Early life Born in Florence, Leopold II was the son of
Ferdinand III, Grand Duke of Tuscany and Princess
Luisa Maria Amelia Teresa of the Two Sicilies, who were double first cousins. His maternal grandparents were
Ferdinand I of the Two Sicilies and
Maria Carolina of Austria. He accompanied his father while fleeing to Germany when Tuscany was
occupied by the French. He and his family returned to Florence after
Napoleon's defeat in 1814.
Reign , circa 1825,
National Museum of the Royal Palace|left He succeeded his father on 18 June 1824. During the first twenty years of his reign he devoted himself to the internal development of the state. His was the mildest and least reactionary of all the Italian despotisms of the day and, although always subject to
Austrian influence, he refused to adopt the Austrian methods of government, allowed a fair measure of liberty to the press, and permitted many political exiles from other states to dwell in Tuscany undisturbed. But when during the early 1840s unrest spread throughout Italy, even in Tuscany demands for a constitution and other political reforms were advanced. In 1845 and 1846, riots occurred in various parts of the country prompting Leopold to grant a number of administrative reforms. But Austrian influence prevented him from doing more, even had he wished to do so. After the election of
Pope Pius IX gave fresh encouragement to Liberalism, Leopold instituted the National Guard on the 4th of September in 1847. Soon afterward the marchese Cosimo Ridolfi (1794–1865) was appointed prime minister. The granting of the Neapolitan and Piedmontese constitutions was followed on the 17th of February, 1848 by that of Tuscany written by
Gino Capponi.
Italian Wars of Independence The uprisings
in Milan and
in Vienna aroused patriotic enthusiasm in Tuscany, where war against Austria was demanded. Leopold, yielding to popular pressure, sent a force of regulars and volunteers to co-operate with
Piedmont in the
Lombard campaign. His speech on their departure was uncompromisingly Italian and liberal. "Soldiers," he said, "the holy cause of Italian freedom is being decided to-day on the fields of Lombardy. Already the citizens of Milan have purchased their liberty with their blood and with a heroism of which history offers few examples... Honour to the arms of Italy! Long live Italian independence!" The Tuscan contingent fought bravely, though unsuccessfully, at Curtatone and Montanara. On 26 June, the first Tuscan parliament assembled but the disturbances following the failure of the campaign in Lombardy resulted in the resignation of the Ridolfi ministry, which was succeeded by that of Gino Capponi. The riots continued, especially at
Livorno which descended into actual civil war, and the democratic party of which
Francesco Domenico Guerrazzi and
Giuseppe Montanelli were organizers became more influential. Capponi resigned, and Leopold agreed reluctantly to a Montanelli-Guerrazzi ministry, which in its turn had to fight against the extreme republican party. New elections in the autumn of 1848 returned a constitutional majority, but it ended by voting in favour of a constituent assembly. There was talk of instituting a central Italian kingdom with Leopold as king as part of a larger Italian federation, but in the meanwhile the grand-duke, alarmed at the revolutionary and republican agitations in Tuscany and encouraged by the success of the Austrian troops, was, according to Montanelli, negotiating with Field Marshal
Radetzky and with Pius IX who had abandoned his liberal tendencies and fled to
Gaeta. Leopold left Florence for
Siena and eventually for
Porto Santo Stefano, leaving a letter to Guerrazzi in which he declared that he could not agree to the proposed constituent assembly on account of a protest from the pope. The utmost confusion prevailed in Florence and other parts of Tuscany. On the 18th of February 1849, a
republic was proclaimed and on that same day Leopold sailed for Gaeta. A third parliament was elected and Guerrazzi appointed dictator, but there was great discontent in the country and the defeat of
Charles Albert at
Novara caused consternation among the Liberals. The majority, while fearing an Austrian invasion, desired the return of the grand duke who had never been unpopular. In April, the municipal council usurped the powers of the assembly and invited him to return, "to save us by means of the restoration of the constitutional monarchy surrounded by popular institutions, from the shame and ruin of a foreign invasion." Leopold accepted, although he said nothing about the foreign invasion, and on 1 May sent Count Luigi Serristori to Tuscany with full powers.
Abdication and Later life At the same time, the Austrians occupied
Lucca and Livorno. Although Leopold feigned surprise at their action, it has since been proved that, as the Austrian general d'Aspre declared at the time, the Austrian intervention was due to the request of the grand duke. On the 24th of May, Giovanni Baldasseroni was appointed prime minister with the Austrians entering Florence the next day. On the 28th of July, Leopold himself returned. In the April of 1850, he concluded a treaty with Austria suspending the constitution for an indefinite period and agreeing to an Austrian occupation force of 10,000 men. That September, he dismissed parliament and the next year established a concordat with the Church of a very clerical character. He asked Austria if he might maintain the constitution and the Austrian premier
Prince Felix of Schwarzenberg advised him to consult the pope, the king of Naples and the dukes of Parma and Modena. On their advice he formally revoked the constitution in 1852. Political trials were held with Guerrazzi and many others being condemned to long terms of imprisonment. By the time the Austrian troops left Tuscany in 1855, Leopold's popularity was gone. Some of the Liberals, however, still believed in the possibility of a constitutional grand duke who could be induced for a second time to join Piedmont in a war against Austria, but the popular party headed by
Ferdinando Bartolommei and Giuseppe Dolfi believed that only by the expulsion of Leopold could the national aspirations be realised. In 1859, when France and Piedmont
made war on Austria, Leopold's government failed to prevent numbers of young Tuscan volunteers from joining the Franco-Piedmontese forces. Eventually, an agreement was arrived at between the aristocratic constitutionalists and the popular party leading the Grand Duke's participation in the war to be formally demanded. Leopold gave way at first, entrusting Don Neri Corsini with the formation of a ministry. The popular demands presented by Corsini were for the abdication of Leopold in favour of his son, an alliance with Piedmont and the reorganisation of Tuscany in accordance with a larger reorganisation of Italy. Leopold hesitated and finally rejected the proposals as insulting to his dignity. But on the 27 April, there was a great disturbance in Florence with the Italian colours being flown everywhere. While order was maintained, the Grand Duke and his family departed for Bologna. Thus the revolution was accomplished without blood being shed and, after a period of
provisional government, Tuscany was incorporated in the
Kingdom of Italy. On the 21st of July, Leopold abdicated in favour of his son
Ferdinand IV of Tuscany. Ferdinand IV never reigned but issued a protest to the annexation from
Dresden on the 26th of March. After his abdication, he lived in exile in Austria for many years and was elected mayor of Schlackenwerth
(Ostrov). Having lived in Rome since 1869, he died there on 29 January 1870, only a few months before Italy
captured the city. ==Evaluation==