Why Italy entered into the great war, by Luigi Carnovale:
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500 | |a In English and Italian, with special t.-p. in Italian: Perchè l'Italia è entrata nella grande guerra... -- Advertising matter: p. [317]-337, 653-673. | ||
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650 | 7 | |a Italien |2 bsbaltswk | |
650 | 4 | |a Außenpolitik | |
650 | 4 | |a Geschichte | |
650 | 4 | |a Weltkrieg (1914-1918) | |
650 | 4 | |a World War, 1914-1918 |x Causes | |
650 | 4 | |a World War, 1914-1918 |z Italy | |
651 | 4 | |a Italien | |
651 | 4 | |a Österreich | |
651 | 4 | |a Austria |x Foreign relations |z Italy | |
651 | 4 | |a Italy |x Foreign relations |z Austria | |
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adam_text | CONTENTS
PAGE
Dedication
...............5
Introduction
—
A Question. An Insinuation. A Premise.
19
FIRST PART
I. The beginning of Austria s military violence in Italy.
The stoning of the boy
Balilla
(1746).......23
II. The dismembering and repartition of Italy in 1815.
The lion s share to Austria. The Carbonari.
... 25
III. The Revolutions in the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies
in
1820.
Austria, with the brutal force of her soldiery,
imposes the tyranny of the Bourbons on the Italian
patriots who are fighting for liberty. Persecutions and
condemnations
(1821)............27
IV. The Revolution of Piedmont in 1821. Austria, with
the brutal force of her soldiery, imposes the tyranny of
the house of Savoy on the patriots who were fighting for
liberty. Persecutions and condemnations
.....31
V. Austria, with the brutal force of her soldiery, imposes
her own tyranny on the patriots of
Lombardo-Veneto,
who are fighting for liberty. Persecutions and condem¬
nations (1820-1821)
............33
VI. The Revolutions of the Duchies of
Modena
and
Reggio
and in the Roman State
(1831).
Austria, with the brutal
force of her soldiery, imposes the tyranny of one of her
princes and the tyranny of the Pope on the Italian pa¬
triots who are fighting for liberty. Persecutions and con¬
demnations
........... .... 35
VII. A
new national conscience is formed by the forceful
teachings of Mazzini,
Gioberti,
and other great Italians,
impelling the people to thought and action. The tyrants,
both big and little, are obliged to concede the benefits of
liberty to the oppressed people. Only Austria, despising
and challenging them, continues to oppress the Italians
of
Lombardo-Veneto............
37
7
8 CONTENTS
РЛСВ
VIII.
The Revolutions of
1848
in Italy. Milan rises up
against Austrian tyranny and fights epically for five
days. The troops of Field Marshal Radetzky
(20,000
men, infantry and cavalry, with sixty field cannon)
slaughter the innocents; burn alive men, women and chil¬
dren; nail nursing babes to the walls of houses; they string
infants on stacked bayonets and carry them around as
trophies; outrage women, kill them, cut off and put in
their pockets the ringed hands from the dead bodies; rob,
pollute, massacre, burn; commit numberless and un¬
speakable crimes. And the Milanese
—
heroic and vic¬
torious
—
respond with civil generosity for the evil
which they had received. Venice also rises up, drives
out the Austrian oppressors, and re-establishes the an¬
cient Republic of St. Mark
..........41
IX. The Hymn of Mameli. The first War of Liberation
—
The Italians are defeated because of the defection of
Pope Pius IX and of the Bourbon King of the Two Sicilies.
The
Austri
ans
are again rulers of
Lombardy
(1848). . . 50
X. The Austrian soldiers re-enter Milan, giving them¬
selves up to rapine and vandalism. Field Marshal Ra¬
detzky extorts the extraordinary tax of
20,000,000
lire
from
185
noble and prominent citizens
(1848). . . 53
XL The insurrection at Rome. The Papal Prime Min¬
ister
Pellegrino
Rossi is killed. Pius IX flees in the night
to Gaeta. The Roman Republic is proclaimed with
Maz-
zini,
Saffi,
and
Armellini
at the head. The second War
of Liberation against Austria. The Italians are defeated
because of their commanders. Carlo Alberto is obliged to
abdicate in favor of his son Victor
Emanuel.
The Aus-
trians, emboldened, extend their tyranny to Piedmont
(1849)................55
XII.
The Lioness of Italy. At Brescia the Austrian
soldiers throw the heads of infants, torn from their
bodies, the arms of women and children, and burned
human flesh on the barricades of the citizens as if they
were throwing the remnants of a dinner to dogs, and com¬
mit other unbelievable villainies. The tragic revenge
of a young Brescian who was burned alive
(1849). . . 57
XIII.
The Austrian soldiers in Tuscany in Bologna, and in
CONTENTS
PAGE
Ancona.
The tyrants crush the Roman Republic, which
had been so gloriously ruled by Mazzini and defended by
Garibaldi, and re-establish the temporal power of the
Popes
(1849)..............61
XIV.
The Austrian soldiers pursue Garibaldi and Anita
(the loved consort of the Hero) who is pregnant. The
sad ending of the heroine, who is buried
nudei
The
abandoned wandering dog *
(1849)........63
XV. The Austrians besiege and bombard Venice, continu¬
ously, for three months. Field Marshal Radetzky apes
Nero. The Queen of the Adriatic Sea is obliged to sur¬
render, because of famine and cholera more than because
of the army of the enemy. The elegy of the poet
(1849)/...............67
XVI.
Field Marshal Radetzky and his graceless officers
celebrate the birthday of their Emperor (Francis Joseph)
in Milan by hectoring the unarmed people, brutally
charging upon them with cavalry and infantry, beating
patriots and whipping the young boys and girls on their
bare backs
(1849)............70
XVII.
The Emperor of Hangmen
(1851-1853). ... 73
XVIII.
The
Bersaglieri in
the Crimean War
(1855).
Cavour
at the Congress of Paris
(1856).
The Alliance with
Napoleon III
(1858).
The memorable words of Victor
Emanuel
II at the opening of the Sub-Alpine Parlia¬
ment. Austria s ultimatum to Piedmont. The Hymn
of Garibadli. The Austrian soldiers massacre the family
of Cignoli. The papal soldiers massacre the patriots of
Perugia. Pius IX and Cardinal Pecci (later Pope Leo
XIII)
praise the assassination. The third War of Libera¬
tion won by the Italians with the aid of the French
(1859)................ 75
XIX.
Garibaldi and The Thousand gloriously conquer the
Two Sicilies
(i860).
Proclamation of the Kingdom of
Italy (1861). The Fourth War of Liberation against
Austria is lost owing to the inefficiency of commanders.
The annexation of
Veneto
(1866).
Villa Glori. The hired
soldiers of Pius IX massacre the Roman heroine Giuditta
Arquati-Tavani with her husband and son. Mentana
FAGS
ХО
CONTENTS
(1867).
The taking of Rome and the final fall of the
temporal power of the Popes
(1870).
The Nation one
and independent
.............
SECOND PART
I. How ancient Rome, during the Republic and also dur¬
ing the Empire, conquered and latinized Friuli,
Istria,
Trieste,
Trentino,
Trent and
Dalmaţia
and how she made
of the Adriatic Sea a great Roman Lake. The
Tavola
Clesiana.*
..............91
II. The barbarian invasion into Italy.
Attila, flagellum
Dei, destroys
(452
A. D.) the beautiful city of Acquileia,
founded by the Romans in 181-182 B. C. In a mass
meeting, presided over by the Emperor Charlemagne,
the Italians of
Istria
protest against the Slavic immi¬
gration
(804
A. D.). The Republic of the Doges liberates
the Adriatic sea from foreign pirates. The marriage of
Venice with the sea. The spontaneous submission of
Dalmaţia
(999
A. D.) after eight centuries of fidelity.
The honorable burial of the standard of St. Mark.
. 98
III. The Communes. Frederick
Barbarossa,
Emperor of
Germany, descends upon Italy
(1154)
massacres, sacks
and burns; captures the celebrated reformer, Arnold
of Brescia, and delivers him into the hands of Adrian IV,
who burns him alive. The subservient Diet of Ron
caglia,
Milan,
Crema
and
Piacenza
rebels.
Barbarossa
takes a
frightful revenge, besieges the smallest town,
Crema.
But not being able to conquer by force of arms, he takes
children of
Crema
and Milan whom he holds
ín
hostage,
ties them to movable wooden towers and exposes them
to the shots of the besieged citizens. Love of Country
overcomes paternal love in the Italians. The destruction
of
Crema
and Milan. The Veronese League. An ener¬
getic Pope. The
Lombardián
League. The Archbishop
Cristiano
of Magonza, plenipotentiary of
Barbarossa in
Italy, besieges
Ancona
and forces the citizens to eat net¬
tles and leather. The heroism of the women. The union
of the communes produces the epopee. The Carrocio.
The Company of Death.
Barbarossa
is defeated by the
Italians at
Legnano
(1176). He is defeated also on the
CONTENTS 11
PAGE
sea by the combined fleets of Venice and Trieste. He
suffers the humiliation of kissing the foot of his enemy
(Pope Alexander III). He sues for peace and leaves
Italy forever without having put it under the yoke.
. . 104
IV. The struggle of the Triestians for their municipal
independence and for the maintenance of their Itali¬
anity from the Peace of Constance (1183). Against the
Bishop-barons
(1295
to
1349).
Against Venice
(1368
to 1381). The surrender to Austria
(1382).
The
Anti-Austrian party, its rebellions and martyrology.
The pride of their Roman heritage/
Triestine
history
from Fifteenth to Eighteenth Century
......112
V. The struggle for Italianity sustained with perseverance
by the Triestians, Istrians, Dalmatians and
Trentini
against Austria, from the time of the treaty of Vienna
1815,
until the Italian revolutions of
1848.....120
VI. The
Trentini,
the Triestians, the Istrians and the Dal¬
matians battle for the Roman Republic, which is under
the leadership of the Triumvirate Mazzini,
Saffi
and
Armellini, and is defended by Garibaldi against the Pope,
and for the Republic of Venice which is led by
Manin
and
Tommaséo
and is defended by General
Guglielmo Pepe
against Austria
(1849)...........131
VII.
The
Trentini,
Triestians, Istrians and Dalmatians in
defense of their Italianity from
1850
to
1858.
Their
filial
contribution of blood to the Second War of Libera¬
tion of Italy against Austria
(1859).......133
VIII.
The
Trentini,
the Triestians, the Istrians in the cam¬
paign of The Thousand. Their filial contribution of
blood during the entire War for the Liberation of Southern
and Central Italy
(i860).
The fierce reaction of the
Austrians. The sums of money gathered from the Istrians
for the national cause. The Triestian women present an
Italian flag to Garibaldi
(i860).........138
IX. The struggle for Italianity, sustained with indomitable
pride by the
Trentini,
Triestians, Istrians, and Dalma¬
tians against Austria from 1861 to
1865......145
X. The filial contribution of blood by the
Trentini,
the
Triestians, the Istrians and Dalmatians, who battle for
12 CONTENTS
PAGE
the independence and unity of Italy against the Austrians
in the war of
1866.
Trieste and
Istria
fight for their
annexation to the Mother Country
(1866).....150
XI. The filial contributions of blood by the Triestians,
Istri
ans,
Trentini
and Dalmatians to Italy in the taking
of Rome
( 1867-1870). ..........158
XII.
Triestians are found among the Garibaldian volunteers
in defense of France against Prussia in the war of
1870.
Continued demonstrations of Italianity in the Irredentist
regions
(1872-1882).
The young Triestian William
Oberdan, university student at Rome, ardent apostle of
Italianity, is hanged at Trieste for attempting to take the
life of Francis Joseph. Tremendous Italian demonstra¬
tions against Austria (December
1882)......163
XIII.
The monument to Dante in the city of Trent
(1896).
Manifestations of Italianity at Trieste and
Istria
(1897-
І9°3)·
The elementary and intermediate Italian schools
in Goritz and
Gradisca,
Trieste,
Istria
and in
Dalmaţia.
The eternal lamp placed by the Irredentist Italians at
the tomb of Dante in Ravenna
(1908).
The Italian
Irredentist students of the University of Vienna assaulted
by the Austrian students of the same University and fired
upon by the police. Tremendous Italian demonstrations
of protest against Austria
(1908).
The incessant con¬
spiracies of Italian Trieste against the Austrian govern¬
ment until
1915.............176
XIV.
A proclamation inciting Italy to war against Austria,
sent by the Triestians to each socialist deputy of the
Italian National Parliament on the day when the new
Legislature opened in Rome, February 1914
.....188
XV. A proclamation inciting Italy to war against Austria,
sent by the Triestians to each non-socialist deputy of the
Italian National Parliament on the day when the new
legislature opened in Rome, February
1914.....190
XVI.
A proclamation inciting Italy to war against Austria
by the Italians of the Irredentist provinces of
Gradisca,
Goritz, Trieste and
Istria
(Julian Venice) and the
Tren¬
tino
during the month of April 1914, for the Unity of
the
Patria.
.............191
CONTENTS 13
PAGE
XVII. The Italian
banner is hoisted at Trieste on the tower
of
San Giusto
and over the harbor of Muggia in Decem¬
ber, 1914. Thousands of Irredentist Italians rush to
offer themselves to the
Patria in
the present great war
against Austria, 1914-1915
..........195
XVIII.
Gabriele d Annunzio
reaffirms and exalts the
Ital-
ianity of Trieste in the garden of the Palace of Andrea
Doria,
at Genoa (May
6, 1915),
upon receiving a gift in
plaster of the Triestian Lion, the original of which is in the
wall of one of the houses of the Guistiniani
.....196
XIX.
Words spoken by
Gabriele
d Annunzio in
Genoa,
May
7, 1915,
to the exiles of
Dalmaţia,
upon receiving
from them the gift of a book, printed in Genoa, in which
the Dalmatians affirm, demonstrate and defend the Itali-
anity of
Dalmaţia.
...........197
THIRD PART
I. The assassination of the Archduke Francis Ferdinand, heir
to the Austro-Hungarian throne, by the Serbian student
Gabrilo
Princip
on June
28,
1914
........201
II. The fatal note
—
ultimatum of the Austro-Hungarian
government to the government of Serbia (July
23,
1914)
................202
III. The partisan attitude of Germany. The conciliatory
attitude of Russia; The beseeching telegram of Prince
Alexander, regent of Serbia, to Czar Nicholas II. An
eloquent telegram from the English Ambassador, Buch¬
anan. The obstinacy of the Austro-Hungarian govern¬
ment
................205
IV. The reply of the Serbian government to the ultimatum
note of the Austro-Hungarian government was given
July
25,
1914.
.............208
V. An eloquent telegram from the English ambassador in
Vienna, Maurice
di
Bunsen,
to Sir Edward Grey (July
27,
1914). An official communication from the Russian
government, published by the
Courrier de la
Bourse, of
Petrograd
(July
27,
1914), the reply of Czar Nicholas II to
Prince Alexander, regent of Serbia (July
27,
1914). The
14 CONTENTS
PAOS
grateful acknowledgment of Prince Alexander to Czar
Nicholas II
..............213
VI. The declaration of war by Austro-Hungary against
Serbia (July
27,
1914). The proclamation of the Em¬
peror Francis Joseph to his people (July 28th). Czar
Nicholas sends an urgent telegram to the Kaiser, begging
of him to discourage war (July 29th). The reply and
the declaration of war (July 31st)
........214
VII.
The treaty of the Triple Alliance between the govern¬
ments of Italy, Austria, and Germany (1882-1912). The
articles III, IV, and
VII
of that same treaty
.....217
VIII.
How the government of Austria, in its fatal ultimatum
of July
23, 1914,
and the consequent declaration of war
against Serbia, of July
27, 1914,
violated the treaty of
the Triple Alliance to the injury of Italy
......218
IX. The declaration of Italian neutrality (August
4,
1914).
220
X. The Italian Government, on May
3, 1915,
denounces
the treaty of the Triple Alliance
........221
XI. Antonio Salandra, president of the ministerial council
of Italy, in the historical session of the National Italian
parliament in Rome, May
20, 1915,
explains the reasons
which forced the Italian government to declare war on
Austria-Hungary.
. ..........223
XII.
Italy declares war against Austria-Hungary (May
23,
XIII.
The Emperor Francis Joseph in a proclamation ad¬
dressed to his people on May
24, 1915,
accuses Victor
Emanuel
HI, King of Italy, of treachery
......226
XIV.
The violent and false speech of
von Bethmann-
Hollweg, the German chancellor, to the Reichstag in
Berlin, against Italy (May
28, 1915).......227
XV. Antonio Salandra, president of the Italian cabinet, in
a solemn and detailed speech delivered in the
Campido¬
glio
of Rome, June
2, 1915,
defends Italy from the accusa¬
tions of the Austro-Hungarian Emperor and the German
Chancellor.
............ 229
CONTENTS 15
FOURTH PART
PAGE
I. First reason: Patriotism
..........·. 243
II. Second reason: Irredentism
......... 245
III. Third reason: An unreturned visit
....... 246
IV. Fourth reason: National cohesion; military efficiency.
. 247
V. Fifth reason: Fear of isolation
......... 250
VI. Sixth reason: The right to travel
........ 251
VII.
Seventh reason: Human solidarity
....... 253
VIII.
The betrayal
............. 278
IX. English and French gold
.......... 289
X. Territorial cupidity
............ 301
XL The
Omnipotents
............ 303
Index
................ 307
ILLUSTRATIONS
The
Tavola Clesiana.
........... 96
Map of the unredeemed Italian regions
......
33S—339
Press and individual opinions on the book, Journalism of the
Italian Emigrants in America by
Luigi Carnovale .
.317
INDICE
ALFABETICO
dei Nomi Propri di Persona
Abba
Giuseppe Cesare,
476.
Abruzzi, duca degli,
572.
Adalberto
di Baviera,
620.
Adami Giovan Battista,
469.
Adamo,
277-
Adriano
IV,
papa,
442, 444.
Aehrenthal, conte,
572, 573.
Ajani Giulio,
424, 496.
Alarico,
592.
Albani Felice,
505.
Alberto, arciduca,
564.
Alboino,
417.
Aleardo Aleardi,
484.
Alessandro III, papa,
445, 448.
Alessandro di
Serbia,
545, 547, 551.
Alighieri,
582.
AUemandi,
464.
Almerigotti Alessandro,
469.
Almerigotti Giovanni e Lodovico,
469·
Amedeo VI di Savoia,
451.
Annibale,
388.
Antonaz Antonio,
484.
Apollinara Pinario,
433.
Ardigò
prof.
Roberto,
600, 606.
Aretino,
636.
Arberto da Intimiano,
447.
Arimani Antonio,
476.
Armellini Carlo,
393, 398, 468,
Arnaldo da
Brescia,
442.
Arquati
Tavani
Giuditta,
424, 425,
426, 496.
Ascoli Graziadio,
458.
Astolfo,
426.
Attila,
437, 592.
Augusto,
429, 430, 432.
Aurelio Marco,
430, 436.
Avezzana,
500*
Baiamonti Antonio,
464, 534.
В
albo Cesare,
376.
Ballila,
362, 389.
Balzac,
634.
Bandiera Attilio ed
Emilio,
458.
Baratieri Oreste,
476.
Barbarossa
Federico,
389, 442, 443,
444, 445, 446, 447, 448, 449.
Barge, conte di,
394.
Barzilai Salvatore,
501.
Bassi Ugo,
399, 400.
Batterà Raimondo,
504.
Battorchi
Cernió,
49г.
Bazzoni Clementina,
508.
Bazzoni, dottor,
508.
Beatrice,
513.
Beccarla Cesare,
508.
Belgioìoso, principessa
Cristina
di,
З92.
Bell,
403.
Belloni Giuseppe,
383.
Berardi G.,
458.
Berchet Giovanni, $72*
Berchtold, conte di,
546, 570, 571,
573·
Berini Giovanni,
506.
Bertelli Pietro,
468.
Bertolini,
628, 632.
Bethmann-Hollweg,
von, 565, 574,
576.
Bevilacqua Achille,
468.
Bevilacqua Giovanni,
469.
Bezzi
Enoch,
476.
Bezzi Ergisto,
476, 477, 485, 488
496.
Bidischini Francesco,
476.
Bismarck,
554, 568, 571.
Bissolati, ministro,
358·
Bixio Nino,
420.
Blasig
Carlo,
498.
Boccaccio,
635.
Boggio Carlo,
494.
Bolcego Tomaso,
476.
643
644
INDICE ALFABETICO
Bolza,
384, 386.
Bonetti, Domenico
469.
Bonomo Antonio,
453.
Borelli Vincenzo,
375.
Borisi Marcantonio,
469.
Borromeo, conte Vitaliano,
392.
Boscovich Carlo,
471.
Bovio Giovanni,
511, 631, 632, 634,
:
Braccioiini,
636.
Brambilla Pietro,
494.
Bresciani, famiglia,
490.
Brisa,
vescovo-barone,
450.
Bronzetti, famiglia,
478.
Bronzetti Narciso,
473, 474, 477.
Bronzetti Oreste,
490.
Bronzetti
Pilade,
477, 478.
Bronzetti
Pilade
e Narciso,
468,
490.
Brück, 459.
Bruffel Giovanni,
468.
Brul,
475.
Brunetti Angelo
(СгсегџассМо)у
399,
4OO.
Bruno Giordano,
580, 591, 600.
Buchanan,
545.
Buchler
Gustavo,
488.
Bulow, principe di,
566, 577, 622,
626, 628, 632.
Bunsen
Maurizio,
550.
Buono Michele,
479.
Burckhardt Jacob,
635.
Cadorna Raffaele,
426, 488, 499.
Gairoli
Adelaide,
497.
Cairoli Benedetto*
497, 498, 500.
Cairoli dottor Carlo,
497.
Cairoli Enrico,
424.
Cairoli, famiglia,
478.
Cairoli, fratelli,
424, 496.
Cairoli Giovanni,
496.
Caligola Caio,
433.
Calvi Pietro Fortunato,
410.
Camerino Quinto Sulpicio,
433.
Campanella Tommaso,
580, 598,
641.
Campbell Roberto,
385.
Canai Giulio,
458.
Cancellieri Giulio,
452.
Canella
Isidoro,
491.
Cantù Cesare,
376.
Canzio Stefano,
499.
Cappellini Alfredo,
422.
Capponi Gino,
376.
Capponi Piero,
523. ;
Capria,
489.
Caprin,
500.
Cara vati, vedova,
382.
Carbone Giovanni,
363.
Carbonis R.,
458.
Carducci Giosuè,
426, 501, 508,
510, 512, 637.
Carli,
493.
Carli Gian Rinaldo,
456.
Carlo Alberto di Savoia-Carignano,
370» 377»
З78,
387, 390» 393» 421
459, 465, 615, 616, 619.
Carlo
II
duca di Parma,
410.
Carlo
Emanuele
III di Savoia,
361.
Carlo, arciduca,
454.
Carlo III, duca di Parma,
410.
Carlo Felice di Savoia,
370, 378.
Carlo Ludovico, arciduca,
503.
Carlo Magno,
438.
Carlo
IV,
450.
Carlo
V,
389, 452, 454.
Carlo VI d Austria,
361, 362, 455.
Carlo Alberto di Baviera (Carlo
VII),
361.
Carlo
VIII, 523.
Carpaccio,
493.
Carrara Francesco,
508.
Casanova don Pietro,
468.
Caterina li di Russia,
508.
Catone,
585.
Cattaneo Carlo,
376, 380, 384, 385.
Cattarozzi Vincenzo,
497.
Caucich Pietro,
515.
Cavali Pietro,
468.
Cavallotti Felice,
637.
Cavour, Camillo Benso di,
376, 411,
412, 415, 418, 471, 481, 482, 483,
486, 636-
Cellini Benvenuto,
635.
INDICE
ALFABETICO
645
Cernuschi Enrico, 385.
Cesare Giulio,
426, 430» 431, 432,
440, 585.
Chimelli Carlo, 490.
Chiozza
Pietro,
489.
Chotek Sofia, 539.
Ciani Giuseppa,
506.
Ciganovic Milan, 541, 549.
Cignoli, 416.
Ciotti Marziano,
476, 488, 496.
Cipriani
Armłcare,
637.
Clarendon,
400.
Claudio,
433,
Clemente VII, papa,
389.
Clerici Giorgio,
385.
Coen Filippo,
469.
Coiz
prof.
Antonio,
472.
Colombo Cristoforo,
585.
Colombo Giacobbe,
408.
Combi
Carlo,
494.
Comelli Federico,
471.
Conforti Raffaele,
413.
Conrad, 571.
Conti Maria,
409.
Correnti Cesare,
397.
Cortella Paolo,
491.
Costantino il Grande,
430.
Covi Virgilio,
490.
Crispí
Francesco,
554.
Cristiano di Magonza, arcivescovo,
445-
Cristo,
366, 596.
Cuder Federico,
497.
Cumano Costantino,
462, 469.
Dalla Costa Giovanni,
476.
DalľOngaro
Francesco,
409, 458,
468.
Dandolo,
535.
Dandolo Enrico,
399.
D Andri Leonardo,
488.
Danielii
Giovanni,
465.
D Annunzio Gabriele,
5
r
4, 535,
623, 626, 632, 637.
Dante,
427, 432,512, 513» 519»
S2°»
S98,
635.
D Aspre,
398.
Davanzati,
493.
D Avarna, duca,
563, 572, 623.
D Azeglio Massimo,
376.
De Bassetti
Tito,
480.
De Benedetti, famiglia,
478.
De
Canal Bernardo,
410.
De Carina Pietro,
495.
De
Haag Riccardo, 515.
Delfino Menotti,
502.
Della Casa Giovanni,
583.
Della Croce Ireneo,
455.
Della Torre Enrico,
450.
De Mulitsch,
502.
Dentato M.
Curio,
630.
Depaugher Carlo,
488.
De Pregel Melchiorre,
498.
De Pretis Carlo,
490.
De Pretis, famiglia,
489.
De Pretis Giovanni,
480.
Depretis, ministro,
554.
De
Rin
Nicolo,
462, 486.
Dicio Domenico,
468.
Diederichs E.,
635.
Diocleziano,
430, 435.
Don aggio Rodolfo,
488, 490, 496.
Donati Giuseppe,
489.
Doria Lamba,
534, 535.
D Oria Luciano,
534, 535.
Dostojewski, 634.
Dragicchio Giuseppe,
469*
Druffel Giovanni,
488.
Ducati Angelo,
465.
Ducati, famiglia,
490.
Duchie Luigi,
515.
Dudovick,
500.
Durando Giacomo,
376.
Durando Giovanni,
390.
Eccheli, famiglia di Ala,
490.
Eccheli, famiglia ài Brentonico,
490.
Eccher
prof.
Alberto,
488.
Elena, regina,
514.
Elisabetta, imperatrice d Austria,
419.
Elisabetta di Savoia-Carignano,
619.
646
INDICE ALFABETICO
Erberti Francesco,
469.
Erode,
430.
Eugenio III, papa,
442.
Fabi,
478.
Fabricci Gustavo,
502.
Fabrizi,
500.
Fabrizio
Caio,
629, 630, 632, 634.
Facchinetti Michele,
471.
Faienz Filippo,
489.
Fani
prof. Gino,
574.
Fattori Antonio,
476.
Fausta,
430.
Favetti Carlo,
471.
Favetti
Nepomućeno,
485.
Federico III d Austria,
453, 454.
Fenali Giuseppe,
489.
Ferdinando
I
di Borbone,
364, 365,
366, 368.
Ferdinando
I
d Austria,
390.
Ferdinando
I,
re dei Romani,
452,
454·
Ferdinando
II
di Borbone,
378,
389» 399» 419»
458·
Ferdinando III di Lorena,
363.
Ferolli Enrico,
488, 490, 496.
Ferrandi Luciano,
408.
Ferrari Carlo,
481.
Ferrari Giuseppe,
376.
Ferrari, maggiore,
474.
Ferruccio Francesco,
389, 477.
Festi
Lorenzo,
465.
Figulo Marcio,
435.
Fischer P. D.,
636.
Flaccio,
493.
Flotow, barone
von, 557, 569.
Foà di Bruno,
422.
Fonda Eugenio,
515.
Fontana Giuseppe,
476, 485, 488,
496.
Ford Henry,
610.
Fortis Leone, 4S9,
469, 471.
Foseólo
Ugo,
591,
Francesco
I
d Austria,
367, 384.
Francesco
I
di Borbone,
369, 378.
Francesco
IÏ
di Borbone (France-
schùlló),
419, 421.
Francesco
II
d Austria,
440.
Francesco Ferdinando, arciduca
¡
d Austria,
529, 544.
Francesco Giuseppe,
357, 390, 407,
410, 412, 416, 418, 419, 423, 470,
486, 494, 498, 507, 508, 510, 521,
524» 539» 542, 552, 554, 563» 574»
582, 583, 597, 620, 621, 623, 624,
625, 626, 639.
Francesco
IV
arciduca di
Modena,
363, 373»
З74»
375·
Fratti Antonio,
590.
Frattini Pietro Domenico,
410.
Friedlander, 635.
Fusinato Arnaldo,
393, 404, 471.
Galilei,
600.
Galletti,
398.
Galli
Ernesta,
409.
Gallo Michele,
488.
Gambaroni Giuseppe,
383.
Garibaldi
Anita, 399, 400, 401, 402,
403.
Garibaldi Bruno e Sante,
590.
Garibaldi Giuseppe,
376, 398, 399,
400, 401, 402, 403, 406, 412, 417,
419, 420, 421, 423, 424, 426, 460,
468, 472, 473, 474» 475» 476, 478,
479, 480, 481, 483» 485» 488, 489»
491» 495» 496» 497» 499»
S«*»
5ОЬ
502,
su,
Ѕ34,
580, 589, 591, 631,
637·
Garibaldi Menotti,
499, 513.
Garibaldi Peppino,
590.
Garibaldi Ricciotti,
499, 513, 589,
S9°·.
Gattesi Giuseppe,
469.
Gazzoletti Antonio,
458, 465, 471.
Gervasio
Ricciotti,
504.
Giesl von Gieslesen, 540, 542, 550.
Gioberti Vincenzo,
376, 377.
Giolitti Giovanni,
618, 621, 622,
623, 625, 627, 628, 629, 632.
Giosuè,
596.
Giovanni, re di Sassonia,
619, 635.
Giugurta,
511.
Giulia,
431.
INDICE ALFABETICO
647
Giussano, Alberto da,
447.
Giusti Giuseppe,
376, 377, 584.
Gizzi, cardinale,
378.
Gladstone
Guglielmo,
413,
Godina
Alessandro,
469.
Goethe,
635.
Gogol,
592.
Gorki,
592.
Gracchi,
497.
Gravisi Girolamo,
488.
Grazioli Bartolomeo,
410.
Grego
Ado,
515.
Gregorich
Luigi,
502.
Gregorio
XVI,
papa,
375.
Gregorovius Ferdinando,
635.
Grey
Edward,
545, 550.
Grimm Hermann, 635.
Grio
Domenico,
488.
Grioli
Giovanni,
410.
Grioli
Giuseppe,
471.
Grion
Giovanni,
516.
Grozet
G.,
458.
Guerrazzi Francesco Domenico,
376, 393^416, 468.
Guglielmo di
Wied,
573.
Guglielmo
II,
539, 553, 620, 621,
624, 625, 626, 639.
Guilay,
415, 418.
Hagenaer,
461.
Hardt
Fred.
В.,
634.
Hart, Schaffner & Marx, 610.
Hayman, 397.
Herrn Viktor, 636.
Herbert Francesco, 469.
Hermet Francesco, 462, 487.
Hess, 418.
Hofmeister, 636.
Hohenwarth,
conte,
479.
Hortis, 487, 494.
Hugo Victor, 508, 510, 589.
Imbriani
Mâtteo
Renato,
511, 637.
Inama
Virgilio,
490.
Infessura,
636.
Insel, 636.
Isnenghi Enrico, 476, 477·
Ivancich Giovanni, 489, 537.
Jagher,
famiglia,
490.
Jagher Giovanni, 490.
Jamsy Carlo, 502.
Jolanda
di Savoia, principessa,
514.
Jurettig Enrico, 510.
Kalteneisen
Ferruccio,
515.
Kandier Giovanni, 458.
Kandier
Pietro,
457.
Kattenbrunner
Arturo,
504.
Krammer
Giulietta,
504.
Krupp, 620.
Kudachew, 544.
Lamarmora
Alfonso,
411, 487.
Lamartine
Alfonso,
584,
Lamoriciere, 417.
Land
ucci,
636.
Lavisato Domenico, 497.
Lazzaro di
Betania,
596.
Leggero,
401.
Leonardi Giuseppe,
476, 488.
Leone
XIII,
papa,
417, 418.
Leonid
a,
477, 478.
Leopardi Giacomo,
376.
Leopoldo, granduca di Toscana,
378, 389» 393·
Leopoldo
I
d Austria,
454.
Leopoldo III d Austria,
451, 45*.
Levi Sansone,
468.
Levino P. Valerio,
629.
Litta, duca,
392.
Livaditi
Demetrio,
471.
Lívia,
430.
Lorenzettì,
524.
Lovìsòni Gioacchino,
487.
Luccardi Vincenzo,
502.
Lucio
II,
papa,
442.
Luigi
I
di Portogallo,
484.
Luíves J.,
634.
Lusgar Nicolo,
453·
Mac Mahon,
417·
Macchio, barone,
546.
Machiavelli,
565, 636.
Maddali
Emilio,
496.
Madonizza dott.
Α.,
457»
4**7·
648
INDICE ALFABETICO
Madonizza
Pietro,
488.
Maffezzoli
Basilio,
474.
Magliani
Agostino,
631.
Magoni Luciano,
514, 515.
Magrini Pietro,
515.
Mala
testa Enrico,
59 г.
Malfatti Bartolomeo,
469.
Mameli Goffredo,
388, 393, 399,
477·
Mamiani Terenzio,
376.
Manara
Luciano,
399.
Manci
Filippo,
476, 477, 485, 488,
491.
Manci
Gaetano,
465, 479.
Manci Sigismondo,
465.
Mancini,
554.
Mandich,
509.
Manin
Daniele,
376, 387, 390, 404,
406, 468, 484, 494.
Manzoni Alessandro,
376, 500.
Marcabruni Luigi,
476.
Marchetti dott. Levio,
468.
Marconi Guglielmo,
606.
Margherita di Savoia, principessa,
497-
Margherita, regina,
554, 582, 619,
620.
Maria
Adelaide,
619.
Maria Elisabetta,
619.
Maria Isabella,
620.
Maria Luigia d Austria,
364
Maria
Luisa
di Borbone,
363.
Maria Pia di Savoia,
484.
Maria Sofia di Baviera,
419.
Maria Teresa d Austria,
361, 362.
Mario Caio,
511.
Marsili Antonio,
480.
Martini, famiglia,
49b.
Martini Federico,
469.
Martini Francesco,
476, 491.
Martini Leopoldo,
473.
Martori
Pietro,
476.
Marzari Carlo,
468.
Masi,
398.
Massenzio,
430.
Massimiano,
430.
Mattedi Francesco,
468.
Mauro Francesco,
496.
Mauro Gino,
524.
Mazza Salvatore,
381.
Mazzini Angelo,
488.
Mazzini Giuseppe,
376, 377^ 393,
З98,
399».406, 410, 427, 458, 460,
468, 485, 500, 515, 580, 591, 631,
637.
Mazzoni,
393.
Medici, generale,
488.
Menelao,
601.
Menotti Ciro,
373, 374.
Mercantine Luigi,
414.
Merey,
570.
Metternich,
367, 368, 378, 457, 459,
461.
Meucci Antonio,
403.
Milius,
392.
Milla
Davide,
488.
Minosse,
513.
Moiola Quirino,
476.
Molinari, famiglia,
490.
Mommsen
Teodoro,
434, 635.
Mondolfo,
392.
Moneta
Teodoro,
606.
Monferrato, marchese di,
108.
Montanari Carlo,
410.
Montanari Pietro,
490.
Montanelli Giuseppe,
376, 393.
Morosini
Emilio,
399.
Moriera
Attilio ed
Emilio,
502.
Mosettig Pietro,
496.
Muller G.,
636.
Muratori Ludovico Antonio,
447.
Muratti Giusto,
496.
Muzio,
493.
Naldini, dottore,
401.
Napoleone
I,
363, 440.
Napoleone III,
411, 415, 417, 418,
419, 423, 424, 426, 494.
Negri Antonio,
450.
Negri Edoardo,
468.
Niccolini Giovan Battista,
376, 416.
Niccolo
I
di Russia,
413.
Nicola
II
zar di Russia,
545, 551,
553·
INDICE ALFABETICO
649
Nipote Giulio,
435.
Nerone,
404.
Nisco Nicola,
413.
Nugent,
390, 395.
Oberdan Giuseppina,
510.
Oberdan
Guglielmo,
504, 505, 506,
507, 508, 509,
sio,
su,
512, 519,
522, 524, 590.
Olacutti Carolina,
504.
Oli
vieri
Alessio,
414.
Orazio,
581.
Orefice Giulio,
452.
Oreste,
435.
Orioli
F., 458.
O. landiíii
Giovanni,
457, 469.
Orseolo Pietro,
438.
Orseolo Pietro
II,
438, 439, 440.
Ottone,
448.
Oudinot,
398, 399.
Pallfly,
460.
Paímerston,
385.
Parisi Rodolfo,
498.
Pasic,
540, 542, 546, 549, 550, 551.
Pasquale III, antipapa,
445.
Patciu,
540, 542.
Pattini Giovanni,
517.
Pecci Gioacchino, cardinale)
417,
418.
Pecenco Luigi,
496.
Pellico
Silvio,
371, 372.
Pepe Guglielmo,
365, 366, 389, 390,
404, 406.
Percoto Caterina,
458.
PersanO) ammiraglio,
423.
Petitti Ignazio,
376-
Piatti Antonio,
383.
Piatti, famiglia,
456.
Piazza Giovanna,
382.
Pieri Pietro,
468.
Pietro,
426.
Pietro
I
Karageorgevic,
539.
Pio
IX,
papa,
378, 389, 390, 392»
399, 418, 426, 459.
Pipino,
426.
Pironti,
413.
Pirro,
629 630.
Pisanelli Giuseppe,
413.
Pitteri Riccardo,
518.
Pianta Giulio,
433.
Plinio,
431.
Poerio Alessandro,
376.
Poerio Carlo,
413.
Pogatschnig
Emilio,
502.
Poincarê,
585.
Pollini Giuseppe,
496.
Poma Carlo,
410.
Pompeo,
431.
Pomponazzi,
600.
Ponti,
392.
Popovich Eugenio,
488.
Poropat Francesco,
469.
Prato,
467.
Princip Gabrilo,
539.
Radetzky, feld-maresciallo,
379,
380, 390, 391, 394, 404, 407, 409,
461, 468, 564.
Ranfo Marco,
450.
Ranieri Giuseppe, arciduca,
619.
Ranke,
635.
Rascovich
Edgardo,
500, 501.
Ravaglia,
401.
Ravaglia Stefano,
401, 402.
Raymmi,
392.
Regazzini Alessandro,
502.
Rendich,
503.
Ressmann Costantino,
463.
Revere Giuseppe,
460, 468.
Riaviz Clemente,
485.
Riaviz Stefano,
502.
Ricchetti Giuseppe,
502.
Ricci Vittore,
465.
Rinaldi Ferdinando,
490.
Rismondo,
487.
Ritozzo Luigi,
469.
Rizzi Giovanni,
465.
Romagnosi
Gian Domenico,
38α
Romanin
Samuele,
469.
Romano Pietro,
469.
Romoló
Augusto,
435.
Rosmini
Antonio,
376.
Rossetti Dante Gabriele,
366.
Rossetti Domenico,
457.
650
INDICE ALFABETICO
Rossetti Gabriele,
366, 368.
Rossi Giovanni fu Francesco,
506.
Rossi Pellegrino,
392.
Rubinisch, 469.
Ruffini, ministro,
358.
Saffi Aurelio,
393, 398, 410, 468,
SOI,
511,631.
S
aguoso,
dottore,
468.
Salandra,
501.
Salandra Antonio,
561, 567, 569.
Saliceti,
413.
Sallier della Torre,
370.
San Giuliano, marchese di,
557,
569» 57°·
San torre di Santarosa,
370.
Sar Tommaso,
469.
Sartori Adolfo,
488.
Sartorio,
493.
Savo
Pietro,
464.
Sazonoff,
542, 544, 545.
Scarboncich Pietro,
469.
Scarteliini Angelo,
410.
Schirone
Luigi,
503.
Schmid,
417.
Scialoia Antonio,
413
Sciesa Antonio, no.
Scipio (Scipione l Africano),
388»
Sclopis Federico,
376.
Scocchi Angelo,
515.
Scorpion
Donato,
452.
Scussa,
455.
Seismit-Doda Federico,
459, 460,
469.
Settembrini Luigi,
413.
Settimo Ruggiero,
376, 378.
Seufferheld,
392.
Sgarzolo Giuseppe,
457.
Sitano Marco Giunio,
433.
Sizzo De Noris, famiglia,
490.
Sizzo Pietro,
465.
Socci Ettore,
512.
Solitro Giulio,
462.
Sonn
ino, barone
Sydney, 559, 560,
568.
Sordello,
513.
Spadoni
Ernesto,
514.
Spaventa Silvio,
413.
Speri
Tito,
410.
Spinola Gasparo,
534.
Špongia
Filippo,
504.
Stamura,
446.
Statuto
Carnudo,
433.
Stefania,
principessa,
503.
Stefano
II,
papa,
426.
Stella Sigismondo,
502.
Sterchele
Anselmo,
476.
Sterle Mario,
515.
Strabone,
431.
Strandtman,
542, 551.
Summa
Antonio,
458.
Sussa
Francesco,
498.
Tabai Antonio,
502.
Tacito,
639.
Tamaro Attilio,
468, 523.
Tankosic Voijna,
541, 549.
Tarugi,
466.
Tavernini, famiglia,
490.
Tazzoli Enrico,
410.
Tchernichewski,
591.
Tedeschi Paolo,
484.
Tegetthoff,
564.
Telesio,
600.
Terzaghi Giulio,
385.
Testi Giuseppe,
465.
Thum Matteo,
465.
Tiberio,
430.
Tito
Livio,
429.
Tivaroni Carlo,
490, 497.
Toller
Domenico (Costa Giacomo),
476.
Tolstoi, 591.
Tommaséo Niccolo,
376, 387, 406,
461, 464, 468, 469, 472, 486, 534·
Tommaso, principe di Savoia,
619.
Tonini Leopoldo,
478.
Traiano,
431.
Tranquillini
Filippo,
476, 477, 485,
488, 490.
Treitschke,
636.
Trezzi Giacomo,
408.
Turgheniew,
591.
Tusti
Alfredo,
634.
INDICE
ALFABETICO
651
Ugheili,
455.
Umberto, principe
di Savoia,
497.
Umberto
I
di Savoia,
497, 512, 514,
554, 582, 619, 620.
Urban,
416.
Urigio
Nicolo,
452.
Vaïussi
Pacifico,
458, 463, 481.
Vascon Giovanni,
488.
Venezian Felice,
523.
Venezian Giacomo,
468.
Venier Cristoforo,
499.
Venturi,
478.
Verdi Giuseppe,
458, 470, 514.
Vergerlo,
493.
Vergottini
Nicolo,
469.
Verzegnasse Francesco,
472«
Vidacovich Antonio,
501.
Vidacowich Domenico,
488.
Viđali
Gian Luigi,
496.
Viđali
Giuseppe,
516.
Vídali
Marcello,
533.
Villari Pasquale,
боб.
Vìnci Giuseppe,
502.
Vinci Leonardo,
600.
Virgilio,
432, 609.
Visconti di
Mondrone,
duca,
392.
Visconti Venosta,
494.
Vittore
IV,
antipapa,
445.
Voltaire, 508.
Vittorio
Emanuele I
di Savoia,
363,
369.
Vittorio
Emanuele
II,
394, 411»
4I2>
415, 417, 418, 419, 421, 422,
423, 424, 472, 473, 475» 476» 480,
48г,
483, 484, 487, 489,
49O,
494,
495* 497»
Soo»
502, 619.
Vittorio
Emanuele
III,
357, 514,
563, 567, 585, 587, 615, 616, 618,
619, 620, 621, 622, 623, 624, 625,
626, 632.
Vusio Tommaso e Rovis,
497.
Walfer,
489.
Weber, von, 636.
Weiss,
famiglia,
490.
Weiden, 390.
Wilson,
presidente,
358.
Winckelmann, 635.
Wolffin, 635.
Wullenbacher, 509.
Zambelli Claudio, 488.
Zambelli Giovanni, 410.
Zamboni Filippo,
468.
Zampieri Riccardo, 520.
Zanardi
Ugo,
502.
Zancani Camillo, 476,477* 48S>
Zanetti
Arturo,
469.
Zanolla, 488.
Zanotti
Attilio,
476, 477.
Zecchia
Niccolo,
498.
Zenelii
Giambattista,
465.
Zeno Donato,
535.
Ziani Sebastiano,
448.
Zima
Carlo,
397.
Zinis Alessandro,
490.
Zobel, 46s.
Zocchi,
513.
Zucchi Martino,
487.
|
any_adam_object | 1 |
author | Carnovale, Luigi |
author_facet | Carnovale, Luigi |
author_role | aut |
author_sort | Carnovale, Luigi |
author_variant | l c lc |
building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV020366880 |
callnumber-first | D - World History |
callnumber-label | D520 |
callnumber-raw | D520.I7 |
callnumber-search | D520.I7 |
callnumber-sort | D 3520 I7 |
callnumber-subject | D - General History |
classification_rvk | NP 4410 |
ctrlnum | (OCoLC)299349 (DE-599)BVBBV020366880 |
discipline | Geschichte |
format | Book |
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geographic | Italien Österreich Austria Foreign relations Italy Italy Foreign relations Austria Italy History 1870-1914 |
geographic_facet | Italien Österreich Austria Foreign relations Italy Italy Foreign relations Austria Italy History 1870-1914 |
id | DE-604.BV020366880 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
indexdate | 2024-07-09T20:18:54Z |
institution | BVB |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-013774638 |
oclc_num | 299349 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-12 |
owner_facet | DE-12 |
physical | 4 p. l., 7-673 p. double map, facsim. : 24 cm |
psigel | BSBQK0084 BSBWK1 BSBWKA |
publishDate | 1917 |
publishDateSearch | 1917 |
publishDateSort | 1917 |
publisher | Italian-American publishing company |
record_format | marc |
spelling | Carnovale, Luigi Verfasser aut Why Italy entered into the great war, by Luigi Carnovale Chicago Italian-American publishing company 1917 4 p. l., 7-673 p. double map, facsim. : 24 cm txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier In English and Italian, with special t.-p. in Italian: Perchè l'Italia è entrata nella grande guerra... -- Advertising matter: p. [317]-337, 653-673. Weltkrieg 1914-19 bsbaltswk Italien bsbaltswk Außenpolitik Geschichte Weltkrieg (1914-1918) World War, 1914-1918 Causes World War, 1914-1918 Italy Italien Österreich Austria Foreign relations Italy Italy Foreign relations Austria Italy History 1870-1914 Digitalisierung BSB Muenchen 19 - ADAM Catalogue Enrichment application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=013774638&sequence=000003&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis Digitalisierung BSB Muenchen 19 - ADAM Catalogue Enrichment application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=013774638&sequence=000004&line_number=0002&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Register // Personenregister |
spellingShingle | Carnovale, Luigi Why Italy entered into the great war, by Luigi Carnovale Weltkrieg 1914-19 bsbaltswk Italien bsbaltswk Außenpolitik Geschichte Weltkrieg (1914-1918) World War, 1914-1918 Causes World War, 1914-1918 Italy |
title | Why Italy entered into the great war, by Luigi Carnovale |
title_auth | Why Italy entered into the great war, by Luigi Carnovale |
title_exact_search | Why Italy entered into the great war, by Luigi Carnovale |
title_full | Why Italy entered into the great war, by Luigi Carnovale |
title_fullStr | Why Italy entered into the great war, by Luigi Carnovale |
title_full_unstemmed | Why Italy entered into the great war, by Luigi Carnovale |
title_short | Why Italy entered into the great war, by Luigi Carnovale |
title_sort | why italy entered into the great war by luigi carnovale |
topic | Weltkrieg 1914-19 bsbaltswk Italien bsbaltswk Außenpolitik Geschichte Weltkrieg (1914-1918) World War, 1914-1918 Causes World War, 1914-1918 Italy |
topic_facet | Weltkrieg 1914-19 Italien Außenpolitik Geschichte Weltkrieg (1914-1918) World War, 1914-1918 Causes World War, 1914-1918 Italy Österreich Austria Foreign relations Italy Italy Foreign relations Austria Italy History 1870-1914 |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=013774638&sequence=000003&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=013774638&sequence=000004&line_number=0002&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT carnovaleluigi whyitalyenteredintothegreatwarbyluigicarnovale |