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158:'s report on the inhumane conditions in Neapolitan detention facilities (1851), emphasizing the case of Poerio, provoked an international uproar; nonetheless, Poerio was set free only in 1858. He and other exiles were then placed on board a ship bound for the
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Descended from an old
Calabrian family, Carlo Poerio was born on 13 October 1803 in Naples. He was the son of Baron Giuseppe Poerio, a lawyer of
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and practised as a lawyer, and from 1837 to 1848 was frequently arrested and imprisoned, helping among others to prepare the
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This article about his brother discusses Carlo in the second half. It offers the following sources:
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In the following year he returned to Italy, and, in 1860 he was elected deputy to the
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government), and was chosen the body's vice-president in 1861, when the
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59:(13 October 1803 - 28 April – 27 April 1867) was an
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89:who had attached himself to the cause of the
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284:Carlo Poerio and the Neapolitan Police
270:Della Vita e de tempi di Carlo Poerio
73:activist, politician, and brother of
280:Two Letters to the Earl of Aberdeen
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383:19th-century Italian male writers
373:People of the Revolutions of 1848
294:I martiri della libertĂ italiana
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132:Imprisonment, refuge, and return
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255:Poerio, Alessandro s.v. Carlo
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189:(the original seat of the
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276:William Ewart Gladstone
260:Encyclopædia Britannica
156:William Ewart Gladstone
299:Alessandro Imbriani,
118:insurrection of 1847
378:19th-century poets
368:Italian male poets
315:Italian Characters
150:Phlegraean Islands
308:I Fratelli Poerio
183:Piedmont-Sardinia
164:Luigi Settembrini
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338:1867 deaths
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327:Categories
201:References
179:parliament
142:labor camp
136:After the
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81:Early life
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