Leone Carpi (1810 or 1820 in Bologna, Italy - 1898) was a Jewish Italian political economist and journalist who took part in the struggles of the Risorgimento. In 1849 he was prominent in the defense of the Roman Republic.[1] After its fall, he went into exile.
Carpi was the first Jewish deputy elected to the Italian Parliament, by the city of Ferrara. On the expiration of his term, he divided his time between Bologna and Rome, where he was a contributor to Popolo Romano. He threw much light on the social and moral conditions of the new united Italy by the information that he collected in all departments of the government.
His son Michelangelo Carpi (Bologna 1846-Firenze 1917) was a famous bariton singer, buried in the Jewish sector of Cimitero Monumentale di Milano.
Among his works may be mentioned:
In his Dell' Emigranzione, he reported that about 555,000 "Italians" lived in what he called Italy's "colonies" abroad. Nearly half of these lived in South America, mainly in Argentina, Uruguay and southern Brazil. Nine per cent lived in North America, mostly in the United States. Another third lived in transalpine Europe and 15% in North Africa, Greece and the eastern Mediterranean.[2]
The only work written by him relating directly to Jewish topics was his Alcune Parole Sugli Israeliti in Occasione di un Decreto Pontifico d'Interdizione, Florence, 1847.