Unification had begun in 1859 and the
Kingdom of Italy was created in 1861
Unification was complete in 1870 with
the takeover of the state of Rome
It had essentially been taken over by the state
of Piedmont with little popular enthusiasm
There were vast differences
between each Italian State
Led to political, social, economic, cultural and
religious problems
Caused a number of problems for the Liberal
government which would contribute ot its
downfall and the rise of the fascist party
Nature of the
Political System
Very similar to that of Britain
Hereditary Monarch, who appoints a government which is led by a Prime
Minister and is advised by an elected member of Parliament which has a
senate and a chamber of deputies
Initially very few people had the vote and
only the wealthy and educated elite could vote
Suffrage was raised to 25% of adult males in 1882
but was still not representative of the people
To stay in power politicians did deals with each other in order
to form governments. This was called TRANSFORMISMO
Local government was also corrupt with prefects being
appointed by the central govenrment thus isolating the masses
Impact of the North/South
Divide and Cultural
Variations
The North was much more industrially
developed than the South.
The three major engineering cities were
Milan, Turin and Genoa
North had a better infrastructure
1370km of railway in the North
compared to 100km in the South in 1861
38000km of road in the North compared to
13800km in the South in 1861
During the 1890s 90% of the South had no roads
68% of the North was illiterate
compared to 87% of the South in 1861
There were language differences
The majority of the population was rural,
most of the rural population lived in the South
57% in 1913 compared to 15% in Britain
Emigration rates were rising from 168,000
in the 1870's to 1,580.000 in the 1890s (many from the South)
Liberal governments saw education as
important and illiteracy rates fell
North - 42% in 1871 to 11% in 1911
South - 88% to 65%
North/South divide continued to grow as
industry in the North grew from 1900
Italy's Relative Weakness
as a Great Power
Far behind other European Countires
Produced 0.1 million tonnes of steel in 1890
compared to Britain's 3.6 million tones
Lacked vital resources such as coal and iron
GNP rose by 4% between 1860-96 compared to Britain,
France and Germany where it rose by 40-50%
Italy's army had only 0.75 million soldiers for
mobilisation in 1914 while Germany had 2.2 million
Italy had only spent £10 million on the military between 1913-14
compared to Germany which spent £60 million in the same period
Nationalists wanted Italian speaking areas which had
not been incorporated into the new state to be acquired
Italia Irredenta (unredeemed Italy) included
Trentino, South Tyrol, Istria, Dalmatia,
Corsica, NIce and Savoy
Recognised the weakness against Austria/Hungary
and France so looked to Africa for an Empire
Nationalists wanted an aggressive foreign policy
in order to build support to unite the Italian people
Italy were too weak to match its aspirations
Italy lost out in the 'scramble for Africa'
Was given Somaliland and Ertitrea ('crumbs of Africa')
Joined the Triple Alliance with Germany and
Austria in 1882 in order to deter France
Invaded Abyssinia in 1896 but were
humiliated and suffered 15,000 casualties
Defeated the already weak Turkey
in 1911-12 and gained Libya
Italy didn't join WW1 with Germany and Austria/Hungry
in fear of the French Army and British Navy
Signed the secret Treaty of London in 1915
hoping to gain parts if Italia Irredenta