Ferdinando Palasciano (June 13, 1815 – November 28, 1891) was an Italian physician and politician, considered one of the forerunners of the foundation of the Red Cross.[1]
Born in Capua (Campania, then part of the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies), he graduated early in Literature and Philosophy, Veterinary Science and, finally, in Medicine and Surgery.
In 1848 he fought in the Bourbon army against the Risorgimento riots of 1848. However, his help to wounded went against the Royal orders, and he risked to be executed for insubordination. He declared:
This declaration is believed to be one of the first related to the main "help principles" of the Red Cross.[2]
Thanks to the intervention of King Ferdinand II, the sentence was commuted to one year in prison jail in Reggio Calabria..
In 1865 he was appointed as Professor of Surgical Chemistry at the University of Naples and in 1883 he was among the founders of the Italian Surgical Society.
During the Expedition of Thousand, Palasciano fought at the "Battle of Volturnus", taking care of wounded Borbonic soldiers.
Two years after, he worked on the other side of the trenches, since he was called by Giuseppe Garibaldi to cure a malleolus wound that he received while fighting on the Aspromonte mountains. The two made friends and started an epistolary correspondence now housed in the museum of San Martino, Naples.