Francesco Teodoro Arese Lucini

Francesco Teodoro Arese Lucini, count of Barlassina (Milan, 30 January 1778 – Milan, 30 April 1835) was prominent member of the Milanese resistance to the Austrian Empire, early proponent of Italian unification, and member of the House of Arese.

Francesco Hayez, Portrait of Count Arese in Prison (1828)

He was held in the Špilberk Castle and sentenced to death (later commuted) by Francis I, Emperor of Austria for his former alliance with Eugène de Beauharnais, Viceroy of the Napoleonic Kingdom of Italy, and for conspiring to liberate Lombardy and unite it with Piedmont.[1][2][3]

gollark: I imagine shopping spreads it a lot.
gollark: Oh, it definitely slows down spread. I'm just saying that it doesn't *stop* it, which is why you still have new cases.
gollark: If everyone were isolated in airtight chambers and never left for probably a month or so you would get rid of viruses. But we can't do that, unfortunately.
gollark: Yes, and that's not total enough to totally stop spread.
gollark: Probably because you cannot actually do *total* lockdown.

References

  1. Jacopetti, Maggiore (1845). Biografie di Achille Fontanelli, di Francesco Teodoro Arese e di Pietro Teulie ́, scritte dal Maggiore Jacopetti (in Italian). Coi tipi Borroni e Scotti.
  2. Mazzocca, Fernando (1987). "Francesco Teodoro Arese Lucini, un mecenate milanese del Risorgimento". Arte Lombarda. 83 (4): 80–96. ISSN 0004-3443. JSTOR 43130216.
  3. http://www.treccani.it//enciclopedia/arese-lucini-francesco-teodoro_(Dizionario-Biografico). Missing or empty |title= (help)


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