Authors: Timothy H. Parsons
Tags: #Oxford University Press, #9780195304312, #Inc
than their secular imperial counterparts and often directed both passive and active resistance to French rule. Some historically minded
churchmen even compared the French Empire to the apocalyptical
threat of the “heathen” Umayyad caliphate’s invasion of Christian
Europe. Rejecting Napoleon’s secular legal code, lay Catholics held
priestless masses and sheltered monks and nuns displaced by his closure of the monasteries.
Most popular resistance to Napoleonic rule was local and uncoordinated, but it had the capacity to grow into widespread rebellion
in regions where geography and banditry limited French authority.
Most of the German-speaking lands remained relatively stable, but
large-scale revolts were common in the waning years of the empire
in the Tyrolean Alps, southern Italy, the Illyrian Provinces, and
Iberia. The most serious of these incidents took place in 1808 after
Napoleonic
Italy 261
Napoleon invaded Spain. Although the Spanish Bourbons were technically French allies, they balked at enforcing the continental system.
Napoleon therefore used a dynastic squabble between Charles IV
and his son Ferdinand VII as an opportunity to depose them both
and shift his brother Joseph from the puppet Kingdom of Naples to
the Spanish throne. The consequences of this move reverberated all
the way to the Andes, where the collapse of royal authority brought
nearly four centuries of Spanish rule in Peru to an end.
In Spain, abuses by the hundred-thousand-man imperial invasion
force and Napoleon’s threat to the autonomy and privileges of local
Iberian communities provoked a massive popular backlash. From the
French perspective, it appeared that all of Spain had risen against
them. Guerrilla bands dismembered or crucifi ed captured imperial
soldiers and murdered helpless French hospital patients. The rebel
Spanish government at Cádiz and the local clergy sanctioned the execution of captured troops, and common villagers poisoned unsuspecting Frenchmen or pushed them down wells. The Napoleonic forces
fought back by matching the guerrillas atrocity for atrocity, but they
could neither subdue the Spanish countryside nor dislodge a British expeditionary force from Iberia. The situation grew so bad that
many French units, which often consisted of Poles or conscripted Italians and Germans, lost the will to fi ght. As a result, the Peninsular
War tied down some two hundred thousand imperial troops at a time
when Napoleon desperately needed them in Russia.
Not surprisingly, many Spanish historians depict this widespread
resistance to French empire building in nationalist terms. In reality,
Spanish nationalism was not yet a coherent ideology, and the rebellion
was not a popular mass uprising. In many cases, the guerrillas were
little more than bandits who preyed on the rural population as much
as they did on the French. More signifi cant, Spanish peasants had little concept of a larger Spanish nation in this period, and few of them
were willing to sacrifi ce themselves for the Bourbons. As in the rest
of Napoleonic Europe, they fought the French because they opposed
Napoleon’s more extractive and intrusive form of subjecthood.
Most Italians felt the same way. At fi rst glance, it seems remarkable that the heirs of the Roman Empire and the architects of the
Renaissance would ever experience the harsh realities of imperial subjecthood. One of the great strengths of the ancient Roman
Republic was the sense of unity that enabled local communities
262 THE RULE OF EMPIRES
throughout the Italian peninsula to think of themselves as Roman
and thus share the benefi ts of Roman citizenship. The collapse of the
western empire in the seventh century and ensuing incursions by
a steady parade of invaders including Germanic bands, Byzantines,
Muslim Arabs,
Normans, medieval Germans, and early modern
Spaniards and Austrians fractured the peninsula politically. The
great Renaissance city-states of northern Italy were formidable military powers and centers of learning and culture, but competition
and mutual distrust kept them from turning this shared culture into
larger political units.
These divisions left Italy vulnerable in the fi fteenth and sixteenth
centuries as the Italians became pawns in the wider struggles between
the French, Spanish, and Austrians. Most of the main Italian states
and regional powers became clients or vassals of various foreign rulers, with only Venice and Genoa retaining a measure of autonomy.
Economic stagnation, widespread rural poverty, and the decline of
the great Italian universities accelerated these trends. Europeans still
respected Italians for their humanism, decorative arts, and opera, but
the preeminence that Renaissance Italy had enjoyed throughout the
continent was largely over.
The Spanish Habsburgs exploited this weakness in giving the Italians a strong lesson in imperial subjecthood. Building on his grandfather Ferdinand’s claims to the kingdoms of Sicily and Naples, Charles
V drove out the French and assumed control of most of the peninsula.
Spanish rule was far from popular. Common Italians resented paying
taxes to fund the Habsburg wars, and intellectuals looked down on
the Spaniards as barbarians on par with the Turks.
The situation did not improve in the early eighteenth century
when the Austrian Habsburgs became the dominant force on the
peninsula after the War of the Spanish Succession. The change in
masters meant little, and in 1725 a Piedmont diplomat lamented the
Italians’ continued imperial exploitation at the hands of the foreigners. “The provinces of Italy are the Indies of the Court of Vienna
[Habsburgs]. For more than twenty-fi ve years a good part of the silver
of Italy has gone there.”26 Pursuing an agenda of absolutist reform,
Empress Maria Theresa and her son Joseph II sought to improve revenue collection and extraction by asserting their sovereignty over
feudal nobles and checking the power of the Church. Most of the
remaining independent Italian ancien régime rulers followed suite.
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Italy 263
In doing so they introduced many of the centralizing measures that
Napoleon would continue and expand a century later.
The Austrian attempts to create more effi cient forms of
administration did not arrest Italy’s economic decline. In spite of the
cultural and commercial infl uence of the Renaissance city-states, Italian society remained predominantly rural and agrarian on the eve of
the fi rst Napoleonic conquest. Urban areas were the centers of absolutist reform and were the economic engine of the peninsula. They
exercised only marginal infl uence on the mountainous hinterlands
that ran down the spine of the peninsula through patronage and control of the judiciary. Most rural communities, particularly those in
remote and rugged regions, remained largely autonomous. In these
areas the clergy and important local families exercised the greatest
authority.
In the fertile lowlands, the Church and great noble families dominated agricultural production through large estates worked primarily
by sharecroppers. In the eighteenth century, urban elites sought security in rural holdings as the Italian manufacturing and commercial
sectors contracted. Wealthy aristocrats and infl uential rural families
enclosed common lands, squeezed greater returns from their tenants,
and evicted peasant farmers. Stagnant wages, unemployment, and
escalating food prices made life worse for the agrarian classes, and the
result was a substantial increase in poverty, vagabondage, and outright banditry.
These sharp class and regional divisions prevented Italians from
emulating the French. Overall, they shared a pride in their Roman
heritage and Renaissance achievements, but they had no sense of how
to create a unifi ed nation-state. Their
patria
(fatherland) usually was
their city or region of birth, and only a small handful of intellectuals
aspired to create a
nazione
(nation). Men such as the playwright Vittorio Alfi eri, the choreographer Gasparo Angiolini, and the philosopher Count Francesco Algarotti were immensely proud of Italy’s vast
cultural achievements and lamented that centuries of alien French,
Spanish, and Austrian rule had left its people backward and divided.27
In the late eighteenth century, the poet and novelist Ugo Foscolo had
his character Jacopo Ortis lay out a plan for producing “Italians”:
There can be a country without inhabitants; but there can never be a
people without a country. . . . Let’s transform the masses, if not all at
264 THE RULE OF EMPIRES
least many of them, into well-to-do citizens who own land. But be
careful! This must all be accomplished without bloodshed, without
religious reforms that are sacrilegious, without factions, without proscriptions and exiles, without the aid and blood and plundering of
foreign troops, without the division of lands with agrarian laws and
the looting of a family’s property.28
Yet neither Foscolo nor any of the other nation-minded thinkers
had a specifi c blueprint for getting the common peoples of the peninsula to recognize that they were Italians. For the
popolani
(lower
classes),
campanilismo
(village patriotism) was far more potent than
nebulous Italian nationalism. As was the case in most of continental Europe, the identities of the vast majority of the peoples of Italy
remained decidedly local.
This was the situation when the French revolutionary armies
invaded Italy in 1796. At that time, the peninsula’s ten major political units consisted of the Papal States, the kingdoms of Naples and
Piedmont-Sardinia, the republics of Venice, Genoa, and Lucca, and
the duchies of Modena, Parma, Milan, and Tuscany. Children or
grandchildren of Empress Maria Theresa ruled Tuscany, Modena,
Naples, Parma, and Milan, which, to varying degrees, placed them
within the Austrian sphere of infl uence. Many of these rulers
attempted to adopt the Habsburgs’ centralizing absolutist agenda
to break down entrenched feudal institutions, but only Piedmont,
Milan, and Tuscany achieved any degree of success. Moreover, none
of these largely foreign rulers had any intention of trying to unify
the peninsula or granting their Italian subjects greater political
rights.
Frustrated reform-minded Italians therefore saw an opportunity
in the demise of the ancien régime in France. Viewing the revolutions
in France and America as models for change, intellectuals, protonationalists (“patriots”), Freemasons, and university students followed
the events in Paris closely. Each faction had its own distinct agenda,
and in most cases all these groups had in common was a commitment
to challenge the status quo in Italy. The most radical of them took the
revolutionary regime in France as inspiration and founded Jacobin
clubs. Even though these Italian Jacobins (Giacobini) and patriots were
far less anticlerical and extreme than their French counterparts, they
had relatively little popular support. Still, even the hint of subversion
alarmed the foreign rulers of Italy. Most governments therefore tried
Napoleonic
Italy 265
to limit the revolutionary contagion by censoring newspapers and
banning imports of subversive literature.
Despite these efforts, radical jargon still found its way into the
language of local resistance as peasants shouted revolutionary slogans and threatened to “act like the French” during riots in Piedmont,
Bologna, and Naples. Few had any real knowledge of Jacobinism,
but they understood that it scared ancien régime rulers. Even more
alarming to those in authority, the Giacobini drew some support from
minor nobles, young middle-class professionals, junior army offi cers,
and lower clergymen who were frustrated by the slow pace of reform.
In time, the various Italian kings and dukes cracked down on the radicals and allied more closely with Austria when evidence emerged that
the Convention was actively trying to instigate revolutions in Italy.
The Italian governments’ aggressive tactics and retreat from enlightened reform led many Giacobini to look more directly to the French
revolutionary regime for relief. In 1793, the Convention sent agents
to Italy to organize them to assist a French invasion, but it eventually
decided the Italian radicals were too divided and tradition-bound to be
of much use. It fell to the Directory to launch the conquest of Italy
two years later. Some of the directors backed the operation to gain bargaining chips in their peace negotiations with the Austrians, but others
saw an opportunity to restructure the northern Italian states as model
sister republics. None of them foresaw the consequences of choosing
Napoleon to lead the expedition.
The Corsican general’s rapid conquest of northern Italy far
exceeded the Directory’s and the Italian radicals’ most ambitious
expectations. From the Italian perspective, only a few patriots, such as
the Tuscan nobleman Filippo Buonarroti, were farsighted enough to
recognize the risks of allying with an imperial conqueror. Buonarroti
tried to organize a pan-Italian revolt to preempt the French invasion, but the Italian authorities uncovered the plot and arrested him.