Revolutions - 7.05- Risorgimento
Episode Date: August 13, 2017In the years after the Napoleonic conquest, the dream of Italian liberation and unification took root. Pre-Order The Storm Before the Storm! Amazon Powells Barnes & Noble Indiebound Books-a-Mil...lion
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And welcome to revolutions.
Episode 7.5, Resorgimento.
Last week, we covered the breadth and depth of the Austrian Empire.
And as I said, there would be two subsets of the Austrian Empire that would demand much fuller treatment.
Italy and Hungary.
So this week we will cover Italy, and then next week, the Kingdom of Hungary.
And then with our large circuit of groundwork laid over the first six episodes,
we will tie everything back together in episode 7.7 with the discussion of the general economic
depression and social crisis that hit Europe in the mid-1840s. And then, with a little luck,
we'll actually get going with something resembling a plot. So to introduce Italy, I am going to,
yes, organically tie it back to the storm before the storm the beginning of the end of the Roman Republic,
forthcoming from Public Affairs October the 24th, 2017. Thank you so much to everyone who has pre-ordered the
book, we are in fact well on our way to our goal, and if you haven't already pre-ordered it,
well, now is as good a time as any. I'll wait for you until you get back. Okay, did you do it?
Fantastic. Thank you very much. Now, if you listen to that first chapter I released,
the beasts of Italy, I briefly touched on the fact that Italy in the second century BC was not a
unified state. It had never been a unified state. The Romans had conquered the peninsula
during the Samnite Wars, but rather than annexed their defeated enemies, they signed treaties
with them that created a Roman-led political confederation. So the Italians were not Roman citizens.
They were simply allies. And in chapter two of the book, the stepchildren of Rome,
I break down the hierarchy of citizenship and rights in Roman Italy because the growing dissatisfaction
of the allies is one of the major threads of the book. It all explodes into the social war in
chapter 9, which is as fascinating as it is exciting, and you should all just go prayer to the book.
Now, spoiler alert, it's not really a spoiler alert because we already went through all of this
in the history of Rome, but the social war results in the political and social unification of Italy,
and that unification would persist all the way through the fall of the Western Empire in 476.
And even after that, the unity would continue under the successor kingdom, the Austro-Gothic kingdom,
but then Italian unification would start to waver during the wars between the Lombards and the Byzantines,
which if you want, you can hop over to Robin Pearson's History of Byzantium podcast for all the details on that,
starts at about episode 33.
The upshot is that whatever legal claims of unity were being made by the rival powers in the Western Mediterranean,
Italy was quickly dissolving back into disunity.
Even by the time Charlemagne has himself crowned King of the Romans and 800, the Italian peninsula was reverted.
to its original form. Small kingdoms and city states that held local sovereignty in a fractured
peninsula. It would remain in that disunited state all through the Middle Ages and into the
Renaissance, and then through the upheavals of the French Revolution and the Napoleonic conquest,
and the Congress of Vienna would then firmly recommit to perpetuating Italian disunity,
the specifics which we'll get to in a second. But jumping ahead to our age, we know that there
is today this thing called Italy. So when did Italy happen? Well, I'll tell you, it's about to start
happening right now. The tumultuous process of modern Italian unification is called Resorgimento,
the rebirth, the resurgence, the revival, however you want to translate it. On its broadest
possible definition, Resorgimento begins in the 1790s with the arrival of Bonaparte and the French
armies that swept aside the old order and literally redrew the map of the peninsula.
And then its latest possible dating can take it all the way to the end of World War I.
But tighter parameters for Risorgimento can date it from the beginning of the Congress of Vienna
in 1815, or even as late as the 1840s when the idea of Italian nationalism spread from the small
click of intellectuals and activists into the wider Italian population.
The end of Resorgimento, meanwhile, can be dated as early as 1861 with the establishment of the Kingdom of Italy,
or 1871 when the Kingdom of Italy captured Rome and made it the capital.
Or, as I just said, you can push it all the way to World War I when the unified Kingdom of Italy
received the final pieces of territory up in the north, thanks to the Treaty of Versailles.
But whether you favor a type or a broad definition of Risorgimento, the revolutions of 1830,
48 are included. 1848 acts as a launching pad of sorts for the really active phase of the process.
So as in Germany, the revolutions of 1848 in Italy will not result in a unified Italy.
Not yet, but the revolutions of 1848 were intimately bound up with the growing nationalist
desire to create a unified Italy. You cannot spell resorgimento without 1848.
So ever since the fall of the Roman Empire and the political fracturing of the peninsula, the idea of Italy, Italia, continued to persist, but only as a literary or poetic expression.
And even then, the idea only existed in the minds of a few intellectuals.
So during the late Middle Ages, you'll have Dante and Petrarch mention it as an idea, but not as a part of any political program.
Then during the Renaissance, Machiavelli, of course, famously ended the prince with a call for some noble prince to come
reunify the peninsula, but this was a scarcely achievable ambition, as the practical Machiavelli
knew too well. Because when he published the Prince in the 1530s, Italian politics was defined by
nothing so much as intense local rivalry. Venice, Genoa, Florence, Naples, Milan, to say nothing
of Rome in the papal states, these were the units of Italian political identity. And it would have
been inconceivable to tell a Florentine and a Neapolitan, hey, you guys are
actually the same thing. I mean, they hardly even spoke the same language, as regional dialects
made even relatively close neighbors all but incomprehensible to each other. And that was even if they
bothered to speak quote-unquote Italian at all. In the north, there was plenty of French predominating.
In the south, there was Spanish, and in Rome, church Latin. These intense local city-state
rivalries had long been encouraged by the other great powers of Europe, who were happy to use the
Italian peninsula as the front lines for their own dynastic struggles between the Habsburgs
and the Velois and then the Hapsburgs and the Bourbons. And far from opposing these foreign intruders,
leaders of the various Italian city-states would be the ones inviting them in, hoping to use the might
provided by a foreign partner to prosecute their own local rivalries. Because the horror of all
horrors was not, oh, we'll be subservient to the Austrians or the Spanish or the French,
the real horror was all we will be subservient to the guys who live a hundred miles up the road.
So in mutually reinforcing cycles, the stronger powers of the North used alliances in Italy to wage proxy wars against each other,
and the Italians used the great powers to try to dominate each other.
As a result of these cycles, the idea of Italian national unity was preposterous.
A Florentine was a Florentine, and a Venetian was a Venetian.
They wanted to cut each other's throats, not sing,
patriotic hymns to the fatherland.
Even as the Enlightenment came along, it still brought with it almost no traceable notion
of what would become the two driving engines of 1848 and Resorgimento, liberation, and
unification.
The Italian branch of the Republic of Letters joined in the general reformist milieu of the
1700s, and there was talk of freer trade among the various states, you know, getting rid of
the network of customs barriers that plagued all of Europe at the time, whether in Spain or France
or the Holy Roman Empire, but not out of any sense of national unity.
There were then humanitarian reforms, you know, promoting education, alleviating poverty,
reforming feudal laws and arbitrary justice, taxation, and even questioning the supremacy of the Catholic Church.
But this was all unfolding in territory ruled by the Habsburgs and the North and the Spanish and the South,
without any Italian really saying, oh, hey, and along the way, we should definitely kick these foreigners out and rule ourselves.
As the historian Dennis Mack Smith says repeatedly, the circle of intellectuals who were interested in political reform at the time wanted good government, but not necessarily, self-government.
A few Italians did think their disunity was a major obstacle to progress, but couldn't quite bring themselves to think liberation and unification were actually practical goals.
The great shock that hit Italy upended everything and got some Italians thinking that liberation and unification was.
were actually practical goals, was the French invasion that began in 1796.
We discussed this all at length during the later episodes of the French Revolution series,
Bonaparte's conquest of the Austrian lands in the north, the movement of the French army
south towards Rome, on their way to their eventual envelopment of the whole peninsula.
Only the islands of Sardinia and Sicily would remain out of French hands, thanks to the British
Navy.
When the French were done, the old order that had ruled Italy for centuries was
swept aside and replaced with new sister republics in client kingdoms, right? The Sissalpine Republic,
the Ligurian Republic, a Roman Republic, and even a short-lived Neapolitan Republic. But this collection
of new sister republics was itself only a temporary state of affairs. After First Consul Bonaparte
became Emperor Napoleon, Italy was carved up into three large divisions. The kingdom of Italy
in the northeast, the kingdom of Naples in the south, and as for the rest, in the north and in the west,
outright annexation into France. So as had happened in the German states, at first, liberal-minded
Italians cheered on the French Revolution and welcome Bonaparte and the French as the bringers of
light and justice into an Italy that still slaved under the darkness of feudal oppression.
And the French brought with them the ideas of the revolution, liberty, equality, fraternity,
republicanism, even a sprinkling of atheism. And those were just the ideological currents. The French also brought
with them more tangible innovations, French-style administration and bureaucracy, the rational metric
system that sliced through a thousand local weights and measure, the abolition of most of the old feudal
laws, the breaking of the independent power of the Catholic Church. Plenty of educated Italians rushed
in to join the ranks of the civil service of these new French regimes as the old conservative
aristocracy was pushed aside. The revolution had come to Italy, and it was the dawning of a new age.
But as was the case with nearly everyone who fell to the French during these years, the Belgians, the Dutch, the Germans, it did not take long for the harsh realities of French rule to reveal themselves.
The domains, quote, unquote, liberated by the French were in fact just there to feed the war and enrich France.
As he did nearly everywhere he went, Napoleon arrived with compliments and kisses and grandiose promises,
and then when he moved on what he left in his wake was heavy taxes, mass conscription,
and the looting of national treasures.
And in Italy, the treasure hunting was particularly intense, as the great cities of the peninsula
housed some of the best artifacts and treasures from classical antiquity,
to say nothing of the total output of the Renaissance.
In particular, the papal collection was second to none.
Napoleon had it all cataloged, boxed up, and shipped to Paris, which is why so much of it today
is still sitting in the Louvre, all of which was, and still is, pretty offensive to the Italians.
So the experience of French imperial rule helped kickstart the engines of what would become
Resorgimento. The patriotic brand of nationalism that the French espoused about the glory of their
own fatherland could not help but trigger an Italian corollary. And as we saw in Germany, this positive
exposure to the idea of la nation, that patriotic nationalism was good and noble, well, it was
joined by the shared negative experience of being under French rule. Now, there had always been
foreign rulers in Italy, but as I said, there were always rival factions, Austrians here,
Spanish there, but now it was just the French everywhere. There was no power the local Italians
could turn to to check French rule. So, as we discussed in episode 6.8D,
Underground movements like the Carbonari started to form that had deliberate pan-Italian membership
and held a common goal of maybe expelling the French, and perhaps even beyond that,
joining the peninsula together and leaving Italy to be ruled by the Italians.
So this is the very earliest sparks of liberation and unification.
But as we've already seen from a couple of different angles, when Napoleon was finally defeated
and the French were driven from Italy, liberation and unification was not on the agenda of the Congress
of Vienna. And before I get too far down this road, though, I do want to stress that at this point
Italian nationalists, the people who would be disappointed by the return of old-style disunited
Italy, were confined to a tiny set of intellectuals. There was no real popular strain of nationalism.
This wasn't like the multitudes were yearning to breathe free air. A Florentine was still a
Florentine, a Venetian was still a Venetian. So only a handful really carried the nationalist
candle in the days after the Congress of Vienna.
But that candle would not go out and would in fact start glowing brighter, because one of the
traditional facets of old disunited unity was not brought back by the Congress of Vienna.
As I said, the local Italians had always been able to play the great powers off each other.
While just as the triumph of the French had put an end to that, the defeat of the French
meant it wasn't coming back.
placed firmly in the driver's seat by the Congress of Vienna, Austria would now be acting as the single
great foreign overlord of the entire peninsula, and it would be against Austria that the fight
for liberation and unification would be principally waged. Now, as we touched on in our little run
through the Austrian Empire, only the far northeast of Italy was directly annexed into the empire
in the form of the Kingdom of Lumberty Venetia, a new kingdom that mashed together the territories
of the old duchies of Milan and Mantua and the Republic of Venice.
The political capitals of the kingdom were Milan and Venice, but there was very little in the way
of local political autonomy. The Italian territories were among those in the Austrian Empire
most under direct Austrian rule. The king of Lumberty, Venetia was Emperor Francis of Austria.
It was just another title he held in.
his long list of additional titles. In the years after the Congress of Vienna,
Medernick had tried to integrate the region and people more completely into the empire
by creating a chancellery specifically focused on Italian matters and hopefully staffed
with plenty of Italian notables. It would not be participatory government in the sense that
they would have a real say, but it would be participatory in that they would be participating
in the administration. But Metternich's grand recommendations were never put into place.
So thanks to this neglect and mismanagement, the Austrians would have trouble in the kingdom of Lombardy, Venetia, in part because they were alienating both the elite and the common peasants, and giving them both a good reason to hate the Austrians.
Now, for the peasants, this would always be more bread and butter issues, the declining standards of living and then eventually privation and famine.
The elite, meanwhile, were treated with a very high hand by their Austrian masters.
Austrians were always favored for civil service jobs, either locally or in Vienna, if you cared to try your luck there.
And the old Italian nobility found themselves always treated one grade lower than they had been back at home.
So an Italian Duke visiting Vienna would be treated like a count, a count like a baron,
and in the world of noble etiquette, which was, after all, supposed to be making a big comeback in the restored world after the fall of Napoleon,
well, this was all very insulting and degrading.
But though the kingdom of Lombardy, Venetia, was the only region directly ruled by the Austrians,
the other states of the peninsula were deliberately established to be subservient to the Habsburgs,
to the point where they could be considered little more than client kingdoms.
All of them had secret treaties to support Austria in everything,
and to allow Austrian troops to enter their territory basically whenever they wanted.
Every duke and king in Italy was in power thanks to Austria,
and knew that staying in power meant staying in Austria's good graces.
So moving south down the peninsula from the kingdom of Lumberty Venetia,
there was a collection of minor duchies that were created to satisfy the dignity of the various royal houses at the Congress of Vienna.
So the Duchy of Parma was given to Napoleon's Austrian ex-wife, Marie-Louise,
and she would rule as Duchess of Parma until her death in 1847.
The Duchy of Modena, meanwhile, was ruled by Duke Francis VIII, who was a grandson of Empress Maria Teresa, and as we'll see in a minute, had secret ambitions about a title bump from Duke to King.
Then there was the very tiny Duchy of Luca, which was carved out for the bourbon Maria Luisa, the sister of King Ferdinand the 7th of Spain, the allegedly desired one, while she had been Queen of Etruria before Napoleon had dissolved her kingdom, and she had come to the Congress of Vienna,
to be given the new Duchy of Parma, and when she wasn't, they carved out this little
thing called the Duchy of Luca as compensation. This is seriously how these things got
worked out. South of this little collection of duchies was the Grand Duchy of Tuscany,
which was the old Dominions of Florence, the territories that had been brought under
Florentine domination by the Medici back during the Renaissance. Most of the cities, the Grand
Duchy of Tuscany continued to resent the hell out of Florentine domination.
Tuscany was ruled by Grand Duke Ferdinand III, who just so happened to be the younger brother of Austrian Emperor Francis I.
Now an old man, Ferdinand had once upon a time been an enlightened young man.
After taking over his Grand Duke of Tuscany in 1790, he earned the distinction of being the first monarch in Europe to recognize the first French Republic in 1792.
But his attempts at peaceful coexistence with the French came to naught, and he was eventually dispossessed and had his territory.
annexed into France. Restored by the Congress of Vienna, the Grand Duke passed his liberal
instincts onto his son, Leopold II, who would succeed him in 1824, and who would then go on to
cause the Austrian's heartburn in the 1840s for being so danged accommodating to calls for
liberal reform and a constitution. The center of Italy was dominated by Rome and the Papal States,
which covered territory that straddled the land between the Terranian Sea and the Adriatic Sea,
creating a physical divide between north and south.
Rome was, of course, the seat of Catholicism,
and as such had enormous social, cultural, and economic heft,
not just in Italy, but across post-Napologianic Europe.
Pope Pius I had been Pope all through the Napoleonic period.
He concluded the concorded of 1802 with First Consul Bonaparte
that finally healed the French Catholic wounds.
He presided over Napoleon's coronation in 1804,
and then when Napoleon had invaded the papal states in 1808,
1808, Pius the 7th had excommunicated the emperor, and for his trouble was taken prisoner.
He lived long enough to see his revenge, though, and freed from captivity in 1814, he returned
home, and Pius the 7th died at the age of 80 in 1824.
He was followed by a succession of popes we don't really need to concern ourselves with until
we get to 1846 and the elevation of Pope Pius the 9th.
Anyone who knows anything about the history of the Catholic Church and the history of Resorgimento
knows that Pope Pius the 9th is a very big deal, and we will discuss him in detail when we get
into the actual course of the revolutions of 1848.
South of the papal states was the largest political unit in Italy, the kingdom of the two Sicilies.
Now, we don't need to talk too much about the kingdom of the two Sicilies because we talked
all about them in episode 6.8D when we introduced the Carbonari.
But just as a little refresher, the kingdom covered all of southern Italy and Sicily, and we
was ruled from Naples by a cadet branch of the Spanish bourbons. But don't let that fool you.
Like every other ruler in Italy, they were in the pocket of the Austrian Habsburgs.
Now, sharp-eared listeners out there might be asking themselves, hey, wait a minute, we just went
from north to south, and I think you skipped one. And indeed I did, I saved it for last,
to the kingdom of Piedmont, Sardinia. Now, the old duchy of Piedmont covered the mainland
portion of northwestern Italy. It was ruled by the House of Savoy, an ancient dynasty that traced
itself back to the 10th hundreds, and who had acquired unified control of Piedmont during the
1500s. Then in 1720, the sitting Duke of Savoy had acquired dynastic title also to the island of
Sardinia and joined the mainland and island territories together into a single realm, and he was given
permission by the other European powers to elevate himself from Duke to King. The kingdom of Piedmont,
Sardinia then briefly entered into our story during Bonaparte's early Italian campaigns, right?
They were the ones who had so ably held back the French in the backwater Italian theater of
the French Revolutionary Wars until General Bonaparte came along in 1796 and blew through them
in about a day and a half. When Bonaparte reorganized northern Italy, Piedmont stayed on the map,
but labored under an utterly subservient treaty to the French. And then eventually it was just
erased and annexed directly into France in 1802.
The dispossessed House of Savoy, meanwhile, managed to hold on to Sardinia,
thanks to the British Navy.
And the Congress of Vienna restored the Kingdom of Piedmont, Sardinia in 1815,
and for good measure also gifted them the domains of the old Republic of Genoa.
The strongest of the post-Napolionic Italian states,
the kings of Piedmont Sardinia had long had greater ambitions,
as they said to peel away territory, like the leaves of an article.
choke. And many of the budding intellectuals evangelizing liberation and unification suspected that it
would only be possible through the ambition and power of Piedmont Sardinia. Someone, after all,
was going to have to fight the Austrians. Setting aside the political divisions of Italy,
economically the peninsula fit the same pattern as the rest of central and southern Europe. No matter
who their sovereign was, the inhabitants were largely rural and agrarian. Mostly subsistence farmers,
a mix of things like olives and grapes and citrus fruit for export. There was also some very
super nascent industrialization in the far north, but in the Maine, the Italian economy was still very
traditional, so much so that in many places there wasn't even any kind of middle class to speak
of. It was a few noble landlords or very rich common landlords, and a bunch of poor peasants.
And they were feeling that population pressure. We talked about in episode 7.1, where the population
was rising and putting pressure on the land.
This would lead to periodic local uprisings,
mostly against rent or taxes or feudal dues,
the feudal dues that had come back,
and were now demanding much,
just as there seemed to be so much less to give.
Our future revolutionaries will do their best
to harness these local uprisings
and try to graft onto them a political program.
But a lot of the time it really was just angry people
with local grievances who could have cared less
about the wider goals of liberation and unification.
Now there were middle-class professionals in the cities, of course, and especially up in the north,
and they would be the ones who were fanning the flames of Risorgimento, along with a smattering of liberal nobles.
Many of the families who would produce these budding revolutionaries had done well in the Napoleonic Empire.
They had been clerks, local officials, and functionaries, junior army officers.
All of them had been respected, respectable, and prosperous during French rule, but then were unceremoniously
dumped after the Congress of Vienna. They were joined by all the students and ex-students
who had been raised to expect a career in the Imperial Civil Service and then found no jobs waiting
for them. And that's a recurring theme across all our revolutionary regions, educated men
for whom there was no work that they had been educated to do. It was inside this group that the
revolutionary ideas of liberation, unification, and nationalism started to take root, if not yet
exactly flourish. These ideas, the idea of Italy, was still confined to literary works after the
Congress of Vienna, especially since it was dangerous to talk too openly about anything, what
would Matternik spies everywhere. All that surveillance, though, did help foster the Italian
habit of forming secret societies. And in the years between 1815 and 1848, there were the Carbonari,
who we've already discussed at length, but also the Federati in Piedmont Sardinia, who were mostly
liberal monarchists and the liberal Catholic neo-Guelphs in the north. And then the ones who will
really get our attention, young Italy, a group considered so dangerous that even knowing a member
and not reporting it was tantamount to treason. But the aims of these groups and the forms of nationalism
taking root in Italy could vary wildly. The most famous of the Italian nationalists, and probably
the most prototypical nationalist of this whole era of European history, was Giuseppe Metzini, who
all introduce in full once we get into the guts of the story. But briefly, Matzini and the group he
created, young Italy, wanted the liberation and unification of Italy to be followed by the creation
of a republic, which put Mancini on the more radical edge, as his other liberal counterparts would
have been just fine with a constitutional monarchy. Agreeing with Matzini's call for liberation and
unification were the neo-Guelf's, but these guys were Catholic theocrats, albeit of a
particularly liberal variety. They wanted a united Italian kingdom under the rule of Rome and the
Pope. Then a third major strain were partisans of Piedmont Sardinia, who saw a practical path
forward for that kingdom in particular to envelop and annex Italy, until the whole peninsula was under
its sovereignty, and the kingdom of Piedmont Sardinia would simply transform into the kingdom of
Italy. More practical revolutionaries of all stripes, meanwhile, looked to Piedmont for some leadership,
as everyone understood, no matter what your preferred endgame was, that liberation and unification
meant war with Austria, and Piedmont Sardinia was the one Italian kingdom who could plausibly
challenge them on the battlefield. So we'll wrap up today's episode with a quick look at the
revolutionary insurrections that were orchestrated by these men in the years between 1815 and 1848, of which there
were two pretty big waves, one in 1820, 1821, and the other in 1830, 1831. Both of them
flamed out pretty quickly, and by that I mean were stomped out by the Austrian army. Now, one of these
revolts we've already discussed in pretty good detail. That was the brief revolution in the kingdom
of two Sicily's in 1820, 1821 that was masterminded by the Carbonari. If you want,
you should go back and listen to episode 6.8D again, but brief refresher.
After the liberal mutiny of Cadiz in 1820, the demand for constitutional government migrated over to Naples.
And briefly, the Carbonari were able to force King Ferdinand of the two Sicilies to accept a constitution.
But then the king called for help, the unity of the Carbonari broke down, and the Austrian army marched south, and that was that.
Most of the revolutionaries fled into exile, as did, for example, the Carbonari general Guillaumeo Pepe, who we will be meeting again.
down the road. But that was not the only revolt that year. And in fact, it was supposed to have been
coordinated with secret groups in Piedmont Sardinia, some of them Carpennari, others Federati.
As in Naples, the idea here was to force the king, in this case Victor Emmanuel I, first,
to adopt a constitution. To help them pull this off, the conspirators enlisted the help of the king's
23-year-old cousin Charles Albert. Charles Albert. You're going to want to remember that name.
In March of 1821, the conspirators hatched a scheme whereby the revolutionaries would mobilize
under arms, surround the royal palace and Torino, and make ominous demands upon the king.
Then Charles Albert would step in and offer to broker a settlement, whereby the king would promulgate
a constitution based on the Spanish constitution of 1812.
And once that was done, they further plan to pressure the king into declaring war on Austria,
as the next phase of the broader plan to liberate Italy from Austrian rule and unify the peninsula under the House of Savoy.
But the night before the revolution was set to launch, Charles Albert got cold feet and would not go through with it.
The frustrated revolutionaries decided to keep going, dutifully surrounded the palace in Torino, and raised the green, white, and red tricolor flag.
It had once been the colors of the Italian Sissalpine Republic, and which were now officially on their way to becoming the national colors of I.
Italy. The revolutionaries were surprised when King Victor Emmanuel Imbuds abdicated the throne in
favor of his brother, Charles Felix. While Charles Felix was at that moment not in the kingdom,
so either by design or coincidence, young Charles Albert, the guy who had gotten cold feet,
was made temporary regent. Now as much at the mercy of the revolutionaries as in cahoots with them,
Charles Albert went ahead and promulgated a liberal constitution. But his cousin Charles Felix was
an intent and committed absolutist and sent up an order for Charles Albert to annul the decree,
I will not recognize any such constitution. Then he sent word to the Austrians of the situation,
and they dispatched forces. In conjunction with the armies they were sending down to repacify the
kingdom of the two Sicilies, another Austrian army moved over to Piedmont and quickly suppressed
the rebels. The whole thing was over in less than a month. But just to push forward a bit,
young Charles Albert remained loyal to the new king Charles Felix under an absolutist and very pro-Austrian
regime that, in fact, allowed an Austrian garrison to remain in the country until 1823.
Well, when Charles Felix died in April of 1831, he designated Charles Albert his heir.
Charles Albert would then spend the next decade continuing to hew to this pro-Austria pro-absolutist line
until things got dicey around Europe in the mid-1840s.
At which point he would return to the revolutionary dreams he had abandoned as a youth
and allow himself to listen to talk of an Italy liberated from the Austrians and united under the House of Savoy.
So things were pretty quiet in Italy for the next ten years,
but then along came the July revolution in France and a new wave of Italian insurrections.
The first hit the Duchy of Modena in 1831,
which ran out of steam swiftly, thanks to the betrayal of the sovereigns who supposedly supported
the revolution, but who then turned their backs on it. As I mentioned, Francis IV, Duke of Modena,
was an ambitious sovereign, and after the Congress of Vienna, he harbored a far-fetched dream of
acquiring more territory for his duchy, getting himself elevated to king, and then uniting the
whole peninsula under his personal rule. In furtherance of this plan, he turned a blind eye to
Carbonari organizers in his realm, the leader of which was Chiro Menotti. And after the failed
insurrections of 1820, 1821, the Duchy of Modena became something of a safe haven.
After the sudden inspirational success of the July revolution in France, Menotti received
assurances from King Louis Philippe that if the Italians were to follow France's lead and go after
constitutional monarchism, that Louis Philippe would have their backs. Francis the Fourth
seemed amenable right up to the last minute. But at that last minute, when Manotti led the
Carbonari revolutionaries out into the open in February of 1831, Francis decided it was too risky,
turned on them all, revealed everything to the Austrians, and arrested the principal leaders.
King Louis Philippe then refused to follow through on his old promises of support after receiving
a with Withering Death Stair from Metternich, implying that interfering in Italy would mean more with
Austria. Prioritizing the stability of his own shaky regime to adventures in world revolution,
King Louis Philippe backed off, and it was added to the list of early bitter disappointments
for the more radical French supporters of the July monarchy. The aborted revolution,
having come to nothing, Manotti was executed by firing squad in May of 1831 and became an early
martyr for Risorgimento. Garibaldi would in fact name one of his sons Manote in his honor.
Concurrent with Menotis' revolt in Modena, a network of liberal revolutionaries in the papal states also declared themselves in revolution and raised the green, white, and red in at least eight of the papal legations. But as the Austrians were coming down anyway in March of 1831, everything was stomped out without too much difficulty. So all of these experiences might have left many with the impression that revolution in Italy was a hopeless flight of fancy. And another Carbonari-led revolting.
in Piedmont, Sardinia in 1834 that collapsed so quickly it's hardly worth mentioning,
only proved that point further.
But the failures of the 1820s and 1830s actually helped foster the cause of Italian nationalism
and the dream of liberation and unification among the network of revolutionary exiles,
who now hunkered down in the various European capitals and as far afield as South America,
and they would get together and continue to talk and plot and dream.
And thus, when in the mid-1840s, Europe was hit with a destabilizing economic and social crisis,
they would come back stronger, more passionate, and more united than ever.
And hopefully when the time came, this time it would be more than a handful of hopeless romantics.
It would be a full-blown national uprising.
Hopefully, the true beginning of Resorgimento.
