RISORGIMENTO

rēsôrˌjēmĕnˈtō [Ital.,=resurgence], in 19th-century Italian history, period of cultural nationalism and of political activism, leading to unification of Italy.

Roots of the Risorgimento

The Risorgimento's roots lie in 18th-century Italian culture in the works of such people as Ludovico Antonio Muratori, Vittorio Alfieri, and Antonio Genovesi. Italy had not been a single political unit since the fall of the Western Roman Empire in the 5th cent., and from the 16th through the 18th cent. foreign domination or influence was virtually complete. During the French Revolutionary Wars and the period dominated by Napoleon I, the temporary expulsion of Austrian and other repressive regimes and the formation of new states in Italy (see Cisalpine Republic) encouraged hopes for unification.

Early Years and Factions

Secret societies such as the Carbonari appeared and carried on revolutionary activity after the restoration of the old order by the Congress of Vienna (1814–15). The Carbonari engineered uprisings in the Two Sicilies (1820) and in the kingdom of Sardinia (1821). Despite severe reprisals inspired by the Holy Alliance, new uprisings occurred in 1831 in the Papal States, Modena, and Parma. Italian literature of this period, especially the novels of Alessandro Manzoni and the marchese d'Azeglio and the poetry of Ugo Foscolo and Giacomo Leopardi, did much to stimulate Italian nationalism.

The Risorgimento was primarily a movement of the middle class and the nobility; since economic issues were virtually ignored, the peasantry remained indifferent to its ideals. Political activity was carried on by three groups. Giuseppe Mazzini led the radical faction through his secret society Giovine Italia [young Italy], founded in 1831. Its program was republican and anticlerical; it vaguely alluded to social and economic reforms. The conservative and clerical elements among the nationalists generally advocated a federation of Italian states under the presidency of the pope. The moderates—the propertied bourgeoisie and the north Italian promoters of industry—favored unification of Italy under a king of the house of Savoy. This monarch, as it later turned out, was Victor Emmanuel II of Sardinia.

The Fight for Unification

Sardinia assumed the leadership of the Risorgimento in 1848 when the Lombardo-Venetian kingdom rose against Austrian rule and King Charles Albert intervened in favor of the rebels. After initial victories Charles Albert was defeated by the Austrians at Custoza and was forced to sign an armistice and withdraw his forces. Renewing his attack in 1849, he was again defeated by the Austrians at Novara and abdicated in favor of his son, Victor Emmanuel II, who made peace. Meanwhile, revolutions were suppressed in Venice (under Daniele Manin), Parma, Modena, Tuscany, the Two Sicilies, and the Papal States, where a short-lived Roman Republic was proclaimed under the leadership of Mazzini.

The liberal movement gradually coalesced around Victor Emmanuel II and the policies of his minister Camillo Benso di Cavour. Cavour realized that Sardinia could not defeat Austria without foreign aid. He set out to win French support and British sympathy by introducing sweeping social reforms within Sardinia, by inaugurating a free-trade policy, and by joining (1855) the allies in the Crimean War. Emperor Napoleon III met Cavour at Plombières (1858) and promised military aid against Austria.

War broke out in 1859. The French and Sardinians defeated the Austrians at Magenta and caused them to retreat at Solferino. These victories were so costly, however, that Napoleon signed a separate armistice at Villafranca di Verona (ratified by the Treaty of Zürich). Austria retained Venetia, and Sardinia gained only Lombardy. It was also stipulated that Tuscany, Modena, Parma, Bologna, and the Romagna, where revolutionists had organized provisional governments, were to return to their former rulers. This provision was not fulfilled; plebiscites were held (Mar., 1860) in these states, which voted for union with Sardinia. In return for recognizing these plebiscites, Napoleon received Savoy and Nice. The spectacular conquest of the Two Sicilies (1860) by Giuseppe Garibaldi was followed by Sardinia's annexation of Umbria and the Marches. After the Two Sicilies had voted for union with Sardinia, the kingdom of Italy was proclaimed in Mar., 1861.

The remaining territorial objectives of the Risorgimento were Venetia, still in Austria's possession, and Rome and Latium, which the pope was able to retain because of French protection. Through its alliance with Prussia in the Austro-Prussian War of 1866, Italy obtained Venetia. Italy seized the remainder of the papal possessions in 1870 when France withdrew its troops during the Franco-Prussian War. Italian unification was then complete, but unsatisfied nationalism continued to exist in the form of irredentism.

Bibliography

See D. M. Smith, Victor Emanuel, Cavour, and the Risorgimento (1971); C. M. Lovett, Carlo Cattaneo and the Politics of the Risorgimento (1972), and the several works on the subject by G. M. Trevelyan.

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Risorgimento  - 1275 results

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The Italian Risorgimento HISTORICAL CONNECTIONS Series...Beinart and Peter Coates The Italian Risorgimento State, society and national...Data Riall, Lucy The Italian Risorgimento: state, society, and national...
...Cultivation of National Identity around the Risorgimento Edited by Albert Russell Ascoli...Introduction Nationalism and the Uses of Risorgimento Culture Krystyna von Henneberg...Past: History, Myth and Image in the Risorgimento Adrian Lyttelton 27...
...ENGLISH LETTERS Figures of the Risorgimento and Victorian Men of Letters By...therefore not astonishing that the Risorgimento , the "resurrection" of Italian nationalism...intellectual relationships during the Risorgimento , particularly those which were expressed...
...engraving at the Museo Centrale del Risorgimento at Rome, made from a portrait by...Berkeley historians of the Italian Risorgimento in gratitude and affection ACKNOWLEDGEMENT...help on any aspect of the Italian Risorgimento has always been forthcoming and is...
...Intermission 44 Risorgimento 52...lasted about three centuries. Risorgimento THE name chosen for the new era, Risorgimento, was bad: another variant of Renaissance...
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...Transnational Catholic Ideology from the Risorgimento to Fascism. by John T. Ford...TRANSNATIONAL CATHOLIC IDEOLOGY FROM THE RISORGIMENTO TO FASCISM. By Peter R. DAgostino...latter closed by the forces of the Risorgimento. For six decades the Vatican and the...
The British the Risorgimento. by Peter Clements...people for their support in the Risorgimento. This support seemed to have been...impact of active British help in the Risorgimento was quite small. Mazzini certainly...
...Garibaldi (1807-82), leader of the Risorgimento, Italys 1814-71 struggle for unity...enthusiastic support for Garibaldi and the Risorgimento, a phenomenon evident in the works...nineteenth-century debates about the Risorgimento and its most charismatic figure, Garibaldi...
...explaining her devotion to the Italian Risorgimento as an enactment, in part, of her own...statements both on her work and on the Risorgimento, Jamess response - a surprising encounter...Barrett Brownings adherence to the Risorgimento - ironically reminiscent, in this passage...
...the connection between the Italian Risorgimento and the "Eastern question" was thus...to be felt at all levels during the Risorgimento, touching public opinion in a diffuse...Piedmontese who wished to lead the Risorgimento: in this context there was a strong...
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...plentitude of Johann Sebastian Bachs old-fashioned Lutheranism. Rome in America: Transnational Catholic Ideology from the Risorgimento to Fascism. By Peter R. DAgostino. (University of North Carolina Press, 416 pp., $22.50 paperback.) DAgostinos pioneering...
...intellectual champion of the movement for Italian unity--the Risorgimento or resurgence--Giuseppe Mazzini was not a popular figure...revolutionist, but the true extent of his importance in the Risorgimento is debatable. When it came, he did not like it. By liberty...
...a rather dull interlude between the Risorgimento and Fascism, between the heroics of...reached deep into the culture of the Risorgimento itself. Up till now no academic biography...one of the towering figures of the Risorgimento: a revolutionary and a conspirator...
...symbolic baggage as Rome, and for Italian patriots of the Risorgimento the rescue of the Eternal City from the clutches of the papacy...as its principal focus the campaign launched by the great Risorgimento hero Giuseppe Garibaldi in 1875 to divert the course of the...
...Catholic Church in the process). The Risorgimento, the mid-century movement of national...fought as volunteers in the wars of the Risorgimento and after, were passionately engaged...the politics or the wars of Italys Risorgimento. Uninterested in culture and despising...
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...nation-states to unify. While Britain, France, Russia, Spain and other nations were unified from the Middle Ages or earlier, the Risorgimento movement, a combination of secular democracy and liberal nationalism, only succeeded in unifying Italy in 1859-61. Then...
...the Rapture and the Strokes, are on the front end of an 80s renaissance. (I say "renaissance" when I should probably say "risorgimento": Both bands include a good share of ethnic Italians.) The Rapture released its long-awaited second full-length album...
...again later, before the pressures of national unification and Risorgimento rattled him back to a politically conservative position...Italian historiography that take their charge from church and Risorgimento respectively; and part is attributable to embarrassment on...
...first novel - an historical tale about Garibaldi and the Risorgimento - had already been optioned by an extremely famous Hollywood...that the author never seemed able to decide how to spell "Risorgimento." Perhaps I came across one or two decent novels in that...
...whole cloth. The idea of an Italian "national religion" was a leftover from the unfinished Risorgimento of the previous century. The ideas of Risorgimento hero Giuseppe Mazzini (he was among early admirers of George Eliots novel of Florentine...
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encyclopedia articles on: Risorgimento  - 38 results

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RISORGIMENTO resor jemen to Ital.,=resurgence, in 19th-century Italian history, period of cultural nationalism and of political activism, leading to unification of Italy. Roots of the Risorgimento The Risorgimentos roots lie in 18th-century Italian culture in the works of such people as Ludovico Antonio Muratori...
...garebal de, 1807 82, Italian patriot and soldier, a leading figure in the Risorgimento . He remains perhaps the most popular of all Italian heroes of the Risorgimento, and a great revolutionary hero in the Western world. In South America...
...MAZZINI, GIUSEPPE joozep pa mat-se ne, 1805 72, Italian patriot and revolutionist, an outstanding figure of the Risorgimento . His youth was spent in literary and philosophical studies. He early joined the Carbonari , was imprisoned briefly...
...CAIROLI, BENEDETTO banadet to kiro le, 1825 89, Italian patriot and premier. One of five brothers all noted as heroes of the Risorgimento, he was the only brother to survive the wars leading to Italian unification. Benedetto took part in the expedition of Giuseppe...
...MARCHESE je no kap-po ne, 1792 1876, Italian politician, historian, and educator. He played an important part in the Risorgimento. His theory of education anticipated the thought of John Dewey. In 1848 he was president of the constitutional government...
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