Italy’s Carbonari, now shed of Bonapartist rule,…
1815 CE
Italy’s Carbonari, now shed of Bonapartist rule, rededicate themselves to overthrowing southern Europe’s post-1814 reactionary regimes.
A secret society divided into small covert cells scattered across Italy, they have first come to prominence in the Kingdom of Naples during the Napoleonic wars.
Although some of the society's documents will claim that it has origins in medieval France, and that its progenitors were under the sponsorship of Francis I of France during the sixteenth century, this claim can not be verified by outside sources.
A plethora of theories have been advanced as to the origins of the Carbonari, but the organization has most likely emerged as an offshoot of Freemasonry, as part of the spread of liberal ideas from the French Revolution.
They first become influential in the Kingdom of Naples (under the control of Joachim Murat) and in the Papal States, the most resistant opposition to the Risorgimento.