???? Vincenzo Gioberti – Definition and Explanations

2023-10-17 05:39:04

Introduction

Vincenzo Gioberti

Portrait

Birth April 4, 1801
Turin Death October 26, 1852
Paris Nationality Kingdom of Sardinia Profession(s) Priest, philosopher and man (A man is an adult male individual of the species called Modern man (Homo…) politics Main activity(ies) Theorists and actors of the Risorgimento

Vincenzo Gioberti, born in Turin on April 4, 1801 and died in Paris on October 26, 1852, is an Italian philosopher and politician He is one of the theorists and actors of the Risorgimento.

Biography

Ordained priest in 1825, Vincenzo Gioberti was a professor at the University of Turin (in Italian, Università degli studi di Torino, abbreviated…) then chaplain to Charles Albert, heir to the throne of Sardinia. He sympathized with Mazzini’s Giovine Italia movement, of which he was a collaborator under the pseudonym Demophile. These sympathies led to his being imprisoned for four months (Le mois (From lat. mensis “months”, and formerly plural “menses”) “) is a period of time…) in Turin, then he had to go into exile (1834) in Paris then in Brussels.

In his book Primato morale e civil degli Italiani, published in 1843, he proposed the formation of a confederation of Italian states under the presidency of the Pope. This is the neo-Guelfist theory. Pius IX nicknamed him the Father of the Fatherland. This theory had an immense influence in circles favorable to the unification of Italy (the risorgimento). In 1848, taking advantage of the revolutionary situation, he returned to Turin. He was elected deputy for Genoa (Genoa (Genova in Italian, Zena in Ligurian) is an Italian city, capital of Liguria,…) and Turin. He became president of the Chamber of Deputies of the Kingdom of Sardinia, then Minister of Public Education (The Ministry of Public Education is the name given to the current Ministry of…). On December 16, 1848, King Charles Albert appointed him prime minister. Overtaken by the left wing of his coalition, he resigned on March 29, 1849. The new king Victor-Emmanuel II appointed him extraordinary ambassador to Paris, where he tried without success to obtain an intervention from the French republic in favor of the Italy. In his work Del rinnovamento sociale d’Italia (1849), he supports the idea that the House of Savoy should take the head of the movement for the unification of Italy. The attacks it contains once morest Pope Pius IX cause him to be blacklisted.

On other Wikimedia projects:

Vincenzo Gioberti on Wikimedia Commons (Wikimedia Commons (often called Commons) is an online media library.) (multimedia resources) Vincenzo Gioberti on Wikisource (Wikisource is a multilingual digital library project, supported by Wikimedia…) (universal library) Vincenzo Gioberti on Wikiquote (collection of quotes) Presidents of the Italian Chamber of Deputies (Italian is the name commonly used for the rope used to operate a reel….) Kingdom of Sardinia Gioberti (1848-1848) | Pareto (1848-1849) | Pinelli (1849-1852) | Rattazzi (1852-1853) | Bon Compagni di Mombello (1853-1856) | Cadorna (1857-1857) | Bon Compagni di Mombello (1857-1858) | Rattazzi (1859-1860) | Lanza (1860-1860) Royaume d’Italie Rattazzi (1861-1862) | Tecchio (1862-1863) | Cassinis (1863-1865) | Mari (1865-1867) | Lanza (1867-1868) | Mari (1868-1869) | Lanza (1869-1869) | Biancheri (1870-1876) | Crispi (1876-1877) | Cairoli (1878-1878) | Farini (1878-1880) | Coppino (1880-1880) | Farini (1880-1884) | Coppino (1884-1884) | Biancheri (1884-1892) | Zanardelli (1892-1894) | Biancheri (1894-1895) | Villa (1895-1897) | Zanardelli (1897-1897) | Biancheri (1898-1898) | Zanardelli (1898-1899) | Chinaglia (1899-1899) | Colombo (Colombo (in Cingalais: කොළඹ, prononcé…) (1899-1900) | Gallo (1900-1900) | Villa (1900-1902) | Biancheri (1902-1904) | Marcora (1904-1906) | Biancheri ( 1906-1907) | Marcora (1907-1919) | Orlando (1919-1920) | De Nicola (1920-1924) | Rocco (1924-1925) | Casertano (1925-1929) | Giuriati (1929-1934) | Ciano ( 1934-1939) | Grandi (1939-1943) Consulta Nazionale Sforza (1945-1946) Assemblée Constituante Saragat (1946-1947) | Terracini (1947-1948) République italienne Gronchi (1948-1955) | Leone (1955-1963) | Bucciarelli-Ducci (1963-1968) | Pertini (1968-1976) | Ingrao (1976-1979) | Iotti (1979-1992) | Scalfaro (1992-1992) | Napolitano (1992-1994) | Pivetti (1994-1996) | Violante (1996-2001) | Casini (2001-2006) | Bertinotti (2006-2008) | Fini (2008-)
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