Authors: Timothy H. Parsons
Tags: #Oxford University Press, #9780195304312, #Inc
Most of the Giacobini and patriots, however, were reassured that the
French forces included exiled Italian republicans and were won over
by Napoleon’s rhetoric of revolutionary fraternalism and Italian
nationalism. They therefore welcomed the French in the hope that
they would bring reform and perhaps even unifi cation.
The realities of the Directory’s three years of rule in Italy, from
1796 through 1799 (the
triennio
), ultimately proved Buonarroti right.
The French quickly demonstrated that they were empire builders,
266 THE RULE OF EMPIRES
not liberators. Napoleon’s fi rst priorities in consolidating his victories
over the Austrians and their local allies were stability and plunder.
He worked with the Giacobini and patriots when it suited him, but
he was equally willing to forge alliances with their more moderate
and conservative countrymen. In fact, the Directory actually ordered
Napoleon not to encourage the radicals because they expected to
return northern Italy to the Austrians as part of a negotiated peace.
Consequently, the would-be nationalists in Piedmont who had
cheered the French invasion forces were frustrated when Napoleon
signed an armistice with their king. Equally troubling, the Frenchsponsored sister republics that replaced the ancien régime states
proved to be little more than imperial puppets. The Giacobini and
allied Italian moderates were initially well represented in the new
governments, but they steadily lost infl uence as the French asserted
more direct control. Moreover, Napoleon redrew and juggled their
borders to suit his needs.
In northern Italy, the French turned Genoa into the Ligurian
Republic and engineered the Cisalpine Republic by merging the
Duchy of Milan, the Lombard Republic, the Cispadane Republic (consisting of Bologna, Ferrara, Modena, and Reggio), and parts of the
Papal States. Napoleon appointed himself president, nominated the
representatives to its assemblies, and had veto power over legislation.
As president, he signed an unequal commercial treaty with France
and forced the republic to pay for the twenty-fi ve-thousand-man
French military garrison on its soil.
The southern Italian puppet states were even more haphazard
and tenuous. Napoleon left Italy to pursue grander ambitions in late
1797, but his deputies occupied what was left of the Papal States to
suppress the highly conservative Pope Pius VI and radical democratic
clubs in Rome. They proclaimed a Roman Republic in 1798, which
in turn drew King Ferdinand of Naples into the confl ict. Backed by
Britain and seeking to restore the Pope, Ferdinand provoked a French
counteroffensive that forced him to seek refugee on Sicily under the
protection of the Royal Navy. The power vacuum allowed the professional classes in Naples to create the Parthenopean Republic.
Awakening to the realities of subjecthood, some Italian republicans called for the French to leave as early as 1797, but even then it
was too late. Demonstrating that Napoleon’s grand pronouncements
about liberating Italy from the ancien régime were simple propaganda,
Napoleonic
Italy 267
Frenchmen of every station quickly turned their attention to extraction. The Directory saddled the Italian sister republics with millions
of francs in indemnities in addition to requisitioning an extensive
inventory of military matériel. In Naples, the republican regime’s
marginal popular support evaporated when the French indemnity of
two and a half million ducats and the Directory’s insistence that it
cover the cost of a French garrison forced the government to levy a
range of invasive new taxes. The Directory also ordered Napoleon to
seize great works of art and cultural treasures as compensation for
the sacrifi ces of the French populace in Italy. This high-class plunder included paintings from Milanese churches, papal treasures, four
bronze horses from the façade of the Basilica di San Marco in Venice,
and thirteen volumes of Leonardo’s manuscripts. At the opposite end
of the spectrum, French troopers looted with impunity. Resistance
simply invited violent retribution. Napoleon’s men punished Pavia
for defying French demands by sacking the city, shooting the members of the town council, and burning neighboring villages.
French imperial meddling was so unpopular that moderate
reformers and Giacobini radicals paid a heavy price for cooperating
with Napoleon when the
triennio
came to an abrupt and unexpected
end. In 1799, the French suddenly lost their grip on Italy after Napoleon became bogged down in Egypt and the Austrian and Russian
armies of the Second Coalition invaded from the north. The outbreaks of popular resistance that had cropped up sporadically during the triennio blossomed into full-scale rebellions. In what became
known as the “Black Year,” ancien régime rulers allied with the Catholic Church and peasant communities angered by French meddling
attacked the Giacobini and aspiring nationalists throughout the peninsula. Popular distaste for the French and their radical clients was so
strong that many commoners actually greeted the Austrian armies
as liberators.
The Church was also a popular rallying point. Stories of church
bells ringing by themselves and miraculous cures at religious shrines
refl ected a resurgence of popular faith in response to the radicals’
anticlerical agenda. Putting aside their issues with the Pope, northern Italians shouted “Viva Maria” as they rose in revolt. In Lombardy, peasants rallied to a leader who claimed he had been called by
Christ to punish the French. In the south, a “most Christian armada
of the Holy Faith” of roughly one hundred thousand peasants and
268 THE RULE OF EMPIRES
bandits under Cardinal Fabrizio Ruffo marched on Naples singing,
“The French arrived, they taxed us;
liberté
. . .
égalité
, you rob me,
I rob thee!”29 Ruffo’s main goal was to restore papal authority, but in
raising the Armata della Santa Fede (Holy Faith army) he infl amed
long-standing local tensions resulting from the ancien régime’s centralizing agenda. This civil strife simmered just beneath the surface
of what at face value appeared to be a counterrevolutionary popular
rejection of the Parthenopean Republic and its French backers. The
Sanfedists slaughtered thousands when they captured Naples, but
this violence was as much due to widespread opposition to absolutist
reform as it was to anti-French sentiment.
The Giacobini allied with the French conquerors in the hope that
they could turn the Directory’s imperial project to their own ends.
The bloodshed of the Black Year demonstrated that they overreached
dangerously in trying to harness the power of revolutionary absolutism. The Sanfedists executed the republicans in Naples, and northern
mobs attacked radical reformers, Jews, and any other constituency
that appeared to have prospered under French rule. Ever mindful of
the threat of further revolution, the Austrians sent hundreds of Giacobini in the Cisalpine Republic to Balkan prisons.
Cardinal Ruffo and more sober aristocrats soon worried that
this counterrevolutionary crusade might spin out of their control.
It was not too far-fetched to imagine that the peasants and urban
mobs might turn on the bastions of privilege and property once they
fi nished with the Giacobini. Consequently, some Italian elites were
receptive to Napoleon’s offer of
ralliement
when the French retook
control of Italy in 1800 after his victory over the Austrians at the
Battle of Marengo. The ensuing Peace of Lunéville one year later recreated the Cisalpine and Ligurian republics that the Austrians and
their ancien régime allies had so carefully dismantled.
This did not mean, however, that the Giacobini regained their infl uence. Much in the way that British empire builders dismissed western-educated Indians as useless after the violence of 1857, Napoleon
gave up on the radicals because they proved poor imperial proxies
during the Black Year. Instead he courted Italian moderates and pragmatic ancien régime notables. In turn, many disillusioned Giacobini
and patriots joined the multitude of vaguely nationalist secret societies that sprang up throughout Italy at the turn of the nineteenth
century. These disorganized and fractious cabals never constituted a
Napoleonic
Italy 269
serious threat, and the Giacobini either made their peace with the
French or faded into obscurity.
With his hold on France secure and his victory over the Second
Coalition complete, Napoleon had the means to reorder Italy to suite
his grand imperial designs. In the ensuing years, he annexed Piedmont,
Tuscany, Umbria, Parma, Rome, and the Ligurian Republic as fourteen
départements réunis
. The restored Cisalpine Republic became the Italian Republic (later the Kingdom of Italy) with the addition of the unannexed parts of the Papal States and territory in northern Italy taken
from the Austrians. Napoleon did not get around to tinkering with the
Kingdom of Naples until 1805, when he deposed the restored Bourbon
regime. By the end of the decade, virtually every Italian experienced
Napoleonic rule as a new Frenchman in the
départements réunis
or a
subject of the puppet kingdoms of Italy and Naples.
In the fi rst case, annexation should have spared Italians from the
full weight of imperial extraction because they technically became
French. Not since the days of romanization had an empire been so
committed to assimilating subject communities, but as in Roman
times, the realities of imperial subjecthood remained harsh and fundamentally oppressive. In Piedmont, French became the required language of education and business, while the Grand Armée absorbed its
eight-thousand-man army. As in metropolitan France, prefects and
subprefects administered each new department in accordance with
Napoleon’s centralizing program. Similarly,
gendarmerie
brigades
imposed and enforced the Code Napoleon. The legitimizing ideology
of the Napoleonic empire held that this expanded bureaucracy was
open to assimilated men of talent, but in the Italian
départements
réunis
the prefects, subprefects, gendarmes, judges, and policemen
were overwhelmingly French.
Assimilated Piedmontese were the only new Frenchmen to play a
signifi cant role in the imperial bureaucracy. Although the French general who oversaw Piedmont’s annexation initially warned that “generally [the people] heartily detest us,” it was relatively easy to absorb
the kingdom because the Piedmontese shared a similar culture with
their French conquerers.30 As a result, some ambitious young men
embraced the opportunities of Napoleonic rule after an initial period
of resistance. They were the only Italians to assume senior positions
in the administration, police, and courts in noteworthy numbers. Yet
French imperial offi cials never really accepted the Piedmontese as
270 THE RULE OF EMPIRES
equals and held them to be slow, clannish, and incapable of grasping
the complexities of the Code Napoleon.
In Rome, the French hoped to win over the notable and propertied
classes after the city’s annexation in 1809 through effi cient rule and
improved law and order. Cosmopolitan Romans, however, resented
being treated as imperial subjects and disliked the Piedmontese who
monopolized senior positions in the courts and administration. The
Pope’s call for mass nonviolent resistance to French rule after his exile
also made it diffi cult to recruit suitable local men to staff the lower
levels of the imperial administrative machinery.
French offi cials soon grew frustrated by their inability to exercise
power at the local level. Not surprisingly, the Code Napoleon was
simply too alien to impose on a rural population that had long practice in resisting centralized absolutist reform. However, the Napoleonic authorities blamed the Italians for their failure to recognize the
benefi ts of French rule and civilization. If the assimilated Piedmontese were not worthy of full imperial citizenship in French eyes, then
it was hardly surprising that they disdained the mass of Italian new
Frenchmen as backward, if not blatantly barbarous.
In the rest of the peninsula, the theoretically autonomous status
of the kingdoms of Italy and Naples offered no greater protection
from the worst aspects of Napoleonic imperial rule than the paper citizenship the French imposed on the
départements réunis
. Napoleon
himself resumed the presidency of the Italian Republic after both his
brother Joseph and his Milanese ally Francesco Melzi turned it down
on the grounds that the reconfi gured government was too weak. In
accepting the vice presidency, Melzi hoped to lay the groundwork
for an elite-ruled unifi ed Italian state, but he was never able to raise
the Italian Republic above the status of a French puppet. Additionally, Napoleon banned all political parties and retained the power to
appoint ministers and conduct foreign affairs. Most important, he had
total control over the republic’s Armée d’Italie, which was essentially
part of the regular French army.