Nationalism - Italy

From LearnSocialStudies
Revision as of 09:40, 23 December 2021 by Admin (talk | contribs) (1 revision imported)

Aim: How Was the Modern Nation of Italy Created?

Do Now: Unification of Italy

Lesson Overview:

Item Approx Time
Do Now 3-5 Min
Mini Lesson 15-20 Min
Activity 15 Min
Discussion 5-7 Min

Nationalism - Italy

The Unification of Italy

The political structure of the Italian peninsula prior to 1861 was that of a fragmented group of small kingdoms and principalities. There was no political cohesion while internal fighting and rivalries were hampering any progress. However, the people of the Italian peninsula, shared language, culture and a historical background. Some Italian leaders began calling for nationalism with the goal of bringing Italy together into a sovereign nation-state with autonomous rule.

The most famous of Italian nationalistic leaders were Count Camilo Cavour, Guiseppe Garibaldi, and Guiseppe Mazzini. Mazzini was instrumental in being the "Heart" of Italian nationalism. He also established the secret society known as Young Italy, an organization devoted to a united Italy. Garibaldi was considered to be the "sword" of Italian nationalism. His band of Red Shirts conquered forces opposed to unification and forced southern Italy into a cohesive political unit. Cavour (shown here) was the "brain" in his role as a skilled diplomat. Cavour successfully received aid from France in a war against the Austrians and eventually put Victor Emmanuel II on the throne of a completely united Italian nation-state in 1861.

The Brain The Sword The Heart
Cavour Garibaldi Mazzini

Classwork & Homework

Lesson PowerPoint: Unification of Italy

Lesson Activity: Unification of Italy

Homework: Unification of Italy & Germany