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Italian Reunification

http://www.sc.edu/library/spcoll/hist/garib/garib.jpg
Garibaldi was the "hero of two worlds" as a revolutionary in both South America and his native Italy.
Mazzini, an intellectual. Cavour, a statesman. Garibaldi, a fighter.

Together, they formed the soul, the brain, and the brawn of the Risorgimento, historians' term for the movement for Italian unity.

The Italian Renaissance of the 15th and 16th centuries had demonstrated Italians' artistic, literary, and scientific genius. The revolutions of 1848 illustrated the emotional power of Italian nationalism. By February 1849, however, Austrian and French forces had crushed the romantic nationalists, leaving Italy again divided into four parts:

  • the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies in the south, ruled by the French
  • the Papal States in the middle, governed by the Pope
  • the states of northern Italy, controlled by Austrian forces
  • the Kingdom of Sardinia, commonly called Piedmont, ruled by a hereditary monarch named Victor Emmanuel

Mazzini

Hailing from Genoa, Giuseppe Mazzini was the revolutionary of the Risorgimento, first rallying Italian nationalists through Young Italy, an organization dedicated to uniting Italy in the causes of democracy and social reform. Later, after the revolutions of 1848, he promoted "the Party of Action" in a campaign to rid Italy of Austrian influences.

Excerpts from "General Instructions for the Members of Young Italy"

Young Italy is a brotherhood of Italians who believe in a law of Progress and Duty, and are convinced that Italy is destined to become one nation — convinced also that she possesses sufficient strength within herself to become one, and that the ill success of her former efforts is to be attributed not to the weakness, but to the misdirection of the revolutionary elements within her — that the secret of force lies in constancy and unity of effort. They join this association in the firm intent of consecrating both thought and action to the great aim of re-constituting Italy as one independent sovereign nation of free men and equals ...

Young Italy is Republican and Unitarian.

–Giuseppe Mazzini, 
"General Instructions for the Members of Young Italy" (1831)

Considered a dreamer by some, he nonetheless inspired a new generation of Italian nationalists to secure independence and create a moral society. Mazzini's plans failed in the short run, but his long-term effect of igniting Italian nationalism remained critical to the hopes of a united Italy.

Cavour

The Risorgimento was the organization that fought to create a unified Italy, one nation under one flag.
In 1852, Count Camillo di Cavour was appointed Prime Minister of Piedmont by King Victor Emmanuel II. Cavour once called unification "nonsense," but he opposed Austrian domination. Thus, he joined the Risorgimento, hoping to create a unified Northern Italy governed by a liberal constitution.

Cavour contributed to the first stage of unification in several key ways. He secured an alliance with Napoleon III of France in 1858 and prepared for war with Austria, hoping to acquire the Austrian-held states of Lombardy and Venetia. Napoleon demanded the two states of Nice and Savoy from Piedmont in exchange for French help. Angered by Cavour's audacity, Austria declared war on Piedmont in April 1859.

The war went well for Cavour. French and Piedmontese forces crushed the Austrians and liberated Lombardy.

Count Camillo di Cavour

Then Napoleon stabbed Cavour in the back. He brokered a separate truce with Austria in July that left Venetia in Austria's grip. The Piedmontese state, however, extended its control over Northern Italy when nationalists staged popular votes called plebiscites in Modena, Parma, Tuscany, and Romagna (a Papal State). The people of these territories overwhelmingly voted to join Piedmont. It was now up to Giuseppe Garibaldi to liberate the south.

Courtesy of Robert Moss
Italy was divided into four separate parts until the entire country was eventually unified in 1870.

Garibaldi

Guiseppe Garibaldi was willing to die for Italian reunification. He, like Mazzini, had a vision of a liberal society that supported workers' rights, self-determination, and female emancipation. His role in the Risorgimento was critical. He led a small army of red-shirted patriots into Sicily and received massive support from many Sicilians. Emboldened, he led the Red Shirts into Naples in August 1860, thus securing the independence of southern Italy from its weak French Bourbon rulers.
Today I am obliged to retire, but for a few days only. The hour of battle will find me with you again, by the side of the champions of Italian liberty. Let those only return to their homes who are called by the imperative duties which they owe to their families, and those who by their glorious wounds have deserved the credit of their country. These, indeed, will serve Italy in their homes by their counsel, by the very aspect of the scars which adorn their youthful brows. Apart from these, let all others remain to guard our glorious banners. We shall meet again before long to march together to the redemption of our brothers who are still slaves of the stranger. We shall meet again before long to march to new triumphs.
 
       –Garibaldi, in a speech to his fellow citizens (1860)

Meanwhile, the Piedmontese armies invaded the remaining Papal States. Garibaldi then faced an important decision. Although he detested kings, a refusal to unite with Piedmont could have resulted in an Italian civil war. In the name of uniting Italy in peace, he ceded political leadership to King Victor Emmanuel at the Bridge of Teano when their victorious armies converged in September 1860. The remaining key territories were Austrian-controlled Venetia, and Rome, which was still protected by French armies.

In 1866, Italy was awarded Venetia for supporting Prussia in its fight against Austria in the Seven Weeks' War. When French soldiers withdrew from Rome during the Franco-Prussian war of 1870, Italian forces took their place and declared Rome to be the capital of Italy. Italy was unified — at least geographically. Political problems quickly surfaced as religious and regional interests collided with Piedmont hegemony.

The pope refused to recognize the new Italian state, and voting criteria excluded a majority of Italians from participating in the political sphere. Significant economic differences separated the north and south. External unification was complete, but the struggle for internal unity had just begun.

Anita Garibaldi was a married woman from Brazil who eloped with the Italian hero Garibaldi. She died while fleeing Austria in 1849 and has been an Italian heroine ever since.
Go to http://www.sc.edu/library/spcoll/hist/garib/garib1.html
In the parlor of a house in Florence, Elizabeth Barrett Browning gathered a group of revolutionary women from all over the world to discuss poetry and art and to fight for Italian unification.
Go to http://www.umilta.net/laurel.html
In 1876, Wade Hampton led a group of Confederate soldiers who opposed the continued presence of federal troops in South Carolina. They called themselves the Red Shirts, after Garibaldi's followers.
Go to http://www.sc.edu/library/spcoll/hist/garib/garib.html
Verdi, whose music became a symbol of Italian nationalism, was turned away from the Milan Conservatory because "he was too old and had poor piano technique."
Go to http://home.prcn.org/~pauld/opera/19cent06.htm
Watch the unification of Italy! (Flash required)
Go to http://www.thecorner.org/flash/italy-unif.htm

Adapted from Beyond Books, New Forum Publishers, Inc., 2001