Cover of the book Le Pasque Veronesi by Francesco Mario Agnoli, dedicated to the 1797 Verona uprising against Napoleon.

Publications

Francesco Mario Agnoli, Le Pasque Veronesi.
Quando Verona insorse contro Napoleone.
Il Cerchio Iniziative Editoriali. Rimini 1998.
With an introductory essay by Massimo de Leonardis.
Single volume. Cover of the first edition. Out of print..


Francesco Mario Agnoli, Le Pasque Veronesi. Quando Verona insorse contro Napoleone.
Il Cerchio Iniziative Editoriali. Rimini 2013.
Preface by Francesco Vecchiato. Introductory essay by Massimo de Leonardis.
Two volumes. Covers of the second edition, enriched with additional essays and many color illustrations.
Out of print.


Francesco Mario Agnoli, Le Pasque Veronesi. Quando Verona insorse contro Napoleone.
Il Cerchio Iniziative Editoriali. Rimini 2016. Preface by Francesco Vecchiato.
Introductory essay by Massimo de Leonardis.
Two volumes. Covers of the third edition, enriched with further essays and hundreds of new illustrations (in addition to period ones), specially commissioned from leading Italian and international illustrators and artists.
Out of print.


Francesco Mario Agnoli: I processi delle Pasque Veronesi. Gli insorti veronesi davanti al tribunale militare rivoluzionario francese (maggio 1797-gennaio 1798).
Il Cerchio Iniziative Editoriali. Rimini 2002.
Includes, in appendix, unpublished sentences and trial documents discovered in Paris by scholars of the Committee for the Commemoration of the Pasque Veronesi.


Antonio Maffei, Dalle Pasque Veronesi alla pace di Campoformido. Volume I: La fine della dominazione veneziana in Verona (marzo 1797-gennaio 1798). Edited by Nicola Cavedini.
Il Cerchio Iniziative Editoriali, Rimini 2005.
The narrative of the most important chronicler of the Pasque Veronesi, who was personally involved in the events.


Antonio Maffei, Dalle Pasque Veronesi alla pace di Campoformido. Volume II: L’ oppressione giacobina in Verona e la caduta di Venezia (marzo 1797-gennaio 1798).
Edited by Nicola Cavedini. Il Cerchio Iniziative Editoriali, Rimini 2006.
Continuation of Maffei’s eyewitness account of the uprising and its aftermath.


Cavedini Nicola – Ruggiero Maurizio, Risorgimento criminale: Verona e le genti venete fra occupazione sabauda e controrivoluzione (1848-1869): i soldati lombardo-veneti fedeli all’Imperatore e l’insorgenza del Corpus Domini del 1867.
Self-published, Verona 2017.
Out of print.

Cover illustration: Pavia, December 16, 1858.
In Corso di Strada Nuova, in front of the University, two Mazzinians assassinate Professor Emilio Briccio with a triangular-bladed dagger, a weapon traditionally used in Masonic lodge rituals, for his loyalty to His Majesty Emperor Franz Joseph.
This was only one of many political crimes of the so-called Risorgimento.

The murderers, Giuseppe Pedotti and Enrico Novaria, fled to Cavour’s Piedmont, where they found asylum and complicity.
To this day, Pavia commemorates the assassins with two streets bearing their names,but not the slain professor.
Meanwhile, local Freemasons have named their city lodge after Pedotti.
Illustration by Oliviero Murru.

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