Kingdom of the Two Sicilies
Kingdom of the Two Sicilies | |||||||||||
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| 1816–1861 | |||||||||||
Coat of arms
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| Anthem: Inno al Re "Hymn to the King" | |||||||||||
The Kingdom of the Two Sicilies in 1839 | |||||||||||
| Status | Sovereign state | ||||||||||
| Capital | Palermo (1816–1817) Naples (1817–1861) | ||||||||||
| Official languages | Italian[1] | ||||||||||
| Common languages | Sicilian and Neapolitan[2] | ||||||||||
| Religion | Catholic Church | ||||||||||
| Demonym(s) | Sicilian, Neapolitan or Borboni | ||||||||||
| Government |
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| King | |||||||||||
• 1816–1825 | Ferdinand I | ||||||||||
• 1825–1830 | Francis I | ||||||||||
• 1830–1859 | Ferdinand II | ||||||||||
• 1859–1861 | Francis II | ||||||||||
| History | |||||||||||
• Bourbon Restoration | 20 May 1815 | ||||||||||
• Founded | 8 December 1816 | ||||||||||
• Expedition of the Thousand | 1860–1861 | ||||||||||
• Proclamation of the Kingdom of Italy | 17 March 1861 | ||||||||||
| Area | |||||||||||
| 1860 | 111,900 km2 (43,200 sq mi) | ||||||||||
| Population | |||||||||||
• 1852 | 9,034,719 | ||||||||||
| Currency | Two Sicilies ducat | ||||||||||
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| Today part of | Italy, Croatia[a] | ||||||||||
The Kingdom of the Two Sicilies (Italian: Regno delle Due Sicilie)[b] was a kingdom in Southern Italy from 1816 to 1861 under the control of the House of Bourbon-Two Sicilies, a cadet branch of the Bourbons.[3] The kingdom was the largest sovereign state by population and land area in Italy before the Italian unification, comprising Sicily and most of the area of today's Mezzogiorno (southern Italy) and covering all of the Italian peninsula south of the Papal States.
The kingdom was formed when the Kingdom of Sicily merged with the Kingdom of Naples, which was officially also known as the Kingdom of Sicily. Since both kingdoms were named Sicily, they were collectively known as the "Two Sicilies" (Utraque Sicilia, literally "both Sicilies"), and the unified kingdom adopted this name. The king of the Two Sicilies was overthrown by Giuseppe Garibaldi in 1860, after which the people voted in a plebiscite to join the Kingdom of Sardinia. The annexation of the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies completed the first phase of Italian unification, and the new Kingdom of Italy was proclaimed in 1861.
The Two Sicilies were heavily agricultural, like other Italian states.[4]
- ^ "Archivio di Stato di Napoli: Resoconti archivistici dal Regno di Napoli e delle Due Sicilie" (PDF).
- ^ Summonte, Giovanni Antonio (1675). "Giovanni Antonio Summonte: Storia della città e del Regno di Napoli".
- ^ De Sangro, Michele (2003). I Borboni nel Regno delle Due Sicilie (in Italian). Lecce: Edizioni Caponi.
- ^ Nicola Zitara. "La legge di Archimede: L'accumulazione selvaggia nell'Italia unificata e la nascita del colonialismo interno" (PDF) (in Italian). Eleaml-Fora!.
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