Measure thy life by loss instead of gain;
Not by the wine drunk, but the wine poured forth
For love’s strength standeth in love’s sacrifice;
And whoso suffers most hath most to give.-From Harriet King‘s poem “Ugo Bassi’s Sermon in the Hospital”
On this date in 1849, the Garibaldian priest Ugo Bassi was shot in Bologna along with fellow-nationalist Count Livraghi.
Bassi was a penniless Barnabite priest famous for his powerful oratory* and his national enthusiasms. He signed right up for Garibaldi‘s national movement in the heady liberal revolutions of 1848-49.
“Italy is here in our camp,” he would say of the Garibaldian forces readying their (ultimately unsuccessful) defense of the Roman Republic.** “Italy is Garibaldi; and so are we.”
Alas, in this engagement, Italy had a lot fewer guns than the French.
The new French ruler Napoleon III, who had himself been in youth a revolutionary carbonaro in Rome, saw foreign policy advantage in backing the exiled Papacy and overthrew the Republic.†
Garibaldi escaped to exile, but many of his subalterns did not. Bassi was captured unarmed — he didn’t even bear arms in battle — and Pius IX, once thought a fellow-traveler by the liberals, did not hesitate to hand him to the Austrians for punishment. The Habsburgs stood equally to lose from any gains of the Risorgimento, and accordingly gave Bassi a perfunctory military trial, then had him shot immediately in Bologna.
For crowning his open-hearted life with this sacrifice, Ugo Bassi instantly became, from that day to this, one of the best-honored Italian patriots.
He possessed at once the simplicity of a child, the faith of a martyr, the knowledge of a scholar, and the calm courage of a hero … If ever Italy comes to be united may God restore her the Voice of Ugo Bassi … The name of Ugo Bassi will be the watchword of the Italians on the day of vengeance!
* Anecdote associated with Bassi once he came to firing up the Bolognese for Garibaldi: a poor girl who could give nothing to the cause spontaneously chopped off her own hair and handed it to him. This is the event depicted by Bassi’s fellow-Bolognese Napoleone Angiolini, Ugo Bassi sui gradini di San Petronio.
** Topical incidental: the Roman Republic lasted only a few months, but its constitution abolished the death penalty … so it can count as the first nation to abolish capital punishment in constitutional law.
† Earning Napoleon III the permanent wrath of Italian nationalists.
On this day..
- 1923: Albert Edward Burrows, Simmondley pit shaft horror
- 1848: Puran Appu, Kandy rebel
- 1862: Frisby McCullough, Missouri bushwhacker
- 1942: Six German saboteurs
- Themed Set: Italy
- 1735: Nicholas Bighelini, Mantua betrayer
- 1990: Sam Cayhall in Grisham's "The Chamber"
- 1570: John Felton, papal bull promulgator
- 1846: John Rodda, nobody chokes baby on acid
- 1523: Jean Valliere, the first Protestant burnt in France
- 1914: Rudolf Duala Manga Bell, in German Kamerun
- 1812: Daniel Dawson, for the integrity of sport
- 1944: Eight July 20 plotters
Pingback: ExecutedToday.com » 1858: Felice Orsini, Italian revolutionary
The key word is “constitution”.
The first state to officially abolish the death penalty was the Grand Duchy of Tuscany, 30th November 1786; the day is still a local holiday.
The first state to abolish it in facts was the Republic of San Marino, were the penalty was never used from 1468 until it was officially abolished in 1865.
I did Revolution and Nationalism as a course for history at university but I never heard of either of these men! Thank you, J!