history facts - italy

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44 Terms

1
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1860s ?

Unification of Italy

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1882

Triple Alliance

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1885

Franchise extended from 2% to 25% of men

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1896

Italy defeated by Abyssinia at Battle of Adowa

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1898

Major riots in which over 100 people were killed

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1900

King Umberto assassinated + a banking crisis

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1911

Giolitti was made Prime Minister for the 4th time after coming to power in 1900 + INVASION OF LIBYA

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1912

Turkey surrendered Libya + extension of franchise to most men

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1913

General Election + Gentolini Pact

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1914

Giolitti resigned as PM and was replaced by Salandra + 'Red Week' and declaration of neutrality in WWI

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1915

April

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Risorgimento

rebirth' and refers to unification in the 1860s.

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'Legal' and 'real' Italy

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Roman question

Catholic Church's refusal to recognise the legitimacy of the Liberal State and the loss of the Papal States.

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Trasformismo

system of bargains and compromises that politicians made with each other to form a government. Giolitti was the master of making such deals to form a majority. Party loyalty counted for little. Trasformismo was less effective when the electorate expanded in 1913.

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Italia irredent

Italian speaking territories occupied by Austria (South Tyrol, Trentino, Istria, Dalmatia, Triest, Fiume)

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Treaty of London

IN april 1915 British agree to grant italia irredenta (except for Fiume) in exchange for Italy's declaration of war against Austria and Germany

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Reformists

Moderates in the socialist party led by Turrati

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Maximalists

Extremists in the Socialist Party (mussolini as leader)

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Liberal party

A loose collection of groups generally in favour of the status quo and included Radicals (anti-clerical), Catholics, Nationalists, Democrats and Conservatives. Liberals dominated parliament in terms of numbers but they were divided. They tended to group themselves around patrons such as Giolitti on the Left and Salandra on the Right of the party.

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PSI

Italian Socialist party

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ANI

Italian Nationalist Association

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Futurists

Intellectual movement led by Marinetti who glorified violence and influenced Nationalists

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Industrial triangle

Industrial base centred around the cities of Turin, Genoa and Milan

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Syndicalists

Extreme trade unions advocating strike action

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Catholic action

The umbrella organisation for numerous charitable and sports club that spread the church's influence beyond priests

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Franchise

Extension of vote

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Giolitti's reform programme

i) Abolished child labour ii) Social insurance and pensions iii) Maternity Fund iv) Spending on public works increased by 50% v) balanced the budget by restraining expenditure on armed forces vi) maintained government neutrality in industrial disputes. The last point is the most important policy because it enabled trade unions to strike and force employers into increasing wages.

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Anti clericalists

Italians who opposed the power of the Catholic Church. They rejected religious involvement in schools and marriage. Socialists & Radicals were anti-clericalists. Giolitti's electoral pact with the Catholics in the 1913 elections led to the Radicals withdrawing their support, forcing Giolitti to resign as PM in 1914 because he could no longer command a majority. Salandra replaced him.

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'Red week'

Following the resignation of Giolitti in March 1914 the new PM, Salandra, reversed many of his reforms, in particular non-intervention in strikes. The provoked the Left into rioting in which hundreds were killed by the police. The Socialists were too disorganised to maintain the momentum and as the name suggests only lasted one week.

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Declaration of neutrality

Italy was part of the defensive Triple Alliance to help further her colonial gains. She remained neutral in August 1914 by claiming that Austria's invasion of Serbia was an aggressive act. Italy had little to gain from fighting alongside Austria and much to lose by making enemies of France and Britain.

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Stat about illiteracy

In 1911, illiteracy was 45% in the South and 10% in the North

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Steel stat

Germany produced 20x as much steel as Italy

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Agricultural yields stat

French agricultural yields were double that of Italy

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Italian GDP stat

Italy's GDP grew by 2.8% annually and workers' wages grew by 40% from 1900 to 1914 and this explains why the working classes were generally non-revoluntionary in outlook until 'Red week' in 1914

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Election stats

In the 1913 election the Socialists won 22% of the vote but only 69 deputies (15% of seats) because Proportional Representation was not introduced until after WWI. The nationalists only had 3 deputies. The liberal coalition lost some deputies but they still dominated (318 out of 511)

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Italy lagging behind industrially stats

60% of the population in 1914 was concerned with agricultural production. In Britain it was just 15%. This difference reflected how Italy lagged behind other European countries in industrialisation

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Po valley

Po valley was the most fertile region of Italy

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Franchise extension

Only 2% of men could vote. In 1870 and it was restricted to the wealthy, the franchise was extended to 25% of men in 1885 but the majority of men were not eligible to vote until 1912

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Electorate increase

The electorate increased from 3 to 8 million in 1912

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Socialist news

Circulation of the main Socialist newspaper, Avanti! (Forward!), quadrupled between 1912 and 1914. This was mainly due its new editor and rising star among the Maximalists of the PSI, Benito Mussolini.

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Membership of PSI

Membership of the PSI in 1914 was 50,000. It was growing but was not yet a mass party

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death of soldiers in libya

3,000 from 1911-12

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Deputies support for Giolitti

300 out of 510 deputies (majority) expressed support for Giolitti's attempt to prevent the declaration of war in May 1915, but he backed down when the king threatened to abdicate and provoke a constitutional crisis.