Anglo-Corsican Kingdom | ||||||||||
Regno di Corsica | ||||||||||
Client state of Great Britain | ||||||||||
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Motto Amici e non di ventura (English: Friends, and not by mere accident) |
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Anthem Dio vi Salvi Regina |
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1794 map of the "Island and Kingdom of Corsica"
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Capital | Corte, then Bastia | |||||||||
Languages | Italian, Corsican | |||||||||
Religion | Roman Catholic | |||||||||
Government | Parliamentary democracy and constitutional monarchy |
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Kingb | George III | |||||||||
President of the Council of State | Carlo Andrea Pozzo di Borgo | |||||||||
Legislature | Parliament | |||||||||
Historical era | Age of Enlightenment | |||||||||
• | Established | June 17, 1794 | ||||||||
• | Conquered | October 19, 1796 | ||||||||
Area | 8,680 km² (3,351 sq mi) | |||||||||
Currency | soldi | |||||||||
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Today part of | France | |||||||||
a The flag of the kingdom was the Corsican Moor's head united with the British royal arms. b Represented by a viceroy. |
The Anglo-Corsican Kingdom was a client state of the Kingdom of Great Britain that existed on the island of Corsica between 1794 and 1796, during the French Revolutionary Wars.
During the time of the French Revolution, Corsica had been a part of France for just two decades. The Corsican leader Pasquale Paoli, who had been exiled under the monarchy, became something of an idol of liberty and democracy, and, in 1789, was invited to Paris by the National Constituent Assembly, where he was celebrated as a hero in front of the assembly. He was afterwards sent back to Corsica with the rank of lieutenant-general.
However, Paoli eventually split from the revolutionary movement over the issue of the execution of King Louis XVI and threw in his lot with the royalist party. Accused of treason by the French National Convention, he summoned a consulta (assembly) at Corte in 1793, with himself as president, at which Corsica's formal secession from France was declared. He requested the protection of the British government, then at war with revolutionary France, and suggested the Kingdom of Ireland as a model for an autonomous kingdom under the British monarch. For Britain it was an opportunity to secure a Mediterranean base.
In 1794, Britain sent a fleet to Corsica under Admiral Samuel Hood. It was during the fighting to capture Calvi that then-Captain Horatio Nelson lost the sight in his right eye. For a short time, Corsica was added to the dominions of King George III, chiefly by the exertions of Hood's fleet, and Paoli's cooperation.