History of Italy during foreign domination and the unification

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This is the history of Italy during foreign domination and the unification.

Contents

See Also: Italian Wars

At the beginning of the 16th century the states of the Italian peninsula began to suffer the effects of an economic crisis due to the move of the main trade routes from the Mediterranean to the Atlantic. Since Italy was not unified politically, most of the small and weak Italian states were defeated by foreign powers (mainly Spain); some of them (e.g. Milan and Naples) were annexed, others (e.g. Venice and Florence) were reduced to a lesser role. The papacy lost much of its importance both because of military defeats and the Protestant Reformation, which deeply weakened the Catholic Church.

In order to prevent the further expansion of Protestantism, the church endorsed the wars of the emperor Charles V (who was also king of Spain) and his successors, and started the so-called Counter-Reformation, with which it established strict control over intellectual life in Catholic countries. Soon, French and Spanish rivalries would present themselves in the Italian peninsula.

In 1494 Charles VIII of France invaded Italy unopposed. Charles entered Naples on February 22, 1495 and was crowned on May 12. In November his armies entered Florence while a revolution had expelled Piero de Medici. In 1495, Ferdinand II of Naples, son of Alfonso II started the Spanish acquisition of Naples with the help of a Venetian fleet and troops under the command of Gonzalo de Córdoba.

In 1498 France declared war on the Kingdom of Naples.

The Italian Wars led to Spanish hegemony over Italy. Spanish control was replaced with Austrian rule in the early eighteenth century, although Spanish control over Naples and Sicily was restored in 1731.

Spanish and Austrian hegemony was not always based on direct rule; while many states, such as Venice, did not come under the direct control of the empires, all of Italy relied on them for protection against external aggression. Furthermore those areas under direct Spanish and (later) Austrian control were theoretically independent principalities bound to the Spanish and Austrian empires through personal unions alone.

Italy experienced a period of relative peace in the seventeenth and eighteeth centuries. However, the Italian economy stagnated due to the decline of the Mediterranean trade routes; in the early seventeenth century the economy experienced a depression. The peninsula was not influenced by the Reformation, but Italy did make some contributions to the Enlightenment; it produced some examples of enlightened absolutism and some intellectuals such as Galileo and Genovesi. Enlightened despots ruled in the conservative Papal states, and some reformists movements existed in conservative Venice.

Main article: Italian unification

At the end of the 18th century, Italy was almost in the same political conditions as in the 16th century; the main differences were that Austria had replaced Spain as the dominant foreign power (and that too was not true with regards to Naples and Sicily), and that the dukes of Savoy (a mountainous region between Italy and France) had become kings of Sardinia by increasing their Italian possessions, which now included Sardinia and the north-western region of Piedmont. This situation was shaken in 1796, when French armies led by Napoleon invaded Italy; even if the states they created (e.g., Cisalpine Republic) were just satellites of France, they sparked a nationalist movement. The Cisalpine Republic was converted into the Italian Republic in 1802, under the presidency of Napoleon; a Kingdom of Italy was later set up. A second satellite state, the Ligurian Republic (successor to the old Republic of Genoa), was pressured into merging with France in 1805.

The Congress of Vienna (1814) restored a situation close to that of 1795, dividing Italy between Austria (in the north-east and Lombardy), the Kingdom of Sardinia, the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies (in the south and in Sicily), and Tuscany, the Papal States and other minor states in the centre. However, some of the old republics such as Venice and Genoa were not recreated (Venice went to Austria, and Genoa went to the Kingdom of Sardinia).

For the transformation of the peninsula into the Kingdom of Italy see the main article on Italian unification.

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