Online Encyclopedia

MARQUIS FERDINANDO BARTOLOMMEI

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Originally appearing in Volume V03, Page 451 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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MARQUIS FERDINANDO BARTOLOMMEI  (1821-1869);
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Italian revolutionist and statesman, who played an important
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part in the
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political events of Tuscany from 1848 to 186o . From the beginning of the revolutionary
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movement Bartolommei was always an ardent Liberal, and although belonging to an old and noble Florentine
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family his sympathies were with the democratic party rather than with the moderately liberal aristocracy . In 1847–1848 his house was a centre of revolutionary committees, and during the brief constitutional regime he was much to the fore . After the return of the
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grand duke Leopold II. in 1849 under
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Austrian
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protection, Bartolommei was
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present at a
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requiem service in the church of
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Santa Croce for those who fell in the
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late
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campaign against Austria; on that occasion disorders occurred and he was relegated to his country estate in consequence (1851) . Shortly afterwards he was implicated in the distribution of seditious literature and exiled from Tuscany for a
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year . He settled at
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Turin for a time and established relations with Cavour and the Piedmontese liberals . He subsequently visited France and England, and like many Italian patriots became enamoured of
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British institutions . He returned to Florence in 1853; from that time onward he devoted himself to the task of promoting the ideas of Italian independence and unity among the
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people, and although carefully watched by the police, he kept a secret printing-press in his palace in Florence . Finding that the
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nobility still hesitated at the idea of uncompromising hostility to the house of
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Lorraine, he allied himself more firmly with the popular party, and found an able
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lieutenant in the baker Giuseppe Dolfi (1818–1869), an honest and whole-hearted enthusiast who had
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great influence with the
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common people . As soon as war between Piedmont and Austria appeared imminent, Bartolommei organized the expedition of Tuscan
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volunteers to join the Piedmontese army, spending large sums out of his own
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pocket for the purpose, and was also president of the Tuscan branch of the Societd Nazionale (see under LA FARINA and CAVOUR) . He worked desperately hard conspiring for the overthrow of the grand duke, assisted by all the liberal elements, and on the 27th of
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April 1859, Florence rose as one man, the troops refused to fire on the people, and the grand duke departed, never to return . Sapristi 1 pas un carreau casse 1 was the comment of the French minister to Tuscany on this bloodless revolution .

A provisional

government was formed and Bartolommei elected gonfaloniere . He had much opposition to encounter from those who still believed that the retention of the grand duke as a constitutional
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sovereign and member of an Italian confederation was possible . In the summer elections were held, and on the meeting of parliament Bartolommei's unitarian views prevailed, the assembly voting the
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resolution that the house of Lorraine had forfeited its rights and that Tuscany must be
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united to Italy under King Victor Emmanuel . Bartolommei was made senator of the Italian
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kingdom and received various other honours . His last years were spent in educational and philanthropic
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work . He died on the 15th of
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June 1869, leaving a widow and two daughters . The best biography of Bartolommei is contained in Il Rivolgimento Toscano e 1'azione popolare, by his daughter Matilde Gioli (Florence, 1905), but the author attributes perhaps an undue preponderance to her
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father in the Tuscan revolution, and is not quite
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fair towards Bettino Ricasoli (q.v.) and other leaders of the aristocratic party . Cf . Lettere e documents di B . Ricasoli (Florence, 1887-1896), and D . Zanichelli's Lettere politiche di B . Ricasoli, U .

Peruzzi, N .
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Corsini, e C . Ridolfi (Bologna, 1898) .

End of Article: MARQUIS FERDINANDO BARTOLOMMEI
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