Antonio Starabba, Marchese di Rudinì explained

Antonio Starrabba di Rudinì
Office:Prime Minister of Italy
Term Start:10 March 1896
Term End:29 June 1898
Predecessor:Francesco Crispi
Successor:Luigi Pelloux
Monarch1:Umberto I
Term Start1:6 February 1891
Term End1:15 May 1892
Predecessor1:Francesco Crispi
Successor1:Giovanni Giolitti
Office2:Minister of the Navy
Primeminister2:himself
Term Start2:6 February 1891
Term End2:15 February 1891
Predecessor2:Benedetto Brin
Successor2:Simone Antonio Saint-Bon
Office3:Minister of the Interior
Primeminister3:Luigi Federico Menabrea
Term Start3:22 October 1869
Term End3:14 December 1869
Predecessor3:Luigi Ferraris
Successor3:Giovanni Lanza
Office4:Mayor of Palermo
Term Start4:August 1863
Term End4:April 1866
Predecessor4:Mariano Stabile
Successor4:Salesio Balsano
Birth Date:16 April 1839
Birth Place:Palermo, Two Sicilies
Death Place:Rome, Kingdom of Italy
Alma Mater:University of Palermo
Profession:Lawyer
Spouse:
    Children:2

    Antonio Starrabba (or Starabba), Marquess of Rudinì (16 April 18397 August 1908) was an Italian statesman, Prime Minister of Italy between 1891 and 1892 and from 1896 until 1898.

    Biography

    Early life and patriotic activities

    He was born in Palermo (then part of the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies) into an aristocratic Sicilian family.[1] However, his family was of a more cultured, liberal disposition than many of their contemporaries.

    In 1859, he joined the revolutionary committee which paved the way for Garibaldi's triumphs in the following year. After spending a short time at Turin as attaché to the Italian foreign office, he was elected mayor of Palermo. In 1866, he displayed considerable personal courage and energy in quelling an insurrection of separatist and reactionary tendencies. The prestige thus acquired led to his appointment as prefect of Palermo. It was while occupying that position that he put down brigandage throughout the province. In 1868, he was prefect of Naples.[1]

    In October 1869 he became minister of the interior in the Menabrea cabinet. The cabinet fell a few months later, and although Starabba was an elected member of parliament for Canicattì, he held no important position until, upon the death of Marco Minghetti in 1886, he became leader of the Right.[1]

    Political career and premierships

    Early in 1891, he succeeded Francesco Crispi as premier and minister of foreign affairs, forming a coalition cabinet with a part of the Left under Giovanni Nicotera. His administration proved vacillating, but it initiated the economic reforms by virtue of which Italian finances were put on a sound basis and also renewed the Triple Alliance.

    He was overthrown in May 1892 by a vote of the Chamber and was succeeded by Giovanni Giolitti. Upon the return of his rival, Crispi, to power in December 1893, he resumed political activity, allying himself with the Radical leader, Felice Cavallotti.

    The crisis resulting from the disastrous battle of Adowa enabled Rudinì to return to power as premier and minister of the interior in a cabinet formed by the veteran Conservative, General Ricotti. He signed the Treaty of Addis Ababa that formally ended the First Italo–Ethiopian War recognizing Ethiopia as an independent country.[2] He endangered relations with Great Britain by the unauthorized publication of confidential diplomatic correspondence in a Green-book on Abyssinian affairs.

    Di Rudinì recognized the excessive brutality of the repression of the Fasci Siciliani under his predecessor Crispi. Many Fasci members were pardoned and released from jail.[3] He made it clear though that a reorganization of the Fasci would not be tolerated. Di Rudini's minister of the treasury Luigi Luzzatti passed two measures of social legislation in 1898. The industrial workmen's compensation scheme from 1883 was made obligatory with the employer bearing all costs; and a voluntary fund for contributory disability and old age pensions was created.[4]

    To satisfy the anti-colonial party, he ceded Kassala to Great Britain, thereby provoking much indignation in Italy. His internal policy was marked by continual yielding to Radical pressure and by persecution of Crispi. During his second term of office, he thrice modified his cabinet (July 1896, December 1897, and May 1898) without strengthening his political position. By dissolving the Chamber early in 1897 and favoring Radical candidates in the general election, he paved the way for the outbreak of popular uprisings about rising prices in May 1898. Rudinì declared the state of siege at Naples, Florence, Livorno and Milan, and the suppression of the riot resulted in a bloodshed in Milan. Indignation at the results of his policy left him without support of both the Left – who blamed him for the bloodshed – and the Right – who blamed him for the permissiveness that allegedly had promoted the uprisings and led to his overthrow in June 1898.[1]

    Death and legacy

    Di Rudinì retained his seat in Parliament until his death in 1908. Has reputed to be a thorough gentleman and grand seigneur. One of the largest and wealthiest landowners in Sicily, he managed his estates on liberal lines, and was never troubled by agrarian disturbances. The marquis, who had not been in office since 1898, died at Rome in August, 1908, leaving a son, Carlo, who married a daughter of Henry Labouchère.

    In many respects Rudinì, though leader of the Right and nominally a Conservative politician, proved a dissolving element in the Italian Conservative ranks. By his alliance with the Liberals under Nicotera in 1891, and by his understanding with the Radicals under Cavallotti in 1894-1898; by abandoning his Conservative colleague, General Ricotti, to whom he owed the premiership in 1896; and by his vacillating action after his fall from power, he divided and demoralized a constitutional party which, with more sincerity and less reliance upon political cleverness, he might have welded into a solid parliamentary organization.

    Many books have been written about his life, including La settimana dell'anarchia del 1866 a Palermo by Gaspare di Mercurio.[5]

    List of Rudinì's cabinets

    1st cabinet (6 February 1891 15 May 1892)

    PortfolioHolderParty
    President of the Council of MinistersThe Marquess of RudinìLiberal-Conservative
    Ministers
    Minister of Foreign AffairsThe Marquess of RudinìLiberal-Conservative
    Minister of the InteriorGiovanni NicoteraDissident Left
    Minister of Justice and WorshipLuigi FerrarisLiberal-Conservative
    Minister of WarLt. General Luigi PellouxMilitary
    Minister of the NavyAdmiral Simone Antonio Saint-BonLiberal-Conservative
    Minister of FinanceGiuseppe ColomboLiberal-Conservative
    Minister of TreasuryLuigi LuzzattiLiberal-Conservative
    Minister of Public EducationPasquale VillariLiberal-Conservative
    Minister of Public WorksAscanio BrancaLiberal-Conservative
    Minister of Post and Telegraph
    Minister of Agricolture, Industry and CommerceBruno ChimirriLiberal-Conservative

    2nd cabinet (10 March 1896 15 July 1896)

    PortfolioHolderParty
    President of the Council of MinistersThe Marquess of RudinìLiberal-Conservative
    Ministers
    Minister of the InteriorThe Marquess of RudinìLiberal-Conservative
    Minister of Justice and WorshipGiacomo CostaNone
    Minister of Foreign AffairsOnorato CaetaniLiberal-Conservative
    Minister of WarLt. General Cesare Ricotti-MagnaniMilitary
    Minister of the NavyBenedetto BrinLiberal-Conservative
    Minister of FinanceAscanio BrancaLiberal-Conservative
    Minister of TreasuryGiuseppe ColomboLiberal-Conservative
    Minister of Public EducationEmanuele GianturcoDemocrat
    Minister of Public WorksCostantino PerazziNone
    Minister of Post and TelegraphPietro CarmineLiberal-Conservative
    Minister of Agricolture, Industry and CommerceFrancesco GuicciardiniDemocrat
    Ministers without portfolio
    Civil Commissioner for SicilyGiovanni CodronchiLiberal-Conservative

    3rd cabinet (15 July 1896 14 December 1897)

    PortfolioHolderParty
    President of the Council of MinistersThe Marquess of RudinìLiberal-Conservative
    Ministers
    Minister of the InteriorThe Marquess of RudinìLiberal-Conservative
    Minister of Justice and WorshipGiacomo CostaNone
    Minister of Foreign AffairsEmilio Visconti VenostaLiberal-Conservative
    Minister of WarLt. General Luigi PellouxMilitary
    Minister of the NavyBenedetto BrinLiberal-Conservative
    Minister of FinanceAscanio BrancaLiberal-Conservative
    Minister of TreasuryLuigi LuzzattiLiberal-Conservative
    Minister of Public EducationEmanuele GianturcoDemocrat
    Minister of Public WorksGiulio PrinettiLiberal-Conservative
    Minister of Post and TelegraphEmilio SineoNone
    Minister of Agricolture, Industry and CommerceFrancesco GuicciardiniDemocrat
    Ministers without portfolio
    Civil Commissioner for SicilyGiovanni CodronchiLiberal-Conservative

    Changes:

    4th cabinet (14 December 1897 1 June 1898)

    PortfolioHolderParty
    President of the Council of MinistersThe Marquess of RudinìLiberal-Conservative
    Ministers
    Minister of the InteriorThe Marquess of RudinìLiberal-Conservative
    Minister of Justice and WorshipGiuseppe ZanardelliDemocrat
    Minister of Foreign AffairsEmilio Visconti VenostaLiberal-Conservative
    Minister of WarLt. General Alessandro Asinari di San MarzanoMilitary
    Minister of the NavyBenedetto BrinLiberal-Conservative
    Minister of FinanceAscanio BrancaLiberal-Conservative
    Minister of TreasuryLuigi LuzzattiLiberal-Conservative
    Minister of Public EducationNicolò GalloDemocrat
    Minister of Public WorksGiuseppe PavoncelliLiberal-Conservative
    Minister of Post and TelegraphEmilio SineoNone
    Minister of Agricolture, Industry and CommerceFrancesco Cocco-OrtuDemocrat

    5th cabinet (1 June 1898 29 June 1898)

    PortfolioHolderParty
    President of the Council of MinistersThe Marquess of RudinìLiberal-Conservative
    Ministers
    Minister of the InteriorThe Marquess of RudinìLiberal-Conservative
    Minister of Agricolture, Industry and Commerce
    Minister of Justice and WorshipTeodorico BonacciNone
    Minister of Foreign AffairsRaffaele CappelliLiberal-Conservative
    Minister of WarLt. General Alessandro Asinari di San MarzanoMilitary
    Minister of the NavyVice Admiral Felice Napoleone CanevaroMilitary
    Minister of FinanceAscanio BrancaLiberal-Conservative
    Minister of TreasuryLuigi LuzzattiLiberal-Conservative
    Minister of Public EducationLuigi CremonaDemocrat
    Minister of Public WorksGeneral Achille Afan de RiveraLiberal-Conservative
    Minister of Post and TelegraphSecondo FrolaLiberal-Conservative

    Orders and decorations

    See also

    References

    Notes and References

    1. Sarti, Italy: a reference guide from the Renaissance to the present, pp. 534-35
    2. Harold Marcus, The Life and Times of Menelik II: Ethiopia 1844-1913 (Lawrenceville: Red Sea Press, 1995), pp. 174-177
    3. https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1896/03/14/105743818.pdf Pardon for Italian Socialists
    4. Seton-Watson, Italy from liberalism to fascism, pp. 185-86
    5. Di Mercurio, Gaspare (1991),La settimana dell'anarchia del 1866 a Palermo; Antonio Di Rudinì, primo sindaco contro la mafia, Palermo: I.L.A. Palma
    6. Book: Italy. Ministero dell'interno. Calendario generale del regno d'Italia. 1898. 53.