Vincenzo Cuoco (born October 1, 1770, Civita Campomarano, Molise, Kingdom of Naples [Italy]—died December 14, 1823, Naples) was an Italian historian noted for his history of the Neapolitan Revolution of 1799.
At the age of 17, Cuoco went to Naples to study law and became a partisan of the French Jacobins when the French Revolution broke out in 1789. After taking an active part in the revolution of the Kingdom of Naples in 1799, he was forced into exile in France, where he wrote in 1800 his Saggio storico sulla rivoluzione di Napoli, 3 vol. (1800; “Historical Essay on the Revolution of Naples”). One of the best philosophical studies on the attempt to establish a republic in Naples, it narrates the events, acutely analyzes the movement’s failure, criticizes the revolution’s leaders for their lack of knowledge of Italy and its needs, and appeals for the creation of a unified national consciousness.
After the Battle of Marengo (June 14, 1800) had established French control, Cuoco returned to Milan, where he directed the newspaper Giornale italiano. When Joseph Bonaparte acceded to the throne of Naples after the expulsion of the Bourbons in 1806, Cuoco returned to Naples, became a member of the royal council, and later was named councillor of state. After the restoration of the Bourbon king Ferdinand I in 1815, however, he gradually became mentally ill and was insane at his death. His other major work was a philosophical novel, Platone in Italia, 2 vol. (1804; “Plato in Italy”), a romanticized account of pre-Roman Italy.