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Topic: Statuto Albertino


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In the News (Mon 7 Dec 09)

  
  Birth of the Italian Republic - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Italy had become a liberal State with the reforms of king Carlo Alberto and his famous Statuto Albertino in 1848.
In this period, the provisions of the Statuto were often not observed.
This King's decisions were taken in accordance with the Statuto, but in contrast with the parliamentary practice of Italian liberal state.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Birth_of_the_Italian_Republic   (3049 words)

  
 Statuto Albertino - TheBestLinks.com - Benito Mussolini, Constitution, Fascist, Italy, ...   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
Statuto Albertino, Benito Mussolini, Constitution, Fascist, Italy, March 4...
Historically, the Statuto was proclaimed only because of the concern of revolutionary insurrection which agitated Italy at the time (and Charles Albert was only following the example of other Italian rulers), but it was the only constitution surviving the repression that followed the First war of independence in Italy (1848-1849).
The Statuto remained at the base of the kingdom's legal system even after Italian unification was achieved and the Kingdom of Sardinia turned into the Kingdom of Italy.
www.thebestlinks.com /Statuto_Albertino.html   (264 words)

  
 [No title]
The starting point was, in }{\b\insrsid1718519 1848}{\insrsid1718519, the }{\b\i\insrsid1718519 Statuto Albertino}{\insrsid1718519, in which the authorization procedure was aborted.
\par The peculiarity of }{\i\insrsid1718519 Statuto Albertino}{\insrsid1718519 is even more amplified by the government\rquote s power to close down an asso ciation if it is suspected to be a threat to the public order.
It is a very ambiguous set up that represents in itself a dangerous interpretation of the balance between State powers and individual freedom of association.
www.misp.it /2003/didattica/materiali_allievi_03/Evangelista2.rtf   (1090 words)

  
 ICPP2008   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
After a brief Napoleonic interval, the liberal revolutions of the early 19th century, known as the Italian Risorgimento, re-established the borders and the order of the Savoy ruling class that led the process of independence throughout the peninsula.
The people came to play an active part, although limited to the higher social classes, thanks to the granting of the constitution - the Statuto Albertino is dated 4 March 1848 –; and the first, fundamental, freedom of the press.
One of the first to take advantage of this was Count Camillo Benso Cavour, the founder of the newspaper "Il Risorgimento", in whose pages he spread his ideas on the economy, agriculture and liberalism.
www.icpp2008.org /cap02/sez02.asp   (445 words)

  
 avogadro   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
In 1820 he became a professor of Turin's university; In 1821 he published another memoria, Nouvelles considérations sur la théorie des proportions déterminées dans les combinaisons, et sur la détermination des masses des molécules des corps and little after Mémoire sur la manière de ramener les composès organiques aux lois ordinaires des proportions déterminées.
However, over time this political isolation was gradually reduced, since revolutionary ideas were receiving increasing attention fromSavoy kings, up to 1848 when Charles Albert granted a modern Constitution (Statuto Albertino).
Well before this, following the increasing attention to his works, Avogadro had been recalled at Turin university in 1833, where he taught for another twenty years.
www.yourencyclopedia.net /Avogadro.html   (884 words)

  
 Statuto Albertino -- Facts, Info, and Encyclopedia article   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
Statuto Albertino -- Facts, Info, and Encyclopedia article
The Statuto remained at the base of the kingdom's legal system even after (additional info and facts about Italian unification) Italian unification was achieved and the Kingdom of Sardinia turned into the (additional info and facts about Kingdom of Italy) Kingdom of Italy.
In its original version, it instituted a (A legislative assembly in certain countries (e.g., Great Britain)) Parliament formed by a Senate entirely nominated by the king and a lower elected House of Deputies.
www.absoluteastronomy.com /encyclopedia/s/st/statuto_albertino.htm   (147 words)

  
 Statuto Albertino --  Encyclopædia Britannica
More results on "Statuto Albertino" when you join.
King Charles Albert of Piedmont followed suit on March 4, granting the relatively conservative Statuto which extended suffrage only to a tiny number of landowners.
During the late Middle Ages the use of what are now the national languages of Europe began to find greater expression in writing, though works in Latin were still being published as late as the 18th century.
www.britannica.com /eb/article-9069484?tocId=9069484   (484 words)

  
 Online Encyclopedia and Dictionary - The Revolutions of 1848 in the Italian states
In the 1847-1848 winter kings started conceding moderate constitutions in order to prevent insurrections.
By March 1848 (when the last and most important of these constitutions - the Statuto Albertino - was promulgated in Piedmont) all the Italian states (with the exception of the Austrian-ruled Lombardo-Veneto) had formally become parliamentary monarchies.
Probably the least corrupt part of Italy, Lombardy's verdant land supported the most concentrated population in Europe, and by 1847 things were ripe.
fact-archive.com /encyclopedia/The_Revolutions_of_1848_in_the_Italian_states   (1551 words)

  
 the government   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
Double-chamber commissions are used for enquiring into cases of accusation, for directing and controlling the radio and television services and for intervening in the Mezzogiorno (Southern Italy), as well as for other controls and enquiries specifically set up by parliament.
Under the Republican Constitution the Senate is an elected body, unlike when under the monarchy it was appointed by the king according to the the provisions of the Statuto albertino.
It is elected, every five years, on a `regional basis' by uninominal colleges or electoral bodies, with the use of regional proportional representation if no candidate succeeds in receiving the necessary 65% of valid votes.
www.elsdatabank.com /italyontheweb/italy2/government.htm   (3470 words)

  
 Dettagli dell'articolo   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
His starting point is an analysis of Art.
68 of the Statuto albertino or the Statute granted in 1848 by Carlo Alberto, King of Sardinia, which designed a judicial branch inspired by two fundamental criteria: 1) a jurisdictional system with a vertical and hierarchical conformation; 2) a guarantee of the independence of magistrates for purposes of impartial, objective law enforcement.
The moderate separation of powers under the Statute gave way to an identification of political leadership at one with the enforcement of the norms, which left no room for independent jurisdiction.
www.mulino.it /rivisteweb/scheda_articolo.php?id_articolo=9826&MULINOSESSID=0ccbe9a569ac5577e12033271ef92f76   (187 words)

  
 January  - March 1999   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
The LETTERE PATENTI AND THE STATUTO ALBERTINO OF 1848: Religious Emancipation in the Kingdom of Sardinia.
In late February and early March 1848, on the very eve of the promulgation of the Statuto Albertino (March 4), King Carlo Alberto of Savoy-Carignano issued to his Waldensian (Protestant) and Jewish subjects the Lettere Patenti by which the reigning monarch of the Regno Sabaudo granted them civil and political liberty.
On the 150th anniversary Roberto Severino, chair of the Italian Department of The Georgetown University, will discuss this important date in the making of modern and democratic Italy.
www.italcultusa.org /home/1999/january/page1.htm   (4569 words)

  
 italyguide - general information - the constitution   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
The `government' of the Republic is thus formed by a system of equal constitutional elements: the President of the Republic, Parliament, Government, Judiciary and Constitutional Court.
The conformity of the law to the Constitution may be subject to verification by the Constitutional Court, which was not provided for by the Statuto albertino.
The latter having been modified by ordinary parliamentary procedure.
www.italyguide.com /INFO/costitu/const2.html   (2513 words)

  
 Progetto Melting Pot Europa
L’Aquila court sentence studies laws and rules on such matter.
Rules according to which the state administration, whose council of lawyers rejected L’Aquila court sentence, oblige to have the christian cross hung in each school room are very old ones and come from the so called Statuto Albertino (the Albertinian Statute?) which was in force before actual Italian Constitution.
Back then catholic religion was considered the state religion and having crosses hung was obviously compulsory.
www.meltingpot.org /stampa.php3?id_article=1602   (522 words)

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