Carlo Maria Alberto Aliotti

Carlo Maria Alberto Aliotti was an Italian diplomat.

Carlo Maria Alberto Aliotti
Italian Ambassador to Venezuela
In office
December 1902  April of 1903
Succeeded byGiovanni Paolo Riva
Italian Ambassador to France
In office
1908–1908
Preceded byGiovanni Gallina
Succeeded byAntonino Paternò Castello di San Giuliano
Italian Ambassador to Mexico
In office
April 11, 1912  October 1913
Preceded byAnnibale Raybaudi-Massiglia
Succeeded bySilvio Cambiagio
Italian Ambassador to Albania
In office
February 21st 1914  mid-August 1914
Succeeded byGaetano Manzoni
Italian Ambassador to China
In office
November 8, 1916  1917
Preceded byCarlo Sforza
Succeeded byVittorio Cerruti
Italian Ambassador to the United States[1]
In office
October 1, 1920  November 1, 1920
Preceded byCamillo Romano Avezzana
Succeeded byVittorio Rolandi Ricci
Italian Ambassador to Japan
In office
November 9, 1920  November 12, 1922
Preceded byRaniero Paulucci di Calboli
Succeeded byGiacomo De Martino
Personal details
Born(1870-01-15)January 15, 1870
Smyrna İzmir
DiedFebruary 8, 1923(1923-02-08) (aged 53)
La Spezia
Cause of deathcar accident
Spouse(s)Aliotti, Fiorenza baronessa
Childrendaughter Buouacorsa Aliotti
Parents
  • Baron Antonio Aliotti, former consul general of Tuscany in Smyrna. (father)
  • Victoria Denotovich (mother)
Alma materScuola superiore di Commercio - Venice
ProfessionDiplomat

Life

He graduated at the Scuola superiore di Commercio in Venice in 1890.[2] On March 29, 1893, he entered the consular career and was employed in Constantinople, Thessaloniki and Vienna. In 1896 he is transferred to the diplomatic career and confirmed in Vienna, In 1900 he was sent to Saint Petersburg, Washington, D.C., and Buenos Aires.[2]

In December 1902 he became Minister plenipotentiary to Venezuela, where he became Chargé d'affaires in 1903 in Caracas. In 1908 he was Chargé d'affaires in Paris. From April 11, 1912 to October 1913 he was Italian Ambassador to Mexico (Minister plenipotentiary to Mexico City).

On February 21, 1914, when the Albanian crisis has broken out he was designate extraordinary envoy and minister plenipotentiary, represented Italy in Durrës.[2] He arrived in Albania on 10 March 1914 as Italian envoy at the time of William, Prince of Albania and was active at the royal court in Durrës during and after the rebel insurrection against the prince. He was the patron of Essad Pasha Toptani and enabled him to leave Durrës as a free man for Italy on 20 May 1914. On 23 May 1914, it was Baron Aliotti who convinced Prince Wied to flee to the safety of the Italian naval vessel Misurata anchored in the bay of Durrës, an act that severely damaged the prince's reputation among his Albanian subjects. In mid-August 1914 he was replaced by Count Gaetano Manzoni. Despite the short time he spent in Albania, Aliotti played a prominent role in the tumultuous political events that unfolded in the sixmonth kingdom. The situation was particularly serious for domestic unrest and Austrian maneuvers that tended to eliminate any possible Italian influence in the area. Aliotti was convinced of the political and strategic importance of Albania for Italy, carried out, but with little luck, a continuous and energetic action in favor of the government of the Prince of Wied; this action aroused the protests of the ambassadors of the other powers of the Triple and, while it found consensus in the public opinion and in the Italian press, it often came into conflict with the more moderate politics of the Marquis Di San Giuliano.

In 1916 he became Minister plenipotentiary in China. In 1918 he became commissioner in Sofia Bulgaria.

In July 1920 he was in Albania again with Colonel Fortunato Castoldi to negotiate the Italian evacuation of Vlora. In August 1920, having Giovanni Giolitti decided to keep in Albania only the Sazan Island, Aliotti he was instructed to begin negotiations with the local Revolutionary Committee; he refused, however, shortly after the assignment and was replaced by Count Gaetano Manzoni .

In October 1920 he was stationed at the Embassy of Italy, Washington, D.C. On November 9, 1920, he became Italian Ambassador in Japan in Tokyo.

In November 1922 he was abruptly retired, with personal communication of Benito Mussolini.

Publications

  • He published a report on the methods of cultivation applied in certain arid regions of Mexico, proposing its extension to Cyrenaica ("Dry Farming" and the cultivation of cotton in the Lagoon of Torreón and Tlahualilo (States of Cohanila and Durando) to Mexico, to care of the ministry of the colonies, Rome 1913).[3]

References

  1. Chief of Protocol, Italian Ambassador to the United States,
  2. Università degli Studi di Lecce (1987). La formazione della diplomazia nazionale (1861-1915) Repertorio bio-bibliografico dei funzionari del Ministero degli Affari Esteri (in Italian). Roma: Istituto Poligrafico e Zecca della Stato. pp. 7-8
  3. Robert Elsie, A Biographical Dictionary of Albanian History, p. 10
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