Eugenio Emanuele di Savoia-Carignano
Prince Eugene Emmanuel of Savoia-Villafranca, Prince of Carignano and Count of Villafranca (Paris, 14 April 1816 - Turin, 15 December 1888) was a statesman and military leader for Piedmont–Sardinia and later for the Kingdom of Italy.
Biography
[edit]He was a son of Prince Giuseppe Savoia-Carignan (1783-1825), a close relative of King Charles Albert of Sardinia, and Pauline de Quélen de Vauguyon (1783-1829), daughter of French Ambassador Paul François de Quelen. His sister was Princess Maria Vittoria of Savoy and his grandfather was Eugenio, Count of Villafranca [1].
He graduated from the Royal Naval School in Genoa, after which he joined the navy as an officer. In the summer of 1834, with the rank of lieutenant, he transferred from the navy to the army, initially to the Piedmont cavalry. By 1836 he had become a colonel, and in 1844, a lieutenant general. In parallel, he continued to be listed in the navy, and was eventually promoted to admiral [1].
Somewhat earlier, in 1842, the prince tried to marry Brazilian Princess Januária of Brazil, but was refused. In 1843, he tried to marry the Austrian princess Maria Carolina, daughter of Archduke Rainer Joseph of Austria, but she died the following year, before the marriage was concluded. The loss of his future bride plunged the prince into complete despair, and for many years after that, he did not want to marry, even when the King offered him advantageous matches [1].
However, twenty years later he finally married a 19-year-old ballerina of relatively simple origin, named Felicite Crosio (1844-1911). From this marriage, eight children were born, who were granted all rights to the lands and titles of their father by decision of King Umberto, despite the fact that their parents' marriage was morganatic [1].
Italian Wars of Independence
[edit]Prince Eugene Emmanuel participated in several military actions during the Wars for the Unification of Italy (1848–1871).
Charles Albert appointed Eugene as commander general of the Navy of the Kingdom of Sardinia between 1844-48 and 1849-51.
Four times during the war (1848, 1849, 1859, 1866), he held the Lieutenancy of the Kingdom, and was then regent of the United Provinces of Central Italy in Tuscany (March 1860) and Lieutenant in Naples (January 1861).
In 1861 he distinguished himself in the Siege of Gaeta, which was defended by supporters of the King of the Two Sicilies, Francis II.
After the unification of Italy, he presided over the General Commission for the Defense of the State, the National Consortium, the National Shooting Range and many other associations of various kinds. He died in Turin on 15 December 1888 [2].
He received the Spanish Order of the Golden Fleece during the short Spanish reign of his cousin Amadeus I, and several other awards.
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani - Volume 91 (2018) by Andrea Merlotti
- ^ Enciclopedia Italiana (1936), by Francesco Lemmi
- 1816 births
- 1888 deaths
- 19th-century people from the Savoyard State
- Nobility from Turin
- Counts of Villafranca
- Princes of Savoy
- People from the Kingdom of Sardinia
- Italian admirals
- Order of the Golden Fleece
- Knights Grand Cross of the Military Order of Savoy
- Knights Grand Cross of the Order of Saints Maurice and Lazarus