The History Book

(Tina Sui) #1
239
See also: The storming of the Bastille 208–13 ■ The 1848 revolutions 228–29 ■ Russia emancipates the serfs 243 ■
The opening of the Eiffel Tower 256–57 ■ The Young Turk Revolution 260–61 ■ France returns to a republican
government 265 ■ The October Revolution 276–79 ■ The Treaty of Versailles 280

privilege. He was also driven by the
goal of ending Austrian rule in the
north of the country and by the
idea of a united Italy. The desire to
form new political entities based on
common national elements such as
geography and history came to be
known as nationalism.

Reaching a compromise
In 1859, much of Italy had already
been united under the state of
Piedmont-Sardinia, in the northwest
of Italy, a process directed by its
shrewd and pragmatic prime
minister Camillo Cavour and
critically boosted by French
military assistance in expelling
the Austrians.
For Cavour, unification meant
the creation not of a republican
Italy, but of a centralized state
under a constitutional monarchy. He
believed this was the only way that

Italy could realize its potential—
above all, to press ahead with
industrialization and compete with
the leading powers of Europe.
The Redshirts’ forces, swelled
by locals flocking to join them, soon
overcame the ineptly led armies
of the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies.
When it came to deciding upon
a government for the newly united
Italy—Venice and Rome excepted,
though both would subsequently
be incorporated, in 1866 and
1870 respectively—Garibaldi
recognized the inevitability of
Piedmontese domination. In
November 1860, with Garibaldi

CHANGING SOCIETIES


at his side, Victor Emmanuel II of
Sardinia entered Naples. In March
1861, he was crowned king of Italy.

Divided goals
The difference between Garibaldi’s
and Cavour’s goals illustrates the
contradictions at the heart of
nationalism in 19th-century Europe.
Prompted by the notions of liberty
and equal rights promised by the
French Revolution, nationalism
developed an idealistic view of a
more just society. National groups
oppressed by alien rule believed
they should be able to assert their
independence as a natural right. ❯❯

Ideas of national self-determination, inspired by the
French Revolution, begin to proliferate across Europe.

The Greek War of Independence epitomizes the struggles
necessary to free nations from foreign domination.

The failed revolutions of 1848 illustrate the ruling
elites’ resistance to notions of national independence.

German unification under Prussia reinforces conservative
nationalism at the expense of republican liberties.

Garibaldi lands in Sicily and overthrows
the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies, but Italy
remains a constitutional monarchy.

Giuseppe Garibaldi, in the red shirt
that symbolized his makeshift army,
managed to overthrow Bourbon rule in
the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies but had
to compromise on governmental form.

US_238-241_Garibaldi.indd 239 15/02/2016 16:43

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