| Piedmontese campaign in central Italy | ||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Part of the Unification of Italy | ||||||||||
Entry of Piedmontese troops into Perugia 1860 | ||||||||||
| ||||||||||
| Belligerents | ||||||||||
|
|
|
| ||||||||
| Commanders and leaders | ||||||||||
|
Victor Emmanuel II Enrico Cialdini Manfredo Fanti it:Maurizio Gerbaix de Sonnaz Raffaele Cadorna Carlo Pellion di Persano |
Christophe Lamoricière Georges de Pimodan † |
Francis II of the Two Sicilies it:Luigi Scotti Douglas it:Giovanni Salzano de Luna Giosuè Ritucci | ||||||||
The Piedmontese campaign in central Italy took place between September and October 1860 during the unification of Italy. It followed the Second Italian War of Independence and the Expedition of the Thousand. The campaign saw a military contingent from the Kingdom of Sardinia (Piedmont) sent against the Papal States. Later, the operation was extended to the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies, officially to restore order and prevent Garibaldi's army from proclaiming an independent republic and moving against the Pope.
The invasion of the Papal States
edit
In the first phase of the campaign the Piedmontese army, composed of the IV and the V Army Corps under General Manfredo Fanti, moved towards the papal provinces of Umbria and the Marche. The casus belli was the need for Piedmont to intervene against the papal army’s repression of the revolutionary movements that favoured the unification of Italy. These had broken out in the first days of September in conjunction with Garibaldi's entry into Naples.[1] The papal forces also included foreign volunteers and mercenaries, commanded by generals from beyond the Alps, and these facts were also used as a justification for the campaign.[2][3]: 375 The Piedmontese plan was for a pincer movement: its armies were to move forward in either side of the Apennines, interrupting the communication routes between Lazio, Umbria and Marche, and then converge on Ancona, the final objective of the expedition.[4]: 282
On 11 September 1860 the Piedmontese army crossed the borders of the Papal State at three different points: the V Army Corps, commanded by Fanti himself, passed through Arezzo and Sansepolcro and took Perugia on 14 September before headed towards Foligno. The IV Army Corps invaded the Marche from two points: the 13th Division, under the command of Raffaele Cadorna, followed a route close to the Apennines through Urbino, Cagli and Gubbio, while the rest of the contingent, composed of the 4th and 7th Divisions under Enrico Cialdini proceeded along the coast by way of Pesaro, Fano and Senigallia, clashing with the Papal Army of General de Lamoricière at the battle of Castelfidardo on 18 September.[3]: 376 [5][6]
Having taken control of the Via Flaminia and Via Salaria, the Piedmontese took the main cities of Umbria and the Marche and routed the papal contingent that was trying to gather near Macerata. They then besieged Ancona, taking it on 29 September, thanks to a successful naval blockade.[6]
The invasion of the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies
edit
The second phase began with the Piedmontese invasion of the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies. The rationale was both to restore order following the effective collapse of the government of Francis II and to prevent Garibaldi from completing the conquest of the kingdom after the Battle of the Volturno, and then attacking Rome.[7][8]
On the march south
editArriving in Ancona on 3 October, King Victor Emmanuel took command of the army and marched south at the head of his troops, aiming to reach the Volturno plain, where the Bourbon army, entrenched between the strongholds of Gaeta and Capua, was defending itself from Garibaldi's men.[9] While a contingent moved along the coast by ship, the bulk of the army set out along two different routes; as they advanced, insurrections and mutinies broke out in various cities and fortresses not yet occupied by Garibaldi's men, and groups of volunteers began to gather.
On 12 October Victor Emmanuel crossed the Tronto River with his troops.[10][11] At the same time, part of the army moved towards Spoleto and Rieti with the intention of reaching L'Aquila. After bypassing the fortress of Civitella del Tronto, which was subsequently placed under siege, the king continued along the coast to the mouth of the Aterno and finally headed towards Chieti. Once in Popoli, the two contingents reunited and together headed towards Roccaraso and Castel di Sangro, in the direction of the Macerone pass where the road from Abruzzo passed that allowed access to the Terra di Lavoro.[12] Here the Piedmontese were joined by the troops who had departed from Ancona and, having landed in Manfredonia, had moved along a route that had taken them to Foggia, Ariano and Benevento.[13]
The main military events of this phase were the siege of the fortress of Civitella, which began on 26 October and lasted several months, and the battle of Macerone (20 October) which, although considered a simple skirmish due to the small forces on the field, opened the way for the Piedmontese, allowing them to take the Bourbon army from behind.[14]
On the battlefield
editThe Piedmontese objective was to join up with Garibaldi's southern army against the army of the Two Sicilies in the northern portion of the Terra di Lavoro. King Francis II had retreated to the fortress of Gaeta, maintaining control of an area that was protected by a series of defensive lines, the most important of which ran along the northern bank of the Volturno River, from the coast to the fortified city of Capua.
Having failed in the Battle of the Volturno to repel Garibaldi's men, Francis II's army was forced to retreat further by the intervention of the Piedmontese army, which had reached the rear of the Bourbon defensive line. Defeated in the Battle of San Giuliano, the Neapolitan army was forced to abandon Capua and retreat to the Garigliano line.[14]
The final event of the Piedmontese expedition took place here, the Battle of Garigliano, fought on 29 October 1860, following which the Bourbon army took a final stand by barricading itself in Gaeta to defend the sovereign.[6]
Chronology of the campaign
editFirst phase: Invasion of the Papal States
edit| Army occupying Marche and Umbria
(Fanti) | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| fleet
(Persano) |
IV army corps
(Cialdini) |
V army corps | ||
| 4th and 7th divisions
(Cialdini) |
13th division
(Cadorna) | |||
| 5 September | Naval squadron sails from Genoa | |||
| 10 September | Squadron sails around the Italian peninsula into the Adriatic | Troops deploy on the border with the Marche along the river it:Tavollo, ready to divide into separate forces | Troops deploy along the border with Umbria, near Arezzo and Sansepolcro | |
| 11 September | Pesaro | Città di Castello[3]: 383–4 | ||
| 12 September | Fano | Urbino and Fossombrone | ||
| 13 September | Senigallia[16]: 1574 | Cagli | Umbertide and Perugia | |
| 14 September | Gubbio | |||
| 15 September | Jesi | Gualdo Tadino | Foligno[16]: 1578 | |
| 16 September | Osimo[4]: 287–8 | Spoleto[4]: 283–4 | ||
| 17 September | Fabriano | |||
| 18 September | Battle of Castelfidardo[3]: 378 | Terni, Narni and Rieti | ||
| 20 September | Naval blockade of Ancona and beginning of bombardment | Macerata | ||
| 24-29 September | Siege of Ancona | |||
| 3 October | Victor Emmanuel II lands at Ancona | |||
Second phase: Invasion of the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies
edit| Piedmontese Army
(Victor Emmanuel II) |
Southern Army
(Garibaldi) | |
|---|---|---|
| 1-2 October | Battle of the Volturno: Garibaldi’s men stop a Bourbon counterattack[6] | |
| 6 October | The fleet sets sail from Ancona with part of the army on board. The soldiers will disembark at Manfredonia and head towards Naples through the territories of Capitanata and it:Principato Ultra | |
| 12 October | Invasion of the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies | |
| 12-17 October | Divided into two columns, the Piedmontese army enters Abruzzo | Battle of Pettorano: a contingent of Garibaldi's men massacred near Isernia [17] |
| 18 October | The two columns from L'Aquila and Chieti meet at Popoli and head for Castel di Sangro and the Terra di Lavoro | |
| 20 October | Battle of Macerone: The Piedmontese defeat the troops sent to stop them | |
| 26 October | Beginning of the Siege of Civitella | |
| 26 October | Battle of San Giuliano: the Neapolitan army is forced to retreat to the Garigliano line | |
| 26 October | Meeting at Teano[18][17] | |
| 29 October | Battle of the Garigliano: the Piedmontese army defeats the Bourbon army and forces it to retreat to the fortress of Gaeta | |
| 5 November | Beginning of the Siege of Gaeta[6] | |
References
edit- ^ Michelet, Jules (1875). A Summary of Modern History. Translated from the French. London: MacMillan and Co. p. 346. Retrieved 31 May 2026.
- ^ Sampson, Donat (1900). The Month An Illustrated Magazine of Literature, Science and Art · Volume 91. London: Longmans, Green & Co. p. 462.
- ^ a b c d Mariani, Carlo (1884). Le guerre dell'indipendenza italiana dal 1848 al 1870 storia politica e militare · Volume 4. Turin: Roux e Favale. Retrieved 31 May 2026.
- ^ a b c I martiri per l'indipendenza d'Italia storia degli sconvolgimenti italiani dal 1815 all'ingresso del re in Roma 1871 Volume 3. Florence: Giuseppe Ferroni. 1871. Retrieved 31 May 2026.
- ^ Cooper, Thompson (1872). Men of the Time A Dictionary of Contemporaries : Containing Biographical Notices of Eminent Characters of Both Sexes. London: Routledge. p. 222. Retrieved 31 May 2026.
- ^ a b c d e Showalter, Dennis (2013). Imperial Wars 1815–1914. London: Amber Books. ISBN 9781782741251. Retrieved 31 May 2026.
- ^ King, Bolton (1899). A History of Italian Unity Being a Political History of Italy from 1814 to 1871 · Volume 2. London: J. Nisbet & Company. pp. 173–4. Retrieved 30 May 2026.
- ^ Müller, Wilhelm (1882). Political History of Recent Times, 1816-1875. New York: Harper & Bros. p. 289.
- ^ Howitt, William; Cassel, John (1864). John Cassell's Illustrated History of England Volume 8. London: Cassel, Petter & Galpin. p. 572. Retrieved 1 June 2026.
- ^ Il crollo militare del Regno delle Due Sicilie Tito Battaglini Da Gaeta al brigantaggio politico · Volume 2. Modena: Società tipografica modenese. 1938. p. 180. Retrieved 31 May 2026.
- ^ De Cesare, Carlo (1879). La vita, i tempi e le opere di Antonio Scialoja. Rome: Tipografia del Senato. p. 140. Retrieved 31 May 2026.
- ^ Atti del congresso di storia del Risorgimento italiano Volume 20. Rome: Istituto per la storia del Risorgimento italiano. 1933. p. 444. Retrieved 31 May 2026.
- ^ Hazeldine Martinengo-Cesaresco, Evelyn Lillian (1894). The liberation of Italy, 1815-1870. New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons. pp. 322–3.
- ^ a b Rivista di artiglieria e genio vol. 4. Rome. 1887. p. 290. Retrieved 1 June 2026.
{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - ^ La rivista di fanteria Volume 8. Rome. 1898. p. 498. Retrieved 31 May 2026.
{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - ^ a b Comandini, Alfredo; Monti, Antonio (1918). L'Italia nei cento anni del secolo xix ... giorno per giorno illustrata. Milan: Antonio Vallardi. Retrieved 31 May 2026.
- ^ a b "Eventi » L'incontro di Teano". 150anni.it. La scuola e il 150° anniversario dell’Unità d’Italia. Retrieved 31 May 2026.
- ^ Archer, Thomas (1890). 1860 to 1890. London: Blackie & Son. p. 80. Retrieved 30 May 2026.