Zusammenfassung der Ressource
The Risorgimento (1831-1847)
- Mazzini and Young Italy
- Young Italy founded in 1831, accompanied by
journal of same name to spread Mazzinian ideas
- United Italian republic
- National revolution necessary
- Belief in democracy and
the will of the people
- Failures
- 1833: Proposed army coup detected before it
began, 67 arrested and 12 members killed
- 1834: Planned attack on Piedmont and
uprising in Genoa failed to get off the ground
- 1831: Mazzini wrote to Charles Albert asking
him to lead the movement for a united Italy
- Impact
- His ideas were inspirational to others
- Helped foster national consciousness
- Views only shared by a minority
- Those from privileged backgrounds
- Peasantry did not support Mazzinian uprisings: land
ownership and poverty were their main concerns
- National identity and support
- There was no native Italian language,
dialects were prevalent in different areas
- Progress
- Journal: Antologia (Tuscany)
- Biblioteca Italiana and Il Politecnico
(Lombardy)
- National organisations (eg.
Congresso degli Scienziata)
- Music
- Giuseppe Verdi's works became
linked with anti-Austrian sentiment
- 1842: Nabucco (opera)
- 'Chorus of the Hebrew Slaves' highlighted
the "enslavement" of Italian people
- 1843: I Lombardi (opera)
- Literature
- Defined identity further and provoked
debate about Italy's future (1840s)
- Who supported the Risorgimento?
- Mostly middle classes, peasantry
more concerned with daily survival
- Intellectuals
- Vincenzo Gioberti
- Italy should be rid of foreign influence
- More moderate than Mazzini
- Italian federation under Pope's leadership
- Neo-Guelph: A way forward without revolution
- Appealed to Italian Catholics
but not totally popular
- Spread idea of Pope as leader
- Even influenced Napoleon at Plombières!
- Cesare Balbo
- In favour of a federation of states
- View of Italy limited: North only
- Piedmontese monarchy should lead in
expelling Austria from Lombardy/Venice
- Solutions: Italian/European diplomacy
- His book became very popular in Piedmont
- Massimo d'Azeglio
- 1845: Witnessed revolution in Romagna
- Believed revolution was not the way forward
- Public and European opinion was of utmost importance
- Change could then happen naturally
- This view also shared by Balbo
- Political change should be engineered
from above, NOT revolution
- This view also shared by Balbo
- Wanted a more conservative settlement