History, asked by katrine2684, 11 months ago

Describe how italian unification was differnt from german unification

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Answered by sujatakumari30071978
1

The unification of Italy had started by nationalism and also brought and won together with nationalism. Italy was broken into many states from the congress of Vienna in 1815. At the beginning of 1815 and through 1848 the Italian people were begining to feel restless the wanted to live no more under the foreign rulers. In the discontent of all of the Italian people and the ages of restlesness there was two very intelligent and ideal leaders that appeared before the Italian people it was Giuseppe Mazzini, Camillo di Cavour, and Giuseppe Garibaldi.

The Germany Unification. This unification will obviously will recieve the same gratification as Italy, achieving national unity in the middle of 1800's. There was the two larger states which was the Austro-Hungarian Empire and Prussia, these dominated the rest. Nationalism unified Prussia as while other races tore at Austro-Hungary. Also Prussia's was the most powerful at that time. Berlin rioters really scared the Prussian king. Wilhelm I in 1861 tried to double the Prussian army. This however the parliment threw it out by not giving him the money to do this. Wilhelm had chosen a republican Junker named Otto von Bismarck. Bismark soon was a master of realpolitik. Bismark soon made a big mistake he acted without the parliments consent and declared he would rule and with no extraction of legal budget. Germany soon expands and Bismark takes Austria out of the picture. The Franco-Prussian war started around 1867 involving France and Prussia food was so scarce people began eating sawdust, leather, and rats. The war ended and King Wilhelm I of Prussia was crowned Kaiser.

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Answered by saialoksahoo2004
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The Unification of Germany into a German Empire with tight political and administrative integration, replacing the decentralized German Confederation and Holy Roman Empire, was officially proclaimed on 18 January 1871, in the Hall of Mirrors at the Palace of Versailles in France. Princes of the German states, excluding Austria-Hungary and its House of Habsburg-Lorraine (the dynasty that formerly ruled over the German princes during the German Confederation and Holy Roman Empire), gathered there to proclaim William I of Prussia and the House of Hohenzollern as German Emperor, following the French capitulation in the Franco-Prussian War.

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