombard the constitutionalists, while the Austrians, having crossed the Ticino,
began to pursue them. In disarray, the rebels took the road to Liguria. Santarosa,
before fleeing, prepared a large number of passports, and the governor of Genoa, Des
Geneys, fearing the gathering of the revolutionaries but the arrival of the Austrians
even more, withdrew enough money from the finance management’s cash desk to hire nineteen
ships, allowing hundreds of the fugitives to embark and set sail for Marseille. Having
arrived in that port, the wealthiest made their way to Paris, while the poorer majority
asked to continue to Barcelona in the hope of enlisting in the Spanish constitutional
army
Many would re-encounter Charles Albert on the battlefields of 1823, but the prince
would no longer be on their side. Having left together with the Hundred Thousand Sons
of Saint Louis commanded by the Duke of Angoulême, Charles Albert became the hero
of the assault on the Trocadero and thus reacquired political respectability in the
eyes of the European powers. Once the torchbearer of the constitutionalists, the Prince
of Carignano ended up being the champion of the Restoration. This volte-face inspired
the poet and patriot Giovanni Berchet to write the romantic poem Clarina: “Esecrato, o Carignano, va il tuo nome in ogni gente! Non v’è clima sì lontano ove
il tedio, lo squallor, la bestemmia d’un fuggente non ti annunzi traditor” Berchet ( Berchet, G. (1830). Poesie. Londra: Taylor.
Despite the fact that the Piedmont revolution of 1821 lasted only about a month, it
rightly takes its place as a fundamental chapter of the nineteenth-century history
of the Kingdom of Sardinia, and, in a broader perspective, of the history of the Risorgimento.
The event already has an important historiographic tradition behind it, albeit one
that has yet to answer many questions. If nothing else, it has been crystallised in
the collective imaginary in different, not to say opposite ways: on the one hand as
a coup d’état carried out hastily and inexpertly, and on the other hand as the first
tangible result of the world of secret societies ramified throughout Europe, the first
uprising that would eventually upset the balance of the Holy Alliance. There remains
the fact of the over 3,800 people involved; but, as Giuseppe Parlato has observed,
it is still difficult today to “establish what the real character of the insurrection
was”. There are those who denigrated the uprisings, “belittling them as an impossible
dream of winning power by some young and somewhat spoiled nobles,” and those that
who have fit them into the framework of oleography “representing these uprisings as
the first certain and conscious sign of the next, unstoppable national revival”. The
conclusion —Parlato continues— is that both these positions have over time given the
uprisings a local dimension, turning them “into a phenomenon of exclusive or preponderant
Piedmontese interest”
Of course, there is a local element, if only because of the different nature of the
uprisings that broke out in the provinces or in the capital: from Alessandria, where
the touch-paper was lit, a garrison border city that had entered the Savoy orbit only
at the beginning of the eighteenth century and was characterised by the presence,
besides the military, of a very strong property-owning, intellectual bourgeoisie intent
on obtaining more political power for itself within the state
The constitution had then become a banner beneath which opposing factions stood: from the moderates, oriented towards a French or English solution, to the democrats, determined advocates of the Spanish one. But the Piedmontese uprising as a whole demonstrates how deep-seated, bitter and irresolvable was the constitutional confrontation. On one side was the king’s council, where many had no knowledge of the various constitutions (apart from the Gaditan charter, considered an absolute evil), and on the other the revolutionary sects, for which the Spanish constitution, little understood despite the publicity effort of ambassador Bardají, and which, following the shock wave of the events in Spain and Naples in particular, was reduced to more of a slogan than a genuine creed. As Pene Vidari has noted, the transplanting of the Constitution of Cadiz - in its Neapolitan variant with the few modifications added by Carlo Alberto - into the Savoy system of the period proved impossible for three different reasons:
Firstly, it set its mythicised concept of a romantic-national “break” at not only
the local or Italian but also continental level against the legitimist system of government
of post-Napoleonic Europe, to which the Savoy government was aligned. Secondly, therefore,
the harsh reaction of the “concert” of the great powers of the time developed, in
which the intransigence of Austria and Russia in Lubiana gained them the green light
not only of Prussia but also of France and England. Thirdly, there was the objection
of the principal branch of the House of Savoy against a constitutional regime, especially
a Gaditan one, towards which the main political and military force of the Piedmontese
Masonic, Carbonari and sectarian contingent had directed its constitutional demands,
overriding the efforts of some young members of the Piedmontese nobility - and initially
Santorre di Santa Rosa himself - to obtain a different constitutional solution, generally
based on the English one and mostly mediated through the Sicilian one
The Piedmontese uprisings of 1821 were therefore a failure, which resulted in the
unleashing of exacerbated absolutist politics and police activity. It was, however,
also a european turning point, the demonstration —together with the revolts in Spain,
Portugal and the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies— that the restored governments could
no longer survive without Austria’s intervention. And there was more. The insurrections,
even if the masses steered clear of taking part, did not give rise to the creation
of royalist movements; that being so, absolute governments could no longer hope for
the fanatical support of the populace, as they had done in 1799. Finally, while the
gunpowder had been supplied by the military, there had then been broad support by
the middle classes: “who had thus offered indisputable evidence of their aversion
to the restored governments”
The Piedmontese authority would have done everything, at the time of the judgment,
to understate the participation of the bourgeois classes, thus avoiding giving political
and ideological publicity to the insurrection. The objective was to promote the idea
of an all-military mutiny, like the revolt that had broken out in Spain the previous
year, in order to make the European powers, and in particular Austria, believe that
it had been merely a gesture by a few exalted young people, without no real outcome,
who, for glory and prestige, had played at sparking off a revolution Bistarelli ( Bistarelli, A. (2011), Gli esuli del Risorgimento. Bologna: Il Mulino.
Isabella, M. (2011). Risorgimento in esilio. L’internazionale liberale e l’età delle rivoluzioni. Roma: Laterza.
Brice, C. and Aprile S. (eds.) (2013). Exil et fraternité en Europe au XIXesiècle. Pompignac près Bordeaux: Bière.
Díaz, D., Moisand, J., Sánchez, R. and Simal J. L. (eds.) (2015). Exils entre les deux mondes. Migrations et espaces politiques atlantiques au XIXe
siècle. Rennes: Les Perséides.
Pulvirenti, C. M. (2017). Risorgimento cosmopolita. Esuli in Spagna tra rivoluzione e controrivoluzione 1833-1839.
Milano: Franco Angeli.
De Fort, E. (2015). Da terra di persecuzioni a terra di asilo: il Piemonte e l’emigrazione
politica dalla rivoluzione del 1821 al Quarantotto. In F. Ieva (ed.). Il Piemonte risorgimentale nel periodo preunitario. Roma: Viella.
Ambroggio, G. (2007). Santorre di Santarosa nella Restaurazione piemontese. Torino: Pintore. |
|
Arnabat Mata, R. (2012). El impacto europeo y americano de la proclamacíon de la constitución de Cádiz en 1820. Trocadero, 24, 47-64. Available at: https://doi.org/10.25267/Trocadero.2012.i24.04. |
|
Balbo, C. (1847). Studii sulla guerra d’indipendenza di Spagna e Portogallo. Torino: Stamperia sociale degli artisti tipografi. |
|
Benedetto, M. A. (1951). Aspetti del movimento per le costituzioni in Piemonte durante il Risorgimento. Torino: Giappichelli. |
|
Berchet, G. (1830). Poesie. Londra: Taylor. |
|
Bianchi, P. (2015). Perrone, Ettore. In Dizionario biografico degli Italiani, vol. 65. Roma: Istituto della Enciclopedia Italiana. Available at: https://bit.ly/2ZldTOg. |
|
Bistarelli, A. (2011), Gli esuli del Risorgimento. Bologna: Il Mulino. |
|
Brice, C. and Aprile S. (eds.) (2013). Exil et fraternité en Europe au XIXesiècle. Pompignac près Bordeaux: Bière. |
|
Butrón Prida, G. (2006). Nuestra sagrada causa: el modelo gaditano en la revolucion piamontesa de 1821. Cadiz: Fundacion Municipal de Cultura. |
|
Butrón Prida, G. (2012a). La recepción de la Constitución española de 1812 en la Italia preunitaria: Cádiz como pretexto y como bandera. Historia y Sociedad, 23, 37-54. |
|
Butrón Prida, G. (2012b). La inspiración española de la revólucion piamontesa de 1821. Historia Constitucional, 13, 73-97. |
|
Carantoña Álvarez, F. (2014). 1820, una revolución mediterránea. El impacto en España de los acontecimientos de Portugal, Italia y Grecia. Spagna contemporanea, 46, 21-40. |
|
Castells, I. (1989). La Constitución gaditana de 1812 y su proyección en los movimentos liberales europeos del primer tercio del siglo xix. Trocadero, 1, 117-132. Available at: https://doi.org/10.25267/Trocadero.1989.i1.08. |
|
Cavicchioli, S. (2017). I sequestri piemontesi del 1821 e il principe Emanuele Dal Pozzo della Cisterna. Mélanges de l’École française de Rome. Italie et Méditerranée modernes et contemporaines, 129 (2), 399-411. Available at: https://doi.org/10.4000/mefrim.3219. |
|
Colombo, P. (1998). Costituzione come ideologia. Le rivoluzioni italiane del 1820-21 e la costituzione di Cadice. In J. M. Portillo Valdés, M. R. Martucci (ed.). La nazione cattolica. Cadice 1812: una costituzione per la Spagna (pp. 131-157). Manduria: Piero Lacaita Editore. |
|
Colombo, P. (2003). Con lealtà di re e affetto di padre. Torino, 4 marzo 1848: la concessione dello Statuto albertino. Bologna: Il Mulino. |
|
Comandini, A. (1900-1901). L’Italia nei cento anni del secolo xix giorno per giorno illustrata (1801-1825). Milano: Vallardi. |
|
Corciulo, M. S. (2015). Ascesa e tramonto della costituzione di Cadice nel regno delle Due Sicilie: luglio 1820-marzo 1821. In F. García Sanz, V. Scotti Douglas, R. Ugolini, J. R. Urquijo Goitia (eds.). Cadice e oltre: costituzione, nazione e libertà. La carta gaditana nel bicentenario della sua promulgazione (pp. 583-592). Roma: Istituto per la Storia del Risorgimento italiano. |
|
Costa de Beauregard, C. A. (1880). Prologue d’un règne. La jeunesse du Roi Charles-Albert. Paris: Plon. |
|
Crociani, P. (2015). Lisio, Guglielmo Gribaldi Moffa conte di. In Dizionario biografico degli Italiani, vol. 65. Roma: Istituto della Enciclopedia Italiana. Available at: https://bit.ly/37gAbp4. |
|
D’Azeglio, M. (1988). Epistolario. Torino: Centro Studi Piemontesi. |
|
De Fort, E. (2015). Da terra di persecuzioni a terra di asilo: il Piemonte e l’emigrazione politica dalla rivoluzione del 1821 al Quarantotto. In F. Ieva (ed.). Il Piemonte risorgimentale nel periodo preunitario. Roma: Viella. |
|
De Francesco, A. (1998). La Constitución de Cádiz en Nápoles. In J. M. Iñurritegui and J. M. Portillo Valdés (eds.). Constitución en España: orígenes y destinos (pp. 273-286). Madrid: Centro de Estudios Políticos y Constitucionales. |
|
De Francesco, A. (2017). Santarosa, Filippo Annibale Santorre De Rossi conte di. In Dizionario biografico degli Italiani, vol. 90. Roma: Istituto della Enciclopedia Italiana. Available at: https://bit.ly/3jV9xqD. |
|
Díaz, D., Moisand, J., Sánchez, R. and Simal J. L. (eds.) (2015). Exils entre les deux mondes. Migrations et espaces politiques atlantiques au XIXe siècle. Rennes: Les Perséides. |
|
Dionisotti, C. (1881). Storia della magistratura piemontese. Torino: Roux e Favale. |
|
Durelle-Marc, Y. A. (2009). Jean-Denis Lanjuinais, juriste et parlamentaire (1753-1827). Parlement[s]. Revue d’histoire politique, 11 (1), 8-24. Available at: https://doi.org/10.3917/parl.011.0008. |
|
Eastman, S. and Sobrevilla, P. (eds.) (2015). The rise of Consitutional government in the Iberian atlantic world. The impact of the Cádiz Constitution of 1812. Tuscaloosa: The University of Alabama Press. |
|
Fernández Sarasola, I. (2002). La Constitucion española de 1812 y su proyeccion europea e iberoamericana. Fundamentos, 2, 359-466. |
|
Ferrando Badía, J. (1959). La constitucion española de 1812 en los comienzos del “Risorgimento”. Roma; Madrid: Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas. |
|
Fiorini, V. (ed.) (1900). Gli scritti di Carlo Alberto sul moto piemontese del 1821. Roma: Società editrice Dante Alighieri. |
|
Gentile, P. (2011). I diplomatici sardi in Spagna. In V. Scotti Douglas (ed.). Spagna e Regno di Sardegna dal 1814 al 1860. Studi, inventari e documenti inediti (pp. 157-170). Alessandria: Edizioni dell’Orso. |
|
Gentile, P. (2013). Alla corte di Re Carlo Alberto. Personaggi, cariche e vita a palazzo nel Piemonte risorgimentale. Torino: Centro Studi Piemontesi-Fondazione “Filippo Burzio”. |
|
Gentile, P. (2015). 1814. Genova e i giochi della diplomazia: dalla repubblica restaurata all’annessione al Piemonte. In G. Assereto and C. Bitossi (eds.). Genova-Torino. Quattro secoli di incontri e scontri, nel bicentenario dell’annessione della Liguria al regno di Sardegna. Genova: Società ligure di Storia Patria. |
|
Gentile, P. (2016). I moti studenteschi del 1821 a Torino: storia, interpretazione, miti. Annali di storia delle Università italiane, 20 (2), 103-130. |
|
Gil Novales, A. (2011). L’influsso della rivoluzione spagnola del 1820 in Italia e in Europa. In V. Scotti Douglas (ed.). Spagna e Regno di Sardegna dal 1814 al 1860. Studi, inventari e documenti inediti (pp. 97-127). Alessandria: Edizioni dell’Orso. |
|
Haller, C. L. v. (1821). Sulla costituzione di Spagna. Torino: Pomba. |
|
Isabella, M. (2011). Risorgimento in esilio. L’internazionale liberale e l’età delle rivoluzioni. Roma: Laterza. |
|
Lanjuinais, J. D. (1820). Vues politiques sur les changemens à faire à la constitution de l’Espagne à la fin de la consolider spécialement dans le royame de Deux-Siciles. Paris: Baudouin. |
|
Lemmi, F., Egidi, P., Segre, A., Bornate, C. and Luzio, A. (1923). La rivoluzione piemontese dell’anno 1821. Torino: Regia Deputazione sovra gli studi di storia patria per le antiche provincie e la Lombardia. |
|
Livraghi, R. (2012). Ceti dirigenti e governo della città di Alessandria nel lungo Risorgimento (1798-1861). Lama Mocogno (Mo): Almayer. |
|
Lo Faso di Serradifalco, A. (2016). Una storia oscurata. Piemonte 1813-1821. Torino: Centro Studi Piemontesi. |
|
Marsengo, G. and Parlato G. (1982-1986). Dizionario dei Piemontesi compromessi nei moti del 1821. Torino: Comitato di Torino dell’Istituto per la Storia del Risorgimento italiano. |
|
Nada, N. (1965). Roberto d’Azeglio. Roma: Istituto per la Storia del Risorgimento italiano. |
|
Nada, N. (1972a). Per una nuova storia dei moti del 1821. Studi Piemontesi, 1 (1), 144-160. |
|
Nada, N. (1972b). I moti piemontesi del 1821. Rivista della Guardia di Finanza, 21 (2), 167-198. |
|
Nada, N. (1980). Dallo Stato assoluto allo Stato costituzionale. Storia del regno di Carlo Alberto dal 1831 al 1848. Torino: Comitato di Torino dell’Istituto per la Storia del Risorgimento italiano. |
|
Nada, N. (1982). Guglielmo Moffa di Lisio 1791-1877. Il contribuito di un patriota braidese. Bra: Cassa di Risparmio di Bra. |
|
Nada, N. (1984a). Significato politico e riflessi diplomatici della pubblicazione de Le mie prigioni. In A. A. Mola (ed.). Saluzzo e Silvio Pellico nel 150° de Le mie prigioni, atti del convegno di studio, Saluzzo, 30 ottobre 1984 (pp. 23-30). Torino: Centro Studi Piemontesi. |
|
Nada, N. (1984b). Santorre di Santa Rosa modello dell’eroe romantico. Bollettino della Società di Studi storici, archeologici e artistici della Provincia di Cuneo (atti del convegno: Santorre di Santa Rosa, Savigliano, 5 maggio 1984), 91 (2), 5-12. |
|
Nada, N. (1991). Il destino degli sconfitti del 1821. In A. Mango (ed.). L’età della Restaurazione in Piemonte e i moti del 1821. Atti del convegno nazionale di studi per la celebrazione del bicentenario della nascita di Guglielmo Moffa di Lisio 1791-1991. Bra 12-15 novembre 1991. Savigliano: L’Artistica. |
|
Nada, N. (1993). Il Piemonte sabaudo dal 1814 al 1861. In P. Notario, N. Nada. Il Piemonte sabaudo. Dal periodo napoleonico al Risorgimento (pp. 97-476).Torino: UTET. |
|
Omodeo, A. (1940). La leggenda di Carlo Alberto nella recente storiografia. Torino: Einaudi. |
|
Omodeo, A. (1955). Difesa del Risorgimento. Torino: Einaudi. |
|
Passamonti, E., et al. (1926). La Rivoluzione piemontese dell’anno 1821. Torino: Regia Deputazione sovra gli studi di storia patria per le antiche provincie e la Lombardia. |
|
Passamonti, E. (1926). Cesare Balbo e la rivoluzione del 1821 in Piemonte. In E. Passamonti, A. Luzio, M. Zucchi (eds.). La rivoluzione piemontese dell’anno 1821. Nuovi documenti (pp. 5-319). Torino: Regia Deputazione sovra gli studi di storia patria per le antiche provincie e la Lombardia. |
|
Passamonti, E. (1927). Prospero Balbo e la rivoluzione del 1821 in Piemonte. In T. Rossi and C. P. Demagistris. La rivoluzione piemontese del 1821. Studi e documenti, vol. II (pp. 190-348). Mondovì: Società Tipografica Monregalese. |
|
Pene Vidari, G. S. (2015). La costituzione di Cadice in Piemonte. In F. García Sanz, V. Scotti Douglas, R. Ugolini and J. R. Urquijo Goitia (eds.). Cadice e oltre: costituzione, nazione e libertà. La carta gaditana nel bicentenario della sua promulgazione (pp. 559-582). Roma: Istituto per la Storia del Risorgimento italiano. |
|
Pes di Villamarina, E. (1972). La révolution piémontaise de 1821 ed altri scritti. Torino: Centro Studi Piemontesi. |
|
Portmann-Tinguely, A. (2007). Karl Ludwig von Haller. In Dizionario storico della Svizzera. Available at: https://bit.ly/3alb6uQ. |
|
Pulvirenti, C. M. (2017). Risorgimento cosmopolita. Esuli in Spagna tra rivoluzione e controrivoluzione 1833-1839. Milano: Franco Angeli. |
|
Ratti, G. (1982). Collegno, Giacinto Ottavio Provana di. In Dizionario biografico degli Italiani, vol. 26. Roma: Istituto della Enciclopedia Italiana. Available at: https://bit.ly/3u0XRr7. |
|
Ricotti, E. (1856). Della vita e degli scritti del conte C. Balbo, rimembranze. Firenze: Le Monnier. |
|
Rodríguez López-Brea, C. M. (2013). La constitución de Cádiz y el proceso revolucionario el las Dos Sicilias (1820-1821). Historia Contemporánea, 47, 561-594. |
|
Rodríguez López-Brea, C. M. (2014). El “Viva la Pepa” traspasa fronteras: los retoños de la Constitución de Cádiz. Revista de Historiografia, 20, 115-138. |
|
Romagnani, G. P. (1990). Prospero Balbo intellettuale e uomo di Stato (1762-1837). Vol. II, Da Napoleone a Carlo Alberto (1800-1837). Torino: Deputazione Subalpina di Storia Patria. |
|
Romano, A. (2015). La Costituzione di Cadice nella penisola italiana: un disegno europeo? In F. García Sanz, V. Scotti Douglas, R. Ugolini and J. R. Urquijo Goitia (eds.). Cadice e oltre: costituzione, nazione e libertà. La carta gaditana nel bicentenario della sua promulgazione (pp. 7-24). Roma: Istituto per la Storia del Risorgimento italiano. |
|
Rossi, T. and Demagistris, C. P. (eds.) (1927). La rivoluzione piemontese del 1821. Studi e documenti. Voll. I-II. Torino: Società storica subalpina. |
|
Sabbatucci, G. and Vidotto, V. (2009). Storia contemporanea. L’Ottocento. Roma: Laterza. |
|
Scotti Douglas, V. (2001). La Constitución de Cádiz y las Revolución italianas en Turín y Nàpoles de 1820 y 1821. In A. G. Novales (ed.). La Revolución liberal (pp. 257-262). Madrid: Edicione del Orto. |
|
Scotti Douglas, V. (ed.) (2011). Spagna e Regno di Sardegna dal 1814 al 1861. Studi, inventari e documenti inediti. Alessandria: Edizioni dell’Orso. |
|
Späth, J. (2012). Revolution in Europa 1820-23. Verfassung und Verfassungskultur in den Königreichen Spanien, beider Sizilien und Sardinien-Piemont. Köln: shVerlag. |
|
Soresina, M. (2015). L’età della Restaurazione, 1815-1860: gli Stati italiani dal Congresso di Vienna al crollo. Milano: Mimesis. |
|
Spini, G., (1950). Mito e realtà della Spagna nelle rivoluzioni italiane del 1820-21. Roma: Perrella. |
|
Stern, A. (1895-1896). Memoria del duca Dalberg al conte Prospero Balbo per una Costituzione piemontese. Il Risorgimento italiano, 1, 638-642. |
|
Talamo, G. (1977). Carlo Alberto. In Dizionario biografico degli Italiani, vol. 20. Roma: Istituto della Enciclopedia Italiana. Available at: https://bit.ly/2LVqrZO. |
|
Talamo, G. (2000). Società segrete e gruppi politici liberali e democratici sino al 1848. In U. Levra (ed.). Storia di Torino. La città nel Risorgimento (pp. 461-492). Torino: Einaudi. |
|
Torta, C. (1908). La rivoluzione piemontese nel 1821. Roma: Società editrice Dante Alighieri. |
|
Viarengo, A. (2005). Narciso Nada (1925-2004). Rivista Storica Italiana, 5 (2), 666-678. |
|
Zucchi, M. (1927). I moti del 1821 nelle memorie inedite di Alessandro Saluzzo. In T. Rossi and C. P. Demagistris (eds). La rivoluzione piemontese del 1821. Studi e documenti, I (pp. 420-542). Torino: Società storica subalpina. |