- Bandiera Brothers
The Bandiera Brothers (in Italian: "Fratelli Bandiera") were Italian patriots, Attilio and Emilio Bandiera, (1811–1844 and 1819–1844).
Background
The two brothers were sons of Baron Francesco Bandiera, an admiral in the
Austro-Hungarian Navy , and were themselves members of that service. At an early age they were won over to the ideas ofItalian unification , and corresponded withGiuseppe Mazzini and other members of theGiovane Italia , a revolutionary secret society.During the year 1843 the air was full of different conspiracies and various other ill-starred attempts at nationalist uprisings were made. The Bandiera brothers spread propaganda among the officers and enlisted men of the
Austria n navy, nearly all Italians, and planned to seize a warship to bombard the city ofMessina . Having been betrayed by informants they fled toCorfu early in 1844.Events
Rumours reached them in Corfu of agitation in the
Kingdom of the Two Sicilies , where the people were being represented as ready to rise "en masse" at the first appearance of a leader. The Bandiera brothers, encouraged by Mazzini, consequently determined to make a raid on the Calabrian coast. They assembled a band of about twenty men ready to sacrifice their lives, and set sail on their venture on 12 June 1844. Four days later they landed nearCrotone , intending to go toCosenza , liberate the political prisoners and issue their proclamations. Tragically for the Bandiera brothers, they did not find the insurgent band they were told awaited them, so they moved towardsLa Sila . They were ultimately betrayed by one of their party, theCorsican Boccheciampe, and by some peasants who believed them to be Turkish piratesFact|date=November 2007.A detachment of
gendarme s and volunteers were sent against them, and after a short fight the whole band was taken prisoner and escorted to Cosenza, where a number ofCalabrian s who had taken part in a previous rising were also under arrest. First, the Calabrians were tried by court-martial, and a large number were condemned to death or the galleys. The raiders’ turn came next, and the whole party, save the traitor Boccheciampe, were condemned to be shot, but in the case of eight of them the sentence was commuted to the galleys. On the 23rd of July the two Bandiera brothers and their nine companions were executed by firing squad; some accounts state they cried "Viva l’Italia"!" (Long live Italy!) as they fell.The remains of the
Bandiera Brothers and of their companionDomenico Moro were brought back to Venice onJune 18 1867 , following the liberation of that city after theAustro-Prussian War of 1866. The three remains are buried in the Church ofSan Giovanni e Paolo , at theCampo San Giovanni e Paolo , where the equestrian monument ofColleoni is located.Aftermath
The moral effect was enormous throughout Italy, the action of the authorities was universally condemned, and the martyrdom of the Bandiera brothers bore fruit in the subsequent revolutions. It also created a profound impression in
Great Britain , where it was believed that the Bandiera brothers’ correspondence with Mazzini had been tampered with, and that information as to the proposed expedition had been forwarded to the Austro-Hungarian and Bourbon governments by their own Foreign Office.
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