1894: Sante Geronimo Caserio, anarchist assassin

On this date in 1894, Sante Geronimo Caserio was guillotined in Lyon, where he had assassinated the president of France two months before.

In the day when the terror stalking European order brandished the black flag of anarchy, the Italian immigrant Caserio (his first name can be rendered either Sante or Santo, and his middle name alternately as Jeronimo, Ironimo or Heironymus) escalated the “propaganda of the deed” into the nightmares of Europe’s executives.

Retaliating for the executions of two previous anarchists, August Vaillant and Emile Henry, Caserio (English Wikipedia entry | Italian | French) stepped up to the carriage of Marie Francois Sadi Carnot on the night of June 24-25 and efficiently planted a dagger in his heart.

Before the decade was out, the Prime Minister of Spain, the King of Italy and the Empress of Austria-Hungary would all likewise be murdered by Italian anarchists.

As one might imagine, Caserio played the role of cocksure martyr to the hilt: asked whether he repented, he vowed to kill another president if given a few minutes; he refused to pursue a mental illness defense or inform on comrades; and at the guillotine, he exhorted the onlookers, “Forza, compagni! Viva l’anarchia!” (The New York Times account of the beheading recounts Caserio’s background, from an obviously hostile class position.)

By the time Caserio lost his head, the propaganda of his deed had already provoked mass arrests of Italians, and a tightening of the lois scelerates (“villainous laws”) cracking down on dissidents.

But as always, one person’s evildoer is another’s hero, and Caserio has his online monuments — like this Italian page, or this blog entry, or this rendition of one of the several songs in his honor:

In an artsier vein, one can also follow the thread of the story to Les Bal des Innocents, a downloadable French production billing itself as “The first feature film under Creative Commons Licence.”

On this day..

11 thoughts on “1894: Sante Geronimo Caserio, anarchist assassin

  1. Pingback: » The Many Ideological Labels of Homegrown Terrorism: Anarchy (1894–1914)

  2. Pingback: ExecutedToday.com » 1897: Five Barcelona anarchists

  3. Pingback: ExecutedToday.com » 1878: Max Hödel

  4. Pingback: ExecutedToday.com » 1901: Leon Czolgosz, William McKinley’s assassin

  5. Anyone who would go out and murder a leader of a country should be put to death. I think Caserio got exactly what he deserved.

    • Reading Caserio’s words at his trial, understanding that the seeds of violence are sown alongside the briars of poverty, and studying how the powerful have historically kept the poor in poverty and ignorance, it’s not surprising that human beings lash out at times, even against those deemed above the law.

  6. Pingback: ExecutedToday.com » 1894: Emile Henry, because there are no innocent bourgeois

  7. Pingback: ExecutedToday.com » 1894: Auguste Vaillant, bomb-throwing anarchist

Comments are closed.