Origins Although it is not clear where they were established, the organization most probably emerged as an offshoot of
Freemasonry, Their initiation rituals were structured around the trade of charcoal-selling, suiting their name. In 1814 the Carbonari wanted to obtain a constitution for the
Kingdom of the Two Sicilies by force. The Bourbon king,
Ferdinand I of the Two Sicilies, was opposed to them. The Bonapartist
Joachim Murat had wanted to create a united and independent Italy. In 1815 Ferdinand I found his kingdom swarming with them. He found an unhoped-for ally in the secret sect of the
Calderari, that had separated from the Carbonari in 1813. Staunchly Catholics and legitimists, the Calderari swore to defend the Church and vowed eternal hatred to
Freemasons and Carbonari. Society in the
Regno comprised nobles, officers of the army, small landlords, government officials, peasants, and priests, with a small urban middle class. On 15 August 1814, Cardinals
Ercole Consalvi and
Bartolomeo Pacca issued an edict forbidding all secret societies, to become members of these secret associations, to attend their meetings, or to furnish a meeting-place for such, under severe penalties.
1820 and 1821 uprisings in
Palermo against King Ferdinand I The Carbonari first arose during the resistance to the
French occupation, notably under
Joachim Murat, the Bonapartist
King of Naples. However, once the wars ended, they became a nationalist organization with a marked anti-
Austrian tendency and were instrumental in organizing
revolutions in Italy in 1820–1821 and 1831. The 1820 revolution began in Naples against King
Ferdinand I. Riots, inspired by events in
Cádiz, Spain that same year, took place in Naples, bandying anti-absolutist goals and demanding a liberal constitution. On 1 July, two officers, Michele Morelli and Joseph Silvati (who had been part of the army of Murat under
Guglielmo Pepe) marched towards the town of Nola in Campania at the head of their regiments of cavalry. Worried about the protests, King Ferdinand agreed to grant a new constitution and the adoption of a parliament. The victory, albeit partial, illusory, and apparent, caused a lot of hope in the peninsula and local conspirators, led by Santore di Santarosa, marched toward
Turin, capital of the
Kingdom of Sardinia and 12 March 1821 obtained a constitutional monarchy and liberal reforms as a result of Carbonari actions. However, the
Holy Alliance did not tolerate such revolutionary compromises and in February 1821 sent an army that defeated the outnumbered and poorly equipped insurgents in the south. In Piedmont, King
Vittorio Emanuele I, undecided about what to do, abdicated in favour of his brother
Charles Felix of Sardinia; but Charles Felix, more resolute, invited an Austrian military intervention. On 8 April, the Habsburg army defeated the rebels, and the uprisings of 1820–1821, triggered almost entirely by the Carbonari, ended up collapsing. On 13 September 1821,
Pope Pius VII with the bull
Ecclesiam a Jesu Christo condemned the Carbonari as a
Freemason secret society, excommunicating its members. Among the principal leaders of the Carbonari, Morelli and Silvati were sentenced to death;
Pepe went into exile;
Federico Confalonieri,
Silvio Pellico and Piero Maroncelli were imprisoned.
1831 uprisings , leader of the failed uprising against
Austrian dominance in Modena, was executed in 1831. The Carbonari were beaten but not defeated; they took part in the
revolution of July 1830 that supported the liberal policy of King
Louis Philippe of France on the wings of victory for the uprising in Paris. The Italian Carbonari took up arms against some states in central and northern Italy, particularly the Papal States and Modena. Ciro Menotti was to take the reins of the initiative, trying to find the support of Duke Francis IV of Modena, who pretended to respond positively in return for granting the title of King of Italy, but the Duke made the double play and Menotti, virtually unarmed, was arrested the day before the date fixed for the uprising. Francis IV, at the suggestion of the Austrian statesman
Klemens von Metternich, had condemned him to death, along with many others among Menotti's allies. This was the last major effort by the secret group.
Aftermath In 1820, the Neapolitan Carbonari once more took up arms, to wring a constitution from King Ferdinand I. They advanced against the capital from
Nola under a military officer and Abbot Minichini. They were joined by
General Pepe and many officers and government officials, and the king took an oath to observe the Spanish constitution in Naples. The movement spread to Piedmont, and Victor Emmanuel resigned from the throne in favour of his brother Charles Felix. The Carbonari secretly continued their agitation against Austria and the governments in a friendly connection with it. Pope Pius VII issued a general condemnation of the secret society of the Carbonari. The association lost its influence by degrees and was gradually absorbed into the new political organizations that sprang up in Italy; its members became affiliated especially with Mazzini's "Young Italy". From Italy, the organization was carried to France where it appeared as the Charbonnerie, which was divided into verses. Members were especially numerous in Paris. The chief aim of the association in France was also political, namely, to obtain a constitution in which the conception of the sovereignty of the people could find expression. From Paris, the movement spread rapidly through the country, and it was the cause of several mutinies among the troops; it lost its importance after several conspirators were executed, especially as quarrels broke out among the leaders. The Charbonnerie took part in the Revolution of 1830; after the fall of the Bourbons, its influence rapidly declined. After this, a Charbonnerie démocratique was formed among the French Republicans; after 1841, nothing more was heard of it. Carbonari were also to be found in Spain, but their numbers and importance were more limited than in the other Romance countries. In 1830, Carbonari took part in the
July Revolution in France. This gave them hope that a successful revolution might be staged in Italy. A bid in
Modena was an outright failure, but in February 1831, several cities in the
Papal States rose and flew the Carbonari tricolour. A volunteer force marched on Rome but was destroyed by Austrian troops who had intervened at the request of
Pope Gregory XVI. After the failed uprisings of 1831, the governments of the various Italian states cracked down on the Carbonari, who now virtually ceased to exist. The more astute members realized they could never take on the Austrian army in open battle and joined a new movement,
Giovane Italia ('Young Italy') led by the nationalist
Giuseppe Mazzini, in which many members would trace their origins and inspiration to the Carbonari. Rapidly declining in influence and members, the Carbonari practically ceased to exist, although the official history of this important company had continued, wearily, until 1848. Independent from French Philadelphians were instead the homonymous
carbonara group born in Southern Italy, especially in Puglia and in the Cilento, between 1816 and 1828. In Cilento, in 1828, an insurrection of Philadelphia, who called for the
restoration of the Neapolitan Constitution of 1820, was fiercely repressed by the director of the Bourbon police Francesco Saverio Del Carretto, whose violent retaliation included the destruction of the village of Bosco. ==Holy protector==