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The two steamers, to avoid Bourbon ships, had followed an unusual route,<ref name="decesare204-205">{{cite book|last= de Cesare |first= Raffaele |title= La fine di un regno |volume= 2 |year= 1900 |publisher= Scipione Lapi |location= Città di Castello |pages= 204-205|language=it}} {{No ISBN}}</ref> which had taken them almost to the [[Tunisia]]n coast. On this route near the Tunisian coast, however, it was observed that on the morning of the last day of navigation, at the ''Il Lombardo'''s speed of 7 miles per hour and after 40 hours of navigation, the two steamers could not be more than 280 miles from the departure from Argentario promontory and therefore approximately at the height of the [[Aegadian Islands]] or to the west of them, at least 70 miles from [[Cape Bon]], without considering delays and stops.<ref>''I Mille nella storia e nella leggenda'', Carlo Agrati, pagg. 148-149</ref> The ''Thousand'', intending to turn towards [[Sciacca]], after having excluded [[Menfi]], between [[Selinunte]] and [[Sciacca]], due to shallow water and disembarkation difficulties, then headed for [[Marsala]], as they were informed by the crews of an English sailing ship and a Sicilian fishing vessel owned by master Strazzeri that the city's port was not protected by Bourbon vessels.<ref name="decesare204-205"/> The absence of Bourbons convinced Garibaldi to head towards Marsala,<ref name="decesare204-205"/> where the ''Thousand'' steamers arrived in the early hours of the afternoon of 11 May 1860.
The two steamers, to avoid Bourbon ships, had followed an unusual route,<ref name="decesare204-205">{{cite book|last= de Cesare |first= Raffaele |title= La fine di un regno |volume= 2 |year= 1900 |publisher= Scipione Lapi |location= Città di Castello |pages= 204-205|language=it}} {{No ISBN}}</ref> which had taken them almost to the [[Tunisia]]n coast. On this route near the Tunisian coast, however, it was observed that on the morning of the last day of navigation, at the ''Il Lombardo'''s speed of 7 miles per hour and after 40 hours of navigation, the two steamers could not be more than 280 miles from the departure from Argentario promontory and therefore approximately at the height of the [[Aegadian Islands]] or to the west of them, at least 70 miles from [[Cape Bon]], without considering delays and stops.<ref>''I Mille nella storia e nella leggenda'', Carlo Agrati, pagg. 148-149</ref> The ''Thousand'', intending to turn towards [[Sciacca]], after having excluded [[Menfi]], between [[Selinunte]] and [[Sciacca]], due to shallow water and disembarkation difficulties, then headed for [[Marsala]], as they were informed by the crews of an English sailing ship and a Sicilian fishing vessel owned by master Strazzeri that the city's port was not protected by Bourbon vessels.<ref name="decesare204-205"/> The absence of Bourbons convinced Garibaldi to head towards Marsala,<ref name="decesare204-205"/> where the ''Thousand'' steamers arrived in the early hours of the afternoon of 11 May 1860.

The army of the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies, which the Expedition of the Thousand and the insurgents had to face was numerically considerable. In 1860 the active army was made up of four army corps, one of the guards and three of the line, for a total of around 90,000 soldiers in active service and over 50,000 in the reserve, therefore overall the total of the Two Sicilies forces at full mobilization could have 143,586 personnel,<ref>{{cite book|autore=L.E.T.|titolo=L'insurrezione siciliana (aprile 1860) e la spedizione di Garibaldi|publisher=Tipografia Fratelli Borroni |location=Milano|year=1861|url=https://books.google.it/books?id=1vssAAAAYAAJ&printsec=frontcover&dq=L%E2%80%99insurrezione+siciliana+(aprile+1860)+e+la+spedizione+di+Garibaldi&hl=it&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwixnvbvmOfaAhUDiywKHUsVBl4Q6AEIKTAA#v=onepage&q=L%E2%80%99insurrezione%20siciliana%20(aprile%201860)%20e%20la%20spedizione%20di%20Garibaldi&f=false|pages=77-78|language=it}}</ref> while according to other sources the maximum number that can be mobilized with the reserve would be set at 130,000 personne.<ref>{{cite book|author=[[George Macaulay Trevelyan]]|title=Garibaldi e i mille|publisher=Zanichelli|location=Bologna|year=1909|url=https://archive.org/stream/garibaldieimille00trev#page/n9/mode/2up|language=it|page=170}}</ref>


===Landing in Sicily===
===Landing in Sicily===

Revision as of 22:13, 24 January 2024

Expedition of the Thousand
Part of the wars of Italian unification

The beginning of the expedition at Quarto dei Mille, Genoa
Date1860–1861
Location
Result

Garibaldine victory

Territorial
changes
Sicily, Southern Italy, Marche and Umbria ceded to the Kingdom of Sardinia
Belligerents

Kingdom of Sardinia Sardinia

Supported by:
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland United Kingdom (naval)

Kingdom of the Two Sicilies Two Sicilies

Supported by:
Papal States Papal States
France (naval)
Spain (naval)
Commanders and leaders
Giuseppe Garibaldi
Kingdom of Sardinia Victor Emmanuel II
Kingdom of Sardinia Enrico Cialdini
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland Rodney Mundy
Kingdom of the Two Sicilies Francis II
Kingdom of the Two Sicilies Giosuè Ritucci
Papal States Juchault de Lamoricière
Strength
90,000[1][2]

The Expedition of the Thousand (Italian: Spedizione dei Mille) was an event of the unification of Italy that took place in 1860. A corps of volunteers led by Giuseppe Garibaldi sailed from Quarto near Genoa and landed in Marsala, Sicily, in order to conquer the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies, ruled by the Spanish House of Bourbon-Two Sicilies.[3]

The project was an ambitious and risky venture aiming to conquer, with a thousand men, a kingdom with a larger regular army and a more powerful navy. The expedition was a success and concluded with a plebiscite that brought Naples and Sicily into the Kingdom of Sardinia (also known as Piedmont-Sardinia), the last territorial conquest before the proclamation of the Kingdom of Italy on 17 March 1861.

The sea venture was the only desired action that was jointly decided by the "four fathers of the nation" Giuseppe Mazzini, Giuseppe Garibaldi, Victor Emmanuel II, and Camillo Benso, Count of Cavour, pursuing divergent goals. However, the Expedition was instigated by Francesco Crispi, who utilized his political influence to bolster the Italian unification project.[4]

The various groups participated in the expedition for a variety of reasons: for Garibaldi, it was to achieve a united Italy; for the Sicilian bourgeoisie, an independent Sicily as part of the Kingdom of Italy, and for common people, land distribution and the end of oppression.

The expedition and the whole enterprise were supported by the British Empire, which wanted to establish a friendly government in Southern Italy, which was becoming of great strategic value because of the imminent opening of the Suez Canal. The Bourbons were considered unreliable due to their increasing openings towards the Russian Empire. The Royal Navy defended the landing party from the Bourbons and donors from the United Kingdom supported the expedition financially with a large part of the money being used to bribe disloyal Bourbon military officers.[5] French and Spanish ships supported the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies during the Siege of Gaeta.[6][7]

Background

The Italian peninsula in March 1860.
  Duchy of Savoy and the County of Nice, ceded to France from the Kingdom of Piedmont-Sardinia following the Treaty of Turin (1860)

The Expedition took place within the overall process of the unification of Italy, which was largely orchestrated by Camillo Cavour, Prime Minister of Piedmont-Sardinia, as his life's work. The Second Italian War of Independence ended on 11 July 1859; the terms of the armistice of Villafranca, wanted by Napoleon III, which recognized Lombardy (with the exclusion of Mantua) to the Kingdom of Piedmont-Sardinia, but left Venice and all of the Veneto in Austrian hands, had created discontent among a large part of the Italian patriots.

The political stalemate was resolved on 24 March 1860, when Cavour signed the cession of the Duchy of Savoy and the County of Nice to France with the Treaty of Turin (1860), obtaining in exchange the consent of the French emperor to the annexation of Tuscany and Emilia-Romagna to the Kingdom of Piedmont-Sardinia. After the annexation of the Grand Duchy of Tuscany, the Duchies of Modena and Parma and the Romagna to the Kingdom of Piedmont-Sardinia in March 1860, Italian patriots set their sights on the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies, which comprised all of southern mainland Italy and Sicily, as the next step toward their dream of unification of all Italian lands.

The Kingdom of the Two Sicilies was led by a young and inexperienced monarch (Francis II of the Two Sicilies, who succeeded his father Ferdinand II only on 22 May 1859, less than a year before the expedition); in 1836 the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies had worsened relations with the United Kingdom, to which it had owed its survival during the Napoleonic period, with the "sulphur question".[8] Finally, the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies had fallen into a sort of diplomatic isolation:[9] it had in fact refused to participate in the Crimean War alongside France and the United Kingdom, alongside which the Kingdom of Sardinia had instead participated, and ended up with being able to rely solely on one's own strength.

When the idea of a conference regarding the reorganization of Italy following recent events circulated in European diplomatic circles in the autumn of 1859, Francis II proved indifferent, not taking the opportunity to show an active presence internationally.[10] In 1860 Garibaldi, already the most famous Italian revolutionary leader, was in Genoa planning an expedition against Sicily and Naples, with the covert support of the United Kingdom.[11] Lorenzo del Boca suggested that British support for Garibaldi's expedition was spurred by the necessity to obtain more favourable economic conditions for Sicilian sulfur, which was needed in great quantities for munitions.[12]

Search for a casus belli

The Kingdom of Piedmont-Sardinia needed a presentable casus belli in order to attack the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies. This was needed for the House of Savoy, which however never gave any declaration of war against the Bourbon kingdom, a necessary condition since this was among the requirements presented to Cavour. The only occurrence that would have satisfied this requirement was an uprising from within. Such an event would have felt the alienation of the people from the dynasty that ruled in Naples and, particularly, the inability of Francis II of the Two Sicilies, to exercise government in his domains. Sicily, as shown by the history of the past decades, was fertile ground, and the liberal south, especially those returning after an amnesty granted by the young king, who worked in this direction for some time.[13][14] Meanwhile the organization of the expeditionary force was in full swing. Garibaldi, fresh from the brilliant Lombardy campaign with the Hunters of the Alps, had demonstrated his abilities as a military leader, facing a regular army with a light army made up of volunteers. Also for this expedition he would have resorted to enlisting volunteers willing to fight under his leadership.

The expedition

Departure and journey

Redshirts volunteers of the Thousand from Brescia, Lombardy (1860), hand-colored
The steamship Il Piemonte, one of the two steamships, that transported the Thousand to Sicily
The steamship Il Lombardo, the other steamship that transported the Thousand to Sicily

In March 1860, exile Rosolino Pilo exhorted Giuseppe Garibaldi to take charge of an expedition to liberate southern Italy from Bourbon rule.[15] Garibaldi was against it at first, but eventually agreed.[15] By May 1860, Garibaldi had collected 1,089 volunteers for his expedition to Sicily.[16]

A total of 336 volunteers came from the contemporary Italian regions, including Genoa (156 volunteers),[17] Tuscany (78 volunteers),[18] Sicily (45 volunteers)[19] and Naples (46 volunteers), with only 11 from Rome and the Papal States. [20] The largest number of volunteers came from Austrian Lombardy and Venetia, with 434 from Lombardy and 194 from Venetia.[18][21] An additional 33 foreign volunteers joined the expedition.[16] This included 14 ethnic Italians from the Trentino region of Austria, as well as István Türr and three other Hungarians.[16] The volunteers came from middle-class backgrounds, with the vast majority being students and skilled craftsmen.[15][18]

The 1,089 volunteers were unfavourably armed with obsolete muskets,[16] and wore red shirts and grey trousers as their uniform.[22] Thus they became known as the Redshirts. The Redshirts were very popular and influenced many armies worldwide. For example, during the American Civil War, the Union's Garibaldi Guard and its Confederate counterpart, the Garibaldi Legion, wore red shirts as a part of their uniforms.

During the night of 5 May, a small group led by Nino Bixio "seized" two steamships in Genoa from the Rubattino shipping company. (The ships were actually secretly provided by Rubattino.) The two ships were renamed Il Piemonte and Il Lombardo. At nearby Quarto dei Mille, the volunteers (including Francesco Crispi's wife, Rosalia Montmasson) embarked for Sicily.[21]

According to Schneid, "Before embarking on the adventure, Garibaldi once again pledged his loyalty to Victor Emmanuel II and proclaimed that his intention was to conquer Sicily for the king. There is every indication that there was far more collusion between Cavour and Garibaldi, if not Victor Emmanuel and Garibaldi. After Garibaldi landed in Sicily, Admiral Persano received orders to support the expedition."[23]

The two steamers, to avoid Bourbon ships, had followed an unusual route,[24] which had taken them almost to the Tunisian coast. On this route near the Tunisian coast, however, it was observed that on the morning of the last day of navigation, at the Il Lombardo's speed of 7 miles per hour and after 40 hours of navigation, the two steamers could not be more than 280 miles from the departure from Argentario promontory and therefore approximately at the height of the Aegadian Islands or to the west of them, at least 70 miles from Cape Bon, without considering delays and stops.[25] The Thousand, intending to turn towards Sciacca, after having excluded Menfi, between Selinunte and Sciacca, due to shallow water and disembarkation difficulties, then headed for Marsala, as they were informed by the crews of an English sailing ship and a Sicilian fishing vessel owned by master Strazzeri that the city's port was not protected by Bourbon vessels.[24] The absence of Bourbons convinced Garibaldi to head towards Marsala,[24] where the Thousand steamers arrived in the early hours of the afternoon of 11 May 1860.

The army of the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies, which the Expedition of the Thousand and the insurgents had to face was numerically considerable. In 1860 the active army was made up of four army corps, one of the guards and three of the line, for a total of around 90,000 soldiers in active service and over 50,000 in the reserve, therefore overall the total of the Two Sicilies forces at full mobilization could have 143,586 personnel,[26] while according to other sources the maximum number that can be mobilized with the reserve would be set at 130,000 personne.[27]

Landing in Sicily

Garibaldi lands in Marsala based on a drawing from 1860

The ships were then accompanied by the British Royal Navy which consisted of HMS Hannibal followed by the gunboats HMS Argus and HMS Intrepid under the command of Admiral Rodney Mundy. They landed at Marsala, on the westernmost point of Sicily, on 11 May. With British ships present in the harbour, the Bourbon ships were deterred from interfering.[28] The Lombardo was attacked and sunk only after the disembarkation had been completed, while the Piemonte was captured. The landing had been preceded by the arrival of Francesco Crispi and others, who had the task of gaining the support of the locals for the volunteers.

According to what was stated by the English historian George Macaulay Trevelyan in his book Garibaldi and the Thousand, the two English ships HMS Argus and HMS Intrepid did nothing to help Garibaldi,[29] nor could they have because their boilers were turned off and they were moored offshore, with their commanders Marryat and Winnington-Ingram on the ground together with part of the crew.[30] The neutrality of the English navy was confirmed during the battle of Palermo, when Garibaldi, left almost without gunpowder, requested it in vain from the commanders of the war fleets moored off the coast of the city.[31] Garibaldi's men left Marsala and quickly moved inland. They were joined, as early as 12 May, by 200 Sicilian volunteers commanded by the Sant'Anna brothers.

Calatafimi and Palermo

Giuseppe Garibaldi in Palermo

The Mille ('thousand') won a first battle at Calatafimi against around 2,000 Neapolitan troops on 15 May. The battle boosted the morale of the Mille and, at the same time, depressed the Neapolitans, who were poorly led by their often corrupt higher officers, and started to feel abandoned. Having promised land to every male who volunteered to fight against the Bourbons the ranks of the Mille enlarged to 1,200 with local men.[32]

On 27 May, with the help of a popular insurrection organized by La Masa and Gilbrossa, Garibaldi took Porto Termini and began the Siege of Palermo. General Lanza had replaced Castelcicala, and had under his command 21,000 troops, and a squadron of warships. Yet, the British Admiral Mundy organized an armistice, and the garrison evacuated on 7 July, after King Francis II authorized the Neapolitan withdrawal.[23]: 62–63 

On 7 July, Garibaldi proclaimed himself Dictator of Sicily "in the name of Victor Emmanuel, King of Italy." He reorganized the Thousand into the Southern Army, with the arrival of Giacomo Medici's additional troops, weapons, and ammunition. Garibaldi then ordered Medici to advance towards Messina, Enrico Cosenz to advance upon Catania, and Nino Bixio to advance upon Syracuse, gathering more Sicilian volunteer irregulars. Francis II strengthened his Neapolitan garrisons at Messina and Syracuse.[23]: 63 

Neapolitan retreat and Battle of Milazzo

Francis II and Maria Sophie
Lithograph of Garibaldi and his Red Shirts at the Battle of Milazzo

The Bourbon troops were ordered to retreat eastwards and evacuate the island. An insurrection that had broken out in Catania on 31 May, led by Nicola Fabrizi, was crushed by the local garrison, but the order to leave for Messina meant that this Neapolitan tactical success would have no practical results.

At the time only Syracuse, Augusta, Milazzo and Messina remained in royal hands in Sicily. In the meantime, Garibaldi issued his first law. A levy failed to muster more than 20,000 troops, while the peasants, who hoped for immediate relief from the grievous conditions to which they were forced by the landowners, revolted in several localities. At Bronte, on 4 August 1860, Garibaldi's friend Nino Bixio bloodily repressed one of these revolts with two battalions of Redshirts.

The pace of Garibaldi's victories had worried Cavour, who in early July sent him a proposal of immediate annexation of Sicily to Piedmont. Garibaldi, however, refused vehemently to allow such a move until the end of the war. Cavour's envoy, La Farina, was arrested and expelled from the island. He was replaced by the more malleable Agostino Depretis, who gained Garibaldi's trust and was appointed as pro-dictator.

On 25 June 1860, King Francis II of the Two Sicilies issued a constitution. However, this late attempt to conciliate his moderate subjects failed to rouse them to defend the regime, while liberals and revolutionaries were eager to welcome Garibaldi.

On 20 July Garibaldi attacked Milazzo with 4,000 men, under the command of Medici and Cosenz, against Bosco's 4,500. On 1 August, Bosco surrendered with honours, and was taken by ship to Real Cittadella, which was soon under siege. Over the next three weeks, with firm control of Sicily, Garibaldi prepared to cross the Straits of Messina.[23]: 63–64 

Landing and conquest in Calabria

Giuseppe Missori landing in Calabria

On 19 August Garibaldi's men disembarked in Calabria, a move opposed by Cavour, who had written the Dictator a letter urging him to not cross the Straits of Messina. Garibaldi, however, disobeyed, an act which had the silent approval of King Victor Emmanuel.

According to Schneid, "The timing of Garibaldi's crossing of the Straits of Messina and the invasion of the Papal States was more than coincidence.[23]: 65 

The Bourbons had some 20,000 men in Calabria, but, apart from some episodes like that of Reggio Calabria, which was conquered at high cost by Bixio on 21 August, they offered insignificant resistance, as numerous units of the Bourbon army disbanded spontaneously or even joined Garibaldi's ranks. On 30 August a conspicuous Sicilian army, led by General Ghio, was officially disbanded at Soveria Mannelli, while only minor and dispersed units continued the fight. The Neapolitan fleet behaved in a similar way.

The end

Battle of Volturnus, 1 October 1860
Meeting between King Victor Emmanuel II and Garibaldi at Teano, 26 October 1860

On 6 September, King Francis II fled Naples for the fortress city of Gaeta, and moved his army to the Volturno river. Garibaldi took possession of Naples, and on 11 September, crossed the Papal frontier.[23]: 65 

On 11 September, Cavour instigated the invasion of the Papal States, led by Manfredo Fanti. The Papal Army was led by Louis Juchault de Lamoricière, though Pope Pius IX's hope that Napoleon III and Franz Josef I of Austria would come to his aid was unfounded. General Enrico Cialdini's IV Corps attacked Pesaro, Enrico Morozzo Della Rocca's V Corps advanced on Perugia, while Persano blockaded Ancona. On 18 September, the Papal Army under Lamoriciére were defeated during the Battle of Castelfidardo, and the siege of Ancona began, finally surrendering on 29 September. According to Schneid, "The fall of Ancona ended the campaign in the Papal States. The Piedmontese Army occupied most of Umbria and Marche."[23]: 65–67 

According to Schneid, "Garibaldi narrowly won the Battle of Volturno. The Southern Army placed Capua under siege, and the Piedmontese forces marched on Gaeta where the erstwhile Neapolitan king had taken refuge." The Savoia Brigade landed north of Capua, while Della Rocca's V Corps, and the rest of the Piedmontese Army, crossed the Neapolitan frontier.[23]

A few days later (21 October) a plebiscite confirmed the annexation of the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies to the Kingdom of Sardinia by an overwhelming majority.

The end of the expedition is traditionally set with the famous meeting in Teano[33] (northern Campania) between Victor Emmanuel and Garibaldi (26 October 1860). Others assign instead the end of the campaign to the King's entrance into Naples on 7 November.

However, the military campaign was not yet fully completed, as Francis II held out in Gaeta until February of the next year, when he finally surrendered to the Sardinian army led by Enrico Cialdini, and left for exile in the Papal States. Shortly thereafter, in March 1861, the new Kingdom of Italy (Regno d'Italia) was formally established.

Garibaldi asked the King to remain in the former Two Sicilies for a year as dictator. He also asked that his officers be integrated into the new Italian Army. When Victor Emmanuel refused to grant the dictator his request but agreed to integrate the men and officers, he returned to Caprera.

Legacy

Most important officers of the Italian State paying homage to the Italian Unknown Soldier at Victor Emmanuel II Monument in Rome on 17 March 2023 on the occasion of the 162nd anniversary of the unification of Italy

The Expedition of the Thousand has traditionally been one of the most celebrated events of the Italian Risorgimento, the process of the unification of Italy.

In the following years, the rise of local resistance (the so-called brigantaggio or brigandage), required at one point the presence of some 140,000 Piedmontese troops to maintain control of the former Kingdom of the Two Sicilies. Traditionally, the handling of the brigantaggio has received a negative judgement by Italian historians, in strict contrast with the heroism attributed to Garibaldi and his followers; the English historian Denis Mack Smith,[34] for example, points out the deficiencies and reticence of the sources available for the period 1861–1946,[35] but the same historian also pointed out the backwardness of the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies at the time of the unification.[36][37]

The expedition, moreover, obtained the support of the powerful great landowners of southern Italy in exchange for the promise that their properties be left intact in the upcoming political settlement. Numerous Sicilian peasants, however, had joined the Mille hoping instead for a redistribution of the land to the people working it. The consequences of this misunderstanding became evident at Bronte.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b c George Macaulay Trevelyan (1913). Garibaldi e la formazione dell'Italia. Bologna: Zanichelli.
  2. ^ a b Alberto Mario Banti (2008). Il Risorgimento italiano. Rome-Bari: Laterza. ISBN 9788842085744.
  3. ^ Don Harrison Doyle (2002). Nations Divided: America, Italy, and the Southern Question. p. 31.
  4. ^ Christopher Duggan (2000). Creare la nazione. Vita di Francesco Crispi. Laterza.
  5. ^ Lorenzo Del Boca: "Maledetti Savoia", Edizioni PIEMME SpA 1998, ISBN 88-384-3142-6, p. 61 (in Italian)
  6. ^ Raffaele de Cesare (1895). La fine di un Regno. Città di Castello: S. Lapi Tipografo-Editore.
  7. ^ L'assedio di Gaeta nel 1860–61: Studio storico-militare, Federico Carandini, 1874, p.54
  8. ^ Alianello, Carlo (1982). La conquista del Sud (in Italian). Milan: Rusconi. pp. 15–16. ISBN 88-18-01157-X.
  9. ^ Di Nolfo, Ennio (1967). Europa e Italia nel 1855-1856 (in Italian). Roma: Istituto per la storia del Risorgimento italiano. p. 412. [ISBN unspecified]
  10. ^ Oliva 2012, p. 230.
  11. ^ Del Boca, Maledetti Savoia
  12. ^ Lorenzo Del Boca, Maledetti Savoia, see chapter Il copyright inglese
  13. ^ Gigi Di Fiore [it], I vinti del Risorgimento, Utet, Torino, 2004, p. 99.
  14. ^ Giacinto de' Sivo, Storia delle Due Sicilie 1847–1861, Edizioni Trabant, 2009, p. 331.
  15. ^ a b c Bouchard, Norma (2005). Risorgimento in Modern Italian Culture. Cranbury.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  16. ^ a b c d Trevelyan, George Macaulay (1912). Garibaldi and the Thousand. London: Longmans, Green, and co.
  17. ^ "unknown". The Conradian. 32–33. United Kingdom: Joseph Conrad Society. 2007. {{cite journal}}: Cite uses generic title (help)
  18. ^ a b c Richter, Ronald (2011). Garibaldi's "Zug der Tausend" in der Darstellung der deutschen Presse. Frankfurt.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  19. ^ Gelso, Aldo (2009). Events in Sicily. USA.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  20. ^ Ridley, Jasper Godwin (1976). Garibaldi. New York. ISBN 9780670335480.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  21. ^ a b Riall, Lucy (2007). Garibaldi: Invention of a Hero. Yale University Press.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  22. ^ Chambers, Osborne William (1864). Garibaldi and Italian Unity. London: Smith Elder and co.
  23. ^ a b c d e f g h Schneid, Frederick (2012). The Second War of Italian Unification 1859-61. Oxford: Osprey Publishing. pp. 58–62. ISBN 9781849087872.
  24. ^ a b c de Cesare, Raffaele (1900). La fine di un regno (in Italian). Vol. 2. Città di Castello: Scipione Lapi. pp. 204–205. [ISBN unspecified]
  25. ^ I Mille nella storia e nella leggenda, Carlo Agrati, pagg. 148-149
  26. ^ (in Italian). Milano: Tipografia Fratelli Borroni. 1861. pp. 77–78 https://books.google.it/books?id=1vssAAAAYAAJ&printsec=frontcover&dq=L%E2%80%99insurrezione+siciliana+(aprile+1860)+e+la+spedizione+di+Garibaldi&hl=it&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwixnvbvmOfaAhUDiywKHUsVBl4Q6AEIKTAA#v=onepage&q=L%E2%80%99insurrezione%20siciliana%20(aprile%201860)%20e%20la%20spedizione%20di%20Garibaldi&f=false. {{cite book}}: Missing or empty |title= (help); Unknown parameter |autore= ignored (|author= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |titolo= ignored (|title= suggested) (help)
  27. ^ George Macaulay Trevelyan (1909). Garibaldi e i mille (in Italian). Bologna: Zanichelli. p. 170.
  28. ^ These were: Stromboli (steam corvette), Valoroso (brigandine), Partenope (sail frigate) and the armed steamer Capri.
  29. ^ George Macaulay Trevelyan (1909). Garibaldi e i mille (in Italian). Bologna: Zanichelli. p. 308.
  30. ^ George Macaulay Trevelyan (1909). Garibaldi e i mille (in Italian). Bologna: Zanichelli. p. 303.
  31. ^ George Macaulay Trevelyan (1909). Garibaldi e i mille (in Italian). Bologna: Zanichelli. p. 416.
  32. ^ Riall, Lucy (12 March 1998). Sicily and the Unification of Italy: Liberal Policy and Local Power, 1859–1866. Clarendon Press. p. 71. ISBN 9780191542619.
  33. ^ Other sources (including Del Boca) set the location of the meeting at Taverna della Catena [it], in the territory of the modern comune of Vairano Patenora.
  34. ^ Denis Mack Smith, Italy and Its Monarchy.
  35. ^ Denis Mack Smith, I re d'Italia, Rizzoli, 1990
  36. ^ Italy: a modern history – Denis Mack Smith –University of Michigan – 1959 – page 3 [1]
  37. ^ "This difference between North and South was fundamental. A peasant from Calabria had little in common with one from Piedmont, and Turin was infinitely more like Paris and London than Naples and Palermo, for these two-halves were on quite different levels of civilization. Poets might write of the South as the garden of the world, the land of Sybaris and Capri, and stay-at-home politicians sometimes believed them; but in fact, most southerners lived in squalor, afflicted by drought, malaria, and earthquakes. The Bourbon rulers of Naples and Sicily before 1860 had been staunch supporters of a feudal system glamorized by the trappings of a courtly and corrupt society. They had feared the traffic of ideas and had tried to keep their subjects insulated from the agricultural and industrial revolutions of northern Europe. Roads were scanty or nonexistent, and passports were necessary even for internal travel. In the 'annus mirabilis' of 1860 these backward regions were conquered by Garibaldi and annexed by plebiscite to the North." —Italy: a modern history, Denis Mack Smith, page 3

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