Social Sciences, asked by 23mahimagupta23, 11 months ago

Italy Unified how United the Italy ​

Answers

Answered by adityaprabhakar2004
7

Answer:

Italy was unified in the following steps-

  1. Chief Minister of Victor Emmanuel II, Count Camillo de Cavour, spoke French better than he did Italian. So with a diplomatic arrangement with the French, he succeeded in defeating Austrian forces in 1859.
  2. Giuseppe Garibaldi, with his men, marched into south of Italy to gain confidence of peasants and succeeded in driving out Spanish forces in 1860.
  3. In 1861, King Victor Emmanuel II, was declared as the king of unified Italy.

Answered by harshinikirubanand
2

Answer:

The movement to unite Italy into one cultural and political entity was known as the Risorgimento (literally, "resurgence"). Giuseppe Mazzini and his leading pupil, Giuseppe Garibaldi, failed in their attempt to create an Italy united by democracy. Garibaldi, supported by his legion of Red Shirts-- mostly young Italian democrats who used the 1848 revolutions as a opportunity for democratic uprising--failed in the face of the resurgence of conservative power in Europe. However, it was the aristocratic politician named Camillo di Cavour who finally, using the tools of realpolitik, united Italy under the crown of Sardinia.

"Realpolitik" is the notion that politics must be conducted in terms of the realistic assessment of power and the self-interest of individual nation-states (and the pursuit of those interests by any means, often ruthless and violent ones) and Cavour used it superbly. In 1855, as prime minister of Sardinia, he involved the kingdom on the British and French side of the Crimean War, using the peace conference to give international publicity to the cause of Italian unification. In 1858, he formed an alliance with France, one that included a pledge of military support if necessary, against Austria, Italy's major obstacle to unification. After a planned provocation of Vienna, Austria declared war against Sardinia in 1859 and was easily defeated by the French army. The peace, signed in November 1959 in Zurich, Switzerland, joined Lombardy, a formerly Austrian province, with Sardinia. In return, France received Savoy and Nice from Italy--a small price to pay for paving the way to unification.

Similar questions