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Kingdom of Lombardy–Venetia

The Kingdom of Lombardy–Venetia (Latin: Regnum Langobardiae et Venetiae), commonly called the "Lombardo-Venetian Kingdom" (Italian: Regno Lombardo-Veneto, German: Königreich Lombardo-Venetien), was a constituent land (crown land) of the Austrian Empire from 1815 to 1866. It was created in 1815 by resolution of the Congress of Vienna in recognition of the Austrian House of Habsburg-Lorraine's rights to the former Duchy of Milan and the former Republic of Venice after the Napoleonic Kingdom of Italy, proclaimed in 1805, had collapsed.[3]

Kingdom of Lombardy-Venetia
Regno Lombardo-Veneto (Italian)
Königreich Lombardo-Venetien (German)
Oesterreichisches Italien[1]
1815–1866
Flag of the Viceroy of Lombardy-Venetia
Coat of arms
Anthem: Inno Patriottico
"The Patriotic Song"
The Kingdom of Lombardy-Venetia (green) and the Austrian Empire (light green) in 1815
StatusCrown land of the Austrian Empire
Capital
Common languagesLombard, Venetian, Friulian, Italian, and German
Religion
Roman Catholic
GovernmentAbsolute monarchy
King 
• 1815–1835
Francis I
• 1835–1848
Ferdinand I
• 1848–1866
Francis Joseph I
Viceroy 
• 1815
Heinrich XV of Reuss-Plauen
• 1815–1816
Heinrich von Bellegarde
• 1816–1818
Anton Victor of Austria
• 1818–1848
Rainer Joseph of Austria
• 1848–1857
Joseph Radetzky von Radetz
• 1857–1859
Ferdinand Maximilian of Austria
History 
9 June 1815
22 March 1848
• Lombardy ceded to France
10 November 1859
14 June 1866
23 August 1866
12 October 1866
Area
1852[2]46,782 km2 (18,063 sq mi)
Population
• 1852[2]
4,671,000
Currency
Today part ofItaly

The kingdom would cease to exist within the next fifty years—the region of Lombardy was ceded to France in 1859 after the Second Italian War of Independence, which then immediately ceded it to the Kingdom of Sardinia. Lombardy-Venetia was finally dissolved in 1866 when its remaining territory was incorporated into the recently proclaimed Kingdom of Italy following the kingdom's victory against Austria in the Third Italian War of Independence.

History

 
An Austrian herald's tabard (Wappenrock) with the coat of arms of Lombardy-Venetia (1834) – Weltliche Schatzkammer in Vienna

Creation

In the Treaty of Paris in 1814, the Austrians had confirmed their claims to the territories of the former Lombard Duchy of Milan, which had been ruled by the Habsburg monarchy since 1714 and together with the adjacent Duchy of Mantua by the Austrian branch of the dynasty from 1708 to 1796, and of the former Republic of Venice, which had been under Austrian rule intermittently upon the 1797 Treaty of Campo Formio.

The Congress of Vienna combined these lands into a single kingdom, ruled in personal union by the Habsburg Emperor of Austria; as distinct of the neighbouring Grand Duchy of Tuscany, the Duchy of Modena and Reggio as well as the Duchy of Parma, which remained independent entities under Habsburg rule. The Austrian emperor was represented day-to-day by viceroys appointed by the Imperial Court in Vienna and resident in Milan and Venice.[2][4][5][6]

Years of the Kingdom

The Kingdom of Lombardy–Venetia was first ruled by Emperor Francis I from 1815 until his death in 1835. His son Ferdinand I ruled from 1835 to 1848. In Milan on 6 September 1838, he became the last king to be crowned with the Iron Crown of Lombardy. The crown was subsequently brought to Vienna after the loss of Lombardy in 1859 but was restored to Italy after the loss of Venetia in 1866.

Though the local administration was Italian in language and staff, the Austrian authorities had to cope with the Italian unification (Risorgimento) movement. After a popular revolution on 22 March 1848, known as the "Five Days of Milan", the Austrians fled from Milan, which became the capital city of a Governo Provvisorio della Lombardia (Lombardy Provisional Government). The next day, Venice also rose against the Austrian rule, forming the Governo Provvisorio di Venezia (Venice Provisional Government). The Austrian forces under Field Marshal Joseph Radetzky, after defeating the Sardinian troops at the Battle of Custoza (24–25 July 1848), entered Milan (6 August) and Venice (24 August 1849), and once again restored Austrian rule.

Emperor Franz Joseph I of Austria ruled over the Kingdom for the rest of its existence. The office of Viceroy was abolished and replaced by a Governor-General. The office was initially assumed by Field Marshal Radetzky - upon his retirement in 1857, it passed to Franz Joseph's younger brother Maximilian (who later became Emperor of Mexico), who served as Governor-General in Milan from 1857 to 1859.

End of the Kingdom

After the Second Italian War of Independence and the defeat in the Battle of Solferino in 1859, Austria by the Treaty of Zurich had to cede Lombardy up to the Mincio River, except for the fortresses of Mantua and Peschiera, to the French Emperor Napoleon III, who immediately passed it to the Kingdom of Sardinia and the embryonic Italian state. Maximilian retired to Miramare Castle near Trieste, while the capital was relocated to Venice. However, remaining Venetia and Mantua likewise fell to the Kingdom of Italy in the aftermath of the Third Italian War of Independence, by the 1866 Peace of Prague.[7] The territory of Venetia and Mantua was formally transferred from Austria to France, and then handed over to Italy on 19 October 1866, for diplomatic reasons; a plebiscite marked the Italian annexation on 21–22 October 1866.[8]

Administration

Administratively the Kingdom of Lombardy–Venetia comprised two independent governments (Gubernien) in its two parts, which officially were declared separate crown lands in 1851. Each part was further subdivided in several provinces, roughly corresponding with the départements of the Napoleonic Kingdom of Italy.

Lombardy included the provinces of Milan, Como, Bergamo, Brescia, Pavia, Cremona, Mantua, Lodi-Crema, and Sondrio. Venetia included the provinces of Venice, Verona, Padua, Vicenza, Treviso, Rovigo, Belluno, and Udine.[7]

According to the Ethnographic map of Karl von Czoernig-Czernhausen, issued by the Imperial and Royal Administration of Statistics in 1855, the Kingdom of Lombardy–Venetia then had a population of 5,024,117 people, consisting of the following ethnic groups: 4,625,746 Italians; 351,805 Friulians; 12,084 Germans (Cimbrians in Venetia); 26,676 Slovenians; and 7,806 Jews.

For the first time since 1428, Lombardy reappeared as an entity, the first time in history that term "Lombardy" was officially used to call specifically that entity and not for the whole of Northern Italy.

The administration used Italian as its language in its internal and external communications and documents, and the language's dominant position in politics, finance or jurisdiction was not questioned by the Austrian officials. The Italian-language Gazzetta di Milano was the official newspaper of the kingdom. Civil servants employed in the administration were predominantly Italian, with only about 10% of them being recruited from other regions of the Austrian Empire. Some bilingual Italian-German-speaking civil servants came from the neighboring County of Tyrol. The German language, however, was the command language of the military, and top police officials were native German-speakers from other parts of the empire.[9] The highest governorships were also reserved for Austrian aristocrats.

Austrian General Karl von Schönhals wrote in his memoirs [10] that the Austrian administration enjoyed the support of the rural population and the middle class educated at the universities of Pavia and Padua, who were able to pursue careers in the administration.

Von Schönhals further noted that the Austrians mistrusted and refused the local aristocrats from high government offices, as they traditionally had rejected university education and had been able to gain leadership positions because of their family background. Consequently, the aristocrats saw themselves deprived of the possibility of establishing themselves in the management of society and supported the wars of independence against the Austrians.

Kings

Before the Congress of Vienna   See Dukes of Milan, Doges of Venice
King Reign Marriage(s)
Issue
Succession right(s) Viceroy(s)
Francis I
(Francesco I)

1768–1835
(aged 67)
  9 June 1815

2 March 1835
List
1815–1816: Heinrich von Bellegarde
1816–1818: Anton Victor of Austria
1818–1848: Rainer Joseph of Austria
Ferdinand I
(Ferdinando I)

1793–1875
(aged 82)
  2 March 1835

2 December 1848
(Abdicated due to
1848 revolutions
)
Maria Anna of Savoy
(m. 1831; w. 1878)
Childless
Franz Joseph I
(Francesco Giuseppe I)

1830–1916
(aged 86)
  2 December 1848

12 October 1866
(Forced to cede
Lombardy and Venetia
)
Elisabeth in Bavaria
(m. 1854; d. 1898)
4 children
(3 survived to adulthood)
1848–1857: Joseph Radetzky
1857–1859: Maximilian of Austria
1859: Ferenc Gyulay

Governors of Lombardy

Governors of Venetia

  • Peter Goëss 1815–1819
  • Ferdinand Ernst Maria von Bissingen-Nippenburg 1819–1820
  • Carlo d'Inzaghi 1820–1826
  • Johann Baptist Spaur 1826–1840
  • Aloys Pállfy de Erdöd 1840–1848
  • Ferdinand Zichy zu Zich von Vasonykeöy 1848 (acting)
  • Laval Nugent von Westmeath 1848–1849 (military governor)
  • Karl von Gorzowsky 1849
  • Stanislaus Anton Puchner 1849–1850
  • Georg Otto von Toggenburg-Sargans 1850–1855
  • Kajetan von Bissingen-Nippenburg 1855–1860
  • Georg Otto von Toggenburg-Sargans 1860–1866 (second time)

Sources

  1. ^ Pütz, Wilhelm (1855). Leitfaden bei dem Unterricht in der vergleichenden Erdbeschreibung. Freiburg.
  2. ^ a b c Fisher, Richard S. (1852). The Book of the World: Volume 2. New York.
  3. ^ Rindler Schjerve, Rosita (2003). Diglossia and Power. Berlin.
  4. ^ Francis Young & W.B.B. Stevens (1864). Garibaldi: His Life and Times. London.
  5. ^ Pollock, Arthur William Alsager (1854). The United Service magazine: Vol.75. London.
  6. ^ Förster, Ernst (1866). Handbuch für Reisende in Italien: Vol.1. Munich.
  7. ^ a b Rosita Rindler Schjerve (2003). Diglossia and Power: Language Policies and Practice in the 19th Century Habsburg Empire. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. pp. 199–200. ISBN 3-11-017653-X. Retrieved 23 March 2022.
  8. ^ "21st-22nd October 1866: annexation of Veneto to Italy" (in Italian)
  9. ^ Boaglio, Gualtiero. 2003. 6. Language and power in an Italian crownland of the Habsburg Empire: The ideological dimension of diglossia in Lombardy
  10. ^ Erinnerungen eines österreichischen Veteranen aus dem italienischen Kriege der Jahre 1848 und 1849 Autor / Hrsg.: Schönhals, Karl von; Schönhals, Karl von[dead link]

External links

  •   Media related to Kingdom of Lombardy-Venetia at Wikimedia Commons
  • Flags of Lombardy–Venetia

kingdom, lombardy, venetia, this, article, need, reorganization, comply, with, wikipedia, layout, guidelines, please, help, editing, article, make, improvements, overall, structure, september, 2016, learn, when, remove, this, template, message, latin, regnum, . This article may be in need of reorganization to comply with Wikipedia s layout guidelines Please help by editing the article to make improvements to the overall structure September 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Kingdom of Lombardy Venetia Latin Regnum Langobardiae et Venetiae commonly called the Lombardo Venetian Kingdom Italian Regno Lombardo Veneto German Konigreich Lombardo Venetien was a constituent land crown land of the Austrian Empire from 1815 to 1866 It was created in 1815 by resolution of the Congress of Vienna in recognition of the Austrian House of Habsburg Lorraine s rights to the former Duchy of Milan and the former Republic of Venice after the Napoleonic Kingdom of Italy proclaimed in 1805 had collapsed 3 Kingdom of Lombardy VenetiaRegno Lombardo Veneto Italian Konigreich Lombardo Venetien German Oesterreichisches Italien 1 1815 1866Flag of the Viceroy of Lombardy Venetia Coat of armsAnthem Inno Patriottico The Patriotic Song The Kingdom of Lombardy Venetia green and the Austrian Empire light green in 1815StatusCrown land of the Austrian EmpireCapitalMilan 1815 1859 Venice 1859 1866 Common languagesLombard Venetian Friulian Italian and GermanReligionRoman CatholicGovernmentAbsolute monarchyKing 1815 1835Francis I 1835 1848Ferdinand I 1848 1866Francis Joseph IViceroy 1815Heinrich XV of Reuss Plauen 1815 1816Heinrich von Bellegarde 1816 1818Anton Victor of Austria 1818 1848Rainer Joseph of Austria 1848 1857Joseph Radetzky von Radetz 1857 1859Ferdinand Maximilian of AustriaHistory Congress of Vienna9 June 1815 Five Days of Milan22 March 1848 Lombardy ceded to France10 November 1859 Austro Prussian War14 June 1866 Peace of Prague23 August 1866 Treaty of Vienna12 October 1866Area1852 2 46 782 km2 18 063 sq mi Population 1852 2 4 671 000CurrencyLombardy Venetia pound 1816 1860 Lombardy Venetia florin 1860 1866 Preceded by Succeeded byKingdom of Italy Napoleonic Republic of San Marco Second French EmpireKingdom of ItalyToday part ofItalyThe kingdom would cease to exist within the next fifty years the region of Lombardy was ceded to France in 1859 after the Second Italian War of Independence which then immediately ceded it to the Kingdom of Sardinia Lombardy Venetia was finally dissolved in 1866 when its remaining territory was incorporated into the recently proclaimed Kingdom of Italy following the kingdom s victory against Austria in the Third Italian War of Independence Contents 1 History 1 1 Creation 1 2 Years of the Kingdom 1 3 End of the Kingdom 2 Administration 2 1 Kings 2 2 Governors of Lombardy 2 3 Governors of Venetia 3 Sources 4 External linksHistory Edit An Austrian herald s tabard Wappenrock with the coat of arms of Lombardy Venetia 1834 Weltliche Schatzkammer in Vienna Creation Edit In the Treaty of Paris in 1814 the Austrians had confirmed their claims to the territories of the former Lombard Duchy of Milan which had been ruled by the Habsburg monarchy since 1714 and together with the adjacent Duchy of Mantua by the Austrian branch of the dynasty from 1708 to 1796 and of the former Republic of Venice which had been under Austrian rule intermittently upon the 1797 Treaty of Campo Formio The Congress of Vienna combined these lands into a single kingdom ruled in personal union by the Habsburg Emperor of Austria as distinct of the neighbouring Grand Duchy of Tuscany the Duchy of Modena and Reggio as well as the Duchy of Parma which remained independent entities under Habsburg rule The Austrian emperor was represented day to day by viceroys appointed by the Imperial Court in Vienna and resident in Milan and Venice 2 4 5 6 Years of the Kingdom Edit The Kingdom of Lombardy Venetia was first ruled by Emperor Francis I from 1815 until his death in 1835 His son Ferdinand I ruled from 1835 to 1848 In Milan on 6 September 1838 he became the last king to be crowned with the Iron Crown of Lombardy The crown was subsequently brought to Vienna after the loss of Lombardy in 1859 but was restored to Italy after the loss of Venetia in 1866 Though the local administration was Italian in language and staff the Austrian authorities had to cope with the Italian unification Risorgimento movement After a popular revolution on 22 March 1848 known as the Five Days of Milan the Austrians fled from Milan which became the capital city of a Governo Provvisorio della Lombardia Lombardy Provisional Government The next day Venice also rose against the Austrian rule forming the Governo Provvisorio di Venezia Venice Provisional Government The Austrian forces under Field Marshal Joseph Radetzky after defeating the Sardinian troops at the Battle of Custoza 24 25 July 1848 entered Milan 6 August and Venice 24 August 1849 and once again restored Austrian rule Emperor Franz Joseph I of Austria ruled over the Kingdom for the rest of its existence The office of Viceroy was abolished and replaced by a Governor General The office was initially assumed by Field Marshal Radetzky upon his retirement in 1857 it passed to Franz Joseph s younger brother Maximilian who later became Emperor of Mexico who served as Governor General in Milan from 1857 to 1859 Lombardy Venetia 1853 and its major cities Political map of the Italian peninsula in the year 1843End of the Kingdom Edit After the Second Italian War of Independence and the defeat in the Battle of Solferino in 1859 Austria by the Treaty of Zurich had to cede Lombardy up to the Mincio River except for the fortresses of Mantua and Peschiera to the French Emperor Napoleon III who immediately passed it to the Kingdom of Sardinia and the embryonic Italian state Maximilian retired to Miramare Castle near Trieste while the capital was relocated to Venice However remaining Venetia and Mantua likewise fell to the Kingdom of Italy in the aftermath of the Third Italian War of Independence by the 1866 Peace of Prague 7 The territory of Venetia and Mantua was formally transferred from Austria to France and then handed over to Italy on 19 October 1866 for diplomatic reasons a plebiscite marked the Italian annexation on 21 22 October 1866 8 Administration EditAdministratively the Kingdom of Lombardy Venetia comprised two independent governments Gubernien in its two parts which officially were declared separate crown lands in 1851 Each part was further subdivided in several provinces roughly corresponding with the departements of the Napoleonic Kingdom of Italy Lombardy included the provinces of Milan Como Bergamo Brescia Pavia Cremona Mantua Lodi Crema and Sondrio Venetia included the provinces of Venice Verona Padua Vicenza Treviso Rovigo Belluno and Udine 7 According to the Ethnographic map of Karl von Czoernig Czernhausen issued by the Imperial and Royal Administration of Statistics in 1855 the Kingdom of Lombardy Venetia then had a population of 5 024 117 people consisting of the following ethnic groups 4 625 746 Italians 351 805 Friulians 12 084 Germans Cimbrians in Venetia 26 676 Slovenians and 7 806 Jews For the first time since 1428 Lombardy reappeared as an entity the first time in history that term Lombardy was officially used to call specifically that entity and not for the whole of Northern Italy The administration used Italian as its language in its internal and external communications and documents and the language s dominant position in politics finance or jurisdiction was not questioned by the Austrian officials The Italian language Gazzetta di Milano was the official newspaper of the kingdom Civil servants employed in the administration were predominantly Italian with only about 10 of them being recruited from other regions of the Austrian Empire Some bilingual Italian German speaking civil servants came from the neighboring County of Tyrol The German language however was the command language of the military and top police officials were native German speakers from other parts of the empire 9 The highest governorships were also reserved for Austrian aristocrats Austrian General Karl von Schonhals wrote in his memoirs 10 that the Austrian administration enjoyed the support of the rural population and the middle class educated at the universities of Pavia and Padua who were able to pursue careers in the administration Von Schonhals further noted that the Austrians mistrusted and refused the local aristocrats from high government offices as they traditionally had rejected university education and had been able to gain leadership positions because of their family background Consequently the aristocrats saw themselves deprived of the possibility of establishing themselves in the management of society and supported the wars of independence against the Austrians Provinces of Lombardy Venetia Ethnographic map of the Austrian Empire 1855 by de Karl von Czoernig Czernhausen Kings Edit Before the Congress of Vienna See Dukes of Milan Doges of VeniceKing Reign Marriage s Issue Succession right s Viceroy s Francis I Francesco I 1768 1835 aged 67 9 June 1815 2 March 1835 List 1 Elisabeth of Wurttemberg m 1788 d 1790 1 children Not survived to adulthood 2 Maria Theresa of Naples and Sicily m 1790 d 1807 11 children 7 survived to adulthood 3 Maria Ludovika of Austria Este m 1808 d 1816 Childless 4 Caroline Augusta of Bavaria m 1816 w 1835 Childless Son of Emperor Leopold II primogeniture Title granted by Congress of Vienna 1815 1815 1816 Heinrich von Bellegarde1816 1818 Anton Victor of Austria1818 1848 Rainer Joseph of AustriaFerdinand I Ferdinando I 1793 1875 aged 82 2 March 1835 2 December 1848 Abdicated due to1848 revolutions Maria Anna of Savoy m 1831 w 1878 Childless Son of king Francis I primogeniture Franz Joseph I Francesco Giuseppe I 1830 1916 aged 86 2 December 1848 12 October 1866 Forced to cedeLombardy and Venetia Elisabeth in Bavaria m 1854 d 1898 4 children 3 survived to adulthood Grandson of king Francis IEldest son of Ferdinand I s only surviving younger brother blood proximity 1848 1857 Joseph Radetzky1857 1859 Maximilian of Austria1859 Ferenc GyulayGovernors of Lombardy Edit Heinrich Johann Bellegarde 1814 1816 Franz Josef Graf Saurau 1816 1818 Giulio Strassoldo di Sotto 1818 1830 Franz von Hartig 1830 1840 Robert von Salm Reifferscheidt Raitz 1840 1841 Johann Baptist Spaur 1841 1848 Maximilian Karl Lamoral O Donnell 1848 acting Felix von Schwarzenberg 1848 Franz Wimpffen 1848 acting Alberto Montecuccoli Laderchi 1848 1849 acting Karl Borromaus Philipp zu Schwarzenberg 1849 1850 acting Michele Strassoldo Grafenberg 1851 1857 with the title of Lieutenant of Lombardy Friedrich von Burger 1857 1859Governors of Venetia Edit Peter Goess 1815 1819 Ferdinand Ernst Maria von Bissingen Nippenburg 1819 1820 Carlo d Inzaghi 1820 1826 Johann Baptist Spaur 1826 1840 Aloys Pallfy de Erdod 1840 1848 Ferdinand Zichy zu Zich von Vasonykeoy 1848 acting Laval Nugent von Westmeath 1848 1849 military governor Karl von Gorzowsky 1849 Stanislaus Anton Puchner 1849 1850 Georg Otto von Toggenburg Sargans 1850 1855 Kajetan von Bissingen Nippenburg 1855 1860 Georg Otto von Toggenburg Sargans 1860 1866 second time Sources Edit Putz Wilhelm 1855 Leitfaden bei dem Unterricht in der vergleichenden Erdbeschreibung Freiburg a b c Fisher Richard S 1852 The Book of the World Volume 2 New York Rindler Schjerve Rosita 2003 Diglossia and Power Berlin Francis Young amp W B B Stevens 1864 Garibaldi His Life and Times London Pollock Arthur William Alsager 1854 The United Service magazine Vol 75 London Forster Ernst 1866 Handbuch fur Reisende in Italien Vol 1 Munich a b Rosita Rindler Schjerve 2003 Diglossia and Power Language Policies and Practice in the 19th Century Habsburg Empire Berlin Mouton de Gruyter pp 199 200 ISBN 3 11 017653 X Retrieved 23 March 2022 21st 22nd October 1866 annexation of Veneto to Italy in Italian Boaglio Gualtiero 2003 6 Language and power in an Italian crownland of the Habsburg Empire The ideological dimension of diglossia in Lombardy Erinnerungen eines osterreichischen Veteranen aus dem italienischen Kriege der Jahre 1848 und 1849 Autor Hrsg Schonhals Karl von Schonhals Karl von dead link External links Edit Media related to Kingdom of Lombardy Venetia at Wikimedia Commons Flags of Lombardy Venetia Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kingdom of Lombardy Venetia amp oldid 1146886243, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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