Giacomo Giuseppe Costa

{{Short description|Italian magistrate and politician}}

{{Infobox officeholder

|name = Giacomo Giuseppe Costa

|image = Il ministro Giacomo Giuseppe Costa.jpg

|office = Minister of Justice

|term_start = 10 March 1896

|term_end = 15 August 1897

|predecessor = Vincenzo Calenda di Tavani

|successor = Antonio di Rudinì

|office2= Senator

|term_start2= 14 June 1886

|term_end2= 15 August 1897

}}

Giacomo Giuseppe Costa (Milan, 24 November 1833 – Ovada, 15 August 1897) was an Italian magistrate and politician, senator of the Kingdom of Italy and Minister of Justice.{{cite web |title=COSTA Giacomo Giuseppe |url=http://notes9.senato.it/web/senregno.nsf/643aea4d2800e476c12574e50043faad/6dcee5ad3eed682a4125646f005a81de?OpenDocument |website=senato.it |publisher=Senato Della Repubblica |access-date=6 October 2023}}{{cite book |title=Il Filangieri rivista periodica mensuale di scienze giuridiche e politico-amministrative |date=1897 |publisher=L. Vallardi |location=Milan |page=719 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=QFjz2QYv67kC&dq=giacomo+giuseppe+costa&pg=PA718-IA2 |access-date=6 October 2023}}

Senator and Minister

File:Nomina ministro Costa.jpg

In 1886 he was appointed Senator of the Kingdom and his numerous interventions (often as rapporteur of bills) are widely documented in the Senate Archives. In 1894 he performed the very delicate role of rapporteur for the Commission into the culpability of judicial officials following the Banca Romana scandal.

On 10 March 1896 he assumed the position of Minister of Justice in the Second di Rudinì government, formed after the resignation of the Crispi ministry following the defeat at the battle of Adwa.{{cite book |title=Bollettino ufficiale del Ministero di grazia e giustizia e dei culti |date=1896 |publisher=Ministero di grazia e giustizia e dei culti |location=Rome |page=161 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=goxIoXiOwCEC&dq=giacomo+giuseppe+costa&pg=PA161 |access-date=6 October 2023}} He was also confirmed in the reshuffle after the crisis of 11 July 1896.

He held this position for about fifteen months although he was becoming progressively more unwell with cancer. Despite his illness, at the end of June and the beginning of July Costa supported the complex discussion of his Ministry's budget. Always calm, he refused to stop working. That summer terrible news reached him: the sudden death of one of his sons in Turin. He allowed himself just twenty-four hours to attend the funeral before returning to work. Only after the discussion of his budget in the Senate did he agree to retire with his family to the countryside in Ovada, his home since his marriage to seventeen-year-old Maria Luigia Pesci in 1860. In less than a month he felt he was nearing the end. In his last moments he sent the a telegram to king Umberto and queen Margherita with these words: "Dying, I send Your Excellency my final greeting and the expression of my devotion, which ceases only with life." Both the king and the queen were deeply moved by his message and responded, the King, from Valsavaranche and the Queen from Gressoney responded, but by the time their telegrams arrived in Ovada, Costa’s suffering had already ended. His last words, addressed to his worthy wife, were: "I'm going to join our son".

He passed away in Ovada at 5.20pm on 15 August 1897.

Honours

References