Misplaced Pages

Roman Republic (1798–1799)

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
(Redirected from Roman Republic (1798-1799)) Republic on the Italian Peninsula between 1798–1799 For the ancient republic, see Roman Republic. For the short-lived revolutionary state, see Roman Republic (1849–1850).
Roman RepublicRepubblica Romana (Italian)
1798–1799
Flag of Roman Republic Flag Coat of arms of Roman Republic Coat of arms
Motto: Il popolo solo è sovrano (Italian)The people alone are sovereign
Departments of the Roman Republic in 1798Departments of the Roman Republic in 1798
StatusSister republic of Revolutionary France
CapitalRome
Common languagesItalian
GovernmentUnitary directorial republic
Directory 
• 1798–99 Consulate
LegislatureLegislative Council (Tribunate & Senate)
Historical eraFrench Revolutionary Wars
• Republic proclaimed 15 February 1798
• Neapolitan occupation 30 September 1799
CurrencyRoman scudo, Roman baiocco
Preceded by Succeeded by
Papal States
Anconine Republic
Tiberina Republic
Papal States
Today part of
Alternative Coat of Arms of the Roman Republic (1798–99)

The Roman Republic (Italian: Repubblica Romana) was a sister republic of the First French Republic that existed from 1798 to 1799. It was proclaimed on 15 February 1798 after Louis-Alexandre Berthier, a general of the French Revolutionary Army, had occupied the city of Rome on 11 February. It was led by a Directory of five men and comprised territory conquered from the Papal States. The Roman Republic immediately incorporated two other former-papal revolutionary administrations, the Tiberina Republic and the Anconine Republic. It proved short-lived, as Neapolitan troops restored the Papal States in October 1799.

Background

During the French Revolutionary Wars, the Papal States, under the temporal authority of the pope in Rome, was part of the First Coalition. After defeating the Kingdom of Sardinia early in the Italian campaign of 1796-1797, General Napoleon Bonaparte turned his attention south of Piedmont to deal with the Papal States. Bonaparte, skeptical over divided command for the invasion, sent two letters to the French Directory. The letters let the Directory relent the invasion of the Papal States for a while. On 3 February 1797, the French defeated the pope's army at the Battle of Faenza. Under the Treaty of Tolentino, signed on 19 February, Pope Pius VII was forced to accept an ambassador of the French First Republic.

On 27 December 1797, General Léonard Duphot, a military attaché at the French embassy in Rome, was killed while trying to defuse a riot in front of the embassy. After throwing himself between the rioters and papal troops, he was shot by the soldiers and later lynched by a mob in front of the Porta Settimiana. Duphot's death led to the departure of the French ambassador, Joseph Bonaparte, and his entourage.

History

The Directory decided that Duphot's killing would be avenged. The next year, French troops under General Louis-Alexandre Berthier invaded the Papal States and occupied Rome on 11 February 1798. Berthier proclaimed the Roman Republic on 15 February 1798, while Pope Pius VI was taken prisoner, escorted out of Rome on 20 February and exiled to France, where he later died. The institutions of the new sister republic were organized on the French model by Gaspard Monge and Pierre Daunou, with the help of local revolutionaries such as the engraver Francesco Piranesi and French residents of Rome such as Joseph-Antoine Florens [fr].

On 24 February 1798, on the occasion of a ceremony for General Duphot, hundreds of French soldiers gathered in front of the Pantheon and addressed their grievances to generals Berthier and André Masséna, commander of the Army of Rome (Armée de Rome). The soldiers demanded the payment of salaries and the punishment of those responsible for looting during the invasion of the Papal States. Masséna refused to aknowledge the soldiers' demands, but after they stormed the Palazzo Ruspoli he committed to pay part of the soldiers' salaries within 48 hours and the rest within two weeks. At the same time, Berthier negotiated with the officers in revolt.

The next day, Masséna ordered the withdrawal of the French army to the other bank of the Tiber in order to disperse the military insurrection. However, a civilian uprising, quickly defeated, broke out in multiple districts of Trastevere. The officers then attempted to have Masséna dismissed. At the end of these two days of unrest, Masséna moved out of the city and Berthier left the Roman Republic. Claude Dallemagne, then provisional commander of Rome, found himself responsible for the city amid contradictory directives from Berthier and Masséna. New insurrections broke out on 2 March, when the officers refused follow to Masséna's order for a transfer of troops, and on 14 March, when the latter returned to Rome and the revolting officers called for his dismissal, his departure within 24 hours and the attribution of powers to Dallemagne while awaiting orders from the Directory.

New orders arrived in Rome on 18 March, indicating a stregthening of the authority of the civil commissioners, the transfers of Berthier to the Army of England and of Masséna to Genoa, and the attribution of powers in the city to General Laurent de Gouvion Saint-Cyr with orders to arrest the officers involved in the insurrections.

The Kingdom of Naples invaded the Roman Republic in November 1798. Although initially victorious at Ferentino, the French evacuated Rome and a Neapolitan army entered the lightly guarded city unopposed on 29 November, the very day that the War of the Second Coalition had begun. Nevertheless, French troops led by General Jacques MacDonald, governor of the Roman Republic, and General Jean Étienne Championnet, commander of the Army of Rome, defeated the Neapolitans at Ferentino, at Civita Castellana on 5 December, and at Otricoli on 9 December, re-entering Rome on 14 December. Championnet would go on to occupy Naples in January 1799 and proclaim the Parthenopean Republic.

Following a second Neapolitan invasion on 30 September 1799, the Papal States were restored under the rule of Pope Pius VII in June 1800, bringing the Roman Republic to an end. The French Army invaded the Papal States again in 1808, after which it was partitioned between the First French Empire and the Napoleonic Kingdom of Italy until the end of the Napoleonic Wars in 1815.

Government

The Roman Republic's constitutional organization was heavily influenced by that of the French Constitution of 1795, which itself was inspired by and loosely based on that of the ancient Roman Republic. Executive authority was vested in five consuls. The legislative branch was composed of two chambers, a 60-member Tribunate and a 30-member Senate, which elected the consuls.

Gallery

See also

References

  1. Imperial City: Rome under Napoleon, Susan Vandiver, (p. 20)
  2. ^ Boulot, Georges (1908). Le général Duphot 1769-1797. Plon.
  3. "Napoleon's Campaign in Italy, 1796–97".
  4. ^ Gainot, Bernard; Martin, Virginie (2020). "L'honneur et la solde. L'insurrection des « capitaines » à Rome (février-mars 1798)". Annales historiques de la Révolution française (in French) (401 ed.): 21–58. ISBN 9782200933210.
  5. Six, Georges (1934). "MACDONALD, duc de TARANTE (Etienne-Jacques-Joseph-Alexandre)". Dictionnaire biographique des généraux et amiraux français de la Révolution et de l'Empire : 1792-1814 (in French). Vol. 2. Paris: Librairie Historique et Nobilaire. p. 137.
  6. Six, Georges (1934). "CHAMPIONNET (Jean-Étienne Vachier, dit)". Dictionnaire biographique des généraux et amiraux français de la Révolution et de l'Empire : 1792-1814 (in French). Vol. 1. Paris: Librairie Historique et Nobilaire. p. 218.
  7. Imperial City: Rome under Napoleon, Susan Vandliver, (p. 21)
  8. Ogg, Frederick Austin (1913). The Governments of Europe. New York: Macmillan Company. pp. 354–355. Retrieved 3 February 2018.
Client states of the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars (1792–1815)
Sister
republics
Germany
IrelandConnacht
Italy
Netherlands
Switzerland
Map of Europe as at 1812, highlighting France and her client states Europe at the height of Napoleon's Empire
Napoleonic
creations
Central and Eastern Europe
Germany
Italy
Mediterranean
NetherlandsHolland
SpainSpain
Holy See
History
Sovereign
judicial entity

under
international
law

(Legal status)
Officials
Governance
Government
Foreign affairs
(Multilateral policy)
Diocese
of Rome

with universal
full communion
(Papal primacy)
Synods
Ecclesiastical
province of Rome

(Vicariate: Rome,
Vatican City)
Suburbicarian sees
Territorial abbeys
Suffragan dioceses
Properties
including
extra-
territoriality
Inside
Rome
Major basilicas
Non-
extraterritorial
Outside
Rome
Non-
extraterritorial
See also
List of historic states of Italy
Pre-Roman period
Ancient Rome
Medieval
and
Early Modern
states
Barbarian kingdoms
(476–774)
Byzantine Empire (584–751)
Papal States
(754–1870)
Holy Roman Empire
and other
independent
states
Republic of Venice
(697–1797)
Other Republics
(c. 1000–1797)
Southern Italy
(774–1139)
Byzantine
Arab
Lombard
Norman
Sardinia
(from the 9th century)
Kingdom of Sicily
(1130–1816) and
Kingdom of Naples
(1282–1816)
French Revolutionary
and Napoleonic eras
(1792–1815)
Republics
Monarchies
Post-Napoleonic
states
Post-unification

Categories: