Machiavelli in the 19th CenturyMain MenuMachiavelli in the 19th CenturyNationalism and the Study of "Modern " HistorySeeing Machiavelli through VillariSuccess of "The Life and Times of Niccolo Macchiavelli"Modern History in mid- 19th Century EnglandThe Risorgimento: Between Italy and EnglandMajor Actors and EventsThe Life and Times of Pasquale VillariRebel, Historian, and PoliticianSeeing Villari through MachiavelliSelected ReadingsLaura Morrealeea5968063e9bb73752be7c434e8e3458b2daad8e
12018-11-17T19:06:30-08:00The Risorgimento: Between Italy and England5Major Actors and Eventsgallery2018-11-17T19:15:13-08:00Throughout the nineteenth century, British intellectuals, politicians, and everyday people supported efforts on behalf of Italian nationalists to unify the Italian peninsula under one centralized secular state. Below, and in the media above, are some well-known examples of Italians in England whose nationalist goals received support and acclaim through the long century:
Ugo Foscolo, Poet, born in Greece, 1788, died in London, 1827. The video attached features an audio recording of his poetry, and an English translation can be found here.
Giuseppe Mazzini, born in Genoa in 1805, died in Genoa in 1872, exiled to London, 1837-1843. Mazzini remained an active figure and parti-time inhabitant of London through the 1850s. He is remembered as a hero of the republic in a 1949 video celebrating a statute erected in his honor.
Pasquale Villari, historian and politician, attended the London International Exhibit in 1862 where he was invited to serve as Juror.
Giuseppe Garibaldi, Italian Unification Activist, traveled to London in April, 1864. He received a hero's welcome, and was lauded as a "Victorian Celebrity." A contemporary print and the New York Times article from April 28, 1864 record impressions of the event.