Thursday, October 28, 2010

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CAISSOTTI



"gold at the eagle sable, reduced theft, topped the field and loaded in the middle of a patch cut from silver and red, the iron arm of the natural shifting of the sinister side, a club with money in hand, in bar debruised on "

Lord and Mas Aiglun

Lord Massoins and Tournefort

Comte de Rigaud

Count Roubion

Count Toudon with Ascros and Revest

Lord of Santa Vittoria

Count of Santa Maria

Marquis Verduno


families from Tende, which from the sixteenth century, enjoyed a great reputation and was already divided into several branches established in Nice and Piedmont (1).


  1. Caissotti Vincent was First Consul of Nice in 1588; it with his brother Bartholomew, had been invested with a fief of the party and Aiglun Mas (2), November 29, 1584 as a result of purchases made with Malope. The same Caissotti Vincent was Captain-General of Sospel for eleven years (1594-1605) and died honorary holder of that office. He married (1590) Philippe de Grasse Kids, daughter of Honore de Grasse and Lucretia Renaud. His son Hannibal (1625) had no heirs and his fiefs passed to his sister Mathilde, wife of Jean-Ludovic Fabri.

II-lawyer Francis Caissotti, prefect of Nice (1603), with the title of senator and state councilor, was invested with fiefs Massoins, Tournefort and Rigaud (the latter with the title Count), 29 November 1622; these fiefs returned to the Crown after the revision of 1720. Lawyer Jean-Paul (son of Francis), also prefect of Nice, then State Councillor and finally Senator Senate of Piedmont (1627), married Beatrice Badat, heiress of the fief and was invested Roubion said fief, with the title of count, 25 August 1684. His descendants we quote:


- Marcel-François, first consul in Nice in 1699;

- Peter, the first consul in 1727;

- another Marcel-François, first consul in 1737 and heir to the name and titles of Galleani, counts of Toudon with Ascros and Revest (1752). But the emphasis should be recalled in this branch, Count Antoine-François and Count Agapit.


Antoine-François (1774 ° 1700) followed diplomatic career and was successively in charge of legations of Frankfurt, Madrid and Naples. In 1747, located in Nice, with courage and tact, by going alone as a parliamentarian with the Duke of Belle-Isle, he managed to save his hometown plundering. He was then appointed Minister of State, Viceroy of Sardinia (1775) and finally the Grand Cross of the Order of Saints Maurice & Lazarus.


Agapit (° 1780 1852), entered public life under the First Empire, was alderman of Nice (1807), and was a member of the deputation which went to Nice in Paris at the baptism of King of Rome (1812).

He was then appointed Deputy Mayor (1812), and a year later, Mayor of Nice, a post he held until the Restoration. Sovereign of the return of Savoy, he was appointed by King Charles Felix, a gentleman of his chamber and vice-president of the Chamber of Agriculture and Commerce of Nice (1825), having been under the previous reign, two After the first Consul of Nice (1818 and 1819). King Charles Albert gave him the title of Special Adviser of State (1831), and a few years later, he was appointed Commander of the Order Saints Maurice & Lazarus (1835) and Head of the Council for the Reform of Education in the County of Nice. Count Agapit was also a member of the Congregation of Charity and the Provincial Council, he presided in Congress divisional of 1843 and 1845.


III. A branch of the family Caissotti, who had lived in obscurity until the seventeenth century, had suddenly acquired an enviable reputation for then extinguished very quickly aware of the last century. This branch recognized as chief counsel Charles Caissotti, who married into the late seventeenth century, Mary Magdalene Bagnol. Their son Charles-Louis (b. 1694 1779) after taking his doctorate in law, distinguished himself at the point in the exercise of the legal profession, at the age of just 26, he was appointed assistant attorney general at the Chamber of Accounts of Turin (1720) (3).


charge of work relating to the Concordat, that Piedmont was then negotiating with the Roman Curia, thus he acquired such fame that the King named him Victor Amadeus Attorney General (1723) and then the first président du Sénat de Piémont (1730), peu de jours avant son abdication. Le Roi voulut même que Caissotti fût le compilateur de l'acte écrit par lequel il renonçait au trône. Le président Caissotti avait été investi d'une portion du fief de Santa Vittoria, près d'Asti, le 3 août 1730, et il reçut ensuite le titre de comte de Santa Maria (8 janvier 1734) et de marquis de Verduno (18 juillet 1739) Les mérites qu'il avait acquis sous Victor-Amédée II, par la révision et la réimpression des Constitutions Royales (1729) et par la mise en ordre des Statuts de la nouvelle Université, ne furent pas méconnus par le Roi Charles­Emmanuel III qui conféra Caissotti to the rank of Minister of State (1750), naming also notary Crown (1767) and finally Lord Chancellor (1768) (4).

His only son, the Marquis Charles-Joseph-Casimir, died without heirs in 1799, leaving his important legacy to both Charity Hospital and St. John, in Turin.



forestay current staff of the branch Roubion.

- Caissotti Delphine, Countess of Roubion,

1. With François, marquis de Châteauneuf Constantine

Married to his cousin, Delphine Caissotti of Roubion, born in 1840, daughter of Earl and Paolina Agapit Ricci Andon; it they remarried Leonard Rozy, and died in 1922 in Annot (Alpes de Haute-Provence), and was the last member of this illustrious family.


(1) Caissotti Piedmont, yet flourishing, we need not mention here, because we can not in any way be considered as belonging to the nobility Nice.

(2) The fiefs of Mas and Aiglun belonged first to Grasse and then to Malope, who yielded to Caissotti; they passed to France by the Treaty of 1760.

(3) During the first part of his career, Crown Caissotti, because of the smallness of its resources, lived in a small room on the top floor of a humble house in the Rue Stampatori at Turin. He watched this late at night to work and study. It is said that Vittorio Amedeo II, who used to walk around at night by the city under a suit of debt, had repeatedly noticed that light burning late at night, and one evening as he was with Count Tana, he wanted to know what was the watchman of this stubborn small room. Thus the King, under any pretext, ran into the house of the young assistant attorney general and had a chance to know the temperament of an exceptional worker and man of study, where he came over later fortune.

(4) Carutti (Storia di Carlo del Regtto Entattuele 111, vol. 11, pag. 39) describes as follows the qualities of President Caissotti:

"He had a clear mind, a quick design, a retentive memory and a wonderful facility to assimilate the ideas of others, by covering it with a varnish of his own, not him to study a lot, but he had a vast knowledge of the laws. He recognized a certain versatility in mind and also an excessive sycophancy, united with great pride of the new man, eager to forget the humility of his origin, he was, in sum, rather than true legal scholar lawyer. "


Source: J. Oreste Di Castelnuovo, "The Nobility of Nice," Laffitte REPRINT, 1912













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