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RURAL SOCIETY AND CROWD ACTION IN BOLOGNA, c. 1796–c. 1831

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 January 2006

DORA M. DUMONT
Affiliation:
State University of New York College, Oneonta

Abstract

Although the field of peasant and rural studies has done much to redeem the reputation of peasants in general, historians generally continue to consider the Italian rural population in the early nineteenth century largely extraneous to the story of national unification. However, police reports, court records, and chroniclers from Bologna provide descriptions of collective action that suggest a complex pattern of interaction with both local authorities and the shifting political context. While it remains true that with few exceptions rural communities had little to do with the Risorgimento directly, already during the Revolutionary and Restoration eras they engaged in collective action that reflected independent initiative in engaging with various types of authority rather than political ignorance or blind adherence to religion.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© 2005 Cambridge University Press

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