{"id":1275,"date":"2026-03-29T11:35:37","date_gmt":"2026-03-29T09:35:37","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/ruffodicalabria.it\/origin\/il-cardinale-fabrizio-ruffo-di-bagnara"},"modified":"2026-03-29T12:12:33","modified_gmt":"2026-03-29T10:12:33","slug":"cardinal-fabrizio-ruffo-di-bagnara","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/ruffodicalabria.it\/en\/origin\/cardinal-fabrizio-ruffo-di-bagnara","title":{"rendered":"Cardinal Fabrizio Ruffo di Bagnara"},"content":{"rendered":"\n<p><em>by Giovanni Ruffo<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Ten years ago (<strong>1995<\/strong>) I wrote for the journal <em>Calabria letteraria<\/em> the article reproduced here, to which I have now added several updates in the light of newly acquired evidence.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In past years I had been encouraged by the late <strong>Director Frangella<\/strong> to revise and update the article, which had pleased him.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Director <strong>Frangella<\/strong> is no longer with us, and I believe I honor his memory by following the advice he gave me so many years ago.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>I offer this updated article to the new Director, <strong>Franco Del Buono<\/strong>, together with my wishes for serene and fruitful work. He is certainly worthy of his distinguished predecessor.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In barely another lustrum it will be <strong>two hundred years<\/strong> since <strong>Fabrizio Ruffo of Bagnara<\/strong>, <strong>Cardinal of the Order of Deacons of the Holy Roman Church<\/strong>, has awaited from history an act of justice: that he be finally freed from the falsehoods and partisan fabrications\u2014at every period suggested and nourished by the political climate of the moment or influenced by the milieu from which they arose\u2014which turned him into the leader of brigand bands who, after obtaining the capitulation of <strong>Naples<\/strong>, drowned in blood the last gasp of liberty of the republican patriots.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Whether his cause was just or unjust, he has that right.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In truth, history rehabilitated him long ago. Yet there are still people in the world of culture who have never accepted that rehabilitation and who, in judging him, continue to rely almost as if they were Gospel on the writings of <strong>Cuoco<\/strong>, <strong>Botta<\/strong>, and <strong>Colletta<\/strong>. These authors, who even when writing history were unable to rise above the emotions derived from their position as contemporaries and participants belonging to the camp of the defeated, wrote the most infamous things about the Cardinal. Today, when archival consultation is possible even with limited effort, it is easy for anyone unwilling to accept the rehabilitation carried out by Italian and foreign historians to conduct specific research and reopen the case, should new and historically reliable documentary evidence emerge.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>Vincenzo Cuoco<\/strong>, a scholar of literature, philosophy, and economics, was exiled from <strong>Naples<\/strong> for having adhered to the <strong>Republic<\/strong>. During the French domination he returned to Naples in <strong>1806<\/strong>, where he held high offices, which he retained even after the return of the <strong>Bourbons<\/strong>. Among other works, he wrote in <strong>1800<\/strong> the <em>Historical Essay on the Neapolitan Revolution of 1799<\/em>. The falsehoods, insults, and atrocities he attributed to <strong>Fabrizio Ruffo<\/strong> may be partly explained, though not justified, by his inability to verify the information being reported to him. Moreover, communication was so difficult that news of the progress of the <strong>Sanfedist expedition<\/strong> reached Naples only when those troops had already arrived at <strong>Nola<\/strong>, in other words at the gates of the city. <strong>Cuoco<\/strong> himself wrote this on p. <strong>263<\/strong> of the second edition of his book (<strong>1806<\/strong>), in which, admitting that he had written only on the basis of his own memories, he could not avoid revising some of his earlier assertions, though only with regard to certain events.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>Carlo Botta<\/strong>, a Piedmontese, was a military doctor attached to the French armies. He was a politician and the author of three historical works. In one of them, <em>History of Italy from 1789 to 1814<\/em>, he did no better than join the partisans in the chorus of slanderous lies to which those contemporaries of the Cardinal resorted when writing of his enterprise. In the opinion of historians, the work suffers from the lack of direct information and is devoid of critical judgment. In it, <strong>Botta<\/strong> reproduced almost word for word what <strong>Cuoco<\/strong> had written.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>Pietro Colletta<\/strong> was a general of the Neapolitan army. In <strong>1799<\/strong> he adhered to the <strong>Republic<\/strong>, but when the monarchy was restored he returned to the service of the <strong>Bourbons<\/strong>. He later passed into the service of the <strong>French<\/strong> during the decade of their rule over the <strong>Kingdom of Naples<\/strong>. During that period he was, among other things, judge in famous political trials. In his <em>History of the Kingdom of Naples<\/em>\u2014a work universally acknowledged to be not only partisan but also of limited scientific value\u2014he confirms his animosity and prejudice by presenting <strong>Fabrizio Ruffo<\/strong> in terms that are openly defamatory, insulting, and false. He wrote of him in these words:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>\u201cFabrizio Ruffo, born of noble but corrupt stock, cunning by nature, ignorant of science and letters, dissolute in youth, lascivious in old age, poor in household, a squanderer, took in his green years the rich and easy road of prelacies. He pleased Pope Pius VI, from whom he obtained the highest office in the Papal Camera; but, because of too many and too sudden gains, having lost office and favor, he returned wealthy to his homeland, leaving in Rome powerful friends, acquired, as in a corrupt city, through gifts and the blandishments of fortune.\u201d<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Of a different opinion from <strong>Colletta<\/strong> and from the two other authors mentioned above were other Neapolitans, scrupulous students of the history of that time, such as <strong>Benedetto Croce<\/strong>, <strong>Raffaele Palumbo<\/strong>, and <strong>Benedetto Maresca<\/strong>, who shed light upon and placed in proper perspective the events and the persons involved in the drama that bloodied <strong>Naples<\/strong> at the end of the <strong>eighteenth century<\/strong>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>But how did <strong>Fabrizio Cardinal Ruffo<\/strong> come into being, and who was he really?<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>He belonged to a branch of the most ancient <strong>House of the Ruffo di Calabria<\/strong>: the line of the <strong>Dukes of Baranello<\/strong> and <strong>Princes of Sant\u2019Antimo<\/strong>, who in <strong>1799<\/strong> became <strong>Dukes of Bagnara<\/strong>, owing to the extinction of the principal branch.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>Fabrizio Ruffo<\/strong> was born at <strong>San Lucido<\/strong>, a barony of his family, on <strong>16 September 1744<\/strong>, to <strong>Duke Letterio Ruffo<\/strong> and <strong>Giustina Colonna<\/strong>, <strong>Princess of Spinoso<\/strong>, <strong>Marchioness of Guardia Perticara<\/strong>, and <strong>Lady of Accetturo and Gorgoglione<\/strong>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Since I must say something about the education received by the child <strong>Fabrizio<\/strong>, I consider it useful to quote what <strong>Abbot Domenico Sacchinelli<\/strong> wrote, ten years after the Cardinal\u2019s death, in <em>Historical Memoirs on the Life of Cardinal Fabrizio Ruffo<\/em>, because he records an episode that may help explain the interest later shown by <strong>Pope Pius VI<\/strong> toward <strong>Cardinal Fabrizio<\/strong>:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>\u201cHe had not yet completed his fourth year when he was brought to Rome to be educated there under the protection of his uncle (in truth his great-uncle, being the brother of his grandfather Paolo), Cardinal Tommaso Ruffo, then Dean of the Sacred College. Present at that Cardinal\u2019s court, in the capacity of auditor, was the Prelate Giovanni Angelo Braschi of Cesena, who, in order to caress little Fabrizio, took him onto his knees. Fabrizio wished to play with Braschi\u2019s beautiful hair: he tried several times to unfasten the ringlets, but was always carefully prevented from doing so; at last, annoyed by that obstacle stronger than his own powers, he struck him on the cheek with his little childish hand\u2014a slap of which there will be occasion to speak.<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>The loving care of Cardinal Tommaso for Fabrizio\u2019s education and studies was not without great effect. He far surpassed the expectations held of his sublime talents; and while still young had already acquired a reputation for great learning in philosophy, and especially in the physical sciences and in political economy; and thus he left behind in the illustrious Collegio Clementino, in which he spent several years as a pupil, the same great renown as his uncle Cardinal Tommaso had left there, a man most worthy of the Papal Tiara, as Muratori calls him in his annals.<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>When Giovanni Angelo Braschi ascended to the Chair of Saint Peter under the name of Pius VI, he had not forgotten the slap he had received, and often, in a tone of benevolence, would mention it to Fabrizio. That sovereign benevolence did not remain inactive; for, both through Fabrizio\u2019s personal merit and through gratitude to the memory of Cardinal Tommaso, the Holy Father did not delay in appointing him first Clerk of the Camera and then Treasurer General of Rome, which at that time\u2014let this be said for those who may not know it\u2014was the most conspicuous and important office in the Papal State; for in Rome the Treasurer possessed those same functions which in other kingdoms are divided among the ministers of finance, the interior, war, and the navy.\u201d<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Regarding this appointment as <strong>Treasurer<\/strong>, the Austrian <strong>Baron von Helfert<\/strong>, who studied with great meticulousness all that had been written on the <strong>revolution and counter-revolution of 1799<\/strong>, wrote in his book <em>Fabrizio Ruffo&#8230;<\/em>:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>\u201cIn that office Ruffo not only carried out a number of measures useful to the general public, but also brought into order the entire system of papal finance.\u201d<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>And further:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>\u201cNo doubt the firmness with which he carried those measures into effect did not fail to bring him disfavor; a great part of the privileged classes was angry with him for having diminished ancient feudal rights; smugglers hated and cursed him because the new customs regulations ruined their trade [&#8230;] Yet the breadth of his knowledge was admirable; writings of his survive on springs and waterworks, on the habits of different species of pigeons, on the movements of militias, on the equipment of cavalry. The Romans as a whole had more reason to be grateful to him than to mock him; his name is linked to institutions whose beneficial effectiveness still endures to this day. No one could attack him in the integrity of his public character. Even his adversaries were compelled to do him justice, and to confess that whatever he undertook he knew how to bring to completion with rare energy and unquestioned ability.\u201d<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The prudence and capacity of <strong>Treasurer Ruffo<\/strong> were such that <strong>Pope Pius VI<\/strong> proposed to him that he find a way to strengthen and render economically productive agriculture in the <strong>State of Castro<\/strong> and the <strong>Duchy of Ronciglione<\/strong>. The agrarian reform carried out by <strong>Ruffo<\/strong> raised the income from those lands from <strong>50,200 scudi<\/strong> to <strong>67,200<\/strong>. But the chief beneficiaries were the peasants, to whom the lands were granted in <em>perpetual emphyteusis in the male line, continuing through the males of the last female of each emphyteuta<\/em>. The Pope was so pleased that he wished to extend this reform to the whole <strong>Papal State<\/strong>. These reforms, which in practice abolished feudal abuses, were appreciated all the more because they had been conceived and put into practice by a <strong>Cardinal<\/strong> belonging to one of the most illustrious families of the <strong>Neapolitan nobility<\/strong>, itself rich in fiefs. The agrarian reform and the opportunities for well-being it granted the peasants, however, won him the hostility of the <strong>feudal nobility<\/strong> and the great landowners. Yet in every circumstance his sense of the State and his awareness that a minister must always act in order to safeguard the higher interest of the Nation gave him the strength to rise above opportunistic considerations and the courage to oppose whatever he believed unjust and harmful to the common good. In this regard, the anonymous author of the <em>History of the House of Ruffo<\/em> wrote in <strong>1873<\/strong>:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>\u201c&#8230;his fame was so popular that he is still celebrated as a model treasurer, a great economist, a man of magnanimous plans and of grand and beneficial works.\u201d<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>As a man, his nature was humane and generous. <strong>Sacchinelli<\/strong> and <strong>von Helfert<\/strong> recount an episode confirming the sensitivity of his soul. One day, while visiting the hydraulic works for draining the <strong>Pontine Marshes<\/strong>, and wandering alone into the forest in pursuit of game, the Cardinal saw a laborer struck down by malaria. He loaded the man onto his own shoulders and carried him a long way along the path to his carriage. He took him to <strong>Rome<\/strong>, to the <strong>Hospital of Santo Spirito<\/strong>, where he had him treated at his own expense.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>Colletta<\/strong> wrote that the Cardinal left the office of Treasurer a rich man. <strong>Sacchinelli<\/strong> did not share that view, for he wrote in turn:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>\u201cRuffo\u2019s disinterestedness and spotless conduct in the exercise of the rich office of Treasurer recalled to Rome the ancient heroes of history. In that very office in which others, from poor men, became rich in a short time, he, after many years in its exercise, had not formed for himself a fund sufficient to cover the indispensable expenses of the cardinalitial attire. He was therefore forced to borrow money at interest, pledging, with prior pontifical brief, the properties of the Ruffo prebend.\u201d<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Nor did <strong>von Helfert<\/strong> say anything different on this point:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>\u201cRaised to the cardinalate in the Consistory of 29 September 1791, Ruffo left his post as Treasurer, which had enabled his predecessors to amass great wealth, and left it empty-handed, so much so that he had to contract a loan in order to cover the first expenses of his new dignity.\u201d<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>I must, however, point out an error in this assertion by <strong>von Helfert<\/strong>. It is true that <strong>Ruffo\u2019s<\/strong> nomination to the cardinalate dates from <strong>29 September 1791<\/strong>\u2014one of those nominations then called <em>in pectore<\/em>\u2014but it is equally true that it was made public only on <strong>21 February 1794<\/strong>, and that <strong>Ruffo<\/strong> continued to exercise the office of <strong>Treasurer General<\/strong> and the other functions entrusted to him throughout <strong>1792<\/strong> and <strong>1793<\/strong>, and for part of <strong>1794<\/strong>. This serves as clear proof that the Pope did not make him a Cardinal, as <strong>Colletta<\/strong> claimed, in order to remove him from Rome and from the office of Treasurer: when <strong>Fabrizio Ruffo<\/strong> left the offices of government and Rome, he had already been a <strong>Cardinal for three years<\/strong>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>It remains to clarify the origin of <strong>Fabrizio Ruffo<\/strong> from <em>\u201cnoble but corrupt stock\u201d<\/em> and the claim that he was <em>\u201cignorant of science and letters,\u201d<\/em> as <strong>Pietro Colletta<\/strong> wrote.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>To the first assertion of <strong>Colletta<\/strong>, <strong>Alexandre Dumas<\/strong> replied:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>\u201cHis birth, therefore, as may be seen, was not only noble but illustrious. Indeed there is an Italian proverb which, in indicating the foremost principles of nobility in the various lands, says: The Apostles in Venice, the Bourbons in France, the Colonnas in Rome, the Sanseverinos in Naples, and the Ruffos in Calabria. Now it has been seen that the Cardinal was Ruffo by his father and Colonna by his mother.\u201d<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Corrupt stock! This now brings to my mind what historians wrote of <strong>Fulcone Ruffo di Calabria<\/strong>, poet and glorious soldier, beloved of that great Emperor <strong>Frederick II<\/strong>; or of <strong>Fabrizio Ruffo<\/strong>, Prior of <strong>Bagnara<\/strong> and Grand Prior of <strong>Capua<\/strong>, Captain General of the Hospitaller fleet, victor together with <strong>Morosini<\/strong> at the <strong>battle of Candia<\/strong>, who with skill and great valor saved at <strong>Zoclaria<\/strong>, near <strong>Canea<\/strong>, the bulk of the Venetian and French naval forces already overwhelmed by the Turks; or of <strong>Gaetano Ruffo<\/strong>, himself a poet and a shining figure of patriotism, who, yearning for the unity of Italy, watered the soil of <strong>Calabria<\/strong> with his young blood; or, to come to our own times, what was written about <strong>Fulco Ruffo di Calabria<\/strong>, the <em>\u201cKnight of the Sky,\u201d<\/em> hero and gold medal recipient of the <strong>War of 1915\u20131918<\/strong>. But General <strong>Pietro Colletta<\/strong> evidently did not know history, nor did he live long enough to know the martyrdom of <strong>Gaetano<\/strong> and the heroism of the last <strong>Fulco<\/strong>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>To the third assertion\u2014<em>\u201cignorant of science and letters\u201d<\/em>\u2014our own age is answered by <strong>Mario Casaburi<\/strong> in his biographical work <em>Cardinal Fabrizio Ruffo<\/em> (<strong>Rubbettino Editore<\/strong>).<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Writing of the studies of the young <strong>Fabrizio<\/strong> at the exclusive <strong>Collegio Clementino<\/strong>, <strong>Casaburi<\/strong> gives the following information:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>\u201c[&#8230;] The fathers also encouraged among the pupils a healthy spirit of emulation. It was considered very useful in the various classes to have each month \u2018some private or public scholastic exercise so that all may be practiced in recitation and each school may have its own honor through the progress of the students.\u2019 The language of use for pupils and masters could only be Latin.<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>Without doubt, that of the Clementino was an environment congenial to Fabrizio\u2019s character, and for fully twelve years he absorbed with extraordinary effectiveness all that was taught to him.<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>The young man soon overcame the understandable initial trauma; he was already accustomed to being away from home, far from parents, brothers, and sisters, and in a short time he became an outstanding element, a leader, of the Clementino, capable of imposing himself upon all and of distinguishing himself among his companions through intelligence, practical decisiveness, and above all through the great love he nurtured for the Latin and Greek classics [&#8230;]\u201d<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>When <strong>King Ferdinand IV<\/strong> learned that <strong>Ruffo<\/strong> was free of office at the <strong>Papal Court<\/strong>, he invited him to transfer to <strong>Naples<\/strong>, offering him the <strong>Intendancy of Caserta<\/strong> and the rich abbey of <strong>Santa Sofia of Benevento<\/strong>, declared to be under royal patronage and, for that very reason, contested by the papal government. Having obtained authorization from the Pope, the Cardinal moved to <strong>Caserta<\/strong> and devoted himself to the silk factories and manufactures of the colony of <strong>San Leucio<\/strong>, bringing them in a few years to a level of production never previously attained. Immersed in his studies, he lived at Caserta until <strong>1799<\/strong>, dreaming\u2014or perhaps even foreseeing\u2014future <em>\u201ctimes and occasions for action.\u201d<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The last decade of the <strong>eighteenth century<\/strong> found the <strong>Kingdom of Naples<\/strong> in disastrous economic condition. Trade was stagnant, industry nearly paralyzed, and agriculture oppressed by absurd and complicated laws. The poorest classes were overtaxed, while the wealthier classes enjoyed fiscal privilege.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>From the moment the Queen, the Austrian <strong>Maria Carolina<\/strong>, by virtue of the birth of the heir apparent, entered into the government\u2014as provided for in the marriage contract\u2014power had passed into her hands and into those of <strong>General Acton<\/strong>, whom the Queen had summoned to <strong>Naples<\/strong> in <strong>1778<\/strong>. The King, more inclined to pleasures than to the cares of the Kingdom, which he detested, intervened in affairs of state only in order to endorse a reckless foreign policy, which led the country first to free itself from Spanish tutelage only to fall under Austrian and then English influence, the latter driving it into conflict with <strong>France<\/strong>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>By then the <strong>Kingdom<\/strong> was entirely in the hands of the so-called <em>\u201cEnglish party,\u201d<\/em> with <strong>Acton<\/strong> as Prime Minister, <strong>Lord Hamilton<\/strong> as English ambassador\u2014whose wife enjoyed the favors of the Queen (and of <strong>Nelson<\/strong>)\u2014and with that Admiral, together with his fleet, in the harbor of <strong>Naples<\/strong>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In <strong>1793<\/strong> the Neapolitan army numbered <strong>36,000 men<\/strong>\u2014in truth half of them poorly disciplined and ill-trained foreigners\u2014and the navy <strong>102 warships<\/strong> of various classes, armed with <strong>618 cannon<\/strong> and manned by <strong>8,600 sailors<\/strong>. On <strong>12 July<\/strong> of that year, Prime Minister <strong>Acton<\/strong> and <strong>Lord Hamilton<\/strong> had the King sign an alliance treaty with <strong>England<\/strong>. This treaty placed the Neapolitan nation among those powers that held command of the <strong>Mediterranean<\/strong>. In spite of that armament\u2014whose cost contributed not a little to the grave impoverishment of the Nation\u2014and that treaty with the English, the Neapolitan government did not dare react and accepted French demands when <strong>Admiral La Touche<\/strong> appeared in the harbor of Naples with a squadron of <strong>14 French warships<\/strong> to impose, under threat of cannon, recognition of the republican government of <strong>France<\/strong>, which the King had earlier refused to recognize.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The years that followed were unhappy for the Neapolitans. The police, in attempting to restrain and control the discontent more or less openly displayed by certain social strata, sowed terror through indiscriminate arrests, which the tribunals turned into severe sentences, and capital punishments were numerous. There had been the ill-fated war with <strong>France<\/strong> and the armistice of <strong>May 1796<\/strong>, imposed by <strong>Napoleon<\/strong>, victorious on Italian soil. But peace lasted little, and another disastrous war against France ended in a peace bought at a dear price and obtained on humiliating terms.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The year <strong>1798<\/strong> saw the troops of <strong>Napoleon<\/strong> in <strong>Rome<\/strong>, the proclamation of the <strong>Roman Republic<\/strong>, and the eighty-year-old <strong>Pope Pius VI<\/strong> driven into exile. He, a prisoner at <strong>Valence<\/strong>, died on <strong>29 August 1799<\/strong>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In the first six months of <strong>1798<\/strong>, the Sicilian coasts suffered raids by the French fleet; but after the resounding naval victory won by <strong>Admiral Nelson<\/strong> in <strong>August<\/strong> of that same year at <strong>Aboukir<\/strong>, a new wind of courage arrived at the Court of <strong>Naples<\/strong>. But by then the fate of the Kingdom of Naples was already sealed. With the French army at its gates and the English within its walls, its independence was only apparent, and there was even the concrete danger that the oldest kingdom of the peninsula might disappear forever. Opposing French and English interests, in the absence of a wise foreign policy\u2014one that might perhaps have had a happy outcome in earlier years\u2014aimed at keeping the Nation neutral in a war in which it occupied an important strategic position, had transformed the Kingdom into a land to be conquered.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Domestic policy had been no wiser. The finances of the State, as has been said, were gravely weakened. The people were weary, and the higher social classes bewildered and divided. Intellectuals and the <strong>lazzari<\/strong>\u2014the name which the Spaniards, during their rule, had given to the poorest and most destitute\u2014 the former decimated, the latter inflamed by the regime of persecution of the preceding years, now seemed ready to confront one another. Aristocrats and bourgeois were uncertain whom to support in order to defend their property. English interests and intrigues, so authoritatively represented within the government, had brought the country to the threshold of civil war, when the victorious French troops persuaded the Court to abandon <strong>Naples<\/strong> for <strong>Palermo<\/strong>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The transfer took place aboard the English ship <strong>Vanguard<\/strong>, while <strong>Nelson<\/strong> sank the Neapolitan ships in the harbor; it was said, so that they should not fall into enemy hands. The departure of the royals took place at <strong>8:30 p.m. on 21 December 1798<\/strong>, and had all the character of a true flight.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>A month later, on <strong>23 January 1799<\/strong>, General <strong>Championnet<\/strong> entered <strong>Naples<\/strong>, and the <strong>Neapolitan Republic<\/strong> was officially proclaimed. Strange destiny, that of this newborn Republic, which in those days inflamed the noblest and most distinguished Neapolitan minds, yet was destined, as it certainly was, sooner or later to yield to the prodigious ambition of power of the new French Caesar, to Spanish claims, or to English interests.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The <strong>English<\/strong> and the <strong>Spaniards<\/strong>, from time immemorial, did not love republics; and <strong>Napoleon<\/strong>, while creating them, was already showing signs of preferring monarchies himself. He demonstrated this in fact barely ten months later, when on <strong>18 November 1799<\/strong> he became <strong>First Consul<\/strong>, upon the ashes of the <strong>Directory<\/strong> and the <strong>Council of Five Hundred<\/strong>. From that moment not only did he create no more republics, but within a few years he would crown himself Emperor and transform into monarchies those few republics he had created, choosing kings from within his own family.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>Benedetto Croce<\/strong>, in the preface to his <em>The Neapolitan Revolution of 1799<\/em>, wrote:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>\u201c[&#8230;] if the Neapolitan republicans had possessed full awareness of the situation, and had followed the instinct of their own preservation, only one line of conduct presented itself, simple and direct: to do to the French what, shortly afterwards, the French, when their own interest required it, felt no scruple in doing to them: abandon them and come to terms with their own Sovereigns.<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>Fortunately, the patriots of Naples were great idealists and poor politicians. No one thought of betraying the French and reaching an understanding with the Sovereigns; very many, selfless lovers of the Republic, were ready to defend it to the utmost, whatever might happen. Thus they kept their tottering Republic standing, even after the departure of the French army, amid boundless illusions and meager results, bold intentions and inadequate means: a life oscillating between comedy and tragedy, until at last the latter prevailed. The Republic fell. But if the patriots of Naples, through their idealism, their obstinacy, and their lack of political sense, went to certain ruin, it was these same facts and circumstances that saved the fruit of their work. In history, immense is what might be called the efficacy of the unsuccessful experiment, especially when there is added to it the consecration of a heroic fall.\u201d<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>On <strong>14 January 1799<\/strong>, <strong>Cardinal Fabrizio Ruffo<\/strong> arrived in <strong>Palermo<\/strong>. The reasons that detained him in Naples for a full three weeks are not known. The oral tradition of the <strong>House of Bagnara<\/strong> maintained that <strong>Fabrizio<\/strong>\u2014who had strongly advised the King against transferring the court to Palermo (and documentary evidence of this in fact exists), a transfer that he considered an unnecessary, shameful, and in any case premature flight\u2014remained in Naples in order to evaluate the possibility of reorganizing at least part of the army, now left without command, and of opposing the weak French invasion forces. His brother <strong>Francesco<\/strong> reached <strong>Palermo<\/strong> even later, together with General <strong>Pignatelli<\/strong>, who by royal mandate should have defended Naples. Both were arrested at the moment of landing, but released the following day after <strong>Pignatelli<\/strong> presented justifications that the King deemed valid.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Oral tradition cannot be granted the force of historical document; I have reported it here only because the same thesis was maintained by other authors.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The Cardinal found the Court at <strong>Palermo<\/strong> immersed in an atmosphere of discouragement and fear. The King seemed to flee from the tragic reality, resigned and absent. The Queen, whose only hope of salvation rested in <strong>Admiral Nelson<\/strong>, wrote in those days to her confidante <strong>Lady Hamilton<\/strong>: <em>\u201chere we are all more dead than alive.\u201d<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>Piero Bargellini<\/strong>, in his novel <em>Fra Diavolo<\/em>, thus described the court environment in those first weeks of exile:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>\u201cOnly one figure, whom we have never yet named, moved about the court with a face in which there was neither cowardice nor indolence. He was fifty-five years old: his long hair, prematurely whitened, curled over his ears almost by nature. In his pale face were set two blazing Calabrian eyes. A long nose and a sealed mouth. His clothing was all black and tightly buttoned, with a cross upon his breast and, on his left shoulder, a red mantle: a prince of the Church. [&#8230;] He was Cardinal Fabrizio Ruffo, born in Calabria, educated in Rome by the canon of Cesena who, under the name of Pius VI, would die a prisoner at Valence. Far from being ignorant, as has unjustly been written of him, he had devoted himself to the science of the age\u2014political economy\u2014maintaining even in his writings a sense of realism and balance that the \u2018abstract speculators,\u2019 as he himself calls the unhappy enlighteners, did not possess.<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>Having displeased the feudal lords through the emphyteutic reform\u2014which would later be attributed solely to Leopold of Tuscany\u2014having displeased speculators through freedom of trade\u2014which would later be attributed solely to the revolutionaries\u2014having damaged smugglers and their protectors through customs reforms, he was dismissed from Rome [&#8230;]. Ill-regarded by Minister Acton, despised by Admiral Nelson, mocked by the King, who, as we have seen, had little sympathy for clerical dress, ignored by the Queen, who dreamed either of philosophers ruling states or generals conducting wars, Fabrizio Ruffo was scarcely tolerated in the palace at Naples. But in Palermo, in misfortune, that serene face and those eyes in the depths of which the fire of hope never seemed to go out began to acquire a new fascination. And that fascination increased when, not even twenty days after the Kingdom had been lost, it was learned that he was already thinking of reconquest.\u201d<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Armed with a royal diploma naming him <strong>Vicar General of the Kingdom<\/strong>, <strong>Fabrizio Ruffo<\/strong> moved to <strong>Messina<\/strong>, and from there embarked and landed in <strong>Calabria<\/strong> on the morning of <strong>Friday, 8 February 1799<\/strong>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Regarding the beginning of the Cardinal\u2019s enterprise, I quote what the late <strong>Prof. Gaetano Cingari<\/strong>, professor of modern history at the <strong>University of Messina<\/strong>, wrote in his book <em>Jacobins and Sanfedists in Calabria<\/em>:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>\u201c[&#8230;] In truth, Ruffo found very few means: the very first letters of his interesting correspondence from those months bring to light all the difficulties of that audacious expedition. In Messina, indeed, there were already clear signs of an impending Jacobin rising, which, had it managed to link Messina and Reggio together, would have shattered all his designs.<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>Nevertheless, the Cardinal did not allow himself to be halted by administrative obstacles or by the atmosphere of suspicion and fear that surrounded him on the day after his arrival in Messina. In fact, he was a man of great ability and, although he had no remarkable military experience, he possessed the distinctive qualities of an excellent leader: he was resolute and prudent and above all endowed with an innate sense of limit and opportunity. Moreover, born in Calabria, he knew the customs and perhaps to some extent the problems of the Calabrians; finally, as a man of the Church, he could count on the support of the prelates and, even more, of the lower clergy, whose vanity he knew how to flatter and whose too long trampled rights he knew how to recognize. [&#8230;] Thus, although there were broad promises for the formation of a first strong nucleus of royalists, Ruffo found himself at Pezzo almost alone.\u201d<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>At the landing at <strong>Capo Pezzo<\/strong> in <strong>Calabria<\/strong>, the Cardinal was accompanied by <strong>Marquis Malaspina<\/strong>, <strong>Abbot Lorenzo Sparziani<\/strong>, his valet <strong>Carlo Cuccaro<\/strong>, three servants, <strong>Annibale Caporossi<\/strong>, and <strong>Domenico Petromasi<\/strong>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Once the first difficulties had been overcome, the march to reconquer the Kingdom began. <strong>Cingari<\/strong> writes:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>\u201cAnd one must not forget that Ruffo\u2019s arrival in Calabria had awakened broad hopes among the Calabrians, especially among the lower people; it was hoped that the victory of the Sanfedist forces would bring tangible relief to economic and social life, by removing the most direct causes of the administrative disorder and recurring injustices of which the defenseless popular classes were the victims.\u201d<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>From the same <strong>Cingari<\/strong> we learn\u2014and the news, amply documented, stands in clear contrast to what had hitherto been written\u2014that:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>\u201cSmall indeed, contrary to every expectation, was the contribution from the towns situated in the Ruffo family\u2019s fiefs, and almost negligible the participation of the inhabitants of Scilla and Bagnara.\u201d<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>From the very beginning of his enterprise, the Cardinal demonstrated in deeds that he had at heart the good success of his expedition, but not at the expense of the higher future interest of the Kingdom. He had immediately realized\u2014or perhaps this formed part of a project long meditated by him in previous years\u2014the futility of radical economic measures which, though advantageous in the moment, would later prove dangerous to the economic and administrative structure of the State once peace had been restored. <strong>Cingari<\/strong> writes again:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>\u201cHe resolved to eliminate the most burdensome imposts and, first of all\u2014this must be noted\u2014those which, because they enriched the galantuomini, more frequently provoked bitter popular reactions.\u201d<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Despite the grave worries and exhausting obligations that weighed upon him in those days, already from <strong>Monteleone<\/strong> (today <strong>Vibo Valentia<\/strong>) the Cardinal began to adopt measures aimed at alleviating the severe crisis in the silk trade, which had inevitably brought about a sharp contraction in the production of that commodity, long the best resource of the whole region. He removed not only the obtuse regulations of the <strong>General Administration<\/strong>, which in previous years had paralyzed that trade, but also modified the customs system in order to favor all commercial activity. <strong>Cingari<\/strong> writes:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>\u201cUnlike what the republicans had neither known nor been able to do, Ruffo tried to lighten the fiscal burden, eliminating, if not the heaviest taxes, certainly the most unpopular ones: the abolition of the annotatori and their substitutes and of the soprabilancieri, figures most hated in Calabrian life, more than any other measure served increasingly to draw the popular classes closer to Ruffo and to nourish the support of the royalists for the Christian Army. Which, also as a result of the edict of pardon granted to all those who, though compromised in the republican movement, returned to obedience, was preparing to march toward towns that were spontaneously \u2018realizing\u2019 themselves.\u201d<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The Cardinal left <strong>Monteleone<\/strong> with about <strong>4,000 men<\/strong>, making for <strong>Catanzaro<\/strong> by way of several stages.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>That city caused the <strong>Porporato<\/strong> no little concern, since the republican party was more deeply rooted there than elsewhere.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Until that moment the Cardinal\u2019s men had found no opponents, the towns they encountered having <em>\u201crealized\u201d<\/em> themselves spontaneously.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>But <strong>Catanzaro<\/strong> also <em>\u201crealized\u201d<\/em> itself spontaneously, while the Cardinal was still with his troops at <strong>Borgia<\/strong>, where a delegation from <strong>Catanzaro<\/strong> reached him to negotiate surrender. From that delegation the Cardinal also learned that in Catanzaro there reigned an atmosphere of terror and great anarchy, permitting atrocious private vengeance and savage crimes. He then wrote to <strong>Don Francesco Giglio<\/strong>, commander of the masses who were to enter Catanzaro, saying:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>\u201c[&#8230;] that war was to be waged only against obstinate Jacobins who stood with arms in hand, not against those who, though they had previously adhered to the rebels, had afterwards repented and submitted themselves to the clemency of the King, and still less against the property of peaceful citizens. He therefore ordered him, under his own responsibility, to see that the anarchy, plunder, private vengeance, and every other outrage committed by force should cease immediately.\u201d<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>On the <em>\u201crealization\u201d<\/em> of <strong>Catanzaro<\/strong>, <strong>Cingari<\/strong> writes:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>\u201cRuffo\u2014as has been said\u2014did not go to Catanzaro, but preferred to halt at the marina before resuming his march of reconquest. This, however, does not mean that he took no special care over the problems arising from the \u2018realization\u2019 of the capital of Calabria Ultra. On the contrary, he devoted the few days of his halt to seeking useful solutions to the internal problems of the city, reordering its administration and even entertaining the idea of separating Reggio from Catanzaro, not only in order to streamline administrative and judicial activity, but also better to control the political activity of the two cities, both deeply \u2018corrupted\u2019 and sources of dangerous upheavals. Moreover, he defined still more clearly his attitude towards popular demands, with measures aimed at moderating the rights of the barons without destroying them, moderating taxes and burdens for the benefit of the poor, and facilitating trade as much as possible without running the risk of internal scarcity.\u201d<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Once <strong>Catanzaro<\/strong> had been <em>\u201crealized,\u201d<\/em> the <strong>Sanfedist<\/strong> bands moved to conquer <strong>Cotrone<\/strong>, where they arrived in the night between <strong>17 and 18 March<\/strong>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>Colletta<\/strong> wrote that <strong>Cotrone<\/strong>, after its first resistance, <em>\u201casked terms of surrender, which the Cardinal refused, for having no money to satisfy the greedy hordes, nor the little gains made along the way sufficing, he had promised them the sack of that city. [&#8230;] Cotrone was taken with slaughter of armed and unarmed citizens, and amid plunder, lust, and blind cruelties, without number.\u201d<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Professor <strong>Cingari<\/strong>, in his already cited <em>Jacobins and Sanfedists in Calabria<\/em>, writes that the details of the conquest of <strong>Cotrone<\/strong>, which took place during the night between <strong>18 and 19 March<\/strong>, are known, when the republicans of that city attempted a sortie. That sortie enabled the men of <strong>Panzanera<\/strong> to prevent the gate from being closed, through which the bulk of the <strong>Sanfedist<\/strong> force was able to pass. From that moment began the fierce plundering of the goods of the noble and civil families:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>\u201cnothing was spared, although the lower people knew how to impose respect for women.\u201d<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The castle, still in the hands of the Jacobins, surrendered on <strong>21 March<\/strong>, <strong>Holy Thursday<\/strong>. <strong>Cingari<\/strong> writes further:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>\u201cAt that point Perez and Rajmondi sent the capomassa Don Giovanbattista Griffo to bring Ruffo the important news and\u2014curious detail\u2014their envoy was stopped and robbed by four brigands. Ruffo reached Cotrone on 25 March [&#8230;]. Without doubt, the conquest of Cotrone, a well-fortified stronghold, which had worried him not a little during his expedition, gave him lively satisfaction. Yet he could not enjoy the deserved repose, since the sanfedists, having completed the sack, returned in great numbers to their home villages; and he therefore had to begin all over again to form the Christian Army.\u201d<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In that period the Cardinal wrote to <strong>General Acton<\/strong> that the Calabrians were slow to follow him, preferring to remain armed in defense of their own property and families, threatened by the many rebels who had fled.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>When the Cardinal had departed from <strong>Monteleone<\/strong> for <strong>Catanzaro<\/strong>, a band of sanfedists had broken away from the main army and headed toward <strong>Paola<\/strong> under the command of <strong>Giuseppe Mazza<\/strong>, of a patrician family of <strong>Taverna<\/strong>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>Sacchinelli<\/strong> wrote:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>\u201cHere it must be observed that all those bloody battles given by the Cardinal\u2019s army, recounted by the writers Coco, Botta, and Colletta, with burnings and sackings of the cities of Cosenza, Rossano, Paola, etc., were all dreams invented by those writers. In certain places various disorders did indeed occur at the moment of the counter-revolution, committed by the citizens themselves for private vengeance and out of lust for blood and plunder, evils inevitable in civil wars; but Cardinal Ruffo, with his army, never passed through those places and carried out his march along the Ionian route, as will be said later.\u201d<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Regarding <strong>Paola<\/strong>, however, <strong>Abbot Sacchinelli<\/strong> does not appear well informed. <strong>Paola<\/strong> was in fact sacked\u2014and there were also <strong>four deaths<\/strong>\u2014by sanfedist troops (the detachment commanded by <strong>Mazza<\/strong>) to whom <em>\u201cmany people from San Lucido, mostly unarmed,\u201d<\/em> had joined themselves. Citizens of Paola even took part in the sack. This certainty is provided by a document published by <strong>Professor Cingari<\/strong> in the appendix to his already cited book. It is, however, entirely true that the Cardinal, at the head of the main body of troops, followed the <strong>Ionian route<\/strong> and therefore did not pass through <strong>Paola<\/strong>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Still at <strong>Cotrone<\/strong>, where he was engaged in rebuilding his army, the Cardinal could write to <strong>Acton<\/strong>:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>\u201cThe Calabrias are now entirely reduced to obedience to the King our Lord.\u201d<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>With the spontaneous submission of the last <strong>Calabrian cities<\/strong>, the whole region had indeed been pacified, even though disorder and anarchy were still present in several towns.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>Sacchinelli<\/strong> reports that, once the column under the command of <strong>Giuseppe Mazza<\/strong> had returned, having left Calabrian territory, the Cardinal wished to halt for a few days in the area of <strong>Sibari<\/strong> to review the troops at his disposal.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>According to <strong>Sacchinelli<\/strong>, the army was composed as follows:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Regular infantry: <strong>ten battalions of 500 men each<\/strong>, all soldiers of the former disbanded army.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The cavalry numbered <strong>1,200 horses<\/strong>, but the light horsemen bore the most varied weapons and dressed in what he calls <em>\u201cfantastical\u201d<\/em> fashion. Alongside this cavalry was a corps of baronial horse, well dressed and well armed, though its precise strength is not known: the Cardinal used it to prevent or at least limit desertion, plunder, and crimes in general.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The artillery consisted of <strong>eleven cannon<\/strong> of various calibers and <strong>two howitzers<\/strong>, with several ammunition chests. There were many gunners from the old army, but no officers.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The irregular troops were composed of <strong>one hundred companies<\/strong>, each of <strong>100 Calabrian men<\/strong>, every company under the command of <strong>three chiefs<\/strong>. These irregulars would not increase in number as the march advanced, since the Cardinal\u2019s future effort was directed only toward enlarging the number of the <strong>regular troops<\/strong>. They were armed <em>\u201caccording to the custom of the Calabrians with muskets, pistols, bayonets, and knives.\u201d<\/em> Poorly clothed, they nevertheless overflowed with courage and enthusiasm.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>At the moment of leaving <strong>Calabria<\/strong>, wishing to rid himself\u2014and rid Calabria\u2014of the convicts perfidiously sent to him by the English, the Cardinal formed them into a body of <strong>1,000 men<\/strong>, placed them under the command of the bandit chief <strong>Panedigrano<\/strong>, and sent them to <strong>Commodore Trowbridge<\/strong>, <em>\u201cinforming him that the corps of one thousand men, commanded by Panedigrano, had been formed from those convicts whom the English had landed on the Calabrian coast [&#8230;].\u201d<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The march through <strong>Basilicata<\/strong> encountered no particular resistance. Just as had happened in much of Calabria, the populations of that region also returned spontaneously to accept royal authority. Only <strong>Altamura<\/strong> showed willingness to shut itself up in defense.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In <strong>Apulia<\/strong> the attitude of the population was no different from that in Basilicata. In that region, however, an event occurred that must have caused the Cardinal great displeasure, and one that served to make even clearer to him the hostile attitude toward him of the <strong>English party<\/strong>, which, as has been said, imposed its own policy at Court.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>From a Russian frigate there disembarked on Apulian territory <strong>Chevalier Antonio Micheroux<\/strong>, minister plenipotentiary of the <strong>King of Naples<\/strong> to the Russian army, who circulated a royal letter dated <strong>Palermo, 31 March 1799<\/strong>, inviting the population to return under the authority of the Crown. <strong>Micheroux<\/strong> did not limit himself to this, but went on to dismiss the authorities recently appointed by the Cardinal, replacing them with men of his own choosing. At first glance, the intention of the minister might have seemed to be to cast doubt upon the authority of the Cardinal as <strong>Vicar General of the King<\/strong> and upon the legitimacy of the expedition; but on closer examination it much more likely constituted a first <em>\u201ctest of the Cardinal\u2019s ability and will to react\u201d<\/em>\u2014if indeed, which would be even more serious, it was not an attempt to liquidate him by depriving him of authority in the eyes of his unruly and composite army. His reaction was immediate, firm, and so resolute that it persuaded the minister to re-embark in all haste. Restoring his own appointees to their offices, <strong>Fabrizio Ruffo<\/strong> ordered them to prosecute as enemies of the King anyone who opposed or altered his commands. At the same time he wrote to <strong>Micheroux<\/strong>, warning him against interfering in future in matters belonging to the competence of the <strong>Vicar General<\/strong>. It became entirely clear to the Cardinal that his design\u2014namely, not to rage against the insurgents of whatever rank and responsibility, in order to make possible, after the reconquest of the kingdom, pacification and the recovery of national unity\u2014was already producing concrete effects in opposition to other designs.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Perhaps this bitter realization helped ensure that he would not be unprepared when the <strong>Palermitan Court<\/strong> attempted to delay his victorious entry into <strong>Naples<\/strong>, in order to allow <strong>Nelson\u2019s fleet<\/strong> time to anchor in its harbor.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Such miserable attempts, which incredibly bore the signature of the <strong>Sovereign<\/strong>, could hardly have encouraged the Cardinal, who was preparing to confront the rebellion of <strong>Altamura<\/strong>, a well-fortified city and one capable of offering real resistance.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Already from <strong>Policoro<\/strong>, <strong>Ruffo<\/strong> had expressed to <strong>President Acton<\/strong> some of his doubts about the orientation of the Court, which recommended rigorous measures against the Neapolitan Jacobins. And since it was therefore clear to him that the successes in Calabria of his expedition were already arousing the envy of his adversaries and concern among the government and the sovereigns, he wrote another letter openly inviting the King to join him, adducing reasons that ought to have led the sovereign to serious reflection.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>These were the two letters sent by the Cardinal:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>Policoro, 30 April 1799<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>\u201cI have learned from a private letter that among the other things sent toward Procida there had been sent a criminal investigating judge, and it was also known that this was his office. I believe such a step impolitic and, the circumstances permitting, I take the liberty to lay before Your Excellency, unasked, my sentiments, which you may afterward value as shall seem most fitting. The difficulty of converting Naples, the greatest I see in the fear of deserved punishment, in the despair of never again being able to have offices, posts, or consideration, in the certainty of being forever, in the midst of the restored monarchical government, objects of suspicion and of bad treatment on every occasion. [&#8230;] Now if we show a will to prosecute and punish, if we do not make them believe that we are fully persuaded that necessity, error, and the force of enemies, not wickedness, were the cause of rebellion, we shall aid the designs of the enemy; and we shall bar to ourselves the roads to reconciliation. It would seem even that, having in one\u2019s hands any guilty man, even a great one, even distinguished in rebellion, one ought to pardon him. Such an example will make reconciliation appear possible to others and will divide them. Let one read the history of France and the many capitulations made with rebels, and one will see party leaders often pardoned, even though they had borne arms against kings [&#8230;] And why ought there not to be employed the utmost clemency and with very few exceptions? Is clemency perhaps a defect? No, it will be said, but it is dangerous. I do not believe it, and, with some precautions, I believe it preferable to punishment, which cannot be carried out with justice. [&#8230;] Of what use is punishment, indeed how is it possible to punish so many persons without leaving behind an indelible trace of cruelty? But I say more: this plan of punishment is impracticable and in itself destroys the possibility of success.<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>[&#8230;] I have always left flight open, because those who absolutely distrust us may depart without desperation and with the hope of returning one day to support the party again and recover their goods. I have been ready to receive rebels and even employ them, making them believe that their crimes were either unknown or that they had perhaps even done well, or at least innocently, in entering into rebellion; from all this it has come about that both the good and the bad have acted for me. The fear of being betrayed by such men might perhaps exclude this plan as dangerous, but I cannot see danger in it except when there is some foreign and imposing force giving tone to clubs of four bankrupts. [&#8230;] Less rigor, I repeat, and let vengeance be renounced\u2014or at least restricted and above all much delayed.\u201d<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>Policoro, 30 April 1799<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>\u201cI, Sir, have fired my small amount of powder; let His Majesty come and he will see how much still remains to be fired. Another consideration too ought to induce His Majesty. If these Russians and Turks come, it will be very difficult for me to govern them, to keep them in check, and they will destroy half the world; but under His authority they will do only what must be done. I still hope for this happy day.\u201d<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>On the morning of <strong>9 May<\/strong>, <strong>Altamura<\/strong> was surrounded by the <strong>Sanfedist troops<\/strong>. Two days earlier soldiers from that city had captured two Sanfedist engineers who had approached to study the fortifications. That same day the Cardinal had sent into the city a negotiator, <strong>Don Raffaele Vecchioni<\/strong> (though he seems in fact to have been called <strong>Giobatta<\/strong>), furnished with credentials authorizing him to negotiate surrender and the release of the two engineers. He was admitted into the city but never returned.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>On the same day, <strong>9 May<\/strong>, the Cardinal reached <strong>Altamura<\/strong> and personally wished to inspect the enemy fortifications.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The walls were strong and from the bastions came a heavy fire of muskets and culverins. The Cardinal noticed that on the northern side of the walls there was a gate known as <strong>Porta Napoli<\/strong>. With the intention of leaving the defenders the possibility of escape, he ordered that side of the walls to be left uninvested. He had already noticed that morning that a multitude of armed men from <strong>Altamura<\/strong>, who at the arrival of the Sanfedist troops were outside the walls, had not re-entered the city but had withdrawn northward. This made the Cardinal hope that, taking advantage of the night, the defenders still inside the city might also choose flight. And indeed this happened during the night. On <strong>10 May<\/strong>, after one gate had been broken down, the Sanfedist troops entered <strong>Altamura<\/strong> without finding resistance. What they did find, piled in a common pit, were <strong>48 corpses<\/strong> of royalists, chained two by two, among them the bodies of the two engineers and of the envoy <strong>Vecchioni<\/strong>. <strong>Vecchioni<\/strong> was not yet dead. Treated, he recovered from his wounds and certainly lived until <strong>1821<\/strong>, as is documented by a letter of his addressed to <strong>Cardinal Fabrizio<\/strong>, which I found in the private archive of the <strong>Ruffo, Princes of Scaletta<\/strong>, and which I publish.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Together with the Sanfedists there had entered the city more than <strong>a thousand ill-intentioned men<\/strong> from the villages around Altamura, for the most part unarmed, but all animated by the desire for plunder.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Despite various attempts by the Cardinal to prevent the sack of the city, <strong>Altamura<\/strong> was for <strong>two days<\/strong> at the mercy of all who wished to reap booty.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>On the capture of <strong>Altamura<\/strong>, <strong>Colletta<\/strong> wrote:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>\u201cTherefore the men of Altamura, defending the breaches with steel and with beams and stones, killed many enemies; and when they saw the city taken, all who could, men and women, by the less-guarded exit, fleeing and fighting, escaped. The fate of those who remained was most wretched, for the victors felt no pity: women, old men, children slain; a convent of virgins profaned; every wickedness, every outrage satisfied. [&#8230;] That hell lasted three days; and on the fourth the Cardinal, absolving the sins of the army, blessed it, and moved on to Gravina, which he put to sack.\u201d<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>Sacchinelli<\/strong>, on the same subject, wrote instead:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>\u201cIt caused great surprise to hear that within Altamura there were no inhabitants. Not only the patriots, but all the rest of the population had fled during that night, except for certain old people later found hidden, and a few sick people who had been abandoned. Although, besides Porta Napoli, they had made two other openings in order to facilitate the exit, it nevertheless caused no little amazement that so many people had fled in a single night in the month of May. It was later learned that many of those citizens, knowing the obstinacy of the republicans, had already withdrawn before the blockade, taking with them the best of what they possessed.<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>Considering the disastrous consequences of the sack of Cotrone, which had caused nearly the whole army to disperse, the Cardinal had persuaded the chiefs of both the regular and irregular troops that, if the city of Altamura were taken by assault, the sack of the city would not be permitted, but instead a heavy war contribution would be imposed [&#8230;]. At the sight of that immense and bloody spectacle\u201d<\/em>\u2014here <strong>Sacchinelli<\/strong> alludes to the finding of the bodies of the two engineers, the negotiator <strong>Vecchioni<\/strong>, and the other <strong>45 men shot<\/strong>\u2014<em>\u201chow could the sack of Altamura any longer be prevented? [&#8230;] All the measures the Cardinal could take were reduced to preventing the desertion of the troops after the sack [&#8230;]. During the sack there was found hiding Count Filo, who was dragged before the Porporato. No sooner had he arrived there, and at the very instant that the Count was placing himself in a supplicating attitude, than a gunshot fired in an outburst of barbarous vengeance by G. L., who was said to be related to the deceased Engineer Olivieri, made him fall dead at the feet of the Porporato! That barbarity having filled all with horror, it was thought necessary to restrain such license.<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>[&#8230;] In the interval of fourteen days, during which the Cardinal had to remain in Altamura for the dispatch of urgent affairs, and especially in order to increase and instruct his army, the population that had fled reappeared in detail, the women returning first and then the men; that Bishop, Monsignor de Gemmis, returned there on the 15th.\u201d<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>A note follows to this effect:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>\u201cThe author of these memoirs affirms that regarding the event of Altamura he wrote exactly all that he saw with his own eyes; and that, just as he omitted nothing, so too he added no circumstance, and therefore the malicious assertions advanced against Cardinal Ruffo by the writers Coco, Botta, and Colletta in recounting the said event must be held to be lying and calumnious.\u201d<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>On <strong>24 May<\/strong> the <strong>Sanfedist army<\/strong> left <strong>Altamura<\/strong>. The Cardinal, who had received news that the republican government had decreed the mobilization of all fit men, was anxious to reach <strong>Naples<\/strong> before these new levies could be armed and to avoid being forced to occupy the city by force.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Yet, reading the Cardinal\u2019s correspondence\u2014composed of letters exchanged with <strong>Minister Acton<\/strong> and with the <strong>Queen<\/strong>\u2014one suspects that his haste to reach Naples was suggested by other considerations, above all this one: he had always known that the <strong>English<\/strong> considered him unreliable, even an enemy.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The successes of the <strong>Sanfedist expedition<\/strong>\u2014which, lacking regular troops, emptied itself of men after every conquest; which lacked arms and provisions; which, practically without artillery, was nevertheless marching victoriously; which even granted itself the luxury of depriving itself of the brigand bands and sending them back to the English who had at one time \u201cgifted\u201d them to the Cardinal (<strong>fully 1,000 men<\/strong>, well trained and excellent fighters even if driven by the thirst for booty) while he marched to the siege of <strong>Altamura<\/strong>\u2014had alarmed the <em>\u201cEnglish party\u201d<\/em> and all those who had hoped for the failure of that expedition.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The English interest, at war with <strong>France<\/strong>, had always been to carry out themselves the reconquest of the Kingdom, perhaps with the aid of <strong>Turks<\/strong> and <strong>Russians<\/strong>, so as to dispose with complete security of that important strategic position. Events had precipitated in <strong>January<\/strong> because of the Cardinal\u2019s unexpected and unwelcome initiative, and by this point all that remained was to prevent him from arriving alone beneath the Neapolitan forts. Let him do so together with <strong>Russian<\/strong> and <strong>Turkish troops<\/strong>, with <strong>Nelson\u2019s fleet<\/strong> in the harbor, so that he would not be the sole arbiter of the capitulation. These allied troops were slow in arriving, and their participation was not indispensable for the conquest of <strong>Naples<\/strong>, given the force already assembled. <strong>Fabrizio Ruffo<\/strong> knew this, and the English knew it too; and for precisely this reason the attempts to delay his march multiplied. In his letters to <strong>Acton<\/strong>, to the <strong>Queen<\/strong>, and to the <strong>King<\/strong> himself, the Cardinal had repeatedly advocated broad clemency for the republicans and a policy that might even make possible the recovery of their leaders:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>\u201cBeyond the prayers that I repeat to Your Excellency to read my scrawling, where there is talk of clemency and pardon, I add that to my sorrow in the letters of the sovereigns there is always talk of rigor, now more, now less, but always of punishment; now I continue to believe that the conduct ought to be absolutely different, and that past excesses ought sincerely to be forgiven.\u201d<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In the letter of <strong>30 April<\/strong> (which I partly transcribed above) he referred to the conduct of the French toward the Jacobins, citing it as an example:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>\u201cLet one read the history of France and the many capitulations made with rebels, and one will see party leaders often pardoned, even though they had borne arms against kings, nor are there far from us examples of agreements and pardons concerning those who were in truth less excusable than the present offenders, in which an until-now invincible force has almost compelled peoples into revolution, whereas then princes were withdrawn from obedience to their sovereigns in order to better their condition, or for money they had received\u2014something that has not happened in the greater part of the guilty in the present case.\u201d<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The suspicion that the Cardinal entertained institutional changes\u2014not, certainly, that of placing his brother <strong>Francesco<\/strong> on the throne of Naples, as some wrote in superficiality or bad faith\u2014and that, once the reconquest was complete, he might replace <strong>Acton<\/strong> in the reorganization of a constitutional kingdom, was circulating at Court and may well have corresponded to reality, if one reflects on the Cardinal\u2019s conduct, which changed in tone and substance as the prospects of success became more and more concrete. In the very latest phase he had ceased insisting that the <strong>King<\/strong> should join the troops and was pressing instead for the <strong>heir apparent<\/strong> to reach him. He had even favored the spread of the <em>\u201cnews,\u201d<\/em> naturally false and due to a certain <strong>de Cesare<\/strong>, that the Prince was in <strong>Apulia<\/strong>. Did this have meaning? Was he perhaps thinking that, after the restoration, <strong>Ferdinand<\/strong> should abdicate in favor of his son, in order to make peace easier to restore and more real the possibility of giving the Kingdom a structure more suited to the times? Was this why he desired the recovery of the Jacobin leaders, who in the end constituted the very flower of Neapolitan culture? The suspicion of such a political design must certainly have existed in certain circles of the Court close to the Queen, and <strong>Nelson<\/strong> must have been convinced of it, if he opposed the victorious Cardinal with such violent determination. More generally, the need for change, which would culminate in the final disappearance of what remained of lay and ecclesiastical feudalism and in greater social well-being, had not only been felt in the Kingdom for many years, but the path of reform in that direction had already long been undertaken. Unfortunately, the alarm created by the <strong>French Revolution<\/strong> had led the government of Naples to take a different course, with the consequent reaction of the most enlightened social strata. And had not the Cardinal shown a concrete will to move in that direction when, as minister of the <strong>Papal State<\/strong>, he promoted agrarian reform and those other reforms which stirred <strong>Cardinals<\/strong> and <strong>feudal lords<\/strong> against him? That <strong>Fabrizio Ruffo<\/strong> believed such reform necessary and thought in terms of a democratic reform of the State, there can, I believe, be little doubt. Why then fight against the newborn <strong>Republic<\/strong>?<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Apart from every other consideration, he always moved under the impulse of a threefold ideal: his <strong>GOD<\/strong>, his <strong>KING<\/strong>, his <strong>ESTATE<\/strong>. On the first two he never wavered, not even for a moment, and for the second he paid, on more than one occasion, the highest tributes, in absolute silence, overcoming every temptation to rebellion\u2014if indeed he ever had any\u2014or to self-defense.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>His estate! Certainly he felt pride in the name he bore, but in all his life, for motives of interest or convenience, he never allowed himself to be conditioned either by the \u201cestate\u201d to which he belonged by birth or by the ecclesiastical one. Indeed, when he made policy, as we have seen, he enacted reforms through which he made enemies of <strong>Cardinals<\/strong> and the <strong>feudal aristocracy<\/strong>. He did not, however, accept the <em>\u201cextremisms\u201d<\/em> of the <strong>French Revolution<\/strong> (while accepting many of its principles. This is confirmed by a source beyond suspicion, the theologian <strong>Nicola Spedalieri<\/strong>, in the dedication he made to him in <strong>1794<\/strong> of his book <em>On the Rights of Man<\/em>) and he employed all his strength to prevent such events from occurring either during his march of conquest or once it was concluded. Unfortunately, he did not always succeed.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Could such a man conceive of the <strong>Republic<\/strong>, moreover one born out of an international conflict, as subordinated to the moods, fortunes, and interests of the various contenders? Besides, it was the age of monarchies, which a few decades later would themselves transform into constitutional monarchies.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Did the Cardinal, then, truly conceive the idea of a <strong>constitutional monarchy<\/strong> and fight for that end? I know of no documents able to confirm these suppositions of mine, and therefore they retain the value they deserve, having been advanced not by a historian, but only by a devoted student of history. Can such conclusions be reached only through the reading of a single document? Now that many \u201ctruths\u201d are known, and times have radically changed and ideologies have faded, let historians draw the conclusions. New evidence allows it. It is certain, however, that <strong>Fabrizio Ruffo<\/strong>, during the years spent at <strong>Caserta<\/strong> and <strong>San Leucio<\/strong>\u2014certainly a troubled spectator of the Kingdom\u2019s degradation\u2014had long reflected upon the economic, political, and administrative structure a Kingdom should possess if it was to correspond to the new reality born of the <strong>French Revolution<\/strong>. Were it otherwise, one could not explain the lucidity with which he dictated all those legislative measures, always appropriate and always rightly calibrated, step by step as he advanced on his victorious march, and which all had in common the characteristic of being suited to the contingent situation and also, more importantly, of not constituting an obstacle on the morrow, when the foundations of the new political, administrative, and juridical order of the State were to be laid. All this could certainly not have been the product of improvisation.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Step by step, and not without difficulties and setbacks, the Cardinal\u2019s troops arrived at <strong>Naples<\/strong>. On that same day, <strong>13 June<\/strong>, Calabrian companies under the command of the Reggian lieutenant colonel <strong>Francesco Rapini<\/strong> stormed and took <strong>Fort Vigliena<\/strong>. Two days later, for reasons that were never certainly ascertained, <strong>Rapini<\/strong> and <strong>150<\/strong> of his Calabrians were blown into the air by the explosion of the fort.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>During the night between <strong>13 and 14 June<\/strong>, Calabrian troops, without the Cardinal\u2019s knowledge, attacked and captured the <strong>Castle of the Carmine<\/strong>. Despite the indiscipline of the irregulars and the very limited means then available to control the troops besieging <strong>Naples<\/strong>\u2014there had not yet been the material time to organize that composite army\u2014the two autonomous and uncoordinated military actions were of great help to the Sanfedist troops. The capture of the <strong>Castle of the Carmine<\/strong> had marked the defeat of the army of General <strong>Writz<\/strong>, who died in battle, while the occupation of <strong>Fort Vigliena<\/strong> made it possible to accelerate the conquest of the city. One after another, the three republican armies yielded to the Sanfedist onslaught: the one under General <strong>Schipani<\/strong>\u2014the same which had already withdrawn from the bivouac around <strong>Altamura<\/strong> upon the arrival of the Sanfedist forces\u2014practically made no attempt to defend itself.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>But already from <strong>14 June<\/strong> the <strong>Neapolitan lazzari<\/strong>, reinforced by bands of troublemakers from neighboring towns, had flooded onto the city\u2019s streets bringing death and destruction. They killed, stripped, plundered, and burned out of resentment, or for vile motives of plunder or revenge. On this point <strong>Sacchinelli<\/strong> writes:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>\u201cCardinal Ruffo, occupied in his camp at the bridge of the Maddalena in taking measures and keeping his troops assembled [&#8230;] troubled by the horrible excesses being committed within the city itself, was deeply grieved at being unable to employ any remedy to bring that dreadful anarchy to an end. With the fortresses still in the enemy\u2019s power, what troops, and how many, would have been necessary to restrain the enraged and immense populace, increased by many thousands of armed men from the neighboring villages, who had entered the city by the Porta Nolana and Porta Capuana?\u201d<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>And further on:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>\u201c[&#8230;] he knew not what expedients to take in order to restrain the dreadful anarchy reigning within the city, prudence not permitting him to use his own troops for fear that the remedy might become worse than the evil [&#8230;]\u201d<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>Pietro Colletta<\/strong>, instead, writes of the massacres at <strong>Naples<\/strong> in these terms:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>\u201cThe republic having fallen, and the war in the countryside being ended, another war began, more cruel and obscene, within the city. The victors fell upon the vanquished: whoever was not a warrior of the Holy Faith or a plebeian, if encountered, was killed; and thus the squares and streets were befouled with corpses and blood [&#8230;] The lazzari, servants, enemies and false friends denounced to the mob the houses they said belonged to rebels; and there nothing took place but rape, theft, killing: all at the whim of fortune. [&#8230;] Cardinal Ruffo, the other chiefs of the Holy Faith, and those influential over the people, though capable of inflaming anger, were not equal to moderating victory.\u201d<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The Cardinal himself wrote to <strong>Minister Acton<\/strong> in those days:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>\u201cFrom the Royal House at the Ponte della Maddalena near Naples, 21 June 1799.<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>Your Excellency, I am at the Ponte della Maddalena; it seems that the castles of the Ovo and the Nuovo are close to surrendering to the Muscovites and to Chevalier Micheroux. I am so crowded upon and exhausted that I do not see how I can remain alive if such a state continues for another three days. To have to govern, or rather to restrain, an immense people accustomed to the most decided anarchy; to have to govern some twenty chiefs of light troops, uneducated and insubordinate, wholly intent on continuing sackings, slaughters, and violence, is so terrible and complicated a thing that it utterly surpasses my strength. They have brought me 1,300 Jacobins, whom I do not know where to keep secure, and whom I am holding in the granaries by the bridge; at least 50 have been dragged away or shot in my presence without my being able to prevent it, and at least 200 wounded have likewise been dragged here naked.<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>Seeing me horrified by such a spectacle, they comfort me by saying that the dead were truly the chiefs of ruffians, the wounded declared enemies of the human race, that the people had indeed recognized them well. I hope it is true, and thus I calm myself a little. By force of care, edicts, patrols, and sermons the violence of the people has, by God\u2019s grace, been considerably diminished. [&#8230;] It is certain that to wage war and at the same time fear the ruin of one\u2019s enemy is the cruelest of situations, and such is ours.<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>If to this there is added our own troop, indeed numerous but irregular, or rather unrestrained, it is enough to make one sweat in the heart of winter. [&#8230;] Meanwhile the people, and so many outlaws who have come to fight for the King, and eighty accursed Turks, plunder and strip at will.\u201d<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The victory over the republicans concluded with a <strong>treaty<\/strong> which, at the request of the defeated, was signed by <strong>Vicar General Cardinal Ruffo<\/strong> in the name of the <strong>King of Naples<\/strong>, by Captain <strong>E. I. Foote<\/strong> in the name of <strong>His Britannic Majesty<\/strong>, by General <strong>Baillie<\/strong>, commander of the troops of <strong>His Majesty the Emperor of All the Russias<\/strong>, by General <strong>Acmet<\/strong>, commander of the <strong>Ottoman troops<\/strong>, by <strong>Antonio Chevalier Micheroux<\/strong>, minister plenipotentiary of <strong>His Majesty the King of Naples<\/strong> to the Russian troops, and, for the republicans, by General <strong>Massa<\/strong>, commander of <strong>Castel Nuovo<\/strong>, and General <strong>Aurora<\/strong>, commander of <strong>Castel dell\u2019Ovo<\/strong>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>For the republicans the act of surrender was countersigned by the French General <strong>M\u00e9jean<\/strong>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The conditions of surrender granted by the Cardinal were as follows:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>1)<\/strong> The castles of <strong>Nuovo<\/strong> and <strong>dell\u2019Ovo<\/strong> shall be handed over into the hands of the commander of the troops of <strong>His Majesty the King of the Two Sicilies<\/strong> and of those of his allies, the <strong>King of England<\/strong>, the <strong>Emperor of All the Russias<\/strong>, and the <strong>Ottoman Porte<\/strong>, together with all munitions of war and provisions, artillery, and effects of every kind existing in the magazines, of which inventories shall be made by the respective commissioners after the signing of the present capitulation.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>2)<\/strong> The troops composing the garrisons shall retain their forts until the vessels hereinafter mentioned, destined to transport those individuals wishing to go to <strong>Toulon<\/strong>, are ready to sail.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>3)<\/strong> The garrisons shall leave with military honors; with arms, baggage, drums beating, banners unfurled, fuses lit, and each with two pieces of artillery. They shall lay down their arms on the shore.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>4)<\/strong> The persons and movable and immovable property of all the individuals composing the two garrisons shall be respected and guaranteed.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>5)<\/strong> All the aforesaid individuals may choose to embark on cartel ships to be prepared for them to take them to <strong>Toulon<\/strong>, without they or their families being molested.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>6)<\/strong> The conditions agreed upon in the present capitulation shall apply equally to all persons of both sexes enclosed in the forts.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>7)<\/strong> The same conditions shall apply to all prisoners taken from the republican troops by the troops of <strong>His Majesty the King of the Two Sicilies<\/strong> and by those of his allies in the various combats that took place before the blockade of the forts.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>8)<\/strong> The <strong>Archbishop of Salerno<\/strong>, <strong>Micheroux<\/strong>, <strong>Dillon<\/strong>, and the <strong>Bishop of Avellino<\/strong>, being held, shall be delivered to the commander of <strong>Fort Sant\u2019Elmo<\/strong>, where they shall remain as hostages until the arrival at Toulon of the persons sent there has been secured.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>9)<\/strong> All hostages and state prisoners confined in the forts shall be released immediately after the signatures of the present capitulation.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>10)<\/strong> All the articles of the present Capitulation shall not be executed until they have been fully approved by the commander of <strong>Fort Sant\u2019Elmo<\/strong>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Were these conditions indeed the terms of surrender imposed by a ferocious victor and bloodthirsty leader of brigands, who out of hatred, wickedness, and base vengeance desired only to <em>\u201cstifle in blood the final breath of liberty of the Neapolitan patriots\u201d<\/em>? They rather make known, clearly and unequivocally, the victor\u2019s will not to destroy, but to <em>\u201csave\u201d<\/em> the fallen enemy, with the secret hope that the evolution of events\u2014as his political acumen enabled him to foresee\u2014would ripen into times and a political climate such as might make possible repentance and perhaps even participation.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Can such apparent evidence be confirmed by the facts?<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The confirmation is contained in the Cardinal\u2019s correspondence, and further confirmation, if any were needed, is found in the last letter he wrote to <strong>Acton<\/strong> on <strong>21 June<\/strong>, from the <strong>Ponte della Maddalena<\/strong>:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>\u201cIt is certain that to wage war and fear the ruin of the Enemy is the cruelest of situations, and such is ours.\u201d<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>And further on:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>\u201cI know not what the conditions will be, but certainly very clement for a thousand reasons which need not be stated one by one, and which from what has preceded Your Excellency may imagine.\u201d<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>What happened in the days that followed is well known, and even the fiercest detractors of <strong>Cardinal Ruffo<\/strong> did not lay at his charge at least that guilt. The Cardinal was removed from the office of <strong>Vicar General<\/strong>, named <strong>Captain General<\/strong>, and flanked by a <strong>Junta of State<\/strong>, chosen\u2014on the suggestion of the <strong>Palermitan Court<\/strong>\u2014by <strong>Nelson<\/strong>, whose task was to keep him under close control. <strong>Nelson<\/strong> even ignored the treaty of surrender, although it had been signed by those who beneath the Neapolitan castles, now surrendering, represented his own lord and king; and, judging that England\u2019s interest lay there, he drowned in blood not only the Republic but certainly also every noble aspiration for a future rich in hopes and new perspectives, thus fatally marking the decline of the <strong>Kingdom of Naples<\/strong>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The Cardinal, placed in the absolute impossibility of defending the peace treaty and of acting freely, attempted by every means to limit at least the scale of the slaughter that was coming into view. <strong>Dumas<\/strong> wrote:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>\u201cAmid all these preparations for death there was one man, he who had done more than all the others, Cardinal Ruffo, accused not only of sympathy for the Jacobins but of intriguing with them, passive, and with his hands tied by his new title of Lieutenant of the King, watched the terrible reaction that was advancing.\u201d<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>According to <strong>Helfert<\/strong>, the Cardinal succeeded in saving the lives of <strong>500<\/strong> of the <strong>1,300 patriots<\/strong> in <strong>Nelson\u2019s<\/strong> hands, who finally departed for <strong>France<\/strong> on <strong>12 August<\/strong>. And Nelson\u2019s hatred for the Cardinal, who snatched five hundred patriots from the executioner\u2019s grasp, may be read in the letter the Admiral wrote on <strong>20 August<\/strong> to <strong>Lord Minto<\/strong>:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>\u201cI have acted under your orders for the public good and for love of the civilized world. Let us work together, and let the greatest act of our lives be to hang Thugut, Cardinal Ruffo, and Manfredini [&#8230;] their counsels are harmful both to the King and to Europe. Bring them before a tribunal and you will see that they are friends of the French and betray Europe. Forgive this manner of speaking from a sailor who tells the truth. My dear Lord, this Thugut conspires against our English King of Naples [&#8230;] but let these three scoundrels be hanged and everything will go very well.\u201d<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Perhaps few people know\u2014or have wished to forget\u2014that <strong>Fabrizio Ruffo<\/strong> had had the death sentences by hanging suspended in the cases of <strong>Mario Pagano<\/strong>, <strong>Domenico Cirillo<\/strong>, <strong>Ignazio Ciaia<\/strong>, and <strong>Giorgio Pignatelli<\/strong>, because they were included among the <strong>eighty of Castel Nuovo<\/strong> to whom the capitulation ought to have applied, <em>\u201csubmitting a consulta to the King\u201d<\/em> on <strong>11 October<\/strong>. On that same day, having sensed that his decree would not be confirmed, he asked to be relieved of his office, and a few days later departed for the <strong>Conclave of Venice<\/strong>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The Cardinal never wished to defend himself against the terrible accusations his adversaries hurled at him, trusting that truth would triumph in times far removed from those passions. So far as is known, he spoke of it only once, and then in a private outburst, writing to his friend <strong>Nicola Maria Nicolai<\/strong>:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>\u201c[&#8230;] Brigand, as though this name were not easily applied to any soldier whenever his party happens to succumb, or as though I had stolen anything from anyone!\u2014He who defends his country, and who has authority and a legitimate commission, has never been considered by civilized nations as a miserable man, nor has he had anything to be ashamed of, nor will he among sensible men. What more? How did I use my victory? Who does not know?\u2014And yet four democratic bankrupts in name, since they possess neither the virtue nor the disinterestedness, persecute me because I defended and spared them [&#8230;]\u201d<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Certain authors wrote that <strong>Fabrizio Ruffo<\/strong> continued active political life in the years that followed. I am obliged to point out that, after the restoration of <strong>1815<\/strong>, the Cardinal no longer wished to concern himself with politics. Those who wrote the contrary confused him with another <strong>Ruffo<\/strong> of the same first name: the <strong>Prince of Castelcicala<\/strong>, or with <strong>Prince Alvaro Ruffo della Scaletta<\/strong>, figures of the same family.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>At the beginning of these notes I wrote that <strong>history rehabilitated Fabrizio Ruffo<\/strong>. I would add that, though acquitted, he has never really been understood\u2014not by his contemporaries, and not even by posterity. Men were content to ascertain that he was not a brigand chief, that he was not responsible for the massacres of <strong>Naples<\/strong> and was not the executioner of the patriots, that it was not he who broke the terms of surrender. They did not go beyond that! Yet in those events there were protagonists at the same level\u2014and for that very reason they acquired over the years such compelling importance: a <strong>King<\/strong>, a <strong>Queen<\/strong>, the greatest <strong>English Admiral<\/strong>, <strong>Napoleon Bonaparte<\/strong>, and a <strong>Cardinal<\/strong> who, without armies, conquered kingdoms.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>I must note with bitterness and surprise (and it is not the occasion of the shared surname that moves me) that\u2014as the second centenary of those events occurred\u2014no historian was prompted to seek the reasons that led <strong>Cardinal Fabrizio Ruffo<\/strong> to stand against the will of his king, with unmistakable determination, although he knew he ran the risk of losing his head; he came within a step of arrest, already ordered by the king, who wrote in his diary on <strong>Wednesday, 26 June<\/strong> (<strong>State Archives of Naples, Borbone, f. 238, cc. 356\u2013386<\/strong>):<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>\u201c[&#8230;] Received a new dispatch from my Wife from Procida with ever more disagreeable news, the Cardinal having granted an infamous Capitulation to the rebels [&#8230;]\u201d<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>On the same page, note <strong>2<\/strong> reads:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>\u201cUnder date of 27-6-1799, by letters from Acton, the Duke della Salandra, General De Gambs, and Colonel Tschudy were charged with arresting Cardinal Ruffo and delivering him to Nelson [&#8230;]. Military and civil government was to be assumed collegially by Simonetti, Zurlo, Legerot, and the Duke della Salandra [&#8230;].\u201d<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>If the King\u2019s designs changed\u2014and this provoked rage and resentment in <strong>Nelson<\/strong>\u2014and the Cardinal kept his head, it was because of the fear inspired in the <strong>Bourbon<\/strong> and in the English themselves by the <strong>Calabrian troops<\/strong>, absolutely loyal to the Cardinal.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>I close these notes\u2014which certainly do not have the merit of completeness, but only that of documentary grounding\u2014by quoting what <strong>Alexandre Dumas<\/strong> wrote in his <em>History of the Bourbons of Naples<\/em>:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>\u201cAnd yet we undertake a strange task, namely to prove that up to this point Cardinal Ruffo has been calumniated by History, or rather by historians: we hope to succeed, and this, as is understood, out of pure love of the truth. Let us say what Cardinal Ruffo was at that period, he who before long will become one of the most courageous heroes of those unhappy times, in which all those who sided with the court were held to be entirely devoid of moral sense, of national honor, and of the rights of nations. Let it not be believed that we are carried away by love of paradox. Whoever reads will see, and above all will judge.\u201d<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>And he adds further:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>\u201cOur partiality consists in not wishing that the man of genius, of simple audacity if you will, who conceived the plan for the restoration of Ferdinand I, who crossed the strait with three thousand ducats, one lieutenant of the King, one secretary, one chaplain, one valet, one servant, who set foot in Catona in the midst of three hundred insurgents, who traversed all Calabria, fighting for an unjust cause, but fighting nonetheless, who arrived at Naples with sixty thousand men, who until the last moment defended the capitulation signed by him, and who fell into the disfavor of the King\u2014who owed him his kingdom\u2014for having upheld, against Nelson, Acton, and Carolina, the rights of humanity, should be treated like a Pronio, a Sciarpa, a Mammone, a Fra Diavolo.\u201d<\/em><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>by Giovanni Ruffo Ten years ago (1995) I wrote for the journal Calabria letteraria the article reproduced here, to which I have now added several updates in the light of newly acquired evidence. In past years I had been encouraged by the late Director Frangella to revise and update the article, which had pleased him. [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[1],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-1275","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-origin"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v27.2 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>Cardinal Fabrizio Ruffo di Bagnara - Ruffo di Calabria<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/ruffodicalabria.it\/en\/origin\/cardinal-fabrizio-ruffo-di-bagnara\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"Cardinal Fabrizio Ruffo di Bagnara - Ruffo di Calabria\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"by Giovanni Ruffo Ten years ago (1995) I wrote for the journal Calabria letteraria the article reproduced here, to which I have now added several updates in the light of newly acquired evidence. 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