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Francesco Crispi (4
October 1818 – 11
August 1901) was an
Italian patriot and statesman. He was
among the main
protagonists of the Risorgimento, a close...
- in
favor of
retaining the monarchy. The Intransigents, led by
Francesco Crispi,
constituted by
former members of the
Action Party,
supporting a left-populist...
-
Crispi who in May 1895
spoke of "the
absolute impossibility of
continuing to
govern through Parliament." In
December 1893,
Umberto appointed Crispi prime...
- schools. In 1887,
Francesco Crispi became prime minister and
began focusing government efforts on
foreign policy.
Crispi worked to
build Italy as a great...
- a lighthouse. The
first one,
inaugurated in
April 1924 as the
Francesco Crispi Lighthouse, was a simple,
functional metal-framed
lighthouse built atop...
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Giuseppe Crispi (Arbërisht: Zef Krispi; 1781–1859) was an
Italian philologist and
bishop of Arbëresh descent. One of the
major figures of the Arbëresh...
- most
famous and
influential prime ministers of this
period was
Francesco Crispi, a left-wing
patriot and statesman, the
first head of the
government from...
-
Michelangelo Crispi (born 5
February 1972 in Catania) is an
Italian lightweight rower. He won a gold
medal at the 1994
World Rowing Championships in Indianapolis...
- The
Crispi IV
government of
Italy held
office from 14 June 1894
until 10
March 1896, a
total of 635 days, or 1 year, 8
months and 25 days. The government...
-
Francesco Crispi, an
exiled political activist who
moved from city to city;
according to some sources, the
couple met in 1849
while Crispi was imprisoned...