Book contents
- The Cambridge History of the Napoleonic Wars
- The Cambridge History of the Napoleonic Wars
- The Cambridge History of the Napoleonic Wars
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Maps
- Contributors to Volume III
- Introduction to Volume III
- Part I The Experience of War
- Part II The Experience of Imperial Rule
- 6 Blockade and Economic Warfare
- 7 Crossing Borders: Encounters with the Other
- 8 Popular Resistance: The Case of Napoleonic Italy
- 9 Collaboration: The Case of the Duchy of Warsaw
- 10 Military Resistance: Desertion
- 11 Liberation: Myth and Reality in Germany
- Part III War, Culture and Memory
- Part IV The Aftermath and Legacy of the Wars
- Bibliographic Essays
- Index
8 - Popular Resistance: The Case of Napoleonic Italy
from Part II - The Experience of Imperial Rule
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 August 2022
- The Cambridge History of the Napoleonic Wars
- The Cambridge History of the Napoleonic Wars
- The Cambridge History of the Napoleonic Wars
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Maps
- Contributors to Volume III
- Introduction to Volume III
- Part I The Experience of War
- Part II The Experience of Imperial Rule
- 6 Blockade and Economic Warfare
- 7 Crossing Borders: Encounters with the Other
- 8 Popular Resistance: The Case of Napoleonic Italy
- 9 Collaboration: The Case of the Duchy of Warsaw
- 10 Military Resistance: Desertion
- 11 Liberation: Myth and Reality in Germany
- Part III War, Culture and Memory
- Part IV The Aftermath and Legacy of the Wars
- Bibliographic Essays
- Index
Summary
Although the Italian Peninsula saw fierce fighting between 1796 and 1800 during the First and Second Italian campaigns, it did not experience any major military operations again until 1814, save for some counter-insurgency operations in the north-eastern Alps in 1809, in the wake of the Wagram campaign and Hoffer’s Tyrolean revolt. The first impression is of a region in a rare and enviable state of peace in a largely war-torn continent, receiving its apprenticeship in a long overdue process of state building, albeit under foreign tutelage. This picture is very misleading, however. The experience of Napoleonic occupation was not only unwelcome and resented by Italian reformers for its authoritarianism and the disappointment of initial ‘Jacobin’ hopes; it was a traumatic experience for the Italian masses, and that trauma often expressed itself in violent revolt.
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- The Cambridge History of the Napoleonic Wars , pp. 162 - 180Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2022