

An edition of Cavour and Garibaldi, 1860 (1954)
a study in political conflict
By Denis Mack Smith
Publish Date
1985
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
Language
eng
Pages
458
Description:
First published in 1954, and now re-issued with a fresh preface, Cavour and Garibaldi remains the single most important contribution yet made by an English-speaking historian to the study of the Risorgimento. Devoted to seven crucial months in 1860, the work examines in detail the sequence of events between the Sicilian rebellion in April, and the absorption of all the south into the Italian kingdom of Victor Emmanuel in November. It shows, in the contrasting priorities of the two great leaders, the creative tensions that underlay the movement for Italian unification. Against Cavour's desire to extend to the rest of the peninsula the benefits of Piedmontese liberalism, the author juxtaposes Garibaldi's dream of a united Italy, achieved if necessary by force. The diplomat and political strategist is compared with the soldier and popular hero, and in the comparison it is Garibaldi who emerges as the realist, and Cavour as the inspired but dogmatic muddler.
subjects: Garibaldi, Giuseppe, 1807-1882, History, Italy War of 1860-1861, Cavour, camillo benso, conte di, 1810-1861
People: 100 Camillo Benso Cavour conte di (1810-1861), Camillo Benso Cavour conte di (1810-1861), Giuseppe Garibaldi (1807-1882)
Places: Italy, Naples (Kingdom)
Times: 1848-1861, War of 1860-1861