Roberto Lucifero d'Aprigliano: Difference between revisions

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In September 1945 he was appointed to the [[Consulta Nazionale|National Consultative Body (''"Consulta Nazionale"'')]], and on 2 June 1946 he was elected to the [[Constituent Assembly of Italy]] as a member of the [[National Bloc of Freedom]] coalition. On 2 June 1946 a [[Italian institutional referendum, 1946|referendum was held on the future of the monarchy]]. The result was clear, but by no means overwhelming, support for a republican future. Lucifero d'Aprigliano was among those who urged the king to stand firm in resisting the referendum result.<ref name=RLsecondoGS/> Not for the first time, however, he found the tide of history was moving against him.
In September 1945 he was appointed to the [[Consulta Nazionale|National Consultative Body (''"Consulta Nazionale"'')]], and on 2 June 1946 he was elected to the [[Constituent Assembly of Italy]] as a member of the [[National Bloc of Freedom]] coalition. On 2 June 1946 a [[Italian institutional referendum, 1946|referendum was held on the future of the monarchy]]. The result was clear, but by no means overwhelming, support for a republican future. Lucifero d'Aprigliano was among those who urged the king to stand firm in resisting the referendum result.<ref name=RLsecondoGS/> Not for the first time, however, he found the tide of history was moving against him.


In the [[Constituent Assembly of Italy|Constituent Assembly]] Lucifero d'Aprigliano intervened on maters such as the "right to strike", regional autonomy, church-state relations, the preservation of public morality and the use by the old aristocracy of their titles.<ref name=RLsecondoGS/> He was also prominent in discussions concerning the rights and properties of the [[House of Savoy]]. He spoke in a plenary session of the assembly on 4 March 1947 to oppose the expressly antifascist sense of the [[Constitution of Italy|new constitution]], contending that the constitution should make no reference whatever to fascism "neither in positive nor in negative terms".<ref name=RLsecondoGS/>
In the [[Constituent Assembly of Italy|Constituent Assembly]] Lucifero d'Aprigliano intervened on maters such as the "right to strike", regional autonomy, church-state relations, the preservation of public morality and the use by the old aristocracy of their titles.<ref name=RLsecondoGS/> He was also prominent in discussions concerning the rights and properties of the [[House of Savoy]]. He spoke in a plenary session of the assembly on 4 March 1947 to oppose the expressly antifascist sense of the [[Constitution of Italy|new constitution]], contending that the constitution should make no reference whatever to fascism "neither in positive nor in negative terms".<ref name=RLsecondoGS/> His preferred formulation involved a preamble to the main text of the constitution along the following lines:
:"The Italian people, invoking God's help, freely exercising their sovereignty, have been granted this fundamental law. through which The State is constituted".
:''"Il popolo italiano, invocando l'assistenza di Dio, nel libero esercizio della propria sovranità si è data la presente legge fondamentale, mediante la quale si costituisce e si ordina in Stato"''



Secondo il L. la carta costituzionale doveva piuttosto contenere una sorta di preambolo così concepito: "Il popolo italiano, invocando l'assistenza di Dio, nel libero esercizio della propria sovranità si è data la presente legge fondamentale, mediante la quale si costituisce e si ordina in Stato".


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Revision as of 14:30, 21 May 2017

Roberto Lucifero d'Aprigliano (16 December 1903 - 11 January 1993) was a lawyer who became an antifascist partisan. As the war ended he turned to politics and, later, to journalism.[1]

In 1947/48 he briefly (and divisively) served as national secretary of the Italian Liberal Party.[1]

Life

He was born in Rome. His father, Alfonso Lucifero was from Crotone in the south and served between 1886 and 1919 as a member of parliament. After the Badoglio Proclamation of 8 September 1943, Roberto Lucifero d'Aprigliano participated in the Roman resistance against the city's occupation by German forces, as a member of an underground monarchist group. In April 1944 he was captured by German Nazi paramilitaries and imprisoned in the Regina Coeli, from where he was released on 4 June 1944 as allied forces liberated Rome from the German occupation.[1]

A dew days later he participated in the formation of the short-lived Italian Democratic Party ("Partito Democratico Italiano " / PDI), created through the merger of the "Centro della Democrazia Italiana", the "Partito di unione" and the "Partito socialdemocratico". As a member of the PDI party executive, he took on responsibility for contributing to the daily news publication "monarchico Italia nuova", from the pages of which he attacked the antifascist measures of the Bonomi government and the "dictatorship" of the Committee for National Libneration ("Comitato di Liberazione Nazionale" / CLN). On 12 September 1944 he had a meeting with the Foreign Minister and CDU leader, De Gasperi, whom he urged to break the CLN coalition alliance with the Communists (something which in May 1947 De Gasperi would indeed do).[1]

Lucifero d'Aprigliano used "monarchico Italia nuova" to promote his opposition to the very broad political coalition underpinning the CLN was at variance with the mood of the times. He was known as a strong supporter of the monarchy. Sources suggest that at a time when the future of the monarchy was being questioned, the king and his family were themselves embarrassed by the support of Lucifero d'Aprigliano's "Italia nuova" movement at a time when the royal family were making a determined push to move away from the Mussolini years, towards a more democratically focused monarchy.[1]

In September 1945 he was appointed to the National Consultative Body ("Consulta Nazionale"), and on 2 June 1946 he was elected to the Constituent Assembly of Italy as a member of the National Bloc of Freedom coalition. On 2 June 1946 a referendum was held on the future of the monarchy. The result was clear, but by no means overwhelming, support for a republican future. Lucifero d'Aprigliano was among those who urged the king to stand firm in resisting the referendum result.[1] Not for the first time, however, he found the tide of history was moving against him.

In the Constituent Assembly Lucifero d'Aprigliano intervened on maters such as the "right to strike", regional autonomy, church-state relations, the preservation of public morality and the use by the old aristocracy of their titles.[1] He was also prominent in discussions concerning the rights and properties of the House of Savoy. He spoke in a plenary session of the assembly on 4 March 1947 to oppose the expressly antifascist sense of the new constitution, contending that the constitution should make no reference whatever to fascism "neither in positive nor in negative terms".[1] His preferred formulation involved a preamble to the main text of the constitution along the following lines:

"The Italian people, invoking God's help, freely exercising their sovereignty, have been granted this fundamental law. through which The State is constituted".
"Il popolo italiano, invocando l'assistenza di Dio, nel libero esercizio della propria sovranità si è data la presente legge fondamentale, mediante la quale si costituisce e si ordina in Stato"


Secondo il L. la carta costituzionale doveva piuttosto contenere una sorta di preambolo così concepito: "Il popolo italiano, invocando l'assistenza di Dio, nel libero esercizio della propria sovranità si è data la presente legge fondamentale, mediante la quale si costituisce e si ordina in Stato".

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h Giuseppe Sircana (2006). "LUCIFERO, Roberto". Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani. Istituto dell'Enciclopedia Italiana (Treccani). Retrieved 21 May 2017.