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Quintino Sella

The Honourable
Quintino Sella
Quintino Sella3.jpg
Minister of Finances
In office
14 December 1869 – 10 July 1873
Monarch Victor Emmanuel II
Prime Minister Giovanni Lanza
Preceded by Luigi Guglielmo Cambray-Digny
Succeeded by Marco Minghetti
In office
28 September 1864 – 31 December 1865
Prime Minister Alfonso La Marmora
Preceded by Marco Minghetti
Succeeded by Antonio Scialoja
In office
3 March 1862 – 8 December 1862
Prime Minister Urbano Rattazzi
Preceded by Pietro Bastogi
Succeeded by Marco Minghetti
Personal details
Born (1827-07-07)7 July 1827
Sella di Mosso, Piedmont-Sardinia
Died 14 March 1884(1884-03-14) (aged 56)
Biella, Italy
Political party Historical Right
Alma mater University of Turin
Profession Economist, mineralogist
Religion Catholic Church

Quintino Sella (Italian pronunciation: [kwinˈtino ˈsɛlla]; 7 July 1827 – 14 March 1884) was an Italian politician and economist.

Sella was born at Sella di Mosso, in the Province of Biella.

After studying engineering at Turin, he was sent in 1843 to study mineralogy at the Parisian school of mines (Mines ParisTech). In Paris he witnessed the revolution of 1848, and only returned to Turin in 1852, when he taught applied geometry at the technical institute. In 1853 be became professor of mathematics at the university, and in 1860 professor of mineralogy in the school of applied engineering.

In 1860 he was elected deputy for Cossato. A two years later he was selected to be secretary-general of public instruction, and in 1862 received from Rattazzi the portfolio of finance. The Rattazzi cabinet fell before Sella could efficaciously provide for the deficit of 17,500,000 with which he was confronted; but in 1864 he returned to the ministry of finance in the La Marmora cabinet, and dealt energetically with the deficit of 8,000,000 then existing. Persuading the king to forgo 120,000 of his civil list, and his colleagues in the cabinet to relinquish part of their ministerial stipends, he effected savings amounting to 2,400,000, proposed new taxation to the extent of 1,600,000, and induced landowners to pay one year's instalment of the land tax in advance.

A vote of the chamber compelled him to resign before his preparations for financial restoration were complete; but in 1869 he returned to the ministry of finance in a cabinet formed by himself, but of which he made over the premiership to Giovanni Lanza. By means of the grist tax (which he had proposed in 1865, but which the Menabrea cabinet had passed in 1868), and by other fiscal expedients necessitated by the almost desperate condition of the national exchequer, he succeeded, before his fall from power in 1873, in placing Italian finance upon a sound footing, in spite of fierce attacks and persistent misrepresentation.


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