Piedmontese Republic

Piedmontese Republic
Repubblica Piemontese
Puppet state of the French Republic

1798–1799
Motto
Libertà, Virtù, Eguaglianza
Liberty, Virtue, Equality
Map of Piedmont within modern Italy
Capital Turin
Languages Italian
Religion Roman Catholicism
Government Republic
Historical era French Revolutionary Wars
 -  Established 10 September 1798
 -  Disestablished 20 June 1799
Currency Piedmontese scudo

The Piedmontese Republic (Italian: Repubblica Piemontese) was a short-lived republic that existed between 1798 and 1799 on the territory of Piedmont during its military rule by Napoleonic France.

Piedmont was the main part of the Kingdom of Sardinia which, despite its name, had its core on the mainland. The kingdom suffered a first French invasion in 1796, which led to the Treaty of Paris and the loss of Savoy and Nice. After a second invasion in 1798, King Charles Emmanuel IV escaped to Rome, but he never agreed to sign a new peace treaty, approving a final arrangement of its continental territories according to international law.

The Piedmontese Republic was declared on 10 September 1798. It was heavily dependent on France and was never really independent as it was under French military occupation. The state was not recognized by the international community. The structure of government was a directorial system.[1]

The republic used the motto Libertà, Virtù, Eguaglianza, echoing the French motto Liberté, égalité, fraternité, on its coins.[2]

On 20 June 1799, the Piedmontese Republic ceased to exist when it was conquered by Austro-Russian troops. It was subsequently reincorporated into the Kingdom of Sardinia, but exactly a year later, it was reestablished as the Subalpine Republic, after Napoleon took back much of northern Italy after the victorious Battle of Marengo. The Subalpine Republic lasted until 11 September 1802, when it was divided between the French and Italian Republics.

References

  1. "Satellite States - Piemontese/Subalpine Republic, 1798-1801". zum.de. Retrieved 29 March 2015.
  2. Van Wie, Paul D. (1999). Image, History, and Politics: The Coinage of Modern Europe. Lanham: University Press of America, Inc. pp. 116–117. ISBN 0761812210.

See also

Coordinates: 45°04′N 07°42′E / 45.067°N 7.700°E