READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM |
A HISTORY OF MODERN EUROPE : A.D. 1453-1900
CHAPTER LXXII.
THE UNION OF ITALY
THE period which elapsed between the
close of the Crimean war and the establishment of the German Empire at the
beginning of 1871, may be said to contain events of more importance as regards
the European system than even its reconstruction by the Congress of Vienna.
These events are, besides the new Empire just mentioned, and a few minor
occurrences, the establishment of the Kingdom of Italy, the absorption of the
Pope’s temporal power, the realization of Prussian supremacy, the decline of
Austria, and the Franco-German war. In the same period occurred two events of
vast moment in the history of the world : the Indian revolt and the civil war
in America, which threatened at one time to break up and divide the great
Republic of the Western Hemisphere ; but these have no direct bearing on our
peculiar subject, the European concert. The affairs of Italy first claim our
attention, from their priority in order of time.
The Austrian occupation of Lombardy and Venetia seemed
still in the year 1858 to offer an insuperable bar to Italian ' unity and
freedom. Whilst the possession of these provinces severed Italy, it also
enabled the Austrians to introduce their forces into that country for the purpose of upholding
its several governments; all of which, with the exception of Sardinia, were
more or less under their influence. The sovereigns of Parma, Modena, and
Tuscany, were connected with the Austrian Imperial family, and leaned on it for
support; whilst the Austrian Cabinet had also a powerful voice in the
Neapolitan and Papal councils, and may thus be said to have dominated nearly
all Italy. Without the expulsion of the Austrians, the views of Italian
patriots could not be realized, and without foreign help they could not be
expelled. The attempt had been made in 1849, and ended in disastrous failure.
Other necessary conditions for the freedom and unity
of Italy were, that the Italians themselves should desire them, and be agreed
as to the means for their attainment. Hence a difficulty almost as great as the
presence of the Austrians. For though dissatisfaction at the existing state of
things was a very prevalent feeling, opinions varied as to the remedy to be
applied. The more ardent patriots desired republican institutions, but of
these some would have been content with a confederation of independent
commonwealths, whilst others aimed at an undivided Italian Republic. This last
party, the most stirring and influential, was led by Mazzini and his sect, or
society, called La Giovine Italia, or Young Italy; which, though itself a
secret society, had now pretty well superseded others of a like nature, as the
Carbonari. The men who adhered to Mazzini were dazzled by ideas, which had the
fault of being utterly impracticable. He was for reconstructing society from
its foundations, something after the fashion of Rousseau; nay, he thought that
art, science, philosophy, in short everything in the world required renovation.
Nor were his views confined to Italy. They embraced all Europe, and in 1834 he
had drawn up a scheme of La Giovine Europa, “an apostolate of ideas,” as he
calls it, by which the whole continent was to be remodelled on the principles
of liberty, equality, and fraternity ; but he allows that he expected no
practical result.
A few men of wiser and more statesmanlike views saw
that the only hope for Italy lay in the suppression of such conspirators, who
were not only abortive disturbers of the public peace at home, but also
disposed European opinion against Italian freedom: for these politicians saw that the emancipation of
Italy from a foreign yoke was simply impossible without help from abroad. This
school, as was natural, had its origin in Piedmont, the only constitutional
Italian State; and probably their plans for Italian unity were not unmixed
with some desire for the aggrandizement of their native country. At the head of
them must be placed Count Massimo d’Azeglio, and a
few of his friends, as Balbo, Gioberti, and others. D’Azeglio’s leading idea was, that no revolutionary
attempts could succeed but such as were conducted in open day. To the success
of his plans the formation of a sound public opinion was necessary, and with
this view he had undertaken in 1845 a journey through great part of Italy in
order to ascertain the sentiments of the people; when he discovered that all
persons of sense and respectability were disgusted with the absurdities of the
followers of Mazzini, and desirous of a new path. His views were approved by
King Charles Albert, who encouraged him to publish them. Such was the origin of
his political writings. After the defeat and abdication of that sovereign in
1849, d’Azeglio became the Prime
Minister of his son and successor, Victor Emanuel II, a post which he held
till 1852, when he was succeeded by Count Cavour.
Without this change Italian independence and unity
would probably not have been achieved. With all his talent and good sense, d’Azeglio lacked the energy, perhaps also we may say the
unscrupulous boldness, without which great revolutions cannot be effected. Of
a generous temper, and devoted to literature and art, he was somewhat inactive
and unpractical. Cavour, on the contrary, was evidently a man of action, and
from the time of his taking office, he may be said to have held the fate of
Italy in his hands. A main part of his policy was to obtain for it the good
opinion of Europe. Hence his commercial treaties with France, England, Belgium,
and Switzerland; hence also the seemingly inexplicable part which he took in
the Crimean war. It was, in fact, a well considered blow at Austria. Sardinia
appeared among the European Powers at the Congress of Paris in 1856, and her
envoy sat side by side with the Austrian Minister, Count Buol; before whose
face he denounced the dangerous state of Italy through foreign occupation.
Cavour, though enterprising, was cautious, and awaited
his opportunity. He appears to have early contemplated the establishment of a
northern Italian kingdom by means of French intervention, and he prepared for
future events by strengthening Alessandria, Casale, and Valenza, and by creating
a great naval arsenal at Spezia. With regard to home policy, he loudly
denounced the revolutionists and republicans. A national opinion, fostered by
the means to which we have adverted, was now beginning to prevail over the
sects, and the “ National Society,” organized by La Farina, served to recall
many from Mazzinian affiliations. The last insurrectionary attempt of Mazzini,
at Genoa, proved a miserable failure. With like views, Cavour conciliated
Daniel Manin, the Venetian patriot. Manin repudiated as he did the plots of
conspirators and the daggers of assassins, and pressed Mazzini to retire from
a scene where he was only an obstacle to Italian progress.
Cavour thought that he might securely reckon on the
help of Napoleon III., the insurgent in Romagna in 1831 for Italian
independence, when a detestable act seemed to shatter his hopes. As the French
Emperor and Empress were proceeding to the opera on the 14th of January, 1858,
one Orsini, who after the Roman revolution had taken refuge in England, and
hatched there his diabolical plot, discharged at the Imperial carriages a
so-called “infernal machine,” consisting of a number of gun barrels, fired
simultaneously by a train of powder. Fortunately neither the Emperor nor
Empress was hit, but several of their suite, as well as bystanders, were
killed or wounded. England was denounced at Paris as having hatched the
conspiracy, and Count Walew- ski, the French Foreign Minister, addressed a
remonstrance, couched in moderate terms, to the British Cabinet. It was of
course an absurd suspicion that the English nation or government should abet
assassination, but the French had some grounds for it. In the preceding year
three Italians had gone from London to Paris, with the design of taking the
Emperor’s life, but were arrested and convicted. Mazzini was proved to have
inspired this plot, and a member of the British Cabinet, Mr. Stansfeld, was his professed admirer and correspondent. The threats of some
French colonels occasioned in England the establishment of the volunteers, and
the whole affair a change of ministry, Lord Palmerston giving place to Lord
Derby. By moderation on both sides, however, the rupture of the French and
English alliance was averted, and the visit of Queen Victoria to the French Emperor
at Cherbourg, on the reopening of that port in August, 1858, seemed to disperse
the clouds which had gathered on the political horizon.
Strangely enough an event which threatened to upset
all Cavour’s plans served eventually to forward them. That Minister having
loudly denounced in the Sardinian parliament the crime of political
assassination, some confidential communications from Napoleon followed, and
soon after a letter, inspired by him, containing the embryo scheme of an
alliance between France and Piedmont. Cavour in consequence, ostensibly on a
pleasure trip, procured an interview with Napoleon at Plombières, July 20th,
1858, where the terms of the projected alliance were arranged. They comprised
the expulsion of the Austrians from Italy by the French and Italian arms ; the
erection of a Northern Italian kingdom of some eleven million souls in favour
of Victor Emanuel, and in return the cession of Savoy and Nice to France. A
marriage was also agreed upon between the Emperor’s cousin, Napoleon, son of
King Jerome, and Clotilda, daughter of the King of Sardinia.
Napoleon, who had much of the conspirator in his
nature, had formed this plot, for such it must be called, without the knowledge
of his ministers. There was no legitimate cause of quarrel between France and
Austria. The pretext put forth was Austrian misgovernment in Italy; Napoleon’s
real motive, it can hardly be doubted, was to add strength and lustre to his
dynasty by the aggrandizement of France. Piedmont also had not for the moment
any valid plea for a war with Austria. But her case was very different from
that of France. The occupation of Lombardy by the Austrians was a constant
threat to her safety and independence, as well as the chief bar to Italian
unity.
Napoleon displayed his intentions on receiving the
diplomatic circle on January 1st, 1859, when he expressed his regret to M.
Hubner, the Austrian Ambassador, that his relations with his master, Francis
Joseph, were not cordial. Such an announcement so suddenly and openly made filled all Europe with
astonishment and alarm. Suspicion had however prevailed in some quarters of an
approaching rupture. In the preceding year, Piedmont had ostentatiously
displayed her enmity towards Austria, and reports of French military
preparations had been rife in diplomatic circles. Not only the Sardinian
official press, but the Chambers also had attacked the right of Austria to her
Italian possessions, whilst she, on her side, had redoubled her military
precautions, and renewed her ancient treaties with Italian States. Already
before Napoleon’s declaration, the Austrian troops, which had been largely
reinforced, had taken up a threatening position on the Ticino.
Victor Emanuel’s speech on opening the Chambers at
Turin, January 10th, 1859, taken in connection with Napoleon’s declaration,
was calculated to remove any remaining doubt as to the true nature of the
crisis. He exhorted the Parliament to meet coming events with resolution ; he
bade them remark the credit which the country had acquired in the councils of
Europe, but that such a situation was not without danger, for if on the one
hand treaties were to be respected, on the other, they could not be insensible
to the cries of anguish directed towards them from every part of Italy. The
marriage of Prince Napoleon and Princess Clotilda, January 30th, threw further
light on the situation.
Napoleon’s views were set forth in a pamphlet
published early in February, entitled “Napoleon III. et l’ltalie;” which, though written by M. de La Gueronnière, was
well known to have been inspired by the Emperor. It insisted on the necessity
of reorganizing Italy, freeing it from foreign domination, and reconstituting
it on the base of a federative union. Treaties were spoken of with levity as no
longer answering the needs of the time, and it was proposed to submit the whole
question to the judgment of Europe—Napoleon’s favourite resort in difficult
emergencies, or when he wanted to act the first part with a show of moderation.
His speech, indeed, on opening the French Chambers, February 7th, seemed to
breathe of peace. He affected astonishment at the uneasiness which had been
shown; reminded the Assembly of his declaration, L’Empire c'est la paix, and in
mentioning Austria, adverted only to some difficulties about the Danubian
Principalities, as if they had been the occasion of
his New Year’s declaration. When touching on the abnormal state of Italy, where
order could be maintained only by foreign troops, he observed that it was not a
sufficient motive for anticipating a war. And he concluded by solemnly
declaring that his first impulses, as well as his last judges, were God, his
conscience, and posterity.
But in spite of this declaration all Europe was
convinced The that war was imminent. England especially took the alarm
ultimatum and made some impotent attempts at mediation, which were 1859.
answered only with rebuffs both at Vienna and Turin. In March, Russia suddenly
proposed a Congress, and some negotiations on the subject ensued, when a hasty
step on the part of Austria rendered war inevitable. She refused to admit
Sardinia to the Congress, and required, as a condition of her own acceptance
of it, that that power should immediately disarm; and on the 23rd of April she
sent to Turin an ultimatum to that effect, allowing only three days for a
reply.
Although Cavour ardently desired a war, his position
was European embarrassing. He knew that Napoleon III’s character was fickle;
that his policy had encountered great opposition in France, especially among
the Church party; that Count Walewski, the French Foreign Minister, was not
only opposed to a war, but even personally hostile to himself. On the other
hand, the attitude of the rest of Europe was encouraging. Although no active
help could be expected from England, her sympathy and moral support might be
relied on. Russia was then unfavourably disposed towards Austria, and on
friendly terms with the French Emperor, who had made advances to her after the
Crimean war. The Prussian Regent, influenced by England and by the attitude of
Russia, perhaps also by ancient jealousy of Austria, had refused to interfere
in the matter, and denied that it concerned the German Confederation. The
South German States, however, supported Austria, and ultimately, when war was
no longer doubtful, the Prussian Minister at the Diet carried a resolution that
the Confederate troops should be held in readiness, and orders to that effect
were given for the Prussian contingent, but solely as a measure of precaution
and defence.
On receipt of the Austrian ultimatum, the Sardinian
government demanded from Napoleon III an immediate succour of 50,000 men. A
small body already assembled in the south of France was at once embarked for
Genoa, while others took the road to Turin by the Col di Susa. The Austrians,
who had in Italy about 200,000 men, under the command of Count Giulay, crossed the Ticino, April 29th, though it had been
notified to them that France would regard such a step as a declaration of war.
By so doing they abrogated the treaties of 1815, and put themselves in the
wrong with the public opinion of Europe. They occupied Vigevano, Novara,
Vercelli, and two or three other towns without opposition, and with due
diligence it would have been easy for them to seize Turin, an open town, and to
crush the small, and as yet unsupported Piedmontese army. But though they had
displayed so much precipitation in their diplomacy, their military operations
seemed struck with sudden paralysis. Giulay showed
the greatest indecision, changed his plans every three days, advanced sometimes
on the right, sometimes on the left, bank of the Po, seemed to stand on his
defence rather than to take the offensive. Thus time was lost till May 10th,
when the allies had assembled in force.
Cavour had made the most active preparations, and he
accepted the help of the revolutionary party, except only the Mazzinians, whom
he threatened to fire upon if they stirred. These irregular forces consisted of
three regiments called Cacciatori degli Alpi, or
Riflemen of the Alps, led by Garibaldi. The Sardinian army, amounting to about
80,000 men, was commanded by the King, having at his side General La Marmora.
Napoleon III. took the command of the French army. Before starting to join it
he published a proclamation denouncing the Austrian aggression, and declaring
that Italy must be liberated as far as the Adriatic. He was visited at Genoa by
Victor Emanuel, and next day, May 14th, he established his headquarters at
Alexandria. The Franco-Sardinian army now amounted to about 200,000 men.
We can give only the main outline of the campaign.1On
the advance of the allies, Giulay retreated to Pavia.
In order to ascertain the position of the enemy, he directed a reconnaissance
in force on Carteggio, May 20th. The Austrians having been beaten in an affair at Genestrello, retired to Montebello, whence they were expelled
the same day, after an obstinate and bloody fight. Expecting to be attacked on
the Po, Giulay had weakened his force in the
neighbourhood of Lago Maggiore; and Garibaldi took advantage of that
circumstance to seize Varese, the Austrians retiring on Como, May 23rd. Four
days after Como also was entered. The Piedmontese, under the King, crossed the Sesia, and attacked the Austrians at Palestro,
at first with doubtful success, but, being supported by a French Zouave regiment,
completely defeated them.
The attack in this quarter was intended to mask the
advance of the French. Giulay continued his retreat
to elbow formed by the junction of the Ticino with the Po. On the 1st of June
General Niel entered Novara, after a slight engagement; and on the 3rd the
French began to cross the Ticino. On the 4th they gained the victory of Magenta,
chiefly by a skilful manoeuvre of McMahon, which procured for him on the field
a marshal’s baton, and the title of Duke of Magenta. In this battle the
Austrians are said to have lost 20,000 men. Their haste in evacuating Milan,
without carrying off or even spiking their guns, revealed to the inhabitants
that their masters had received a disastrous defeat. The municipality, except
the Podesta, who fled, formed themselves into a temporary government, and sent
a deputation to Victor Emanuel, to announce their annexation to Sardinia. On
the 8th of June, that Sovereign, accompanied by the French Emperor,
triumphantly entered the Lombard capital. Hence Napoleon addressed a proclamation
to the Italians in general, calling on them to take up arms for the liberation
of their country.
On the same day that the Emperor entered Milan, the
French defeated the Austrians at Melegnano (anciently
Marignano), who now crossed the Mincio, deeming their
position impregnable through the so-called Quadrilateral, formed by the
fortresses of Lonato, Peschiera, Mantua, and Verona.
Here they were joined by the Emperor Francis Joseph ; and, on the night of the
23rd of June, they recrossed the Mincio, to give
battle to the allies. Both sides were unaware of the position of their
opponents. The Battle of Solferino which
ensued was a kind of haphazard affair, gained by sheer fighting (June 24th).
All three Sovereigns were present at this battle, and displayed great personal courage.
Early in the day the Piedmontese on the left wing had experienced several
repulses, but after the taking of Solferino by the French, drove the Austrians
from positions which were become untenable. The loss on both sides, and
especially the Austrian, was enormous. By the 1st of July the allies had
effected the passage of the Mincio, and the Austrians
retired into Verona.
And now when the French Emperor seemed to be on the
point of completing his programme, when the hopes of the Italians were excited
to the highest pitch, and when all Europe was wrapt in expectation, Napoleon suddenly stopped short in his victorious career. On
July 7th he despatched General Fleury to the Austrian camp, with proposals for
an armistice, and on the 11th, after an interview with the Austrian Emperor,
the preliminaries of a peace were signed at Villafranca.
Napoleon’s conduct has been variously accounted for.
His apologists allege his age—a little past fifty, the heat of the weather, the
sight of so much carnage, and the loss of so many men. He is also said to have
received news of the probable intervention of Prussia; but, though some
Prussian corps had been marched towards the Rhine, they were not intended to
take the offensive. Austria, apparently from latent suspicions, had declined
Prussia’s offer of an armed mediation, and called upon her for immediate action,
for which Prussia was not inclined. What chiefly weighed with Napoleon were
probably two circumstances, both of which might have been foreseen. One of
these was the strength of the Quadrilateral, and the necessity for some tedious
sieges. Another was the enthusiasm displayed in the Italian duchies for
annexation to Piedmont. This formed no part of Napoleon’s plan; and lest the
French should take alarm at some dictatorships which had been erected in the
duchies by Victor Emanuel, he was careful to inform them in an official note in
the “Moniteur,” June 23rd, that they were only
provisional and temporary. But here it will be necessary to cast a glance at
the proceedings in these States.
The news of approaching hostilities had agitated the
Italian duchies. In Tuscany, the government of the Grand Duke, Leopold II, was
not oppressive; but he was bound to the Austrian court by kinship, as well as
by treaties, which, to the disgust of the Florentines, he was now called upon to fulfil.
Leopold had just made a journey to Rome and Naples, undertaken, no doubt, with
a view to concert measures of common safety; and his return was marked by a
more rigorous Austrian policy. Many young men of the best Florentine families
now set off for Piedmont, to offer their swords to Victor Emanuel; and a
meeting of the principal citizens addressed a paper to the Grand Duke,
expressing a wish for the independence of the different Italian States, and
their union in a Confederation. Finding himself no longer master of his
actions, Leopold quitted Florence for Vienna. A provisional government established
in the Palazzo Vecchio now besought Victor Emanuel to appoint a governor of
Tuscany, and Signor Buoncompagni, the Sardinian
Minister at the Tuscan court, was ultimately made Royal Commissary. He formed a
ministry of which Baron Ricasoli was one of the most distinguished members—a
man of austere and resolute character, but of moderate political views. In the
revolution of 1848 he had supported the Grand Duke; but, on his entering
Florence, on his return from Gaeta, with an Austrian escort, Ricasoli, in
disgust, renounced his connection with the Court, and rtired to his domain of Brolio, near Siena, where he watched with interest
the progress of Piedmontese policy. The Tuscans formed an army of nearly 20,000
men; but before they could join the allies the Peace of Villafranca had been
concluded.
Duke Ferdinand V of Modena was also connected with
the. Austrian imperial house. His government was despotic and tyrannical,
especially at Carrara, where the Austrian major, Widerkhem,
enforced martial law. Some of the inhabitants had been put to death, hundreds
condemned to imprisonment or the galleys. The movement in Tuscany excited an
insurrection in Massa and Carrara. The Duke fled to the fortress of Brescello, carrying off with him a large sum of money, the
crown jewels, and the most precious articles from the public museums and
libraries. He also brought away eighty political convicts, and cast them into
the dungeons of Mantua. The Piedmontese government proclaimed the annexation of
Massa and Carrara, May 20th; and after the battle of Magenta Duke Francis
retired into Austrian territory. The tricolor was now hoisted, Victor Emanuel II proclaimed, and the historian, Farini,
appointed Piedmontese Commissary at Modena.
The mild and indulgent government of Parma, by the
Duchess Louisa Maria of Bourbon, as Regent for her minor son, Duke Robert I,
presents an agreeable contrast to that of Modena. She desired to preserve a
strict neutrality in the war, but such a course was impossible in a small State
situated like Parma. Notwithstanding the comparatively popular government, the
movement in Tuscany caused a corresponding one in Parma. Towards the end of
April a provisional junta was formed, in the name of the King of Sardinia, and
the Regent proceeded with her son to Mantua. She was shortly afterwards
recalled, but her restoration lasted little more than a month. Finding herself
compelled either to take part in the war, or to violate her engagements with
Austria, she retired into Switzerland, June 9th. The municipal government,
after the evacuation of Piacenza by the Austrians, proclaimed annexation with
Sardinia, when M. Pallieri was appointed Governor of
the Duchy. The further history of these States, and of Romagna, will be resumed
after describing the Peace OF VlLLAFRANCA.
By the preliminaries the two Emperors engaged to
promote an Italian Confederation, with the Pope as honorary president. Austria
was to cede her possessions in Lombardy, except Mantua, Peschiera,
and the territory east of the Mincio, to the Emperor
of the French, who would transfer them to the King of Sardinia. Venetia, though
still under the Austrian sceptre, was to form part of the new Confederation.
The Grand Duke of Tuscany and the Duke of Modena were to re-enter their
dominions on giving a general amnesty. The two Emperors would demand from the
Holy Father some indispensable reforms. The preliminaries of Villafranca were
completed by the Treaties of Zurich, signed November 10th. The most notable
difference is in the 19th Article of the Treaty of Peace between France and
Austria, regarding the duchies. It is there stated that, as the boundaries of
these States cannot be altered without the concurrence of the Powers who
presided at their formation, the rights of the Grand Duke of Tuscany, of the
Duke of Modena, and the Duke of Parma (now mentioned for the first time) are
expressly reserved by the high contracting parties. This is a variation from
the engagement that they should re-enter their States.
Zara and Venice threatened by French fleets,
disturbances in Hungary, and the defeats and losses which she had suffered in
the war, seem to have been Austria’s motives for making a peace which involved
so considerable a sacrifice. Nevertheless, the campaign must be pronounced a
failure on the part of Napoleon. He had not carried out his agreement with
Cavour, and could not, therefore, claim the stipulated reward. The Lombards
excepted, who had obtained their freedom, nobody was satisfied with the result.
It excited great discontent in France; and the address of the Emperor to the
Legislature (July 19th) betrayed an uneasy consciousness that he had but half
performed the task which he had undertaken in the face of Europe. Cavour’s
disappointment was bitter indeed. An Italian confederation under Papal
presidency, with Austria as a member of it, and retaining a footing in Italy,
still left Francis Joseph master of the situation. When informed of the peace
by Victor Emanuel, Cavour’s rage was ungovernable. He immediately resigned, and
was succeeded by General La Marmora and Ratazzi.
The revolted duchies showed no inclination for the
return of their former masters. Of all the central provinces, Romagna, which
had also joined the revolt as soon as the Austrians had been compelled by
defeats to withdraw their troops from Bologna and Ancona, most dreaded the
restoration of its former government. The Papal administration was, indeed,
about the worst of all those misgoverned States. Hundreds of persons had been
condemned to fine or imprisonment for what were called erroneous political ideas,
a liking for innovation, want of attachment to the government, etc. The disaffection
was almost universal, and shared by the highest class, including the Marquis
Pepoli, grandson of Murat, and cousin of Napoleon III. An Assembly of an
aristocratic caste, elected by universal suffrage, unanimously voted the
abrogation of the rule of the Holy See, and annexation to Sardinia. But Victor
Emanuel hesitated to accept the proffered dictatorship. Romagna was in a
different situation from the duchies, and the question of the Pope’s temporal
authority might involve many diplomatic complications. But the King sent d’Azeglio as Commissary Extraordinary, who organized a
government. Soon after, Farini being offered by the Assembly the direction of
affairs, took the title of Governor-general; and, on the 1st of January, 1860,
he united the three
governments which he held, viz., Romagna, Modena, and Parma, to which last he
had been appointed after the peace of Villafranca, under the ancient title of Ae4milia.
The Pope compensated himself for the impotence of his temporal weapons by
resorting to his spiritual ones, and the singular prerogative which he enjoys
of consigning his enemies to everlasting perdition. He fulminated in open
consistory a Bull of Excommunication against all the promoters, abettors, and
adherents of the usurpation (March 30th), which would include the French
Emperor as well as Victor Emanuel; but nobody was named. The bull was placarded in Rome; but it was necessary to post gendarmes
to protect it.
With regard to Tuscany, Ferdinand, Leopold’s son—who
had fought with the Austrians at Solferino, and was now become sovereign by the
abdication extorted from his father—proclaimed that he would adopt the
national colours, uphold the Constitution, and recognize the popular rights.
But the Tuscan municipalities voted the deposition of the House of Lorraine by
a large majority. Buoncompagni was recalled in order
that the proceedings of the people might appear entirely free, and on the 1st
of August he handed over his authority to Ricasoli, President of the Ministry,
who firmly repressed all insurrectionary attempts. A newly elected Assembly confirmed
the deposition of the dynasty, and unanimously voted annexation to Sardinia. A
military League was formed between the central Italian States, including an
agreement to prevent pontifical restoration in Romagna. The army of the League
was placed under the Piedmontese general Fanti, and Garibaldi contented himself
with the command of the Tuscan division.
The turn events had taken was a source of much anxiety
to the Sardinian government, and of very grave embarrassment to Napoleon III.
He began to see that his idea of an Italian confederation under the Pope was
simply impossible; that even the temporal power of the Holy See, which he was
pledged to maintain, was in danger. The provisional governments, also,
established in the duchies were of course only temporary, and it became every
day more necessary that something decisive should be done. To relieve himself
from this difficulty he proposed a Congress of the Powers which had been
parties to the Treaties of Vienna: the proposal was accepted, and it was agreed
that the Congress should meet at Paris in January, 1860.
Towards the end. of the year Napoleon published a
pamphlet entitled Le Pape et le Congres, which
rendered the assembly impossible. It contained some very absurd ideas. Rome was
to be converted into a sort of large monastery under the Pope; and though the
citizens were to be without political interests or passions, each of them would
be able to say, “Civis Romanus sum! ” Pio Nono was urged to acquiesce in the
independence of Romagna, to make large political reforms in his remaining
States, and to content himself with a nominal sovereignty at Rome. It was
maintained very truly, but hardly in accordance with the keeping of French
troops at Rome, that the less territory the Holy Father had to govern the less
would his spiritual authority be exposed to vicissitudes. This line of argument
raised a storm throughout Europe, and put an end to the Congress. The French
Emperor followed up his views in a letter to the Pope, December 31st, in which
he was advised to place the legations, which could be recovered only by force,
under the vicariate of Victor Emanuel, and Europe would then guarantee him in
his other possessions. But such views suited not Pio Nono nor his adviser,
Cardinal Antonelli. About the same time, by replacing Walewski as Foreign
Minister by Thouvenel, Napoleon proclaimed the end of all hostile diplomacy
towards Italy. Indeed, between the signing of the preliminaries of Villafranca
and the execution of the Treaties of Zurich his views had already begun to
waver. In a letter to Victor Emanuel (October 20th) he had proposed several
variations from the Villafranca programme, though the idea of restoring the
sovereigns was preserved in the main. In the same letter he still adhered to
his scheme of a federative union under the Pope; from which also before the
end of the year he began to vary.
The ministry of La Marmora and Ratazzi,
which had become unpopular, seemed unequal to the importance of the crisis, and
on the 20th of January, 1860, Cavour accepted a recall to power. The
vacillation of Napoleon encouraged him to attempt annexation of the central
provinces. Napoleon now withdrew from the responsibility of the situation which
he had himself created. He recalled the French army of occupation from
Lombardy, and left Cavour to proceed at his own risk; only stipulating that in
case the annexation of the duchies to Piedmont should be effected, France was
to receive Savoy and Nice as the price. A clear breach of the stipulations of
Villafranca. There could be no doubt as to the wishes of the population of the
central provinces, and to please Napoleon Cavour adopted his favourite method
of a plebiscite. It was held with a favourable result on the 11th of March, and
a week afterwards Tuscany and Aemilia were declared, by a royal decree,
annexed to Piedmont. Elections were then held throughout the newly-constituted
State for the first Italian Parliament. This assembly confirmed the
annexations, but not without violent though ineffectual opposition, led by Ratazzi, to the cession of Nice and Savoy. By the cession
of Nice, Garibaldi’s birth-place, Cavour incurred his implacable hatred. The
English cabinet, with Lord Palmerston at the head, made some abortive attempts
to prevent the cession of Savoy and Nice to France. Even Austria refused to
interfere, and, apparently from domestic difficulties, quietly acquiesced in
the flagrant violation of treaties.
Thus the French Emperor obtained his share of the Plombières
programme by means which he had neither contemplated, approved, nor promoted;
whilst Cavour saw indeed the Piedmontese kingdom enlarged beyond his
expectations, but with the annoying circumstance that Napoleon had not fairly
earned the ceded provinces. For the present, however, he was prepared to
acquiesce in what had been done, and to leave the completion of his plans to
some future opportunity, when an unexpected enterprise of Garibaldi’s—which,
but for its success, would have been deemed one of the rashest and most foolish
ever undertaken—opened out to him the prospect of a kingdom more extensive than
he had ever dreamt of, even that of all united Italy.
The population of Sicily was dissatisfied with the
government, and ripe for revolt. On the 17th of April, a Sicilian deputation
had requested Victor Emanuel, then at Florence, to take possession of the
island, which, under present circumstances, he declined to do. But Garibaldi
saw before him a magnificent field of enterprise. With the help of Mazzini he
collected at Genoa a band of volunteers called the “ Thousand,” and on the
night of the 5th of May he embarked them on board two steamers which he had forcibly
seized. He landed at Marsala without opposition, though two Neapolitan frigates
were cruising in the neighbourhood. As he marched towards Palermo his little
force was increased by insurgents and by deserters from the Neapolitan army.
After some skirmishes at Monreale and Calatafimi,
Palermo was entered almost without opposition, although there were more than
20,000 regular troops in the city and neighbourhood. The commandant signed a
capitulation on board an English man-of-war. Garibaldi’s progress was now
easy. The royal troops, though far outnumbering his, retired into Messina,
after making a last stand at Melazzo.
Cavour was alarmed as well as surprised at Garibaldi’s
rapid success. The hatred which Garibaldi entertained for him, had prevented
any concert between them; but Cavour, though aware of the enterprise, did
nothing to arrest it. He would have preferred a federal union between North and
South Italy to annexation; but when he saw that Garibaldi would pretty
certainly succeed, he directed Admiral Persano to
help him with the Italian fleet. The state of the Neapolitan dominions promised
an easy triumph. Francis II, who had recently succeeded to the crown on the
death of his father, Ferdinand II (May 22nd, 1860), had contrived in two or
three months to alienate the affection of his subjects by puerile reactionary
attempts. Garibaldi, crossing the Straits early in August, marched upon Naples
without striking a blow. Francis betrayed helpless irresolution. Instead of
opposing the invader, he tried conciliation by granting a constitution, offered
to join Victor Emanuel against Austria, appealed to France and England for
help, and on Garibaldi’s approach retired to Capua with 50,000 men!
It now became necessary for Cavour to take some
decisive step. Garibaldi, elated by his wonderful success, seemed to consider
himself Dictator of all Italy, a title which he had already assumed with regard
to Sicily and Naples. He talked openly of going to Rome and Venice; steps which
would necessarily produce a collision with either France or Austria, perhaps
with both. He wrote to Victor Emanuel demanding the dismissal of Cavour and
Farini. Cavour knew that Garibaldi did not share the views of Mazzini and the
republicans, though he had many of them in his ranks, and that he sincerely
desired Italian unity under the sceptre of Victor Emanuel. Cavour let him know
that the King and his government confided in him, but at the same time resolved
to take the movement out of his hands. To facilitate matters, he is said to
have tampered with and bribed several of Francis II’s officers and councillors,
and even members of the Royal family itself.
Garibaldi’s progress could be arrested only by force,
for he was deaf to all considerations of policy. But to use force it would be
necessary to violate international law, by marching an army through the Papal
States. Fortunately, the Pope, or rather his counsellor, Antonelli, had
afforded a pretext for such a step. Rome dreamt of nothing less than
reconquering Romagna, and with that view had formed a legion of adventurers of
all nations, of whom the distinguished French general, Lamoricière, an
enthusiast for the Pope, accepted the command. This force, which amounted to
about 10,000 men, was a menace to Piedmont, threatening to crush the new
Italian kingdom between itself and the Austrians posted on the Po. Antonelli
having refused to dismiss it, Cavour seized the pretext to despatch an army
through the Marches to arrest Garibaldi’s progress. Napoleon had been
previously consulted, who, as in the case of the annexations, left Cavour to
act on his own responsibility. A large Piedmontese force, under Generals
Cialdini and Fanti, defeated Lamoricière, September 18th, at Castelfidardo, near Ancona, into which city the French
general retired; but as the Italian fleet, under Persano,
began to bombard it, he was obliged to capitulate.
Fortunately, Francis II, by disputing Garibaldi’s
passage of the Volturno, October 1st, had arrested
his march, and thus unwittingly aided Cavour’s policy by giving the Italian
army time to come up. Victor Emanuel had now joined Cialdini and accompanied
his march. They fell in with Garibaldi at Teano, when the King gave him his
hand, with the laconic address, “Grazie” (I thank
you). Their united forces now marched to Naples, which the King and the
Dictator entered in the same carriage. Garibaldi had exchanged his
characteristic red shirt for a uniform, but he declined the offer of a
field-marshal’s baton.
Garibaldi, disappointed and disgusted, retired soon
after to Caprera. Before doing so, in his capacity of
Neapolitan Dictator, he proclaimed Victor Emanuel “King of Italy.” But it was
determined that the Two Sicilies should choose their
own sovereign by a plebiscite; and, due precautions being taken, Victor Emanuel
was elected at the end of October. He declined, however, to assume that title
till it should be conferred on him by a National Assembly. The first
parliament of the now almost united Italy, assembled at Turin, proclaimed
Victor Emanuel as its Sovereign, March 14th, 1861. Francis II. had already
surrendered. He had retired with the remnant of his forces into Gaeta, where he
was besieged by the Piedmontese army united with the Garibaldians. The siege
was protracted through the equivocal conduct of the French fleet, which seemed
at first disposed to protect the town. This proceeding, which has been
ascribed to various motives on the part of Napoleon III., was probably caused
by irresolution. It is certain that he disliked the annexation of the Two Sicilies to Piedmont, but he hesitated to strike a blow to
prevent it. On the withdrawal of the French fleet, and consequent bombardment
of the town by that of Persano, it capitulated, February
13th. It had made an heroic defence, during which the Neapolitan Queen, Maria
of Bavaria, displayed remarkable courage. Francis II and his consort then
retired to Pome. Messina, the last place which held out for the Royal cause,
surrendered March 13th.
Thus Cavour’s policy had succeeded beyond his most
sanguine expectations. Instead of a kingdom of 11,000,000 souls, he had
realized one of double that number. His success in North Italy was, indeed, of
a very different kind from that in the South, but both showed the versatility
of his talent. The kingdom of North Italy was the calculated result of a long
chain of policy; in the annexation of South Italy, his merit lies not in any
preconcerted plan, but in his knowing how to use and direct the daring, but thoughtless,
adventurer who had brought it about without his foreknowledge, and even
perhaps, at first, against his will. The state of Europe favoured the
operation, which was approved by some Powers and seriously opposed by none.
They regarded the Neapolitan revolution as a fait accompli, the conduct of
which was at all events better in the hands of a constitutional king than in
those of republicans and anarchists. Napoleon, indeed, when appealed to by the
Pope, made some show of displeasure, and for a time recalled his Ambassador
from Turin; an example which was followed by Russia and Prussia. Austria, whose
domestic troubles prevented her from interfering, contented herself with
protesting. The British Cabinet was not averse to the aggrandizement of Italy,
and was satisfied with Cavour’s engagement not to attack Austria, and to make
no more cessions to France. Francis Joseph could obtain no promise of aid
either from Prussia or Russia. The Italian cause was favourably viewed in North
Germany. On the accession of the Regent William to the Prussian throne on the
death of his brother, January 2nd, 1861, Cavour sent General La Marmora to
Berlin to represent that the interests of the two countries were identical—the
establishment of national hegemony.1 But Bismarck had not yet
appeared as protagonist on the political scene, and Prussian views on that
point were not clearly defined.
Cavour had achieved much, but a great deal still
remained to be done. Italian unity was not complete while Venetia and Rome held
out; and their annexation promised to be a work of much greater difficulty than
that of the other provinces. The Piedmontese rule remained to be consolidated
in South Italy, where it was far from popular. When Victor Emanuel visited
Sicily, his reception was the reverse of flattering. Great part of the Southern
Italians were Garibalians or Mazzinians. On the Fete
of the Nativity at Naples, the bambino, or Infant Christ, was dressed in
Garibaldian costume. Frequent risings took place in the provinces, which were
encouraged by the ex-King Francis II. at Rome, and by the priests, who
sometimes led them. The French garrison at Rome also indirectly encouraged, or
at all events countenanced, the half robber, half royalist bands, which disturbed
the Neapolitan dominions.
Of the Venetian and the Roman questions, the latter
was by far the more difficult one. The liberation of Venice concerned only one
foreign Power, and had to be left alone for the time. The annexation of Rome
touched the views and interests of all Catholic States, and involved the
formidable opposition of the Church. The more ardent Ultramontanists maintained that the independence and sovereignty of the Pope were necessary to
his spiritual security; that he must be free not only at home from the
domination of popular assemblies, but also abroad from the dictation of foreign
Powers; and that for
these ends the possession of sovereign temporal power was indispensable. The first of these postulates would make the Pope an absolute and irresponsible despot; the second is
impossible. To make it feasible, the Pontiff should be the greatest of all
military potentates, for so long as there is a greater he may be liable to
dictation. And, as a matter of fact, he had not been able for many years to
hold his own territories without the help of foreign bayonets. The Austrians
had held Romagna for him since 1848, and as soon as they evacuated it, the
population threw off his yoke. At that moment he was maintained in his own
episcopal city only by a French garrison. These evils were incurred through his
temporal power; without which his spiritual authority would have been greater
and more respected. His temporal sovereignty was a political solecism in modem
Europe, and utterly opposed to the principles of modern society. The views
still entertained by the Roman Court are shown in the Encyclical known as
Quanta Cura, drawn up by the Jesuit Perrone, and with the annexed Syllabus, or
list of errors, published in December, 1864. Liberty of conscience and of
worship are treated as hallucinations; the independence of the civil power, the
liberty of teaching and of the press, together with many other things which
more enlightened nations regard as their dearest privileges are forbidden.
Cavour’s religious views were liberal, but free from
that morbid hatred of the Church which characterized most
of the revolutionists. His maxim was Libera Chiesa in libero Stato —a free Church in a free State, in accordance
with which he held that the Pope’s temporal power must fall. He suppressed some
of the more useless monastic Orders, but he retained such as did good by
teaching or by charitable acts, as the Soeurs de Charité and others. He
had at first hoped to conciliate the Pope by friendly negotiations, which
proved fruitless. They were renewed, with the knowledge of the French Emperor,
after the march of the Sardinian army through the Papal territories. Pio Nono
was offered a large patrimony, absolute property in the Vatican and other
palaces, the maintenance of his sovereign rights, prerogatives, and
inviolability, with freedom from State interference in the affairs of the Antonelli affected for a while to
listen, perhaps to get at the bottom of the Piedmontese plans, then suddenly
broke off the negotiations.
To effect the legislative and administrative
assimilation of so many very different provinces; to reorganize the army of the
new kingdom; to fuse into a single budget those of six or seven States, while
embarrassed at the outset by a deficit of 500 million francs (20 millions
sterling); to allay the disturbances caused by Garibaldians, Mazzinians, and
Neapolitan Royalists—such were the gigantic tasks to be undertaken in
consolidating united Italy. It was necessary to dissolve Garibaldi’s army,
which was done as gently as possible. Some of the chiefs were made generals,
while many of the officers accepted commissions in the national army. Garibaldi
at Caprera was furious. He overwhelmed Cavour and the
moderate liberals with abuse as traitors, and demanded a national arming.
Ricasoli in an eloquent speech in the Chamber denounced Garibaldi. Garibaldi
appeared in the Chamber, April 18th, in his red shirt and American cloak, and
amidst violent uproar accused Cavour of fomenting fratricidal war. But he
failed to shake the firm and constant mind of the great Minister, who persisted
in his resolution to dismiss the volunteers. The King brought about an
interview between them at the palace, and there was an apparent reconciliation.
Cavour carried his point, and Garibaldi returned to Caprera.
This contest with the popular, but unreflecting, hero,
gave a fatal shock to Cavour’s health, already undermined by the multiplicity
of his cares and labours. On the night of May 29th he was seized with a violent
illness, and on the 6th of June he died. There will be few dissentient voices
as to his merits. He was essentially the founder of the kingdom of Italy.
Ricasoli, a declared enemy of the priests, now for a
time became Prime Minister. Napoleon made him promise to undertake nothing
against Rome, and French intrigues used the democratic faction, animated by
Mazzini and led by Ratazzi, to overthrow him. Ratazzi then occupied his post. Garibaldi, meanwhile ill at
ease in his retirement, was plotting the seizure of Venice and Rome. He held a
great democratic Congress at Genoa, in March, 1862, and assembled volunteer corps at
Bergamo and Brescia, with intent to invade Venetia, but Ratazzi caused the greater part of them to be disarmed. In the following June,
Garibaldi, relying on the hatred of the Neapolitans and Sicilians for the
Sardinian government, attempted another insurrection in that quarter, with the
view of marching on Rome. He landed in Sicily and passed over to Calabria with
some 1,200 men. But General Cialdini, who had been despatched with some troops
to arrest his progress, caught him at Aspromonte. His men were dispersed, he
himself wounded in the foot, and carried to Spezia.
The repression of Garibaldi’s attempt showed Victor
Emanuel strong enough to maintain order, and on the strength of it he claimed
to be put in possession of Rome, when he engaged to guarantee the Pope’s
spiritual headship. This demand offended Napoleon III, and occasioned a change
both in the French and Italian Ministry. At Paris, Thouvenel was replaced by Drouyn de l’Huys, who was more
favourable to the Pope; at Turin, Ratazzi was
succeeded by Farini. It was the policy of Napoleon to keep Victor Emanuel weak
in South Italy, and so dependent on him. With the same view apparently, the
French garrison at Rome continued to connive at secret armings in favour of Francis II, and during two years there were constant skirmishes in
the mountains, attended not only with much bloodshed, but also with the most
horrible atrocities.
At length, in the autumn of 1864, a suspected new
coalition among the northern Powers induced Napoleon to alter his views. The
evacuation of Rome would, it was thought, conciliate England and sow
dissensions among the new allies— September Protestant Prussia, schismatic
Russia, and Catholic Austria. There was at that time some misunderstanding
between the French and English Cabinets. England had given a flat refusal to
Napoleon’s proposal of a Congress in November, 1863, while the enthusiastic
reception of Garibaldi in England in the spring of 1864 had caused the Italian
government much embarrassment. On the 15th of September of that year a
definitive Convention was concluded between France and Italy on the subject of
Rome. Victor Emanuel undertook not to attack the Pope’s dominions, and to
protect them from all external assaults, while Napoleon on his side agreed to
the gradual withdrawal of his troops from Rome, to be completed within two years. The formation of a papal
army, recruited from various countries, sufficient to maintain the Pope’s
authority without menacing Italy, was allowed. As the French Emperor demanded
some material guarantee, the removal of the Italian capital from Turin to
Florence within six months was arranged by a protocol appended to the Convention. The news of the change of capital caused a riot at Turin, accompanied with
considerable loss of life. To appease these disturbances the ministry was
dismissed, and La Marmora, of Piedmontese origin, made President of the
Council. The riots, however, were renewed in January, 1865; it is supposed at
the instigation of Mazzini. There were cries of “Abasso il re,” and on the 3rd of February Victor Emanuel left Turin for Florence.
Italy was now gradually taking her place among the
great European Powers. By the end of 1865 she had been recognized by most of
them. In the autumn of 1864 Austria herself had proposed to do so on the base
of uti possidetis, on the sole
condition that she should not be attacked for a certain number of years. Thus,
for the sake of her material interests, she was prepared to abandon not only
her allies the Italian potentates, but even the Holy Father himself. But public
opinion in Italy would not have allowed the formal abandonment of Venice. The
internal unity of Italy was confirmed January 1st, 1866, when the new codes of
law came into operation throughout the annexed provinces. The principal
features of them were civil marriages—a blow at the clergy— and the equal
division of property among children of both sexes—a blow at the aristocracy. In
the foreign policy of the newly-created nation the first most remarkable
features are her treaties with Prussia, first by joining the Zollverein towards
the end of 1865, and on the 10th of April of the next year by that momentous
alliance which was attended with such prodigious effects for both countries.
But to explain these matters we must take a retrospect of German affairs, which
we have brought down in the preceding chapter to the establishment of the
Prussian Regency in 1858.
The internal troubles of Austria—one of the principal
causes of the loss of Lombardy—became after that event matter for serious
consideration with the imperial Cabinet. Financial affairs, chiefly intrusted to Jews, were
badly managed, and the debt continually increased. The army, administered by
incompetent persons, daily deteriorated. The superior officers adopted a brutal
tone towards their subalterns, called the “Russian manner,” and these again
used the cane unsparingly on the men. An open contempt was displayed for
religion, and profanity became the tone of the Court. To these sources of
weakness and decay were added open discontent, and even rebellion, in some of
the various provinces constituting the ill-cemented Austrian empire.
These latter evils were the most pressing. To meet
them reforms were made in the various provincial Landstage,
or parliaments, and a new constitution was framed for the whole empire, which
was proclaimed February 26th, 1861. The Emperor opened the new Reichstag,
or imperial parliament, May 1st. It consisted of an Upper and Lower House, the
first named for life by the Emperor, while the second was composed of 343
delegates from the different provincial Landstage.
Toleration was held out for Protestants, which pleased many of the Hungarians,
but the Archbishops, who commonly obeyed in silence, ventured to express a hope
that the Catholic character of the monarchy would not be destroyed ; and the
Tyrolese, who are papists, refused to carry out the new regulations.
It soon became evident that the new constitution would
not work. The Hungarians and Croats refused to recognize it, and sent no
delegates to the Reichstag. Bohemia quietly enjoyed these quarrels,
while the Magyars, under Deak’s leadership, resolved to recover the national
rights which they had lost by their rebellion in 1849; but, for fear of Russia,
they offered only a passive resistance. Kossuth, indeed, in London, and
Garibaldi in Italy, agitated for an insurrection in Venetia and Dalmatia, to be
followed by a rising in Hungary, but without effect. General Benedek, a
Hungarian by birth, was sent to conciliate his fellow-countrymen, but neither
his persuasions nor his threats had any result. Addresses poured in demanding
the constitution of 1848, and Francis Joseph at length consented to the
assembling of a Hungarian Parliament, which was opened April 2nd, 1861.
The programme of the constitutional party was that Hungary
was no Austrian province, but a substantive kingdom, having only a personal
union with Austria; that the abdicated Emperor Ferdinand, now residing at Prague, their
lawful king, was not justified in having transferred the crown of St. Stephen
to his nephew without the consent of the Hungarian nation; but if he would
declare his abdication, and if Francis Joseph would submit to be crowned after
the ancient fashion, no further resistance would be offered. The Emperor would
not listen to these conditions. He dismissed the Assembly, sent large bodies of
troops into Hungary, and collected the taxes by force.
Whilst Austria thus presented all the symptoms of
decay, Prussia, her younger and more vigorous rival, was preparing for the
struggle for supremacy. Under the weak reign of Frederick William IV, and the
administration of what was called the Kreuz party, she had considerably
retrograded. The accession of the Prince of Prussia to the Regency threw
somewhat more vigour into the counsels of the Berlin Cabinet. But some years
were still to elapse during which Prussia submitted, for the most part, to
follow in the wake of Austria. The programme of the Regent and of the new
Ministry under Prince Hohenzollem-Sigmaringen, a
puisne prince of the royal house, was to discountenance all liberal
revolutions, to respect Roman Catholic rights, but, at the same time, to
cherish the evangelical union, to patronize learning and science, and, above
all, to bestow especial care upon the army. The accession of the Regent to the
Prussian throne, by the death of his brother, January 2nd, 1861, and the deaths
in the same year of General Von Gerlach and Privy Councillor Stahl, two of the
leaders of the Kreuz party, did not at first cause much alteration in the
policy of the Berlin Cabinet. William I. was deeply imbued with feudal notions,
and the idea of sovereignty by the grace of God. Although of the seven
preceding kings of his house, the first only, Frederick I., had been crowned,
William celebrated his coronation with great pomp at Konigsberg, October 18th.
Taking the crown from the altar, he placed it on his own head, and then on his
queen’s. In his address to the Parliament he observed: “The rulers of Prussia
receive their crown from God; therein lies its holiness, which is
unassailable.” But he failed not to intimate that he would listen to their
advice. This speech, taken in connection with some measures of the Cabinet, was
regarded by the Liberals as reactionary, and threatening a return to
absolutism. That party had a majority in the Parliament which assembled in
January, 1862, and offered so violent an opposition that Prince Hohenzollern
retired in favour of Prince Hohenlohe-Ingelfingen. A
new Parliament proved equally refractory. The Fortschritt party, as it was called, or Party of Progress, was, indeed, pleased with the
recognition of Italy, and with the treaty between the Zollverein and France,
effected in March, 1862; but, in other respects, the parliamentary opposition
was just as violent as before. The new Ministry was in turn compelled to
retire, when the King named Herr Bismarck Schonhausen President of the Council, or Prime Minister, who from this moment may be said
to have guided the destinies of Germany as Cavour had previously done those of
Italy.
To compare Bismarck with Cavour implies that their
work was a good deal alike; and, indeed, the state of Germany at this time
bore considerable resemblance to that of Italy. It presents the picture of a
struggle for national unity achieved at last, as in Italy, by its chief
military Power, under the guidance of a remarkable statesman. In both countries
these Powers were ruled by patriotic and energetic sovereigns, soldiers by
profession. But some differences must be observed. Germany had already a federative
union, and was not made up, like Italy, of a number of wholly independent
States. In Germany, again, the struggle was entirely national. There was no
foreigner to be expelled, no need of foreign aid. But the most striking point
of difference is that Germany contained two great military Powers, by whose
rivalry, and the ultimate ascendancy of one of them, unity was effected. Besides
these two Powers, there was a number of minor States, fearful of losing the
prerogatives conferred upon them by the treaties of Vienna, and as they could
not stand alone, for the most part satellites of Austria. But their safety
chiefly lay in keeping both Austria and Prussia from becoming predominant, and
in fomenting the mutual hatred and jealousy of those Powers. Hence these middle
States were the chief obstruction to German unity. At one time, as we have
said, under the leadership of Von Beust, the Saxon
Minister, they entertained the idea of effecting a union among themselves, and
thus forming a German Triad, which would have made confusion worse confounded.
During the period under review, therefore, the interest of German history
centres in the disputes between Austria and Prussia. These concerned, of course, questions relating to the
Confederation, such as the fortifying and garrisoning of federal fortresses,
like Ulm and Rastadt, the government of electoral
Hesse, and questions of the like nature.
The war in Italy and peace of Villafranca had much influence
on German affairs. They not only widened the breach between Austria and
Prussia—the former Power complaining that she had been shamefully
abandoned—but also caused a great national movement, by having displayed the
impotence of the Confederation. One of their first effects was the foundation
of the Nationalverein, or National Association,
formed at Eisenach towards the end of July, 1859, by the radical Hanoverian,
Baron Benigsen, and Herr Metz, of Darmstadt, and
patronized by Duke Ernest II of Saxe- Coburg-Gotha. Its programme was to
substitute for the Bund the German Constitution of 1848—a German Parliament
constituent and sovereign, and Germany united under the hegemony of Prussia,
with Austria excluded. This association was soon after opposed by another,
called the Reform- verein, founded in 1862 by what was called the Great German
Party. The national interests were the watchword of both; but the first was
for Prussia, the second for Austria. Neither of them, however, did anything but
talk.
The history of the German Bund, as Professor
Von Sybel has remarked, is the history of a protracted malady, which began with
its birth in 1815. By means of its Diet, a Congress of Princes, manipulated
with consummate skill by Metternich, Austria and the reactionary party had
triumphed for a long series of years, and even at Berlin. Bismarck himself,
though a Prussian Junker, had been, as we have said, a member of the Kreuz
party, and an advocate of Austrian supremacy. His experience as Prussian envoy
at the Diet, and subsequent ambassadorships to Paris and St. Petersburg,
altered and extended his views. He saw that Germany, to be strong, must be
reconstructed, that Prussia alone was equal to the task, but not before she had
been strengthened. Soon after his accession to power, he is said to have
remarked that the questions which agitated the German Fatherland could not be
decided by speeches and vetos, but by blood and iron. With this view, assisted
by Von Loon, the Minister at War, he reformed and increased the army. Hence the
Parliamentary opposition to which we have alluded. The democrats hated nothing
so much as a strong government, and Bismarck was assailed with the most virulent abuse.
But he persisted in his plans, in which he was supported by King William I, who
declared in the Chamber that the reformation of the army was his own work, that
he was proud of it, and would carry it through.
The Zollverein, or Customs Union, formed by Prussia,
enabled her to speak with authority. Austria was excluded from the treaty with
France already mentioned, and to the minor States she intimated that if they
would not join it they must quit the Zollverein. The demand of Austria for admittance
was supported by these States, who threatened to quit the Zollverein in case of refusal.
But Prussia persisted, well knowing that the benefits which they derived from
it were greater than anything that Austria could offer to them. This of course
inflamed the quarrel between the two great Powers. Austria now proposed to
several of the States a separate Parliament for general affairs, to sit side by
side with the Diet. The proposal was supported by the four German Kings and
several Princes. Bismarck now adopted a high tone. He declared that Prussia
would not bow to a majority of the Diet, and was not bound to do so by the
Federal Constitution. Austria was further incensed by a remark ascribed to Bismarck,
that she should remove her capital to Ofen; which,
indeed, would have been more central for her dominions.
The unpopularity of the home government of Prussia
seemed to offer an opportunity for attack. After some secret negotiations,
Austria invited the minor German Sovereigns to a Govern-Fürstentag at Frankfurt, August, 1863. William I was kept in the
dark till the last hour, and refused to attend. In this Assembly, Austria
proposed a new constitution, which, as it never came to anything, we need not
detail. Its main features were, a sort of Directory of five Princes, with the
Austrian Emperor as President, superior to the Bund; a confederate tribunal,
and a national parliament, but of a very circumscribed sort, in which Prussia
was sure to be outvoted. This, it was thought, if carried into effect, would
tie Prussia’s hands; if she rejected it, she might be denounced as the enemy of
German unity. Prussia steadily rejected the importunities of the minor
Sovereigns to attend the meeting, and the project came to nothing.
Austria now changed her front. Count Kechberg, her Minister, determined on conciliating Prussia. This unexpected union of
the two Powers staggered the middle States, neutralized the power of the Diet,
and paralyzed the patriotic associations. But the Nationalverein had already abandoned the cause of Prussia on account of the defensive treaty
which she had made with Russia (February 8th, 1863), on the breaking out of the
Polish insurrection. The German democrats represented this treaty as an
offensive one, and the Nationalverein resolved to
abandon its former Gotha programme so long as Bismarck should be Minister. The
Prussian Chamber displayed the most violent animosity towards the Ministry, and
the historian, Von Sybel, took a leading part in the attacks upon it. The
President of the Assembly sometimes prevented the Ministers from speaking, who
declared that they would not again enter the House unless freedom of speech
were guaranteed to them. And, supported by the King, they set at defiance the
contumacious opposition of the Chamber.
The Polish
Insurrection just adverted to broke out at the beginning of 1863. Grave
symptoms of discontent had manifested themselves in Poland a year or two before
on the occasion of the police having interfered with an anniversary celebration
of the Polish victory over the Russians at Grochow in 1831. Some lives were
lost in the riot which ensued; this rankled in the minds of the Poles; a
general mourning was adopted, even by the women, and other tokens of discontent
were displayed. The insurrection came at a very inopportune moment for Russia.
She was again looking after the “sick man’s” property, and had been stirring up
revolt in the Christian provinces of Turkey, which was to break out in 1863,
but did not take effect. Great quantities of arms had been sent into Moldavia,
Wallachia, and Servia; the Herzegovina and Montenegro were in open
insurrection; and in Greece the revolution was preparing which hurled Otho from
the throne? In these circumstances an attempt was made to conciliate the
Poles. For this purpose the Emperor Alexander sent his brother, the Grand Duke
Constantine, to Warsaw, in June, 1862. Constantine had been recalled from his
travels in the preceding year on account of some disturbances in Russia, and
particularly at St. Petersburg. He was bold and energetic, and the partisan of a vigorous autocracy
in Russia; but at the same time, by his travels in France and England, he had
imbibed many of the liberal ideas of the time, and a taste for progress. He
was accompanied to Warsaw by the Marquis Wielopolski,
a native Pole, who was made chief of the Polish Council. Wielopolski entertained the impracticable idea of reconciling the Poles and Russians, and
uniting them in the Panslavist interest.
In Russia itself much discontent existed, principally
excited by the emancipation of the serfs, begun in 1857. Alexander II has
received great credit for his humanity in this measure, but it appears rather
to have been dictated by policy, with a view to break the power of the nobles.
The alliance of despotism with extreme democracy and the lowest classes of
society is a fact that has been often illustrated in our own time. Alexander’s
principal design was to withdraw the serfs from the influence of their masters,
the boyars, and place them under his own. The measure caused great discontent
among the nobles and educated classes, who now saw no barrier between the
throne and themselves. There were demands for a Constitution and a Parliament,
and the discontent was manifested by incendiarism in most of the great towns,
including St. Petersburg. Nor was the condition of the serf improved. He was
still attached to the soil and to his horde, or community, which spared him
less than the landed proprietor had done. Similar measures, with the like
views, were contemplated for Poland.
The state of that country under Russian despotism may
be inferred from the fact that in the first half of the year 1862, nearly
15,000 persons, or about one-fifth of the whole male population of Warsaw, had
been thrown into the dungeons of that city. Count Andrew Zamoyski, selected to
represent the national sentiments to the Tsar, was seized, carried to St.
Petersburg, and thence into exile. Alexander II. was for some time doubtful
what course to pursue. There were two sets of counsellors. The old Russian, or
Muscovite party, to which Prince Gortschakov belonged, followed the traditional policy of the Emperor Nicholas, and was for
mild and conciliatory measures, with certain reforms. On the other hand, the
German, or “Young Russia” party, invited by Prussia, was for using the greatest
severity. Their counsels prevailed, and war to revolutionists became the order
of the day.
There can be no doubt that the Polish insurrection was
purposely excited by Russia. The method adopted was an illegal conscription.
Lists were made out of young men of the noble and burgher classes, the most
troublesome to Russia, who were to be pressed into the army, while the peasants
were left untouched. Thus one of two objects would be attained : either the
disaffected would be rendered powerless, or, what was both more probable and
more agreeable to Russian policy, a rebellion would ensue.
The measure was executed in the most brutal manner. On
the night of January 15th, 1863, Warsaw seemed to be suddenly converted into a
town taken by assault. The conscripts marked out by the police were seized in
their beds ; where they could not be found, their kinsmen, old men and boys,
were dragged in their stead to the citadel. A few days after, the Russian official
journal announced, with a cynical irony, that the conscription had been
peaceably effected! Insult added to injury was too much for human nature to
bear, and the insurrection sprung at once into life. Many marked for
conscription had escaped into the country, and were soon joined by others from
different quarters. Before the end of January the insurrection was regularly
organized with a central anonymous committee at Warsaw.
In this disastrous struggle the Poles displayed the
greatest heroism. The spirit which animated them is illustrated by a combat at Wengrow. The Polish main body having been defeated by a
superior Russian force, a body of 200 youths, mostly nobles, to cover the
retreat of their comrades, made a desperate charge up to the Russian guns, and
were killed to a man. The warfare was of the guerilla kind. It was at first
endeavoured to give the insurgents a more regular organization, and with this
view, Langiewicz, who had served under Garibaldi, was made Dictator. He
collected some 12,000 men, and established his headquarters at Radom. But he
was interfered with by the Polish Committee in London, and by their protege Microslawskv, who wanted the chief command, and thwarted
all his plans. Langiewicz was defeated by the Russians, March 19th, and his
army dispersed. He himself escaped into Galicia, and was favourably received by
the Austrian authorities.
Austria at first ostensibly favoured the Poles. The
Vienna and St. Petersburg Cabinets were at that time far from friendly. Austria
suspected and feared the Russian plots to excite rebellion in Turkey, which
could not but be prejudicial to her interests. Russia, the foremost advocate of
passive and slavish obedience, scruples not, when it suits her plans, to
foment rebellion among her neighbours. Bismarck had endeavoured to draw Austria
on the side of Russia. The treaty with Russia before mentioned made the
question a European one. It has not been published; but the chief feature of it
seems to have been to allow the Russians to pursue the Poles into Prussian
territory. When the Western Powers interfered, Bismarck attempted to disavow
it; but practically it was carried into effect. The French people sympathized
with the Poles, but the Germans, who were averse to them, stood like a wall
between them and France. Napoleon III was at that time well disposed towards
the Tsar, and unwilling to compromise one of the first of Continental
alliances. He observed in his speech on opening the Chambers in November, that
Alexander II had faithfully supported him during the war in Italy and the
annexation of Savoy and Nice. France, therefore, did not proceed beyond diplomatic
action, in which she was joined by England and Austria. Lord John Russell drew
up some pedantic notes in which he lectured Russia on the treaties of 1815.
Those treaties had indeed secured for Poland many rights which might now be
sought in vain—religious freedom, liberty of the press, equality before the
law, the sole use of the Polish tongue in public affairs, the filling of all
posts, both civil and military, by Poles alone, a national representation of
two Chambers, and several more. But of all these they had been deprived after
the extinction of their rebellion in 1831, and to invoke them now was like
calling spirits from the vasty deep. The Russians, of course, only laughed in
their sleeves, and more especially, perhaps, at the appeals which the notes
contained to Russian magnanimity and clemency. Gortschakov made a semiserious reply. Austria cared little for the Poles. Her chief
anxiety was for her province of Galicia, though probably she was not displeased
with an opportunity to spite Russia. Gortschakov’s answer to her note was short and dry; to France he replied with protestations
of goodwill, intermingled with sarcastic remarks about the dangers of revolutionary
principles. In June the three Powers followed up their notes by a joint one, in which, on the
suggestion of the English Cabinet, the following six points were laid down as
the basis of a pacification:—1. A complete and general amnesty. 2. National
representation. 3. Public offices to be filled by Poles. 4. Perfect religious
liberty. 5. The Polish language to be the official one. 6. A legal system of
recruiting. A suspension of arms was also demanded, and a Congress of the
five great Powers to settle the matter. Gortschakov replied that the Tsar had already made concessions which were contemned by the
Poles; asserted that the centre of the insurrection was to be sought in the
revolutionary committees in London and Paris, and refused a suspension of
arms. The suggestion of a conference was contemptuously met in the reply to
Austria by a counter one for a conference of the three Powers which had divided
Poland; thus intimating that the Western Powers had no business to interfere.
Russia came victorious out of the diplomatic contest. She knew her own will,
while the counsels of the three Powers were divided and irresolute. The French
and English ambassadors at St. Petersburg let fall, indeed, some obscure
threats and on the 3rd of August the three Powers renewed their representations.
But the season was now too far advanced for naval operations in the Baltic.
Early next month Gortschakov announced that the
discussion was closed.
Meanwhile the war had proceeded with increased
intensity. After the defeat of Langiewicz, the Central Committee gave up the
idea of another Dictatorship, and guerilla warfare was resumed, for which the
numerous woods afforded great facilities. It was marked by extreme barbarity on
the part of the Russians. All Polish officers captured were shot or hanged.
Towns and villages were burnt, their inhabitants massacred, prisoners put to
death; robbery and murder were the order of the day. Several Russian officers
committed suicide rather than carry out their barbarous instructions, among
them Colonel Korf, who declared that he could not reconcile his orders with his
duties as an officer and man of honour. In the midst of these horrors, the
Central Committee conducted its business with wonderful secrecy, under the very
eyes of the Russian authorities. It exercised all the functions of a regular
government, raised taxes, granted passports, and even passed sentences of
death. Its commands were implicitly obeyed, though nobody knew whence they
came. Once a treacherous workman betrayed to the Russians the chamber in which the proclamations and other papers of the Committee were printed. The house was
surrounded, the chamber searched; only a large chest was found, and in
it the corpse of the traitor!
The insurrection had been propagated in Lithuania and the General Russo-Polish
provinces, but not in those belonging to Austria methods and Prussia, for fear of bringing those
Powers into the field. The mission of General Muraviev into Lithuania with dictatorial power, was a sort of answer and defiance to the
Western Powers. His methods were death or Siberia and confiscation. Immediately
after his arrival he shot or hanged some of the chief landed proprietors of the province, as well as several priests
and abbes. He emancipated the Lithuanian peasants, incited them against their
masters, whose lands he promised them. He is computed to have driven at least a quarter of a million
Lithuanians into the Steppes of Orenburg. His fury was particularly directed
against women and priests; women, indeed, were the soul of the insurrection.
The schismatical Church of
Russia has always displayed the utmost intolerance and hatred towards the Roman Catholics.
The clergy were subjected to heavy contributions, and decimated by arrests. Within
the year 183 priests were apprehended. Colonel Moller, Russian commandant in Wilkomir, said in a circular, “I attribute all the
disturbances in Poland to the inclination of the Romish clergy for brigandage and
rebellion, which is common to them with Pio IX and his Cardinals.”
The Grand Duke Constantine, who had not acted with the
expected vigour, quitted Warsaw in August. General de Berg now assumed
dictatorial power, and imitated the example of Muraviev at Wilna. He discovered some members of the secret government, hanged five of them,
and condemned sixteen others, including four ladies, to hard labour in the Siberian mines. Austria gave a
death-blow to it, and at the same time reconciled herself with Russia, by
proclaiming martial law in Galicia. One of the last brutalities of the Russians was the destruction
of Ibiany, in the government of Kowno,
in May, 1864, which had distinguished itself in the insurrection. The
principal inhabitants were put to
death, the rest were transported into
remote provinces, and their lands distributed among Rascolniks, or old
orthodox Russians, the town was razed, its very name effaced, and the new colony was called “Nicholas.” By a decree of the Tsar, March 2nd, 1864, the lands of the Polish nobles were given to the
peasants, with only a nominal compensation. Polish officials who did not speak
Russian were dismissed, and the Russian tongue was introduced into all schools.
The children of the poor were forcibly baptized by Russian popes; the rich had
to pay for the privilege of Catholic baptism. The same policy was pursued in
subsequent years. In July, 1869, the Polish university of Warsaw was converted
into a Russian one, and all lectures were to be in that tongue. Shopkeepers and
innkeepers were forbidden to answer an address in Polish; the speaking of that
language aloud in the streets was prohibited ; nay, fathers and mothers were
forbidden to teach it to their children! A German author has truly remarked,
that though some of the tyrants of antiquity turned whole populations out of
their lands and homes, and sent them into strange lands, there is no instance
of their having deprived them of the use of their mother tongue.1
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