Garibaldi's Spedizione dei Mille launched from Genoa
Giuseppe Garibaldi had the support of King Victor Emmanuel II |
The Expedition of the Thousand, the military campaign to unite Italy
led by the soldier and revolutionary Giuseppe Garibaldi, was launched on this
day in 1860.
The campaign, in some ways the climax of the Risorgimento
movement, began in response to an uprising in Sicily, when Garibaldi set sail
from Genoa, with a makeshift army of volunteers, hoping his support would
enable the rebels to overthrow the Bourbon rulers of the island.
The greater purpose, though, was to achieve another step
towards his ultimate goal, which he shared with his fellow nationalist
revolutionary, Giuseppe Mazzini, and which was supported by King VictorEmmanuel II of Sardinia-Piedmont and his prime minister, Camillo Benso di Cavour, that of creating a united Italy.
The revolutionary leader in Sicily, Francesco Crispi, had
all but guaranteed that substantial numbers of Sicilians would fight on the
side of Garibaldi’s troops.
Some accounts suggest Garibaldi, who had commanded military
campaigns in Europe and South America and was a charismatic figure, had wanted
to lead his followers into an attack on the French occupiers of Nice, his home
city, but was persuaded to turn his attention to Sicily by Cavour, who feared a
war with France would result.
A painting by an unknown artist shows soldiers boarding a boat on the shore at Quarto with the steamships in the background |
Whatever the truth of that story, after another revolutionary,
Nino Bixio, had requisitioned two steamships from the Rubattino shipping
company in Genoa, Garibaldi summoned his volunteers to nearby Quarto, where
they were to embark.
The exact number who had enlisted is not known, although
1,089 is the number often quoted. They
are said to have included 434 from Lombardy, 194 from Venetia, 156 from Genoa,
78 from Tuscany, around 45 from each of Sicily and Naples and 33 foreigners.
The cities of Genoa and Bergamo were thought to have supplied one third of the
force between them.
Nearly all were said to be from middle-class backgrounds.
Many were teachers, writers or traders. There were 150 lawyers and law
students, 100 physicians, 50 engineers, 20 chemists, ten painters and
sculptors, three priests and 30 naval officers.
Armed with outdated muskets, the group were poorly equipped, but their
simple uniform of red shirts and grey trousers helped foster a strong sense of
unity.
Italy at the time was made up of five states - the Austrians
in Venetia, the Papal States, the Kingdom of Piedmont-Sardinia (which by then
included Tuscany), the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies, and San Marino.
The Piemonte, one of the two steamships that carried Garibaldi's men from Genoa to Sicily |
Piedmont-Sardinia and the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies, which
essentially encompassed all territories south of Rome, were by far the largest
and it was felt that a new state uniting both could justifiably be called the
Kingdom of Italy.
After renaming the two steamships Il Piemonte and Il
Lombardo, Garibaldi took to the seas on the evening of May 5. On reaching Sicilian waters, he was almost
ambushed by the Bourbon fleet but, with cover provided by the British Royal
Navy, who had ships in the area monitoring the activities of the French, his
armies landed at Marsala on May 11.
Garibaldi’s force was tiny compared with the number of
soldiers at the Bourbon leader King Francis II’s disposal, yet in the face of
public support for the invaders, who disliked their rulers and hoped Garibaldi
would seize land from the wealthy and give it to the poor, the Bourbon defences
at Marsala quickly crumbled.
After the Thousand moved into Palermo, the city came under
heavy bombardment from the Bourbon general, Ferdinando Lanza, and 600 civilians
were killed. But those who survived never wavered in their resolve and Lanza
eventually surrendered the city to Garibaldi.
A painting by Sebastiano de Albertis shows the famous meeting at Teano between Garibaldi (left) and the King |
After proclaiming himself the ruler of Sicily on behalf of
King Victor Emmanuel II, Garibaldi led his army across the Straits of Messina and
headed north towards Naples. All along
their route, the red shirts were hailed as heroes and resistance was so sparse
that Garibaldi was able to arrive in the city by train.
In the meantime, the Kingdom of Sardinia-Piedmont invaded
the Papal States, conquering Umbria and Marche and reducing the reach of the
pope’s territory to just Lazio and the Vatican. In the decisive Battle of the
Volturnus in October, Garibaldi’s army had grown to 24,000 men, although it was
only with the help of the Sardinian army that the 25,000-strong Neapolitan Army
was defeated.
The end of the expedition is traditionally seen as the
meeting in Teano in northern Campania between Victor Emmanuel II and Garibaldi
on October 26, when Garibaldi formally handed over the Kingdom of the Two
Sicilies to the monarch, whom he declared to be the King of Italy. This conclusion disappointed such as Mazzini,
who wanted Italy to become a republic, but Garibaldi believed that unity was
the primary requirement. Following the historic ‘handshake’, Garibaldi returned
to his home in Caprera, a small island off the northern coast of Sardinia.
Baroni's sculpture at Quarto is a monument to the expedition |
Travel tip:
The former fishing village of Quarto al Mare, now a
residential area to the east of Genoa, was renamed Quarto dei Mille in 1911 in
honour of Garibaldi’s expedition. The road that runs along the sea front is
called Via V Maggio (May 5 Street) and passes, on either side of the small
inlet from which the boats carrying his men set sail, a couple of commemorative
statues, a sculpture by Eugenio Baroni erected in 1915 and opened by the writer
and patriot Gabriele D’Annunzio, and a more recent obelisk by Fabrizio
Pezzoli, which marks the exact rock from which the Red Shirts climbed into rowing boats to take the to the steamships anchored off the shore. The nearby Villa Spinola, where the
participants gathered, now houses a Garibaldi museum.
The remains of the Roman theatre at Teano, near Caserta |
Travel tip:
Teano in Campania, scene of Garibaldi’s meeting with King
Victor Emmanuel II, is a town in the province of Caserta, north of Naples, that
is built on the site of the important Roman city of Teanum Sidicinum. Roman
remains include a theatre, once one of the largest in Italy, some statues and
Roman houses. Other sights in the town, which sits at the foot of the extinct
Roccamonfina volcano, include a 12th century cathedral, in front of
which is a portico containing two red granite sphinxes that originated in a
pagan temple on the same site. There is a statue in bronze by Oreste Calzolari depicting the handshake on horseback of the monarch and the revolutionary, although this currently resides in Piazza Mino da Fiesole in Fiesole, outside Florence.
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