
Prospero Colonna
Duke of Rignano, Prince of Sonnino
Prospero Colonna, Duke of Rignano, Prince of Sonnino (18 July 1858 – 16 September 1937) was an Italian politician and aristocrat. He was twice mayor of Rome (1899–1904, 1914–1919). He served in the Chamber of Deputies and Senate of the Kingdom of Italy. Prospero was born in Naples, son of Giovanni Andrea I Colonna, a landowner, and Isabella Alvarez di Toledo. He was descended from the House of Colonna, an ancient aristocratic family. In his youth, he married Maria Ignazia Massimo. They had 3 children: Mario, Piero (future Fascist politician) and Fabrizio. In 1895, Colonna was elected to the Chamber of Deputies as the representative of Anagni. He supported the Historical Right. He resigned his charge in 1900. In the same year, Colonna became both a Senator and the Mayor of Rome. During his term, Rome completed a streetcar line, including a passage under the Quirinal Hill. In June 1904 the IOC's President Pierre de Coubertin chose Rome as the host for the IV Olympic Games, but Colonna refused due to the difficult status of the city treasury. Although he reached out to the government, the Prime Minister Giovanni Giolitti refused to help the city. Finally, Colonna resigned his office. When the First World War started, Colonna joined in the Italian Royal Army as cavalry colonel. However, he never participated in battles, as he was appointed "military" mayor of Rome. In 1919, he resigned the office again and retired from politics. He died in 1937.


The army of the Duchy of Modena and Reggio or Royal Troops was the land army of the Austro-Este State, operational from 1814 to 1863. At the end of April 1859, with the outbreak of the second Italian War of independence and the fall of the Grand Ducal government in neighboring Tuscany, the Este troops stationed in the territories bordering the Kingdom of Sardinia were mobilized. On 28 May the garrisons of Massa, Carrara and Montignoso were made to fall back on Fivizzano. On 29 April and 12 May there were some skirmishes around the village of Fosdinovo between the Este army and the pro-Piedmontese Magra Hunters. Meanwhile, on 2 May, the Sardinian Kingdom had declared war on the Duchy of Modena and Reggio while in the neighboring State of Parma the Duchess Regent Luisa Maria had temporarily left the capital. With the landing of the French V Corps in Livorno, the Este government decided to recall all the troops stationed in Lunigiana and Garfagnana on the Emilian side of the Apennines, while an Austrian battalion was being brought in from Bologna. To stop the Franco-Tuscan advance on the mountains, some battalions were deployed on the main communication arteries of the Modena and Reggio Apennines. Pavullo was allocated the column Forghieri while in Casina was installed the operational center of the column Casoni. In the plain an Austrian brigade under the command of Generalabl The Austrian defeat at Magenta and the consecutive retreat of the imperial troops from the territories of the Emilian duchies and from the Papal legation of Bologna on 7 May, forced the Modena general staff to order the withdrawal of the troops allocated to the
Apennines. On 10 June, Duke Francis V ordered his soldiers to evacuate Modena and Reggio and withdraw to the Po. The following day the Este sovereign abandoned the capital forever followed by most of his troops. The Modenese army, headed for Mantua, withdrew through Carpi and Guastalla, where the soldiers from the garrison of Reggio also flowed. On 14 June the Ducal troops, in all about 3 800 men left the territory of the duchy. Upon reaching the territory of Lombardo-Veneto, the Modenese army was reorganized into an operational brigade. On 16 June it was merged with the division of General Herdy which, together with the division of Field Marshalel On 23 June, while the bulk of the Austrian troops moved towards the Chiese river, the Estense Brigade was stationed at the fort of Belfiore, at the gates of Mantua. The following day the Austrians clashed hard with the French at Solferino reporting a further defeat that definitively compromised the progress of the war. The Austrian II Corps, and consequently also the Estensi troops, remained in reserve throughout the course of the battle. In the following years, despite the transfer to Vienna of Francis V and the proclamation of the Kingdom of Italy, the Este Brigade saw its ranks increase to 5 000 units. On September 24, 1863, at the Villa Morosini Cappello in Cartigliano, near Vicenza, the Estense Brigade was officially disbanded.

The House of Colonna, also known as Sciarrillo or Sciarra, is an Italian noble family, forming part of the papal nobility. It was powerful in medieval and Renaissance Rome, supplying one pope (Martin V) and many other church and political leaders. The family is notable for its bitter feud with the Orsini family over influence in Rome, until it was stopped by papal bull in 1511. In 1571, the heads of both families married nieces of Pope Sixtus V. Thereafter, historians recorded that "no peace had been concluded between the princes of Christendom, in which they had not been included by name". According to tradition, the Colonna family is a branch of the Counts of Tusculum — by Peter (1099–1151) son of Gregory III, called Peter "de Columna" from his property the Columna Castle in Colonna, in the Alban Hills. Further back, they trace their lineage past the Counts of Tusculum via Lombard and Italo-Roman nobles, merchants, and clergy through the Early Middle Ages — ultimately claiming origins from the Julio-Claudian dynasty and the gens Julia whose origin is lost in the mists of time but which entered the annals for the first time in 489 BC with the consulship of Gaius Julius Iulus. The first cardinal from the family was appointed in 1206, when Giovanni Colonna di Carbognano was made Cardinal Deacon of SS. Cosma e Damiano. For many years, Cardinal Giovanni di San Paolo (elevated in 1193) was identified as a member of the Colonna family
and therefore its first representative in the College of Cardinals, but modern scholars have established that this was based on false information from the beginning of the 16th century. Giovanni Colonna (born c. 1206) nephew of Cardinal Giovanni Colonna di Carbognano, made his solemn vows as a Dominican around 1228 and received his theological and philosophical training at the Roman studium of Santa Sabina, the forerunner of the Pontifical University of Saint Thomas Aquinas, Angelicum. He served as the Provincial of the Roman province of the Dominican Order and led the provincial chapter of 1248 at Anagni. Colonna was appointed as Archbishop of Messina in 1255. Margherita Colonna (died 1248) was a member of the Franciscan Order. She was beatified by Pope Pius IX in 1848. At this time, a rivalry began with the pro-papal Orsini family, leaders of the Guelph faction. This reinforced the pro-Emperor Ghibelline course that the Colonna family followed throughout the period of conflict between the Papacy and the Holy Roman Empire. Ironically according to their own family legend, the Orsini are also descended from the Julio-Claudian dynasty of ancient Rome. In 1297, Cardinal Jacopo disinherited his brothers Ottone, Matteo, and Landolfo of their lands. The latter three appealed to Pope Boniface VIII, who ordered Jacopo to return the land, and furthermore hand over the family's strongholds of Colonna, Palestrina, and other towns to the Papacy. Jacopo refused; in May, Boniface removed him from the College of Cardinals and excommunicated him and his followers. The Colonna family (aside from the three brothers allied with the Pope) declared that Boniface had been elected illegally following the unprecedented abdication of Pope Celestine V. The dispute led to open warfare, and in September, Boniface appointed Landolfo to the command of his army, to put down the revolt of Landolfo's own Colonna relatives. By the end of 1298, Landolfo had captured Colonna, Palestrina and other towns, and razed them to the ground. The family's lands were distributed among Landolfo and his loyal brothers; the rest of the family fled Italy. The exiled Colonnas allied with the Pope's other great enemy, Philip IV of France, who in his youth had been tutored by Cardinal Egidio Colonna. In September 1303, Sciarra and Philipp's advisor, Guillaume de Nogaret, led a small force into Anagni to arrest Boniface VIII and bring him to France, where he was to stand trial. The two managed to apprehend the pope, and Sciarra reportedly slapped the pope in the face in the process, which was accordingly dubbed the "Outrage of Anagni". The attempt eventually failed after a few days, when locals freed the pope. However, Boniface VIII died on 11 October, allowing France to dominate his weaker successors during the Avignon papacy. The family remained at the centre of civic and religious life throughout the late Middle Ages. Cardinal Egidio Colonna died at the papal court in Avignon in 1314. An Augustinian, he had studied theology in Paris under St. Thomas of Aquinas to become one of the most authoritative thinkers of his time. In the 14th century, the family sponsored the decoration of the Church of San Giovanni, most notably the floor mosaics. In 1328, Louis IV of Germany marched into Italy for his coronation as Holy Roman Emperor. As Pope John XXII was residing in Avignon and had publicly declared that he would not crown Louis, the King decided to be crowned by a member of the Roman aristocracy, who proposed Sciarra Colonna. In honor of this event, the Colonna family was granted the privilege of using the imperial pointed crown on top of their coat of arms. The poet Petrarch, was a great friend of the family, in particular of Giovanni Colonna and often lived in Rome as a guest of the family. He composed a number of sonnets for special occasions within the Colonna family, including "Colonna the Glorious, the great Latin name upon which all our hopes rest". In this period, the Colonna started claiming they were descendants of the Julio-Claudian dynasty. At the Council of Constance, the Colonna finally succeeded in their papal ambitions when Oddone Colonna was elected on 14 November 1417. As Martin V, he reigned until his death on 20 February 1431. Vittoria Colonna became famous in the sixteenth century as a poet and a figure in literate circles. In 1627 Anna Colonna, daughter of Filippo I Colonna, married Taddeo Barberini of the family Barberini; nephew of Pope Urban VIII. In 1728, the Carbognano branch (Colonna di Sciarra) of the Colonna family added the name Barberini to its family name when Giulio Cesare Colonna di Sciarra married Cornelia Barberini, daughter of the last male Barberini to hold the name and granddaughter of Maffeo Barberini (son of Taddeo Barberini). The Colonna family have been Prince Assistants to the Papal Throne since 1710, though their papal princely title only dates from 1854.
Awards: Collar, sash and star of the Order of Saints Maurice and Lazarus (Ordine dei Santi Maurizio e Lazzaro), stars of the Order of the Crown of Italy (Ordine della Corona d'Italia), the Royal Victorian Order, the Royal and Much Distinguished Order of Charles III (Real y Muy Distinguida Orden de Carlos III) and the Order of the Holy Spirit (Ordre du Saint-Esprit).
