Authors: Timothy H. Parsons
Tags: #Oxford University Press, #9780195304312, #Inc
to neighboring territories was a less drastic recourse, and offi cials in
the Kingdom of Italy estimated that more than twenty thousand eligible men dodged conscription in this manner. Those who did not
escape the French roundup frequently took the fi rst opportunity to
desert. Approximately thirty thousand to forty thousand conscripted
soldiers chose this option in the Italian kingdom between 1803 and
1812, and desertion rates climbed even higher in later years as news
of the terrible losses in Russia and Spain reached Italy.33
276 THE RULE OF EMPIRES
The French authorities dealt with these overt and subtle forms
of resistance aggressively. Not only did their armies need continual
reinforcement after 1805, but as imperial rulers, they could not allow
any expression of defi ance to go unpunished. In 1808, the Kingdom
of Italy created special labor camps to punish captured draft dodgers
and fi ned their families. Villages with too many missing sons risked
being burned to the ground by the
gendarmerie
. Prefects also exercised greater supervision over local draft councils, tightened medical
exemptions, restricted movement through special internal passports,
and even banned the marriage of young men to women over sixty.
Napoleonic offi cials considered desertion an even more serious
offense. Escaping soldiers spread demoralizing news of French defeats
and drained military resources by making off with their uniforms
and weapons. Moreover, many joined the bandit gangs that grew in
size and means in response to the inherent hardships of French rule.
In 1809, the Kingdom of Italy assigned small military detachments
to each of its departments to deal with armed ex-soldiers, and Italian
military courts punished convicted deserters with sentences ranging
from three years at hard labor to the death penalty. French offi cials
considered these punishments too lax and often took matters into
their own hands. In the sections of the Papal States added to the Kingdom of Italy they executed some resisters summarily, and Eugène
personally condemned a few sons of Rome’s leading families to death
for deserting from the
gardes d’honneur
.
Although Napoleon counted the rule of law as one of the most substantial benefi ts of his empire, his men in Italy frequently resorted to
extrajudicial measures to maintain control because local Italian courts
and policemen would not take action against members of their own
communities. In the more settled areas, the political or
haute
(high)
police had the authority to dispense with the formal criminal courts
in dealing with banditry and subversion, but in time they became
embroiled in relatively petty controversies involving violations of
public morality. This was a natural consequence of the amalgamist
project, and French offi cials had to contend with local controversies
involving adultery, wayward priests, and aristocratic intrigue. Italians
rather than imperial offi cials brought many of these charges, and the
French came to detest the spies and informers they needed to control
urban and settled Italy. Imperial offi cials concluded that the Italians
were too petty and depraved to qualify for full imperial citizenship.
Napoleonic
Italy 277
These sentiments ran entirely contrary to their emperor’s goal
of rallying Italian notables, but in practice
ralliement
never stood a
chance of success. Like all imperial conquerors, the French fell victim
to bigotry in mistaking military power for cultural superiority.
Concluding that luxury and superstition had made Italian men vain,
cowardly, and effeminate, French offi cials decided that
amalgame
was
unrealistic and ill-advised. Although they often depicted themselves
as the heirs of classical Rome, they were particularly dismissive of
contemporary Roman society. One senior administrator even refused
to let his wife join him on his posting to Rome because he worried
that the decadent Romans would corrupt an impressionable young
woman.
This disdain for Italian culture did not prevent Frenchmen of all
stations from using imperial privilege to take sexual advantage of
Italian women. Prefects and prosecutors often kept local mistresses,
and a French military veteran recalling his service in Germany could
have just as easily been speaking about the Italians. “The hate which
the Germans have for us should not be too surprising. They cannot pardon us for having for twenty years caressed their wives and
daughters before their very faces.”34 This kind of sexual predation
is an inherent part of the larger exploitive and dehumanizing realities of empire and must be considered alongside French demands for
manpower and revenue in explaining the failure of
ralliement
.
Italian notables thus had good reasons for questioning the sincerity of Napoleon’s invitation to enlist as junior partners and new
Frenchmen in his imperial enterprise. Some of the emperor’s most
important Italian allies hedged their bets by treating with his enemies.
Melzi was careful to maintain his contacts in Austria, and infl uential
Neapolitans sent family members to both Paris and the exiled Bourbon court in Sicily. Most of these fence-sitters made up their minds to
reject
ralliement
when the military tide turned against Napoleon and
French rule became more precarious. Napoleon’s arrest of the Pope
struck a further blow to
ralliement
. Loyal Romans wore papal cockades as part of a passive resistance campaign that shut down the local
administration and courts through a mass retreat from civic life.
While Italians were cool to Napoleon’s call to rally, they were even
more suspicious of his amalgamist project. The Piedmontese nobleman Massimo d’Azegilo was enraged when the French forced him
to send his son to the military academy at Saint-Cyr because he felt
278 THE RULE OF EMPIRES
it violated his paternal right to decide how his children should be
educated. Similarly, the elite families of Parma withdrew their children from the College of Santa Caterina after Napoleonic offi cials
tried to turn it into a military academy, and instead hired exiled
Roman clergymen as tutors. Parents in Genoa and Tuscany shunned
the new French-style schools. Only ex-Giacobini and the urban middle classes that found fruitful employment in imperial service gave
the French full access to their children.
Ralliement
and
amalgame
were never open to the common Italians
who bore the real weight of French rule. Rural communities that had
striven to thwart the centralizing reforms of ancien régime princes
had no reason to accept the far more burdensome demands of a foreign imperial power. Admittedly, Napoleon’s efforts to impose his will
on the Italian countryside were an extension of his efforts to force the
resistive populations of western and southern France to respect his
authority. The difference, however, was that Napoleon considered the
peoples of the Vendée and the Midi to be Frenchmen whether they
liked it or not. He was far more ruthless with the peoples of the wider
empire who dared to stand in the way of his extractive ambitions.
The necessity of intruding into rural communities to meet their
emperor’s treasure and manpower requirements forced Napoleonic
offi cials to develop even more aggressive methods of disciplining
their subjects. Special local guard formations and the National Guard
in the Kingdom of Italy and the Civic Guard in Naples augmented
French authority throughout the peninsula. French rule was relatively effective in Piedmont, but it grew weaker the further south one
traveled. It waned considerably in the rural hinterlands where local
institutions of authority remained largely immune to
ralliement
,
much less
amalgame
. Although they disdained feudal institutions,
necessity forced the French to depend on the rural clergy to execute
imperial policy at the village level. They also needed vigilante groups
to control banditry and maintain rural order. These irregular units,
known popularly as
sbirri
(cops), were a holdover from the ancien
régime era, and the imperial regime’s efforts to control them through
French offi cers were barely successful. More often than not, the
sbirri
bands were more inclined to prey on local communities instead of
enforcing French rule.
As in much of early nineteenth-century Europe, rural opposition
to the imposition of central authority, imperial or otherwise, often
Napoleonic
Italy 279
took the form of banditry. Peasants, herdsmen, sharecroppers, day
laborers, draft dodgers, and military deserters, whose resistance the
French criminalized as “brigandage,” sought primarily to protect
feudal-era rights and local privileges. Some of the lawless groups were
indeed made up of criminals, but classifying resisting rural peoples as
brigands, a particularly barbaric type of bandit, allowed Napoleonic
offi cials to employ harsh extralegal measures against them. Military
tribunals routinely handed down death sentences to brigands, and
gendarmerie
units punished resisters summarily without bothering
to refer them to the courts at all. Imperial offi cials tried to improve
security by banning the production and sale of daggers, but they could
not prevent deserters from arming rural communities throughout
the peninsula. Although property owners and feudal elites generally
supported French efforts to promote rural order, few were willing to
assist the imperial regime actively in confronting the outlaws.
Persistent and endemic banditry was a fertile medium for local
discontent to grow into more serious mass challenges to the Napoleonic regime. As in the Black Year, these rebellions often took on an
overtly Catholic veneer, but they were more concerned with thwarting French-led centralization than with defending the Church. The
fi rst signifi cant uprising began near Genoa in 1805 and 1806. Led
by a former militia captain and an innkeeper, local communities in
Piacenza struck back against taxation, conscription, the closure of
monasteries, and wartime requisitioning. Although it took French
gendarmes
and Italian reservists only a few weeks to restore order,
the revolt unnerved the imperial authorities. Special military commissions in Parma and Piacenza sent captured rebels to the gallows
or enslavement in Mediterranean galleys. The imperial authorities
also turned the
sbirri
loose on defi ant rural communities under the
guise of imposing collective punishment. These draconian measures
were out of proportion to the seriousness of the unrest, but Napoleonic offi cials rightly viewed any form of coordinated resistance as a
threat to their hold on the rural majority. Lacking the manpower and
resources to govern the countryside directly, they relied on intimidation and terror to extend their authority into upland Italy.
This imperial bluff largely collapsed in 1809. Encouraged by
Austrian propaganda and infl amed by a new milling tax, the Kingdom
of Italy’s hinterlands again erupted in revolt. With the Armée d’Italie
distracted by the war with Austria, the rebels killed policemen, drove
280 THE RULE OF EMPIRES
off imperial offi cials, and burned tax and conscription records. The
collapse of authority in the highlands gave bands of peasants numbering in the thousands the freedom to move on the urban areas that
anchored Napoleonic rule in the region.
Further north, similar revolts broke out in the Tyrolean regions
that Napoleon had added to the puppet Kingdom of Bavaria. Once
again, peasant grievances centered on taxation, conscription, and the
unwelcome expansion of state authority. They too attacked government offi ces, burned bureaucratic records, and chased off the imperial regime’s local representatives. Swelled by the addition of military
deserters, smugglers, and common criminals, the revolt lasted into
1810 and blocked commerce on the Po River. Austrian propaganda
and subversion defi nitely played a role in instigating these revolts.
Archduke John’s attacks on Napoleonic exploitation, covert missions
to the Tyrol, and short-term military victories gave the rebels hope
that they might drive out the French. Some peasants even waved
Austrian fl ags and shouted support for the Austrian emperor, but the
vast majority of the rural people who took part in the 1809 uprisings
were no more Habsburg partisans than they were Italian nationalists.
Like the Catholic façade of the Black Year, the Austrians simply provided a useful rallying point for the defense of local autonomy.
Yet if localism drove the revolts, it was also the primary cause of
their failure. The tendency of the rebels to resort to banditry cost
them popular support, and their inability to unite left them fatally
divided once Napoleon’s troops turned back the Austrian invasion. It
was then a relatively simple matter for
gendarmes
, civil guardsmen,
and soldiers to hunt down the small, lightly armed groups. Thousands