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CARLO GIUSEPPE GUGLIELMO BOTTA (1766–1837) , See also: Italian historian, was See also: born at See also: San Giorgio Canavese in Piedmont
.
He studied See also: medicine at the university of See also: Turin, and obtained his See also: doctor's degree when about twenty years of age
.
Having rendered himself obnoxious to the See also: government during the See also: political commotions that followed the French Revolution, he was imprisoned for over a See also: year; and on his See also: release in 1795 he withdrew to See also: France, only to return to his native country as a surgeon in the French army, whose progress he followed as far as Venice
.
Here he joined the expedition to Corfu, from which he did not return to See also: Italy till 1798
.
At first he favoured French policy in Italy, contributed to the annexation of Piedmont by France in 1799, and was an admirer of See also: Napoleon; but he afterwards changed his views, realizing the See also: necessity for the union of all Italians and for their freedom from See also: foreign control
.
After the separation of Piedmont from France in 1814 he retired into private See also: life, but, fearing persecution at home, became a French citizen
.
In 1817 he was appointed rector of the university of See also: Rouen, but in 1822 was removed owing to clerical influence
.
Amid all the vicissitudes of his early manhood Botta had never allowed his See also: pen to be long idle, and in the political quiet that followed 1816 he naturally devoted himself more exclusively to literature
.
In 1824 he published a See also: history of Italy from 1789 to 1814 (4 vols.), on which his fame principally rests; he himself had been an eyewitness of many of the events described
.
His continuation of See also: Guicciardini, which he was afterwards encouraged to undertake, is a careful and laborious See also: work, but is not based on See also: original authorities and is of small value
.
Though living in See also: Paris he was in both these See also: works the ardent exponent of that recoil against everything French which took place throughout See also: Europe
.
A careful exclusion of all Gallicisms, as a reaction against the French influences of the See also: day, is one of the marked features of his See also: style, which is not infrequently impassioned and eloquent, though at the same See also: time cumbrous, involved and ornate
.
Botta died at Paris in See also: August 1837, in See also: comparative poverty, but in the enjoyment of an extensive and well-earned reputation
.
His son, See also: Paul Emile Botta (1802-1870), was a distinguished traveller and See also: Assyrian archaeologist, whose excavations at See also: Khorsabad (1843) were among the first efforts in the See also: line of investigation afterwards pursued by See also: Layard
.
The works of Carlo Botta are Storia naturale e medica dell' Isola di Corfu (1798) ; an Italian See also: translation of Born's Joannis Physiophili specimen monachologiae (1801); Souvenirs d'un voyage en Dalmatie (18o2); Storia della guerra dell' Independenza d'See also: America (1809) ; Camillo, a poem (1815); Storia d'Italia dal 1789 al 1814 (1824, new ed., See also: Prato, 1862); Storia d'Italia in continuazione al Guicciardini (1832, new ed., Milan, 1878)
.
See C
.
Dionisiotti, Vita di Carlo Botta (Turin, 1867) ; C
.
Pavesio, Carlo Botta e le sue opere storiche (Florence, 1874) ; Scipione Botta, Vita private di Carlo Botta (Florence, 1877) ; A. d'See also: Ancona e O
.
Bacci, Manuela della Letteratura Italiana (Florence, 1894), vol
.
V. pp
.
245 seq
.
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