Lucerne Incident
The Lucerne Incident was an assassination attempt made against the Duke of Clarence and Avondale by an Italian anarchist, Gumesindo Carlucci when the duke and his then fiancée, Princess Astrid of Sweden were then residing at the Hotel Palace Luzern in Lucerne, Switzerland.
The attempt, which occurred when the assassin spotted the royal couple in the hotel's hallways ultimately failed when the duke himself, whom was armed at the time resisted the attempt, leading to a brief altercation which saw the assassin himself killed in the process. Eventually, while Swiss authorities never persecuted the latter due to the self-defence nature present during the incident, the royal couple promptly departed from Switzerland out of fear of a repeated incident.
Background
In March 1923, Prince Frederick, Duke of Clarence and Avondale and his then fiancée, Princess Astrid of Sweden had chose to visit Switzerland incognito after having gotten engaged to one another. The couple, whom were then residing in Sweden first entered Switzerland via France where upon crossing the Franco-Swiss border, their identites were voluntarily kept secret by the Swiss authorities whom had done so upon the couple's behest. Reportedly, through the initiative of the local authorities, both Frederick and Astrid were instead disguised as Mr. and Mrs. Gustavus, which alluded to the princess's Swedish background.
Following their arrival, while still using their provided pseudonyms, then assisted by their common-like choice of apparel, the couple checked into a hotel in the Swiss city of Lucerne, namely the Hotel Palace Luzern, where for the duration of the next two weeks was to be the couple's main residence in the country.
The assassin
The assassin, namely Gumesindo Carlucci had been a former low-ranking soldier in the Italian Army when, following Kingdom of Italy's plunge into anarchy after the end of the First World War which, among others saw a massive spike in unemployment led a then twenty one year old Carlucci to be unexpectedly dismissed from the military. Consequently, a disaffected Carlucci began grsudally aligning himself with the radical political movements in the country, eventually siding with the Italian far-left movements against its right-wing opposite most notably led by Benito Mussolini, whom subsequently assumed power as Prime Minister of Italy.
Due to rife political persecutions, on November 1922, Carlucci originally fled from his hometown city of Milan before moving further north into Switzerland as an immigrant, to which he was ultimately allowed inside into the country by Swiss authorities. Consequently, an initially homeless and poor-ridden Carlucci began working for discreet socialist organisations, an effort which turned out to be a relative succeess. However, on January 1923, he was momentarily arrested for participating in a minor socialist protest, though the sentence itself proved lenient, as he was to only serve for two weeks. Upon his release, Carlucci promptly withdrew into obscurity though he consistently maintained his work for socialist organisations in the country.
Incident
On March 7th 1923, a fellow member of the socialist organisation that Carlucci had been working for informed the latter of the sight of a couple whom, according to a leak by one of the Swiss border officials tied to the said member had been that of a royal couple from Sweden that had entered the country incognito. Carlucci however was initially reluctant to mimic the assassinations committed by past anarchists towards members of royalty out of fear of being arrested by the authorities once more, but the former promptly reneged on his initial decision upon being told of the couple's lack of security, which had been virtually non existent aside from the local Swiss police, some of which had been covertly tasked to supervise the royal couple. Soon after, Carlucci immediately headed for the Hotel Palace Luzern, based in the city of Lucerne, Switzerland, where the royal couple was residing in. Prior to his departure, Carlucci had armed himself with both a Bodeo Model 1889 revolver alongside a stiletto knife,
At approximately 10:25 A.M., Carlucci, whom had been scouting the royal couple's movements from the hotel's reception area first noticed the duke and the princess walking down the hotel hallways. As Carlucci had anticipated, both the duke and the princess wandered around the hotel in a generally unguarded manner, and were only typically supported by thw usual number of guards stationed around the hotel, to which none of them then paid any attention towards Carlucci himself.
Almost immediately, as the royal couple was waiting for the elevator, Carlucci quickly neared the royal couple with his stiletto knife in possession but was unexpectedly caught off-guard when the princess herself unexpectedly noticed Carlucci's strange behavior, before noticing the concealed knife in the assassin's left hand, which led the duke, whom was in turn personally armed with a Colt Model 1903 pistol to promptly aim his own handgun towards the stunned assassin. Carlucci, whom was then said to had initially conceived the idea of running away immediately as he had lost the element of surprise, promptly lunged towards the royal couple but was immediately killed when the duke fired his pistol thrice in response. With all three of the fired bullets having fatally struck the assassin in the chest, local Swiss police immediately surrounded the scene before promptly carrying away the assassin's corpse for a mandatory autopsy.
While the royal couple was momentarily questioned regarding the incident, they were promptly exonerated from any charges as they had acted in self-defence. Nevertheless, they were soon advised to leave Switzerland out of fear of their safety, which they did so just a few hours later. In the immediate aftermath, the Swiss authorities promptly launched a crackdown on several underground socialist organisations, which were believed to had ties with Carlucci. Later, on April that year, noted Italian socialist leader Anna Kuliscioff reportedly expressed much despair at the lack of success in the assassination attempt, as she was said to had compared the relative success of the assassination attempt against the then Austrian empress Elisabeth which had occurred almost twenty five years ago with Carlucci's own, which had resulted in failure.