Cabinet D'Azeglio I

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The D'Azeglio I cabinet ruled the Kingdom of Sardinia-Piedmont from May 7, 1849 to May 21, 1852. In contrast to his predecessor Claudio Gabriele de Launay, Prime Minister Massimo d'Azeglio advocated the parliamentary monarchy and the constitution of 1848 . When in May 1852 d'Azeglio's conservative party comrade and minister Camillo Benso von Cavour supported the election of the opposition politician Urbano Rattazzi as President of the Chamber of Deputies and an expanded political alliance between Cavour and Rattazzi (Connubio) , d'Azeglio handed in his resignation one that was rejected by King Victor Emmanuel II . After Cavour was reproached during the Cabinet meeting on May 16, 1852, he resigned, and so did the rest of the Cabinet with him. This was followed by the D'Azeglio II cabinet , from which Cavour was excluded, but which he continued to support in parliament.

minister

Massimo d'Azeglio
Ministries Surname
Prime Minister Massimo d'Azeglio
Exterior Massimo d'Azeglio (until July 12, 1851)
Alfonso La Marmora (until September 15, 1851)
Massimo d'Azeglio (from September 15, 1851)
Interior Pier Dionigi Pinelli (until October 20, 1849)
Giovanni Filippo Galvagno (until February 26, 1852)
Alessandro Pernati di Momo (from February 27, 1852)
Justice and Church Affairs Luigi de Margherita (until December 20, 1849)
Giuseppe Siccardi (until February 4, 1851)
Giovanni Filippo Galvagno (until July 6, 1851, ad interim )
Giovanni de Foresta (until February 26, 1852)
Giovanni Filippo Galvagno (from February 26, 1851) 1852)
war Enrico Morozzo Della Rocca (until September 17, 1849)
Eusebio Bava (until November 2, 1849)
Alfonso La Marmora (from November 3, 1849)
Finances Giovanni Nigra (until April 10, 1852)
Camillo Benso von Cavour (from April 19, 1852)
Public Works Giovanni Filippo Galvagno (until October 20, 1849)
Pietro De Rossi Di Santarosa (until November 2, 1849, ad interim )
Pietro Paleocapa (from November 3, 1849)
education Cristoforo Mameli (until November 9, 1850)
Pietro Gioja (until October 19, 1851)
Luigi Carlo Farini (from October 20, 1851)
Agriculture and Commerce Filippo Galvagno (until October 20, 1849)
Antonio Mathieu (until October 23, 1849)
Pietro De Rossi Di Santarosa (until August 5, 1850, †)
Filippo Galvagno (until October 11, 1850, ad interim )
Camillo Benso von Cavour (from October 12, 1850)

Web links

literature

  • Denis Mack Smith: Modern Italy. A political history. New Haven / London 1997.
  • Indro Montanelli , Mario Cervi: L'Italia del millennio. Rizzoli, Milan 2000.