GIUSEPPE GARIBALDI, (1807–1882).

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GIUSEPPE GARIBALDI 1807–1882

Born in Nice to a sea captain father, the young Garibaldi
was a professional revolutionary. He took part in the Mazzinian uprising
against the Piedmontese monarchy in 1834 and, following its suppression, was
condemned to death for his role in the fighting. Garibaldi, however, had fled
to Brazil. There, he met his first wife, Anita, and fought gallantly for six
years (1836–1842) on behalf of the South Rio Grande republic, trying to achieve
independence. Garibaldi ended the war as admiral of the would-be republic’s
small fleet. In 1846, he organized and commanded the Italian legion that fought
for Uruguay in its war against Argentina. Garibaldi’s reputation as the “hero
of two worlds,” and his familiar penchant for South American peasant garb,
dates from this period.

News of the 1848 revolutions, however, prompted his return
to Turin. Garibaldi fought bravely against the Austrians in Lombardy and in
defense of the Roman republic in the spring of 1849. Together with a faithful
band of volunteers and Anita, Garibaldi broke out of Rome and retreated toward
Venice, which was still resisting Austrian rule. After suffering heavy
casualties, they were forced to take refuge in the swamps surrounding Ravenna,
where Anita died of exhaustion.

Garibaldi, at the lowest ebb of his fortunes, was expelled
from Piedmont-Sardinia and was forced to lead the life of an exile once more.
He worked briefly as a candle-maker in Camden, New Jersey, before returning to
Europe in 1854. He established himself in a house on the Sardinian Island of
Caprera and gradually became more politically realistic. Under Camillo Benso di
Cavour’s influence, Garibaldi accepted that the Piedmontese monarchy offered
the best hope of unifying Italy. This renunciation of his Mazzinian and
revolutionary principles restored him to favor in Turin, and in 1859 Garibaldi
was made a general in the Piedmontese army.

Garibaldi was violently critical of the Treaty of
Villafranca. In January 1860, he endorsed the latest venture launched by
Giuseppe Mazzini, the “Action party,” which openly espoused a policy of
liberating southern Italy, Rome, and Venice by military means. To this end, in
the spring of 1860, Garibaldi led a corps of red-shirted patriots from Genoa to
the assistance of a Mazzinian uprising in Palermo. The “Expedition of the
Thousand” is the most famous of all Garibaldi’s military exploits. After
landing near Palermo with the support of ships from the British fleet,
Garibaldi swiftly took command of the island. On 14 May 1860, he became
dictator of Sicily and head of a provisional government that was largely
dominated by a native Sicilian who would play an important role in the political
future of Italy, Francesco Crispi.

With the support of thousands of Sicilian peasants and
workers, Garibaldi then invaded the Italian mainland, intent on marching on
Rome. He entered Naples in September 1860. He was joined there by the principal
republican theorists, Mazzini and Carlo Cattaneo, and for a brief moment it
looked as if the process of Italian unification would take a radical turn.
Cavour’s shrewdness enabled him to outmaneuver Garibaldi. Piedmontese troops
invaded the Papal States, blocking the road to Rome. Garibaldi decided not to
compromise Italian unity by risking a conflict with the Piedmontese. On 26
October 1860, he consigned southern Italy to the monarchy.

Garibaldi, however, was unable to consider Italian
unification complete while Rome remained under clerical domination, protected
by French troops. He became a thorn in the side of the first Italian
governments by carrying on his own independent foreign policy. In 1862,
Garibaldi returned to Sicily to raise another army of volunteers willing to
march under the melodramatic slogan “Rome or Death.” The outraged reaction of
Napoleon III compelled the Italian government to intervene, and Garibaldi’s
advance was halted by Italian troops at Aspromonte in Calabria. There was a
skirmish, and Garibaldi was shot in the foot. Garibaldi was briefly imprisoned,
but his international fame (especially in England, to which he made a triumphal
visit in 1864) soon led to his release.

In 1866, Garibaldi led Italian troops in the Trentino,
liberating a great part of the Italian-speaking territory under Austrian rule
before being ordered to relinquish his gains upon the end of the hostilities
between Prussia and Austria. His short reply amply conveyed his disgust at the
command: Garibaldi sent a one-word telegram saying obbedisco (I obey). His
exploits in the Trentino were a prelude to further impolitic attempts to take
Rome in the fall of 1867. Escaping from house arrest on Caprera, he joined
3,000 waiting volunteers in Tuscany. The courage of his amateur troops,
however, was no match for the French army defending Rome, and at the small but
bloody battle of Mentana on 3 November 1867, Garibaldi was decisively beaten.
Once more, he was forced into exile on Caprera.

Garibaldi played no role in the liberation of Rome in 1870.
His last campaign was on behalf of the French Republic. Garibaldi led a corps
of Italian volunteers at the battle of Dijon in the fall of 1870, and his
efforts were a useful contribution to what was the only French victory of the
Franco–Prussian War. In his last years, Garibaldi dedicated himself to writing
his memoirs (and heroic poetry) and became a declared socialist. He died on
Caprera in 1882, but his myth has been a powerful influence on Italian
political life ever since

RISORGIMENTO

In Italian, the Risorgimento means the awakening of national
sentiment that led to the creation of the modern Italian state. The decisive
moment for Italian political unity was the wars of 1859–1861. Thanks to a
felicitous combination of international and domestic factors and skillful
diplomacy, Italy was substantially united under the rule of the House of Savoy.
First, the international context was favorable for the reduction of Austrian
power in Italy. Austria had isolated itself during the Crimean War by staying
neutral and was facing France’s challenge to its role as the power broker in
Europe. Liberal England, moreover, wished to see the end of the anachronistic
absolutist regime of the Bourbons in southern Italy. Within Italy,
Piedmont-Sardinia, thanks to the modernizing efforts of Camillo Benso di
Cavour, had emerged as a power of some weight capable of attracting the middle
classes of Lombardy, Tuscany, and the rest of northern Italy to its cause.
Liberal and nationalist ideas, moreover, were widespread by the end of the
1850s. The views of Vincenzo Gioberti, Cesare Balbo, and Massimo D’Azeglio had
been read by every educated Italian, and republicans and democrats such as
Carlo Cattaneo and Giuseppe Mazzini also had a substantial following,
particularly in central Italy.

Cavour’s unique diplomatic skills turned these favorable
conditions into political action. First, he persuaded Napoleon III to ally
France to Piedmont in July 1858 at Plombières by promising France Nice and the
duchies of central Italy (the eventual status of Savoy was left open) in
exchange for French assistance to liberate Lombardy and Venetia from Austrian
rule. The four northern Italian regions so liberated were then to form a
federation under the presidency of the Pope. Cavour then goaded Austria into
declaring war in April 1859, allowing Piedmont-Sardinia to appear as the
innocent victim of an act of aggression by a larger power. As the bloody
battles of Magenta and Solferino demonstrated, without French support the
Piedmontese army would never have been able to defeat the Austrians.
Simultaneous insurrections in Tuscany, Modena, and Parma in favor of
unification with Turin were in large part organized by Cavour’s agents, thus
nullifying the Plombières agreement by thwarting Napoleon III’s ambitions. The
peace of Villafranca in July 1859—which granted Lombardy to Piedmont but
insisted on the return of absolute rule in central Italy—was a tardy attempt by
Napoleon and the Austrians to close the Pandora’s box opened by their own
ambition. The treaty provoked Cavour’s resignation, but by now the movement for
unification with Piedmont in central Italy was too strong to be blocked by
anything short of a bloody war of repression. Cavour returned triumphantly to
office in January 1860 and, in exchange for the cession of Savoy as well as
Nice to France, was allowed to incorporate all of north-central Italy into
Piedmont-Sardinia.

Mazzini and Giuseppe Garibaldi regarded Cavour’s patient
diplomacy as too cautious, however. At the beginning of 1860, the so-called
Action Party was founded with the specific goal of liberating Rome, Venice, and
southern Italy from absolutist and Papal rule. In April 1860, Garibaldi and his
“Thousand” redshirts sailed from Genoa to Palermo to assist the Mazzinian
uprising that had broken out against Bourbon rule. With the assistance of the
British fleet, Garibaldi disembarked and swiftly established his personal
dictatorship over Sicily. In August 1860, he crossed the Strait of Messina at
the head of an army of Sicilians and marched on Naples, which he entered in
September without encountering resistance. He was joined by Mazzini and
Cattaneo, who openly argued that the red-shirts’ conquests should herald a
democratic and republican solution to the unification of Italy.

Cavour, alarmed by this project, used the threat of a
democratic revolution in Italy to persuade France to give him a free hand in
southern Italy. Piedmontese troops invaded the Papal States and blocked
Garibaldi’s road to Rome, and at Teano on 26 October 1860, Garibaldi ceded his
conquests in person to Victor Emmanuel II. This decision was confirmed by
regional plebiscites in February 1861. Only the wealthiest citizens were
allowed to vote, and, particularly in the south, ballot fraud was widespread.
Italy had completed its liberal revolution but had installed a regime that was
ignorant of the needs of the southern peasantry and strongly identified with
the interests of the northern upper classes. It is not fanciful to claim that
many of Italy’s subsequent problems stemmed from the political settlement of
the process of unification.

By MSW
Forschungsmitarbeiter Mitch Williamson is a technical writer with an interest in military and naval affairs. He has published articles in Cross & Cockade International and Wartime magazines. He was research associate for the Bio-history Cross in the Sky, a book about Charles ‘Moth’ Eaton’s career, in collaboration with the flier’s son, Dr Charles S. Eaton. He also assisted in picture research for John Burton’s Fortnight of Infamy. Mitch is now publishing on the WWW various specialist websites combined with custom website design work. He enjoys working and supporting his local C3 Church. “Curate and Compile“
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