Carlo Zucchi (general)

Carlo Zucchi (Reggio Emilia, 10 March 1777 Reggio Emilia, 19 December 1863), was an Italian general and patriot, who served in the Kingdom of Italy and later in the Papal State. He played an active role in the Risorgimento. His namesake nephew was a notable architect.

Carlo Zucchi
Born10 March 1777
Reggio Emilia
Died19 December 1863
Reggio Emilia (aged 86)
AllegianceKingdom of Italy (Napoleonic) Kingdom of Italy (1798-1815)
Italy United provinces of Italy (1831)
RankKingdom of Italy (Napoleonic) Brigadier General
Italy Brigadier General
Battles/warsWar of the Second Coalition (1798-1802)
War of the Fourth Coalition (1806-1807)
War of the Fifth Coalition (1809)
Battle of Raab (1809)
Battle of Mincio (1814)
Battle of the Cells (1831)
AwardsLegion d'Honneur

Biography

First seeing action as a sub lieutenant of a battalion of volunteers in the 1796 Italian Campaign, Zucchi rose steadily through the ranks, serving as a Colonel under Eugene de Beauharnais in the 1809 campaign, being made General de Brigade and Inspector General of the Infantry of the Kingdom of Italy. In 1812 he served in the XI Corps of the Grande Armée, commanding a brigade sent to join army in Russia, late November. In 1813 he was dispatched to oversee the cavalry reserves being organised in Italy, then returned to the field to lead a brigade of Gérard's 35th Division in Macdonald's XI Corps. He served at the action of Seyfersdorf 5 May, the capture of Lahn 18 August, Niederau 23rd and the battle of the Katzbach on the 26th. He was then at the Battle of Leipzig 18 Oct. In 1814 he commanded the 6ème Division of the Armée d’Italie under Eugene de Beauharnais.[1]

In 1821 he was arrested for his part in the Italian risings against Austria, and in the 1829 risings he commanded the revolutionary forces of the Duchies and Papal States, being arrested again in 1831.[2] On 4 June 1832 an Austrian military commission sentenced Zucchi to the death penalty, later commuted to twenty years of fortress imprisonment following the intervention of the French court.

Initially in solitary confinement in the fortress of Palmanova, in 1840 he was transferred to Josephstadt, and in 1848 was liberated by the revolutionary forces, of which he again took command and from which he rejected the imperial siege of Palmanova with about 1,440 fighters between regulars and volunteers. In October-November 1848 he was Pius IX's last minister of arms as a constitutional sovereign. In the 1859 uprising he again volunteered for Piedmont and served as Lieutenant General.[3]

His Memorie del generale Carlo Zucchi were edited by Bianchi, and published in 1861.

References

  1. Memorie del Generale Carlo Zucchi. Pubblicate per cura di Nicomede Bianchi. Casa Editrice Italiana di M. Guidoni. Milano, Torino
  2. Italy in the Age of the Risorgimento 1790 - 1870 By Harry Hearder
  3. Italy in the Making 1815 to 1846 By George Fitz-Hardinge Berkeley, Joan Weld Berkeley, p.97
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