The Unification of Italy - Italian

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Transcript The Unification of Italy - Italian

The Unification of Italy
The Risorgimento
Italian Unification
Background
• Congress of Vienna
– Restoration of the pre-Napoleonic patchwork of
independent governments
• Groups in several Italian states began to
push the idea of a unified Italian state
again
– the struggle for Italian unification was
perceived to be waged primarily against the
Austrian Empire and the Habsburgs
• they directly controlled the predominantly Italianspeaking northeastern part of present day Italy and
were the single most powerful force against
unification
• the Austrian Empire fought hard against nationalist
sentiment growing on the Italian peninsula
• Metternich stated that the word Italy was "purely a
geographic expression."
Background
• Pope opposed to Italian unification
– Wanted some measure of autonomy
over the Papal States
• Different groups could not agree on
what form a unified state would take
– Vincenzo Gioberti suggested a
confederation of Italian states under the
Pope.
– Many leading revolutionaries wanted a
republic
– Eventually it was a king and his minister
who had the power to unite the Italian
states as a monarchy
Early Moves
• Carbonari (coal-burners)
– a secret organization formed in southern Italy
early in the 19th century
– Inspired by the principles of the French
revolution, its members were mainly drawn
from the middle class and intellectuals
– Carbonari spread into the Papal States, the
kingdom of Sardinia, the Grand Duchy of
Tuscany, the Duchy of Modena and the
kingdom of Lombardy-Venetia
– Many rulers decreed the death penalty for
anyone who attended a Carbonari meeting
– Most leaders of the unification movement were
members of this organization
Prominent Leaders
•
•
•
•
Giuseppe Mazzini
Giuseppe Garibaldi
Count Cavour
Victor Emmanuel II
Giuseppe Mazzini
Giuseppe Mazzini
• A member of the Carbonari
• Activity in revolutionary movements got him in
trouble
• Organized La giovine Italia (Young Italy)
– A political society
– its basic principle was the union of the several states
and kingdoms of the peninsula into a single republic
• Believed that Italian unification could only be
achieved through a popular uprising
• His importance was more ideological than
practical
• Credited with fashioning the political idea that
Italy was a country more than a patchwork of
antiquated Roman city-states
• It would be others who would make this idea a
reality though
• Never accepted a monarchical united Italy and
continued to work for a democratic republic
Giuseppe Garibaldi
Giuseppe Garibaldi
• In 1833, met Giuseppe Mazzini
• Joined the Young Italy movement and the Carbonari
revolutionary association
• In February 1834 he participated in a failed Mazzinian
insurrection in Piedmont, was sentenced to death, and fled
• Garibaldi left for Brazil and took up the cause of
independence of the Republic of Rio Grande do Sul
• Joined the rebels against the newly independent Brazilian
nation
• Returned to Italy in 848
– served the king of Sardinia
– after disagreements, he & followers crossed into Lombardy
where they offered assistance to the provisional government of
Milan
• Roman Republic under threat from French forces
– Garibaldi took up the command of the defense of Rome
– city fell on June 30, 1849
– Garibaldi was forced to flee
• Moved to the USA then to the UK
Count Camillo di Cavour
Count Camillo di Cavour
• In 1847, became a political journalist with his newspaper Il
Risorgimento in Turin
• Gave a speech in front of many journalists in favor of a
constitution for Piedmont, which was eventually granted
• Never really favoured the establishment of a united country
– favored an expanded Piedmont rather than a unified Italy
– like most Italians he resented the control that Austria had over
the country
• when an uprising in Milan against the Austrians occurred in 1849,
Cavour was one of many who advocated the war that followed as
the chance to expell the Austrians once and for all
• the war was unsuccessful for the Piedmontese
• Cavour was finally brought in to the Chamber of Deputies, sitting
on the right as a conservative
• gained a reputation as a non-revolutionary progressive
• Cavour lost an election but was then brought back into
Parliament
• Cavour soon came to dominate the cabinet
• Became Prime Minister of Piedmont on 4 November 1852
Victor Emmanuel II
Victor Emmanuel II
• Became king of Sardinia-Piedmont in 1849
– father abdicated after an overwhelming military
defeat by the Austrians
– Victor Emmanuel was immediately able to
obtain a rather favorable armistice at Vignale
by the Austrian commander
– In 1849 he also fiercely suppressed the revolt
in Genoa, defining the rebels as a "vile and
infected race of cowards
• In 1852 Victor Emmanuel II gave Count
Camillo di Cavour the title of Prime
Minister
• Victor Emmanuel II soon became the
symbol of the Italian Risorgimento
1830
• Rrevolutionary sentiment in favor of a
unified Italy began to grow
• Insurrections took place throughout the
Papal States
– Chose the tri-color as their flag
• Insurrected provinces planned to unite as
the Province Italiane unite
– Pope Gregory XVI asked for Austrian help
against the rebels
• Spring of 1831
– Austrian army began its march across the
Italian peninsula
– crushed resistance in each province that had
revolted
1848
• Revolutions all over Italy
• Results
– No change
War of 1859
•
Sardinia-Piedmont still sought expansion across Italy
– Cavour saw that Piedmont would not be able to do it alone
– hoped to secure aid from Britain and France in expelling the Austrians
•
Attempted to gain western favor by supporting them in the
Crimean War
– not successful
– Italian matters were ignored at the Congress of Paris
•
On January 14, 1858, an Italian nationalist Felice Orsini attempted
to assassinate Napoleon III
– In a plea written from his prison cell, Orsini appealed to Napoleon III to
fulfill his destiny by aiding the forces of Italian nationalism
– Napoleon III became convinced that it was his destiny to do something
for Italy
•
Summer of 1858
– Cavour met with Napoleon III and signed a secret agreement
– agreed to a joint war against Austria
– Piedmont would gain the Austrian territories in Italy (Lombardy and
Venetia), as well as the Duchies of Parma and Modena
– France would be rewarded with Piedmont's transalpine territories of
Savoy and Nice
– Cavour was to provoke the Austrians into aggression by encouraging
revolutionary activity in Lombardy
War of 1859
• The Austrians were surprisingly patient in dealing
with the Piedmontese-inspired insurrections
• The Piedmontese mobilization in March 1859 was
then something of an admission of defeat
• Without Austrian aggression, the French could
not intervene, and without French support,
Cavour was unwilling to risk war
• At this time however, the Austrians conveniently
made their opponents' task easier by sending an
ultimatum to the Piedmontese demanding
demobilization
• This the Piedmontese could conveniently reject
and, by making Austria seem the aggressor,
allowed the French to intervene
War of 1859
• The war itself was quite short
• Battle of Magenta
– French and Sardinians were victorious
over the Austrian army
– Austrians withdrew from most of
Lombardy
• Battle of Solferino
– bloody engagement
– French were again victorious
– Austrians withdrew behind the
Quadrilateral of fortresses on the
borders of Venetia
Results of War of 1859
• Napoleon III meets with Franz Josef
– Sardinia-Piedmont takes Lombardy, no
other changes
• Smaller northern Italian states form
the United Provinces of Central Italy
– Napoleon III agrees to their
incorporation into Sardinia-Piedmont
after compensation of Savoy and Nice
being transferred to France
1860
• Only four states remain in Italy
– Sardinia-Piedmont
– Venetia
– Papal States
– Kingdom of the Two Sicilies
Initial Unification
• Garibaldi invades Sicily and takes control
of the island in short order
• After consolidation of power in Sicily,
Garibaldi invades the mainland
– Takes Naples, the capital of the Two Sicilies
– Still not able to completely defeat the army of
the Two Sicilies
– Calls for help from Sardinia-Piedmont
• To reach the Two Sicilies, the army of
Sardinia-Piedmont was required to go
through the Papal states
– Initial agreement was given for this
– However, Papal army resisted and was
defeated
Initial Unification
• Combined army of Garibaldi and
Victor Emmanuel finally defeats the
army of the Two Sicilies
– King of Two Sicilies abdicates
• Two Sicilies united with SardiniaPiedmont in an Italian state
– Only Papal States and Venetia remain
outside the union
Moves on Rome
• French troops staioned in Rome to
support the pope
• Garibaldi demands that Italian state
attack Rome
– Italy refuses
• Garibaldi, with 2,000 volunteers
moves on Rome but is barred by
Italian troops
• Victor Emmanuel II reaches
agreement with Napoleon III for
French to leave by 1866
Austro-Prussian War
• Italy supports Prussia
– Invades Venetia in 1866
– Defeated in battles both on land and on
sea
• With defeat of Austria in the war
– Italy awarded Venetia
• Only Rome stayed outside of a united
Italy
Rome
• French troops move back into Rome
• Various threats to Rome by Italian
groups from 1866 – 1870
• With the outbreak of the FrancoPrussian War of 1870, France returns
troops to France to fight in the war
• Italy takes Rome after French defeat
at Sedan
• Pope withdraws inside Vatican
• Rome becomes capital of Italy