History Daily - The Fight for the Unification of Italy
Episode Date: March 17, 2026March 17, 1861. After more than 10 years of revolution led by such figures as Giuseppe Garibaldi, a parliament assembled and officially proclaimed the unified Kingdom of Italy. This episode originally... aired in 2022. Support the show! Join Into History for ad-free listening and more. History Daily is a co-production of Airship and Noiser.Go to HistoryDaily.com for more history, daily.
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It's a spring morning in 1860 on the island of Sicily.
On a vine-strewn hillside, an army of 1,000 rebels stands in preparation for a battle.
Leading them is an Italian revolutionary named Giuseppe Garibaldi.
Garibaldi shields his eyes from the blistering sun and peers out across the valley.
In the distance, some 3,000 Neapolitan soldiers march through the haze,
their military coats gray against the yellow hillside.
Garibaldi gives the signal.
to his troops. The rebels send a volley of gunfire into the oncoming soldiers. There's a brief moment
as the Neapolitans prepared their artillery. And then, cannibals thud into the hillsides around Garibaldi
and his men, followed by the crackle and blast of musket fire, echoing throughout the sun-bleached valley.
As the Neapolitans unleashed the full strength of their arsenal, Garibaldi orders his men to hold
the line and stand firm, but they don't listen. They charge down the hill.
toward the enemy, their bayonets gleaming, their red uniforms bright and bold.
This was not the plan.
Garibaldi orders a trumpet blast to call the troops back, but his band of rebels again don't listen.
These men are volunteers, not trained soldiers, and they're fighting for something they believe in,
something they believe is worth dying for.
As Garibaldi watches them crash into the enemy lines, he feels equally inspired.
So he slings his musket across his chest and unsheaths his sword
and follows his enthusiastic compatriots into battle.
The fighting is dogged and fierce.
But despite being outgunned and outmaned, Garibaldi's red-shirted rebels
push the Neopalitans back to their original position.
But then the enemy regroups and takes aim.
Garibaldi's second-in-command urges retreat.
Garibaldi turns to him with blue eyes blazing with conviction, bellowing either way.
We make Italy here on this spot, or we die in the endeavor.
And with that, the rebels mount another charge, forcing the Neapolitans into a hasty retreat.
The Battle of Calataphimi in May of 1860 will herald the first victory of Garibaldi's invasion of Sicily.
Soon, the green, white, and red of the Italian flag will flutter above the hillside,
making a significant step in Garibaldi's ultimate goal, unifying the kingdom of Italy.
At the time of the battle, Italy is a fragmented patchwork of sovereign states, ruled by aristocratic European dynasties, including the Spanish House of Bourbon, which governs the kingdoms of Naples and Sicily.
But support for Italian unification has been growing, a movement spearheaded by the likes of Garibaldi and his allies.
After decades of simmering revolutionary sentiment, a final push towards unification begins in 1860, leading to a series of bloody battles across the United States.
the peninsula until finally the land is united under one king, and Italy officially becomes a unified
country on March 17, 1861. From Noisor and Airship, I'm Lindsay Graham, and this is History Daily.
History is made every day. On this podcast, every day, we tell the true stories of the people
and events that shaped our world. Today is March 17, 1861, the fight for the unification of Italy.
It's September 1814.
about 46 years before the Battle of Calataphimi.
Delegates across Europe have come to the city of Vienna to attend a peace conference.
Inside the opulent banquet hall of the Bauhaus plots, princes, dukes, and barons
discussed the balance of power on the continent.
The future of Europe is being decided here, amidst powdered wigs and gilded chandeliers,
and the main question of the day is how to prevent history from repeating itself.
Until recently, the future of European hegemony was in the hands of one Frenchman
Napoleon Bonaparte. By 1812, Napoleon's empire stretched from Spain and the West to Russia
in the East. He defeated the monarchies of Prussia, Austria, and Spain, as well as the Italian
states, disseminating French ideals of republicanism along the way. But following Napoleon's downfall
in 1814, Europe's great powers, including Prussia, Austria, Great Britain, Russia, and the
recently restored monarchy of France, are eager to reinstate the old aristocratic regimes.
and to stem the revolutionary tide of democratic liberalism spreading across the region.
Here, in Italy, at the Conference of Vienna,
ambassadors from these European powers work to divide up the Italian Peninsula.
Prior to the rise of Napoleon, the peninsula was checkered by independent states,
ruled by dukes and princes.
To maintain a healthy balance of power,
the ambassadors at the gathering redivided the peninsula among the four European royal families.
The Austrian-Hapsburg Empire acquires the northeast,
The House of Savoy claims the Northwest. The Pope recovers his territories in central Italy,
while in the south, the Spanish branch of the House of Bourbon reassumes control of Naples and Sicily.
But even as Italy is divided up among royal families, the first stirrings of unity are emerging.
Things started to change during the Napoleonic occupation, when the Italian states were grouped under one Italian republic.
Prior to Napoleon, the modern-day Italian language was only spoken by scholarly.
and intellectuals. But in the wake of Napoleon's downfall, this language slowly but surely
starts to replace regional dialects and a distinct Italian identity begins to take root. And following
the Congress of Vienna, nationalist sentiment only increases, giving rise to a secretive network
of revolutionary societies called the Carbonari. Its members all want the same thing,
and end to the rule of absolutist monarchy and the unification of Italy under one constitution.
Throughout the 1820s, members of the Carbonari instigate armed revolts against the Habsburg, Savoy, and Bourbon monarchies.
In the course of these revolts, supporters of Italian unification adopt a red, white, and green flag,
inspired by the flag of France as a symbol of liberty and unity.
But the monarchists try their best to repress this revolutionary fervor.
The Habsburgs, who rule in the northeast and some of central Italy, entirely repudiate the notion of Italian statehood.
Austrian Chancellor Franz Metternich believes the word Italy is a mere geographic expression and nothing more.
But Metternich underestimates the scale of the unification movement sweeping the peninsula.
Some people know that Italy is more than just geography.
And soon enough, one prominent member of the Carbonari will emerge as a hero of Italian unification
and a thorn in the side of the monarchy.
It's 1833 in Genoa, northern Italy.
12 men stand before a firing squad.
They're all members of a revolutionary group called Young Italy,
a nationalist organization responsible for plotting to overthrow the Savoy monarchy.
The plot was foiled, and its architects were sentenced to death.
As an officer shouts the signal, there's a crack of rifle fire,
and the 12 men dropped like stones.
The monarchists foiled Young Italy scheme,
but they failed to kill the ringleader of the plot,
the founder of Young Italy,
Giuseppe Matsini. The 28-year-old Matzini is an ardent member of the Carbonari. He was arrested years
ago in 1827 for spreading revolutionary propaganda. And after being released in 1831, he was exiled to
Switzerland. But there he promptly established Young Italy. And by 1833, the group has amassed some
60,000 followers. When Matzini hears about the execution of his 12 followers, he doesn't cower. He grows
even more determined to overthrow the Savoy monarchy and achieve a united Italy. So he organizes
another plot. This time he plans a two-pronged invasion of Genoa. Mazzini will lead troops from
Switzerland in the north, while another member of Young Italy leads a second invasion by sea.
This man is a 26-year-old merchant navy captain named Giuseppe Garibaldi. Garibaldi joined Young
Italy in 1833, after meeting Mazzini and becoming galvanized by the cause of Italian.
unification. Garibaldi vowed to make it his life's goal to liberate his homeland from foreign
monarchies. He's smart, charismatic, a man of integrity. Mazzini was glad to have him on board.
But the two-pronged attack in Genoa will also fail. Mazzini will again be arrested, along with
Garibaldi, who will be sentenced to death. It's April 1848, 14 years after the failure of the
two-pronged invasion. A ship cuts through choppy waters across.
the eastern Mediterranean. On board are a group of Italian revolutionaries who are returning to
their home on the peninsula. Among them is a bearded man with steely blue eyes and a poncho slung around
his neck. Giuseppe Garibaldi has spent the last 12 years in South America, where he fled
after being sentenced to death for his role in the failed insurrection in Genoa. But Garibaldi made
good use of his time away from Italy. He took command of a group of exiled Italian soldiers,
known as the Italian Legion
and joined independence movements
across the South American continent.
Today, Garibaldi and his Italian Legion
are sailing back to Italy
to join a wellspring of anti-monarchy revolution
sweeping Europe.
When Garibaldi heard that unrest was breaking out
in the Italian states,
he seized the opportunity.
He hopes that the moment has finally arrived
to topple the monarchies and unite Italy.
Garibaldi and his men head to Milan,
where rebels from the northwestern region
of Piedmont are leading a revolt against the occupying Austrian hapsburgs.
This revolt would become known as the first Italian War of Independence.
Garibaldi takes command of a small force of rebel soldiers and joins the revolt.
But after suffering a crushing defeat against Austrian troops in March 1849,
Garibaldi is again forced to flee, this time south to Rome, where he is greeted by a familiar
face.
Giuseppe Matzini, Garibaldi's old friend and mentor, has recently become.
come head of the Roman Republic, a democratic city state created after the ousting of Pope Pius
the 9th in 1848. For Matzini, controlling Rome is a major, symbolic step towards unification,
but trouble is on the horizon. News of the events in Rome have reached France, where Napoleon
Bonaparte's nephew, Louis Napoleon, now rules as an elected president. France is a predominantly
Catholic nation, so Louis Napoleon decides to please his Catholic citizens.
by dispatching an army to topple the new Roman Republic
and to restore order under the old Pope, Pius 9th.
On June 1st, 1849, the siege of Rome begins.
30,000 French troops surround the city.
Under the bombardment of French artillery fire,
Garibaldi's 7,000 volunteers defend Rome courageously,
but they cannot withstand the onslaught.
Soon French soldiers breach the city walls and wage war in the streets.
Under Garibaldi's charismatic leadership, the soldiers of the Roman Republic fight with spirit
to Feni Matzini's vision for a free democratic society.
But ultimately the French proved too powerful.
Matsini, Garibaldi, and other members of the Republican leadership fall back into the Roman
assembly when they must decide their next steps.
Trenched in blood from battling the French, Garibaldi urges retreat, stating wherever we may be,
there will be Rome.
Matzini looks out at the crumbling ruins of the ancient city, which once stood as a symbol of democracy.
Now it is riddled with bullets and pockmarked by artillery blasts.
With a heavy heart, Matzini agrees with Garibaldi.
Unification will come, but not today.
Once again, both Matzini and Garibaldi flee Italy.
Matzini escapes first to Switzerland and then to London, where he will publish revolutionary journals.
Garibaldi, still hounded by French and Austrian authorities,
ends up in retirement on the island of Caprera in the Mediterranean.
And with Matzini and Garibaldi out of the picture,
the Italian unification movement appears to have sputtered to an end.
But soon, a third crucial figure will take center stage.
A politician from northern Italy, who believes the best way to achieve unification,
is not through violence, but through diplomacy.
It's July 1858 in the town of Plambier-Leban in eastern France.
Louis-Napolian of France is a very farce.
holding a clandestine meeting with the Prime Minister of Piedmont,
a man named Camillo Benso, Count of Cavour.
A far cry from the romantic figure of Garibaldi,
Gavour is portly and middle-aged,
with pink cheeks and wire-framed spectacles.
Though descended from a long line of Savoy aristocrats,
Kovore is a liberal reformer dedicated to the cause of Italian unification.
Kovor has arranged this meeting with Louis-Nopolion
to negotiate a treaty between France and Piedmont.
Kavore wants to oust his enemies, the Austrian hapsburgs, from the Italian peninsula.
But to do that, he needs the help of the French.
A coming diplomat, Kovor convinces Louis-Napolian that by driving the Austrians from northern Italy,
France will emerge as Europe's leading power.
Louis-Napolian is persuaded.
The Franco-Piedmontese alliance launches what will become known as the second Italian War of Independence.
And this time, unlike as in the first, the Austrian Hapsburgs are defeated.
They are driven from their domains in Lombardi before relinquishing their central Italian territories to Kvoor and Piedmont.
The victory gives Kovor hope for the total unification of the entire peninsula, but there is still vast portions of the South under the dominion of the Spanish Bourbon dynasty.
Kivore cannot simply launch an invasion of another sovereign state.
He would be ostracized by the European establishment.
What Kavore needs is someone who isn't afraid of upsetting the status quo, someone who is someone who,
who has a long track record of picking fights with sovereign powers. He needs Giuseppe Garibaldi.
It's May 1860 in the Mediterranean Sea. Two steamships plow through the waves heading south.
At the prow of one ship stands Giuseppe Garibaldi. Garibaldi has assembled an army of
1,000 volunteers to invade Sicily and overthrow the Spanish branch of the Bourbon Monarchy.
But Garibaldi is not acting on Kovor's orders. He has undertaken this daring maneuver all on his own
And after landing on the island of Sicily, Garibaldi's men win their first battle against the Neapolitan defenders,
before going on to take the capital city, Palermo.
When Kavore hears that Garibaldi has defeated the bourbon occupants of Sicily, he grows excited.
Total unification is closer than ever before.
And then when Garibaldi's army lands on the southern tip of the Italian mainland,
Kovor urges the king of Piedmont, Victor Emmanuel II, to send an army to welcome him.
On October 26, 1860, in the town of Teano in the southern region of Campania,
Garibaldi's tired, weary rebel army meets with the forces of Victor Emmanuel,
and the two leaders shake hands.
It's a symbolic moment.
Garibaldi has compromised his most fervent anti-monarchy beliefs for the sake of unification.
Because if Italy can unite, even if under one Italian king, then Garibaldi is happy.
The combined forces of Garibaldi and Victor Emmanuel go on to defeat the remaining bourbon troops.
And once his mission is complete, Garibaldi returns to the island of Caprera,
refusing to accept a financial reward for his heroic exploits.
For Garibaldi, unification is now all but assured, and his work, at long last, is done.
But although the peninsula is effectively united, Italy has yet to be proclaimed a nation.
That moment comes on March 17, 1861.
In the Palazzo Carriano and Turin,
the newly elected Italian parliament meets for the first time.
King Victor Emmanuel II stands before the assembled ministers
and declares the kingdom of Italy an independent country.
He will rule as its monarch,
while the Count of Cavour will be Italy's first prime minister.
The Grand Hall erupts in applause.
Unification of Italy did not happen in a day.
It was a decades-long fight characterized by revolts, reform, and war.
But that struggle, and the heroic actions of men like Garibaldi, Matzini, and Kavore,
is celebrated on this day of unity, March 17, 1861.
Next, on History Daily, March 18, 1913.
Just months after a historic military victory, King George I of Greece is shot dead,
ending a tumultuous 50-year reign.
From Noisor and Ayrship, this is History Daily.
Post it, edited and executive produced by me, Lindsay Graham.
Audio editing by Molly Bond.
Music and sound design by Lindsay Graham.
This episode is written and researched by Joe Viner.
Executive producers are Stephen Walters for Airship
and Pascal Hughes for Noiser.
