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Giuseppe Garibaldi
1807 - 1882

The Italian soldier Giuseppe Garibaldi was the key military
figure in the creation of the kingdom of Italy. An unflagging
foe of all tyranny, he devoted his life to fighting oppression.
For the greater part of his life most of the native land of
Giuseppe Garibaldi was under the control of foreigners. In the
north Lombardy was held by Austria, and to the south of the
States of the Church the kingdom of Naples was in the hands of
the stagnant feudal regime of the Bourbons. Garibaldi was the
embodiment of the Italian brand of 19th-century nationalism,
which was impelled by the twin desires for unity and freedom.
Giuseppe Garibaldi was born on July 4, 1807, at Nice, which was
at that time a French town. His father, Domenico, was a
fisherman and modest tradesman, a fact that helped determine
Giuseppe's early choice for a life at sea. At 17 he was already
a sailor, journeying in the Mediterranean and Black seas, and in
1832 he earned certification as a merchant captain.
Garibaldi entered the Piedmontese navy and in 1833 joined Young
Italy, the revolutionary organization of Giuseppe Mazzini,
another Italian irredentist and patriot. As part of a larger
republican plot of Mazzini, he became involved in a mutiny,
attempting to seize his ship and take over the arsenal of Genoa.
The plan failed and Garibaldi fled, taking refuge in France. He
was condemned to death by default on June 3, 1834.
In 1836 Garibaldi sailed for Rio de Janeiro from Marseilles. For
the next 4 years he fought as a soldier and naval officer and
sometimes as a pirate for the province of Rio Grande in its
attempt to free itself from Brazil. He then entered the service
of Uruguay, becoming commander of the new Italian Legion at
Montevideo in 1843. His victories at Cerro and Sant'Antonio in
1846 did much to ensure the liberty of Uruguay. Garibaldi's
years in South America taught him the skills of war and steeled
him for the Herculean tasks to come.
Revolt of 1848
His heart quickened by news of the uprising against Austria,
Garibaldi returned to Italy with 80 men of his legion, landing
at Nice on June 24, 1848. He offered his services in July to
Charles Albert, King of the Piedmont, and in August was in
command of a volunteer army at Milan. The following year, when
the war was going badly for the revolutionaries and the Pope was
away from Rome, Garibaldi was elected deputy of the Roman
Assembly and worked for the creation of a Roman republic. Thus,
against a French army aiding in the suppression of the general
revolt, he defended the ephemeral republic, winning a brilliant
victory at the San Pancrazio gate on April 30, 1849.
Garibaldi labored mightily during the next few months,
inflicting defeats on Neapolitan and French armies. Only when it
became clear that no power on earth could preserve the
revolutionary movement from the superior forces of reaction did
Garibaldi lead a handful of men on a retreat through central
Italy. This movement was itself a masterpiece of military skill.
He escaped to the Piedmont and in 1850 turned up in America,
where he took a job making candles. He never intended to reside
there permanently, and within the year he traveled to Peru,
where he captained a ship under the flag of that country. In
1855 he returned to Italy and bought part of the island of
Caprera, north of Sardinia, where he built a home.
War of Liberation
In 1858 a fateful meeting took place at Turin between Garibaldi
and Camillo di Cavour, the prime minister of the Piedmontese
kingdom. The count, looking forward eagerly to another war with
Austria, asked the now-renowned soldier to form an army of
volunteers. Cavour believed that this time, with boldness and
planning, Austrian control could be broken. Garibaldi set
himself to the task and was made a general in the Piedmontese
army. In April 1859 he formed his corps, the Cacciatori delle
Alpi, and in the same month war broke out. A rapid series of
victories in May drove the Austrians out of northern Italy, all
the way to the Tirol.
Dazzling as these accomplishments were, his greatest military
feat lay yet before him. When the French, this time allies of
the Piedmont, pulled out of the war in July 1859, Garibaldi
shared Cavour's disappointment. But soldier and statesman were
soon at odds with each other. Garibaldi was not permitted to
attack the papal states in November and bitterly returned to
civil life. He was quickly elected to the Piedmontese
Parliament, and in April 1860, he publicly attacked Cavour for
ceding Nice to France. Meanwhile he was planning, with British
encouragement, the invasion of Sicily. Neither he nor Cavour had
given up on the national movement, even though the Piedmont had
felt compelled to follow the lead of France and sign an
armistice with Austria.
On May 11, 1860, Garibaldi landed at Marsala with a thousand men
and on May 15, crushed an undisciplined Neapolitan army at
Calatafimi. By May 25, Palermo, the capital of Sicily, was in
his hands. Then, moving with remarkable speed and agility, his
forces crossed the Straits of Messina, slipping past a
formidable Neapolitan navy. On September 7, Garibaldi
triumphantly entered Naples and proclaimed himself dictator of
the Two Sicilies. A last major battle was fought a month later
on the Volturno, a struggle that put an end to the Bourbon
capacity for resistance. Garibaldi then punctuated these
victories by holding plebiscites in Sicily and Naples.
These months of fevered and brilliant activity by Garibaldi in
the south found their echo in the rest of Italy, as the
foundations of tyranny were undermined. It was with jubilation
that Italians greeted Victor Emmanuel, King of the Piedmont, as
he traveled south through the country to meet Garibaldi near
Naples. On Nov. 7, 1860, in one of the most generous acts in
Western history, the soldier formally gave to Victor Emmanuel
all of southern Italy and proclaimed him king of a united land.
All the problems had not been solved. Austria still possessed
the Trentino, and the territory of the Church, protected by the
French, still lay as an obstacle across central Italy. But
Garibaldi withdrew to Caprera and once again entered politics.
In April 1861, he castigated Cavour in Parliament because of the
prime minister's failure to take his volunteers into the regular
army. The bitterness between the two men was never fully
assuaged, and it was only under Ricasoli, Cavour's successor,
that Garibaldi's soldiers received satisfaction in the matter.
By this time the fame of the great soldier had spread so far
that Abraham Lincoln saw fit to offer him a command in the
American Civil War. This he politely refused, preferring to
remain as close as possible to events in Italy.
In the summer of 1862, at odds with the official position of the
Italian government, Garibaldi began a march on Rome, only to be
wounded in Calabria and taken prisoner. Moved by the general
sympathy for the soldier and by the magnitude of his
contribution to his country, the King granted him an amnesty.
Garibaldi then returned to Caprera and in the following year
resigned from Parliament over the issue of martial law in
Sicily.
War of 1866
After traveling in 1864 to England, where he was given a hero's
reception, Garibaldi formed another volunteer army with which to
do battle once again with the Austrians. And again his army
seemed invincible. He won battle after battle until, when about
to attack the Trentino, he was ordered by his superior, Gen.
Lamarmora, to withdraw. The order came on July 21, 1866, and
Garibaldi's answer, "Ubbidisco" (I obey), has often been called
a marvelous example of a soldier's subordination of his own
wishes to the command of a superior, no matter how unpopular the
command. This acquiescence should not be exaggerated since
Garibaldi had already been told that Austria, because of
Prussian pressure, could not under any circumstances yield the
Trentino to Italy. Therefore no matter what his soldiers did,
they would eventually be forced to withdraw for diplomacy's
sake. The brief war ended with the cession of Venice to the new
Italian kingdom.
Garibaldi returned to Caprera but not merely to savor the
delights of victory. As the result of an agreement in 1864
between the French and Italian governments, French troops had
been removed from Rome. Therefore he thought the time was right
for another attack on the papal territory. Before he could put
his plan into operation, he was once again arrested by the
Italian government and brought back to Caprera. Almost at once
he succeeded in escaping and went to Florence.
In spite of the government's official unwillingness to seize
Rome by force, some members of the executive branch were fully
in sympathy with Garibaldi's goals, and they furthered a second
military effort. He was once again stopped, however, shortly
after entering papal territory in October. It was ironic that
when, in 1870, the Italian kingdom finally absorbed the
remainder of the States of the Church, the great condottiere was
not directly involved. He spent that year fighting for the
French in the Franco-Prussian War.
Deputy for Rome
The last decade of Garibaldi's life was no less stormy than the
earlier years. After the final humiliation of France by the
Prussians he was elected to the Versailles Assembly; but he felt
insulted by the French, mostly because they seemed unwilling to
recognize the extent of his contribution to their war effort. He
had, after all, won victories over the Germans at Châtillon and
Dijon. He resigned his position in anger and returned to Caprera.
In 1874 he was elected to Parliament as deputy for Rome.
Garibaldi relished his position but was generally unhappy with
the conservative cast of the government; when the ministry
sought to confer upon him a large gift of money and an annual
pension, he refused. It is revealing that when a government more
oriented to the left took over and made the same offer, he
accepted it gratefully. The generous gift was a recognition of
the enormous debt owed by the new Italian kingdom to its
greatest soldier.
Garibaldi, a handsome man with long hair, a full beard, and
burning eyes, often disagreed violently with the government he
had worked so hard to bring into existence. He was not an easy
man to work with and his decisions were often rash, leading to
the mercurial changes of his fortunes. But Giuseppe Garibaldi's
contribution to Italy was of lasting significance, and when he
died on June 2, 1882, his fellow citizens felt his passing
deeply.
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This web page was last updated on:
10 December, 2008
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