Unification of italy

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    The Unification of Italy Before Unification Before unification, Italy was made up of several small countries. These separate countries seemed to share a common culture and language. From these similarities many people wanted to unify in nationalism. Napoleon had invaded Italy in 1796, so unification was not possible until he was defeated in 1814. A map of Italy before Unification. After Napoleon’s downfall Italy was made up of: Kingdom of two Sicilies, The Papal states, the Austrian empire

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    The unification of Germany and Italy was centered around the belief of nationalism. Nationalism is the belief that one’s greatest loyalty should not be to a king or an empire but to a nation of people who share a common culture and history. The nation will then become a nation-state when it has its independent government. Bonds that will create a nation state are nationality, language, culture, and religion. Germany and Italy both went to drastic measures to unify their countries In 1815, Italy as

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    of those were crucial for the unification of Italy, but moreover it was the two men that have contributed the most; Count Camillo di Cavour and Giuseppe Garibaldi. They were completely different. Cavour was the leading strategic power behind the unification and Garibaldi was the national hero inspiring the masses. It cannot be denied that the success of the unification of Italy depended on both of them. Although Cavour was the leading figure in the Italian Unification, its completion would not have

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    The Italian Unification is a time period during which Italy becomes unified as one country. While trying to unify the country there were obstacles faced and conquered by Mazzini, Cavour, and Garibaldi as they continued to unify Italy. They pushed Nationalism on the people. The problems that were faced during the time of the unification were the Austrian occupation of Lombardy and Venice. Also, the land still belonged to the Pope and not the government which meant that it did not really belong to

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    Unification of Italy and Germany Essay

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    Unification of Italy and Germany By 1871 both the kingdom of Italy and the empire of Germany were united. Even though both countries used popular trends to that time, both liberalism and nationalism, the process unifying these two countries was very different. The end result was Germany emerging as a strong nation and Italy appropriately, the weaker. Italy’s problems started with the fact that it didn’t have one main ruler, but two people and a concept, resulting in a different approach to

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    The Unification of Italy (1815-1871), is one of the most debatable periods of Italy’s modern history. The Risorgimento (in Italian) was the governmental movement of the Italian Peninsula that combined the different states of the Italian Peninsula into one governmental and cultural state known as the Kingdom of Italy. What sparked the beginning of the Italian unification movement was the Congress of Vienna (1814-1815), an assembly of ambassadors that’s purpose was to reform Europe, after the effects

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    unified country but Italy went through many obstacles attempting to unify and become what we know as Italy today. Italy was divided into competing states which made it difficult for the people because they considered themselves a part of their city, not as part of a bigger Italy. Secondly, The Congress of Vienna divided Italy up among Austria, Hapsburg, and the French. Finally, Nationalist revolts were continually crushed by Austria. The weak national feeling that the people of Italy were feeling was

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    Unification of Italy: Pros and Cons After the Congress of Vienna Italy consisted of six separate states. Controversy over whether or not Italy should be unified stirred up during the mid to late 1800’s. The unification of the Italian states was an ongoing debate for quite some time. During the years of the debates people found the unification to be positive change, a negative change, and some had different opinions for their own certain reasons. Those who agreed that Italy should be unified

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    included Germany and Italy. Both countries had many issues to resolve though before they could achieve any type of unification. Though very similar in overcoming them, Germany and Italy’s end result contrasted in many ways. Europe in the 1800’s was divided into several states and there was no balance of power among them. In the case of Germany, France preferred them to remain in smaller states as they would be easier to control rather than one giant unified nation. As was Italy, but they did not threaten

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    Germany and Italy unified, and disrupted the old Balance of Power. Both unifications, came to be because of Chancellors, Count Cavour for Italy, and Otto Von Bismarck for Germany. Both men knew the neede other countries help, to unite. Italy first went to France, promising them land in central Italy, if they would help defeat the Austrians. France won two major battles, but Napoleon III thought the war was becoming too expensive, so he made a secret peace treaty with Austria. This meant Italy only won

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