Francesco Maria Bovio


Francesco Maria Bovio was an Italian lawyer, judge and professor. He's best known for being the grandfather of Italian philosopher Giovanni Bovio. He also fought for the Parthenopean Republic during the so-called Altamuran Revolution.

Life

Francesco Maria Bovio was born in Altamura in the 1750s to a family of landowners; the exact date of birth is currently unknown. He studied literature and law at the University of Naples, and he turned out to be particularly gifted in the field of law. After winning a public competition for the position of teacher, he taught Latin and Ancient Greek in the "Royal Schools" of Matera, Italy.
After his father's death, when he returned to his hometown Altamura in order to administer his properties, he was assigned the position of lecturer of literature as well as civil and canon law at the University of Altamura.
At the end of the 18th century, he was already a member of the Altamura Masonic lodge Oriente di Altamura, together with other famous Altamurans. The seat of the Masonic lodge was the baronial palace of the Melodia family. He took an active part in the Altamuran Revolution, planting the Tree of Liberty. He was later removed from teaching; but after the Treaty of Florence, was allowed to resume teaching.
In the period 1806-1815, he was appointed judge. When Court of Appeal transferred to Altamura, Francesco Bovio brilliantly worked as a lawyer in that court of appeal, following the court even when it was transferred to Trani. In 1821, he became a judge of the civil court of Lecce but after a few years he returned to Trani because of his age and there he died in 1830.
He had at least two children - Scipione Bovio and Nicola Bovio. Both of them, in 1820, joined the Carboneria of Trani. Nicola Bovio was the father of the famous philosopher Giovanni Bovio.

The Altamuran Revolution

During the upheavals of the Parthenopean Republic, Bovio became minister of the Republican Departmental Government. Later, with the return of the Bourbons as kings of the Kingdom of Naples, he wasn't allowed to teach anymore. Bovio claimed to have joined and fought during the Altamuran Revolution for fear of being shot by the commissioner Nicola Palomba of Avigliano.