Marco Minghetti (born Nov. 8, 1818, Bologna, Papal States [Italy]—died Dec. 10, 1886, Rome, Italy) was a statesman who was twice prime minister of united Italy (1863–64, 1873–76).
In his youth, while visiting an aunt in Paris, Minghetti came under the influence of exiled Italian patriots. Returning home he entered the University of Bologna, where he devoted himself to courses in science but was soon also attracted to the humanities and politics. He was drawn to Rome to assist in seeking reforms from the government of the Papal States under the liberal Pius IX, and he became a member of the revolutionary government of the Roman Republic (1847). He resigned in 1848 to join the Piedmont-Sardinian army fighting the Austrians, and he returned to Rome late in 1848. After the general failure of the revolutionary movement, he resumed a life of study and travel.
In 1859 Count Cavour, prime minister of Piedmont-Sardinia, appointed him secretary-general of the Piedmontese foreign office. After the successful French-Italian campaign against the Austrians, Minghetti served as president of the assembly of liberated Romagna until its annexation to Piedmont-Sardinia. He soon became minister of the interior of the expanding Piedmontese monarchy and premier of the newly united kingdom of Italy (1863). His role in shifting the capital from Turin to Florence in exchange for the withdrawal of French troops from Rome aroused popular antagonism because of the implied abandonment of Rome as united Italy’s capital. He resigned eight days later (Sept. 23, 1864).
He returned to the government as minister of agriculture in 1869, and in July 1873 he again became prime minister. Taking the financial portfolio himself, he introduced reforms that led to the first balanced budgets since 1860, but his arbitrary measures against the political opposition eventually led to his losing office (March 1876). For the next few years Minghetti continued in a role of opposition to the left-leaning governments of Agostino Depretis and his successors.