José Borjes Explained

José Borjes
Birth Date:28 November 1812
Birth Place:Vernet (Artesa de Segre), Spain
Death Place:Tagliacozzo, Kingdom of Italy
Placeofburial:Church of the Gesù, Rome
Allegiance:
Branch:
Serviceyears:1833–1861
Rank:Brigadier general
Awards:Royal Order of Francis I

José Borjes (28 November 18128 December 1861) was a Spanish general who fought on the Carlist side during the Carlist Wars. Later in his life he sided with Francis II of the Two Sicilies and fought against the unification of Italy.

Biography

Born in a Catholic family, Borjes took part in the First Carlist War. During the war, he lost his father, who was shot in Cervera by colonel Don Cristino Niubó. Borjes was one of the closest collaborators of Carlos de Borbón and was promoted to the rank of colonel in 1839. After the armistice, he emigrated to Bourg-en-Bresse, in France.[1]

He returned to Spain in 1847 and took part with the rank of brigadier general in the Second Carlist War. In 1848 he was appointed Commander-general of the province of Tarragona by Ramón Cabrera.[1] The following year he was defeated by the liberal troops of General Quesada in Selma and was forced to go back to France.[2]

In 1861 he was selected by General Clary, the Marseille-based leader of one of the secret committees that sought a Bourbon restoration in Southern Italy, to make a clandestine landing on the Italian coast.

Promoted to the rank of General, Borjes was entrusted with the task of making contact with elements loyal to the Bourbons and organising a general uprising to restore the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies. After a successful landing in Calabria, having found little support there for the Bourbon cause, Borjes embarked with his small company on a risky and adventurous journey into mountainous Basilicata in an attempt to establish contact with Carmine Crocco, the most famous leader of the Italian brigandage in the years following the Unification.

The goal of Borjes was the capitulation of Potenza, the most well-defended stronghold of the Italian army in Basilicata. Crocco did not trust Borjes from the start and worried about losing his leadership, but he accepted the alliance. Crocco, with the support of Borjes, conquered various towns searching for new recruits, including Trivigno, Calciano, Garaguso, Craco and Aliano. Crocco's army made its way to Potenza, occupying neighbouring cities such as Guardia Perticara, San Chirico Raparo and Vaglio, but the expedition to the main city failed because of a clash between Crocco and Borjes on the military campaign.

After other battles and retreating to Monticchio, one of his headquarters, Crocco broke the alliance with Borjes because he did not want to serve under a foreigner and did not believe the promise of the Bourbon government about the provision of reinforcements. Disappointed, Borjes planned to go to Rome, to inform King Francis II but, during the journey, he was captured in Tagliacozzo and shot by Piedmontese soldiers headed by Major Enrico Franchini. Victor Hugo condemned his execution.

His body was buried in the Church of the Gesù in Rome.[3] Throughout the expedition Borjes kept a journal in which he recorded the most notable actions fought in Calabria and Basilicata. Borjes's journal was first published by the Swiss writer Marc Monnier in his book entitled Historie du Brigandage dans l'Italie Méridionale (Paris 1862). The diary was translated into Spanish in the book Historia del bandolerismo y de la Camorra en la Italia meridional by Juan Mañé y Flaquer and Joaquín Mola Martínez.

Notes

  1. Encyclopedia: José Borges . . Bullón de Mendoza y Gómez de Valuguera . Alfonso . . 13 July 2024.
  2. Book: Pirala , Antonio . Historia contemporánea. Anales desde 1843 hasta la conclusion de la actual guerra civil . 2 . 1876 . Imprenta y fundición de Manuel Tello . Madrid . 406–7.
  3. Book: Guerri , Giordano Bruno . Il sangue del Sud: antistoria del Risorgimento e del brigantaggio . 2010 . Giordano Bruno Guerri . Mondadori . Milan . 210 . 9788804603306.

Bibliography