The Creation of the Kingdom of Italy, 1856-61 Flashcards
How did Cavour coordinate with Daniele Manin and Garibaldi in 1856?
- Cavour met Manin and, although they had their disagreements, their meeting was a step towards change, with Manin accepting leadership in Italy might be under a Piedmontese monarch and not a republic
- Cavour met with Garibaldi to discuss possible war with Austria
- Such meetings were very important, as they demonstrated the republican movement was prepared to get behind Piedmont
How did Cavour keep up dialogue with Napoleon III?
Cavour didn’t want France and Napoleon III to think he was organising and backing a group of dangerous radicals.
After the Congress of Paris, Cavour and Napoleon had kept up a dialogue through Napoleon’s nephew, Prince Jerome, and Cavour’s trusted friend Niagra.
Why was Napoleon III in Italy in 1830-1, and why was he expelled from Rome?
The Bonaparte family had been exiled from France as part of the Vienna Settlement of 1815, and he happened to be in Italy at tis time
He was expelled from Rome when he tried to capture the Pope’s castle at Saint Angelo to proclaim his cousin Napoleon I’s son king of Italy. He would have ruled on his behalf as regent as Nap’s son was a prisoner of the Austrians.
The Austrians got wind of this and arrested those involved.
Why did Napoleon III’s attitude towards Italy change after December 1848, and why did he come to the Pope’s aid in 1849?
- He was elected president of the French Republic in 1849 and had to behave as a leader, becoming a counter revolutionary to the Roman Republic
- He wanted to win the support of the Catholic Church and Catholics at home, striking a blow against the Austrians who were threatening Rome as well
How did Napoleon III exhibit political cunning in the April-June 1849, but why also may his actions be seen as an error of judgement?
He agreed to an armistice with Mazzini to buy time so that he could reinforce his army in order to attack Mazzini. 10,000 - 20,000 men
As an error of judgement, he became the champion of the most illiberal regime in Europe. Many claimed that he had betrayed Republican principles
Why did Napoleon III get involved in Italy, and what were his plans for central Italy?
He wanted to drive out Austria and create an enlarged Piedmont, big enough to be a useful ally but not too big to threaten independence from France, and it should not interfere French ambition to get Nice and Savoy. He wanted to replace Austrian influence with French.
His plan for central Italy was for it to be part of Piedmont, or to create a separate French controlled state, perhaps governed by one of Napoleon’s many cousins.
What happened in the Orsini plot?
January 1858, an attempt was made on Napoleon III’s life by 4 Italian nationalists, led by one Count Felice Orsini.
Orsini made 3 large bombs in London, outwitting French police by moving though Brussels. A bomb was thrown at Napoleon and his wife Eugenie on the way to an opera.
8 dead, 150 injured. Napoleon and his wife were unharmed.
What was suspicious about the Orsini plot?
Orsini aimed to kill Napoleon so that he would be replaced by a new, Republican government in France which would help Italy.
The letter he wrote on this matter appealed to Napoleon to help Italy get independence. Some even believe Napoleon dictated the contents.
Was it genuine or did Napoleon want an excuse to invade Italy/fight Austria?
How did Victor Emmanuel II calm tensions following the Orsini bomb plot?
Initially, Napoleon III was incredibly bitter towards Piedmont as they had allowed Orsini to avoid arrest and make his way to France.
At his point, VEII saved the day and did a great service to Italy by presenting Piedmont as the best guarantee against the excesses of radicals. This, combined with Napoleon’s long standing desire to “do something for Italy”, clamed his nerves.
A visit from his confidant Dr Conneau, to Turin in June 1858, raised hopes of direct cooperation between the two states against Austria.
When and what was the Pact of Plombieres?
A highly secret meeting between Cavour and Napoleon at Plombieres on the 21st July, 1858. Plans drawn up for military intervention, enlargement of Piedmont, etc.
It seems like the outcomes were more in Napoleons favour than Cavour’s which shows that Cavour was an opportunist willing to compromise to achieve the liberation of northern Italy.
How did the great powers play into the terms agreed by the pact of Plombieres?
- Austria was to be seen as the aggressors who provoked the war. If France provoked the war, Prussia might defend Austria
- Feared that Britain would not tolerate replacing Austrian control of Italy with French control so Napoleon had to appear to be protecting the weaker Piedmont
- Naples would remain as it was because Napoleon didn’t want to upset the Tsar of Russia who was an ally of the Bourbons
How would Italy be divided under the Pact of Plombieres?
- A Kingdom of Upper Italy, ruled by the House of Savoy, over Piedmont, Lombardy, Venetia, the duchies of Parma and Modena, and the Papal legations
- A Kingdom of Central Italy, controlled by Tuscany, including Umbria and the Papal Marches
- Rome and the surrounding area would remain under control of the Pope, leading an Italian confederation
- Naples remained as to avoid anger from Russia
- France would get Nice and Savoy in return for 200,000 soldiers
How was the Pact of Plombieres sealed?
The marriage of the 15 year old daughter of Victor Emmanuel II, Marie Clotilde, to the middle aged prince Jerome Bonaparte, referred to as ‘Plon-plon’ by peers. (the real tragedy of the war)
Why was VEII worried about army preparations for war with Austria?
Struggling to produce an army of 100,000 to match Napoleon III’s promise of 200,000 French troops, having just 20,000 untrained volunteers from the National Society, and 60,000 Piedmontese soldiers
When did Piedmont first prepare for war in 1859?
- 10th January, VEII makes his Cry of Anguish (Grido di dolore) speech
- March, Piedmonts mobilises its army
How did Austria respond to early Piedmontese mobilisation in 1859?
- April, Austria mobilised (costly for Austria, they could not afford to mobilise for long)
- 23rd April, Austria demanded Piedmont demobilise within 3 days
- 29th April, Austria declared war, General Franz Gyulai invaded Piedmont, but was delayed by poor weather, giving time for the French forces to arrive by rail to support Piedmont
How prepared was Austria for war in 1859?
- Commanded by ‘courtier soldiers’ (nobles, not always career soldiers)
- Took 10 days to mobilise
- Only partial mobilisation as troops had to be left in Hungary
- 90,000 troops
How prepared were France and Piedmont by the start of the war?
- Piedmontese officers were reluctant to engage, wanted to leave fighting to the French
- The army arrived by train, but in advance of their supplies. Some men died of exposure before even getting to the battlefield!
What happened at the battle of Magenta?
- 30,000 French troops moved across the Ticino towards the village of Magenta as to form a bridgehead
- Close nature of country, irrigation canals and streams, precluded elaborate manoeuvres
- Austrians turned every house into a miniature fortress.
- Brunt of the fighting was by 5,000 grenadiers of the French imperial guard
- Decisive victory by the 4th June, not a single Piedmontese soldier lost his life
- Battle so bloody that it led to the creation of the Red Cross and the colour ‘Magenta’
What happened at the battle of Solferino?
- Austrians retreated to the Quadrilateral fortresses in Lombardy. Austrian emperor Franz Josef (legend lived that long) himself takes control of the Austrian army in northern Italy
- Battle deteriorated into a series of attacks and counter attacks, ranging over 60 square miles, with the allies committing piecemeal forces to the attack the second they arrived
- Battle ranged from 21st to 24th June, and eventually the Austrians were driven back into the Quadrilaterals
- Allies took 17,000 casualties out of 137,000
- Austrians took 21,000 casualties out of 128,000
What was the result of the Battle of Solferino?
- 11th July, Franz Josef, defeated in battle and facing a revolution in Hungary, met with Napoleon III, who was badly affected by Solferino’s large number of casualties and fearful that a drawn out campaign would allow Prussia to enter the conflict
- They together signed an armistice without consulting the Sardinian allies
How and when did the National Society encourage change in Tuscany?
April 1859, a popular demonstration in Florence caused the Grand Duke Leopold to flee and the creation of a provisional government by Baron Bettino Ricasoli, who would arrange the annexation of Tuscany to Piedmont
How and when did the National Society encourage change in Modena and Parma?
- May 1859, The National Society organised a peaceful revolution in Modena and Parma, leading the ruler to flee and leaving a provisional government in control
- June 1859, The Duke of Modena and the Duchess Regent of Parma fled their provinces, replaced by a government led by Luigi Farini, close to Piedmont. All major government decisions were being approved by Turin, making this area almost a Piedmontese colony