File:Italy in the nineteenth century and the making of Austria-Hungary and Germany (1898) (14782671215).jpg

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Identifier: italyinnineteent00lati (find matches)
Title: Italy in the nineteenth century and the making of Austria-Hungary and Germany
Year: 1898 (1890s)
Authors: Latimer, Elizabeth Wormeley, 1822-1904 A.C. McClurg & Co
Subjects:
Publisher: Chicago, A.C. McClurg and company
Contributing Library: The Library of Congress
Digitizing Sponsor: The Library of Congress

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f the Emperor Napoleon. He hked to workunderground, for his own ends, and showed considerableskill in doing so. The restless Garibaldi at Caprera, the relations he keptup with the disaffected, and the designs he made no secretof harboring against the Papal States, continually disquietedRattazzi. Then, too, there were two armies in the field,under different leaders and under different discipline. Hewas perplexed how to get rid of the volunteers. He appearsto have conceived a plan for ridding himself of both em-barrassments by appearing secretly to favor Garibaldisdesigns for a new march on Rome, thereby leading him intoa trap, in which he might be caught, together with therasher portion of his adherents, and so put out of the wayof creating further embarrassment. This plan was promoted by Garibaldis intense indigna-tion and disgust at certain concessions made by the Rattazziministry to the French Emperor. It was reported that theCabinet was in close alliance with Louis Napoleon for the
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URBANO RATTAZZI. ITALY MADE —NOT COMPLETED. 247 division of Italy into three parts, — the northern one tobelong to Victor Emmanuel: the Pope to rule in the centre ;and the kingdom of the Two Sicilies (under what govern-ment it does not appear) to be restored. Absurd as this rumor was, it had its effect on Garibaldi.As president of a rifle corps association he travelled throughLombardy and the newly annexed duchies, exciting theyoung men. The Rattazzi ministry did not oppose him.He was carrying out their policy; he was playing intotheir hands. Mazzini, however, wholly disapproved the scheme ofGaribaldi, and would take no part in it. He thought, —as, indeed, did Victor Emmanuel, — that the first step togaining Rome should be to recover Venice. So Garibaldi had his own way unopposed, and againlanded in Sicily. At Palermo he found the two princes,Umberto and Amadeo, and passed some hours in theircompany. His reception in Palermo, and throughout Sicily,was triumphal. He was receive

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