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CARLO FILANGIERI (1784–1867) , See also: prince of Satriano, Neapolitan soldier and statesman, was the son of Gaetano Filangieri (1752-1788), a celebrated philosopher and jurist
.
At the age of fifteen he decided on a military career, and having obtained an introduction to See also: Napoleon See also: Bonaparte, then first See also: consul, was admitted to the Military See also: Academy at See also: Paris
.
In 1803 he received a commission in an See also: infantry regiment, and took See also: part in the See also: campaign of 18o5 under General Davoust, first in the Low Countries, and later at See also: Ulm, Maria Zell and See also: Austerlitz, where he fought with distinction, was wounded several times and promoted
.
He returned to Naples as captain on See also: Massena's staff to fight the Bourbons and the Austrians in 1806, and subsequently went to See also: Spain, where he followed See also: Jerome Bonaparte in his retreat from See also: Madrid
.
In consequence of a fatal duel he was sent back to Naples; there he served under See also: Joachim See also: Murat with the See also: rank of general, and fought against the Anglo-Sicilian forces in See also: Calabria and at See also: Messina
.
On the fall of Napoleon he took part in Murat's campaign against See also: Eugene Beauharnais, and later in that against See also: Austria, and was severely wounded at the See also: battle of the Panaro (1815)
.
On the restoration of the Bourbon See also: king
See also: Ferdinand IV
.
(I.), Filangieri retained his rank and command, but found the army utterly disorganized and impregnated with Carbonarism
.
In the disturbances of 182o he adhered to the Constitutionalist party, and fought under General
See also: Pepe (q.v.) against the Austrians
.
On the re-establishment of the autocracy he was dismissed from the
service, and retired to Calabria where he had inherited the princely title and estates of Satriano
.
In 1831 he was recalled by Ferdinand II. and entrusted with various military reforms
.
On the outbreak of the troubles of 1848 Filangieri advised the king to See also: grant the constitution, which he did in
See also: February 1848, but when the Sicilians formally seceded from the Neapolitan See also: kingdom Filangieri was given the command of an armed force with which to reduce the See also: island to obedience
.
On the 3rd of See also: September he landed near Messina, and after very severe fighting captured the city
.
He then advanced southwards, besieged and took See also: Catania, where his troops committed many atrocities, and by May 1849 he had conquered the whole of See also: Sicily, though not without much bloodshed
.
He remained in Sicily as governor until 1855, when he retired into private See also: life, as he could not carry out the reforms he desired owing to the hostility of Giovanni Cassisi, the See also: minister for Sicily
.
On the See also: death of Ferdinand II
.
(22nd of May 1859) the new king See also: Francis II. appointed Filangieri premier and minister of war
.
He promoted See also: good relations with See also: France, then fighting with Piedmont against the Austrians in See also: Lombardy, and strongly urged on the king the See also: necessity of an See also: alliance with Piedmont and a constitution as the only means whereby the dynasty might be saved
.
These proposals being rejected, Filangieri resigned office
.
In May 186o, Francis at last promulgated the constitution, but it was too See also: late, for See also: Garibaldi was in Sicily and Naples was seething with See also: rebellion
.
On the advice of Liborio Romano, the new See also: prefect of police, Filangieri was ordered to leave Naples
.
He went to See also: Marseilles with his wife and subsequently to Florence, where at the instance of General La Marmora he undertook to write an account of the See also: Italian army
.
Although he adhered to the new See also: government he refused to accept any dignity at its hands, and died at his See also: villa of See also: San Giorgio a Cremano near Naples on the 9th of See also: October 1867
.
Filangieri was a very distinguished soldier, and a See also: man of See also: great ability; although he changed sides several times he became really attached to the Bourbon dynasty, which he hoped to save by freeing it from its reactionary tendencies and infusing a new spirit into it
.
His conduct in Sicily was severe and harsh, but he was not without feelings of humanity, and he was an honest man and a good See also: administrator
.
His biography has been written by his daughter Teresa Filangieri See also: Fieschi-Ravaschieri, Il Generale Carlo Filangieri (Milan, 1902), an interesting, although somewhat too laudatory See also: volume based on the general's own unpublished See also: memoirs; for the Sicilian expedition see V
.
Finocchiaro, La Rivoluzione siciliana del 1848–49 (Catania, 1906, with bibliography), in which Filangieri is bitterly attacked; see also Under NAPLES; FERDINAND IV.; FRANCIS I.; FERDINAND II.; FRANCIS II
.
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