Charles Albert (October 2, 1798 – July 28, 1849) was the Duke of Savoy, Piedmont, Aosta and King of Sardinia from 1831 to 1849. He succeeded Charles Felix, and his name is bound with the first Italian statute and the First War of Independence (1848–1849). He abdicated after his forces were defeated by the Austrian army at the Battle of Novara (1849).
He was educated in the intellectually liberal and Francophile atmosphere of Geneva, then in Paris during the First French Empire. After the fall of Napoleon I of France, Charles Albert returned to Turin. He married Maria Teresa of Tuscany (1801-1855) in 1817 and displayed some sympathies with liberals. In 1821, as regent for the kingdom in the absence of the new king, Charles Felix, he conceded a constitution that was disavowed by the king, who sent him to join the French ultra-monarchist forces in Spain to suppress the liberal revolution there and restore Ferdinand VII. He distinguished himself at the Battle of Trocadero in 1823, which annihilated hopes of a constitutional monarchy for Spain.
Carlo Alberto succeeded Carlo Felice to the throne of Sardinia in 1831. Although an Italian patriot opposed to Austrian hegemony in Northern Italy, he put down the Mazzini conspiracy. He introduced a series of reforms that abolished domestic customs barriers within the kingdom, promulgated a constitutional law code (Statuto Albertino) along Napoleonic lines and supported the arts and sciences.
During the Revolutions of 1848 he agreed to a constitutional regime that remained in place for the century that the Kingdom of Italy lasted. The same year he declared war on absolutist Austria. However, he was defeated at Novara in 1849 and, rather than redraw the Statute, abdicated in favour of his son, Victor Emmanuel.
He then left for exile in Porto, Portugal, where he died the same year.
For all hereditary titles, check Vittorio Amedeo III.
With Maria Teresa of Tuscany he had children including:
1798 births | 1849 deaths | Natives of Turin | House of Savoy | Claimant Kings of Jerusalem | People of the Revolutions of 1848 | Contemporary Italian history
Carlo Alberto I. | Carlos Alberto de Saboya | Charles-Albert de Sardaigne | Carlo Alberto di Savoia | Karel Albert van Sardinië | カルロ・アルベルト | Karl Albert av Sardinia | Carlos Alberto da Sardenha | 卡洛·阿尔贝托
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"Charles Albert of Sardinia".
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