Carlo Vincenzo Ferrero di Roasio, marchese d’Ormea (born April 5, 1680, Mondovì, Italy—died May 29, 1745, Turin) was a Piedmontese statesman who as minister under both Victor Amadeus II and Charles Emmanuel III played a leading role in the internal and external affairs of the Piedmontese–Sardinian kingdom.
A member of a noble but poor family, Ormea attracted attention by his gifts at the court of Victor Amadeus, who made him first count of Roasio and then marquess of Ormea (1722). The King also appointed him minister of finances and of the interior, where he instituted important reforms. Ormea obtained papal recognition for Victor Amadeus as king of Sardinia (December 1726) and then concluded with the papacy a concordat favourable to the King (May 1727).
When Victor Amadeus abdicated in favour of his son Charles Emmanuel (1730), Ormea was appointed minister of foreign affairs as well as of the interior (1732). He helped Charles Emmanuel by the arrest of the old king when Victor Amadeus tried to revoke his abdication (1731). During the War of the Polish Succession (1733–38), Ormea engineered an alliance with France, and in the War of the Austrian Succession (1740–48) he concluded an alliance with Austria. By the Treaty of Worms, he obtained from the empress Maria Theresa lands in Piacenza and in the Ticino in Italian Switzerland. When the new pope Clement XII nullified the concordat of 1727, Ormea was instrumental in obtaining a new concordat in 1741. Finally, in 1744, he succeeded in lifting the French siege of the city of Coni (now Cuneo).