Unification of Italy Flashcards
– a politician who worked to unify Italy
Camillo Cavour
– a nationalist military leader who worked with Cavour to create an unified Italy
Giuseppe Garibaldi
– person who wants to abolish all government
anarchist
– movement away from one’s homeland
emigration
How did influential leaders help to create a unified Italy?
- Italy had not experienced political unity since Roman times.
- That changed in the 1800s, however, when leaders such as Giuseppe Mazzini and Count Camillo Cavour worked to build a united state.
Napoleon’s invasions stirred Italian nationalism in the early 1800s, but there were many obstacles to unity.
• Despite a common language, people identified mainly with their local regions due to frequent foreign rule.
• At the Congress of Vienna, Italy was partitioned by Austria, the Hapsburg monarchs, and others.
• Nationalist revolts were continually crushed
by Austria.
Giuseppe Mazzini, a nationalist leader, founded Young Italy in the 1830s.
- It was a secret society whose goal was to establish a united Italy.
- Mazzini helped set up a revolutionary republic in Rome in 1849, but French forces soon toppled it.
- Still, the ideas of nationalists such as Mazzini soon spread.
Victor Emmanuel II, the monarch of Sardinia, wanted to join other states to his own and increase his power.
- He made Count Camillo Cavour his prime minister in 1852.
- Cavour was a skilled politician who reformed Sardinia’s economy
- His ultimate goal was to drive Austria out of Italy and annex more provinces.
With Sardinia in control of northern Italy, Cavour next turned his attention southward.
- Sardinia helped Britain and France fight Russia in the Crimean War.
- In the aftermath, Cavour got France to agree to help Sardinia if it ever went to war with Austria.
- Cavour then provoked that war and defeated Austria with France’s help.
In southern Italy, Giuseppe Garibaldi led a volunteer force of 1,000 “Red Shirts.”
- Garibaldi was a nationalist and ally of Mazzini.
* Using weapons and ships supplied by Cavour, the Red Shirts won control of Sicily and marched toward Naples.
Cavour feared Garibaldi would set up his own republic in the southern part of Italy.
- However, when Victor Emmanuel sent Sardinian forces to confront Garibaldi, he turned over Naples and Sicily. Victor Emmanuel II was crowned king of Italy in 1861.
- Italy won the province of Venetia during the Austro-Prussian War and won Rome during the Franco-Prussian War. It was finally a united land.
• Italy became a unified state between 1858 and 1870.
Italy faced many problems once it was unified.
• Regional rivalries and differences made it hard to solve problems.
• The north was rich and had
a tradition of business and culture, whereas the south was rural and poor.
• Popes resented seizure of the Papal States and urged Italian Catholics not to cooperate
with the new government.
Under Victor Emmanuel, Italy became a constitutional monarchy.
• Italy had a two-house legislature.
• The lower house was elected, but only a small number of men had the right to vote.
• The king appointed members to the upper
house, which could veto laws passed by the lower house.
Turmoil broke out in the late 1800s as the left struggled against a conservative Italian government.
- Socialists organized strikes and anarchists turned to violence.
- In response, the government extended suffrage to more men, passed laws to improve social conditions, and set out to win an overseas empire in Africa.
Italy developed economically, particularly after 1900.
- Industries developed in northern regions and people moved to cities.
- Though a population explosion created tensions, many people chose to emigrate, this calmed things at home.