Diese Publikation wird Ihnen präsentiert durch Paradigm Publishing Services

Princeton University Press

Startseite Princeton University Press Chapter 5 Crossing the Mediterranean: Volunteers, Mercenaries, Refugees
Kapitel
Lizenziert
Nicht lizenziert Erfordert eine Authentifizierung

Chapter 5 Crossing the Mediterranean: Volunteers, Mercenaries, Refugees

© 2023 Princeton University Press, Princeton

© 2023 Princeton University Press, Princeton

Kapitel in diesem Buch

  1. Frontmatter i
  2. Contents vii
  3. Acknowledgements xiii
  4. Map of southern Europe xvi
  5. Introduction. Southern Europe and the Making of a Global Revolutionary South 1
  6. What constitution did revolutionaries fight for? A few introductory remarks 18
  7. The making of a constitutional order and its conflicts: plan of the book 27
  8. Part I. War, Army and Revolution
  9. Introduction 33
  10. Chapter 1 Conspiracy and Military Careers in the Napoleonic Wars 39
  11. Secret societies and the planning of revolutions 39
  12. From fighting in the Napoleonic wars to declaring the revolution 57
  13. Chapter 2 Pronunciamientos and the Military Origins of the Revolutions 87
  14. After the Napoleonic wars: economic crisis and an impossible military demobilisation 87
  15. Communicating the revolutionary script: nation, army and constitution 93
  16. The army and popular mobilisation 113
  17. In the name of what nation? 130
  18. Conclusions 137
  19. Chapter 3 Civil Wars: Armies, Guerrilla Warfare and Mobilisation in the Rural World 139
  20. Portugal and political change through military pronunciamientos 146
  21. Fighting in the name of a prisoner king: counterrevolution in Spain 161
  22. Civil war as a war of independence: Sicily against Naples 170
  23. Civil war as a crisis of the Ottoman order: the Greek revolution 175
  24. Conclusions 187
  25. Chapter 4 National Wars of Liberation and the End of the Revolutionary Experiences 190
  26. Introduction 190
  27. The failure of the revolutionary script in Naples, Piedmont and Spain 192
  28. Greece and the nationalisation of the anti-Ottoman conflict 205
  29. Conclusions 215
  30. Chapter 5 Crossing the Mediterranean: Volunteers, Mercenaries, Refugees 218
  31. Introduction: Palermo as a Mediterranean revolutionary hub 218
  32. Sir Richard Church: bridging empire, counterrevolution and revolution 220
  33. Emmanuele Scordili and the Greek diasporas 231
  34. Andrea Mangiaruva: volunteer for freedom and economic migrant? 241
  35. Conclusions 251
  36. Part II. Experiencing the Constitution Citizenship, Communities and Territories
  37. Introduction 255
  38. Chapter 6 Re-conceiving Territories: The Revolutions as Territorial Crises 259
  39. Introduction 259
  40. Constitutional devolution and federal royalism in Spain 262
  41. Resisting centralisation: Genoa, Sicily and provincial freedoms 274
  42. Emancipating local councils; creating a new state: Portugal and Greece 285
  43. Chapter 7 Electing Parliamentary Assemblies 301
  44. Chapter 8 Petitioning in the Name of the Constitution 323
  45. Conclusions: political participation and local autonomies after the 1820s 339
  46. Part III. Building Consensus, Practising Protest: The Revolutionary Public Sphere and Its Enemies
  47. Introduction 347
  48. Chapter 9 Shaping Public Opinion 351
  49. Communicating the revolution, educating citizens: information and sociability 351
  50. Invasions and conspiracies: rumours and the international imagination 366
  51. Chapter 10 Taking Control of Public Space 380
  52. Revolutionary ceremonies as rituals of concord 380
  53. Rituals of contestation: singing the revolution 396
  54. Secret societies: from clandestine opposition to public advocacy 410
  55. Protest and corporate interests in Madrid, Palermo and Hydra: artisans and sailors 428
  56. Chapter 11 A Counterrevolutionary Public Sphere? The Popular Culture of Absolutism 443
  57. Conclusions: from revolutionary practices to public memory 471
  58. Part IV. Citizens or the Faithful? Religion and the Foundation of a New Political Order
  59. Introduction 481
  60. Chapter 12 Christianity against Despotism 487
  61. Religious nations, intolerant nations? 487
  62. Reforming churches: priests as educators 503
  63. Chapter 13 A Revolution within the Church 510
  64. Begrudging endorsement? Church hierarchies and the revolutions 510
  65. A divided clergy 521
  66. Preaching in favour of or against the new order 546
  67. The politics of miracles 553
  68. Conclusions 558
  69. Epilogue. Unfinished Business: The Age of Revolutions in Southern Europe after the 1820s 567
  70. Yannis Macriyannis and the betrayal of the Greek revolution 571
  71. Bernardo de Sá Nogueira (Viscount and Marquis of Sá da Bandeira) and the search for political stability in Portugal 579
  72. Guglielmo Pepe: transnational fame and the endurance of Neapolitan patriotism 588
  73. Antonio Alcalá Galiano and the transition to moderate liberalism 595
  74. Conclusion 603
  75. Chronology 607
  76. Glossary of Foreign Terms 613
  77. Bibliography 615
  78. Index 665
Heruntergeladen am 20.3.2026 von https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/9780691246192-027/html
Button zum nach oben scrollen