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     GIUSEPPE MAZZINI, the
       great political idealist of the Italian struggle for independence, was
       born at Genoa, June 22, 1805. His faith in democracy and his
       enthusiasm for a free Italy he inherited
       from his parents; and while still a student in the University of
       Genoa he gathered round him a circle of youths who shared his dreams.At
       the age of twenty-two he
       joined the secret society of the Carbonari, and was sent on a
       mission to Tuscany, where he was entrapped and arrested.On
       his release, he set about the formation, among the Italian exiles in
       Marseilles, of the Society of Young
       Italy,
       which had for its aim the establishment
       of a free and united Italian republic. His activities led to
       a decree for his banishment from France, but he succeeded in outwitting
       the spies of the Government and going on with his work.The conspiracy for a national rising planned by Young
       Italy was discovered, many of the leaders were executed, and Mazzini
       himself condemned to death. | 
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Almost
  at once, however, he resumed operations, working this time from Geneva; but
  another abortive expedition led to his expulsion from Switzerland. He found
  refuge, but at first hardly a livelihood, in London, where he continued his
  propaganda by means of his pen. He went back to Italy when the revolution of
  1848 broke out, and fought fiercely but in vain against the French, when they
  besieged Rome and ended the Roman Republic in1849.
 
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Defeated
       and broken, he returned to England, where he remained till called to
       Italy by the insurrection of 1857. 
 He worked with Garibaldi for
  some time; but the kingdom established under Victor Emmanuel by Cavour
  and Garibaldi was far from the ideal Italy for which Mazzini had striven. The
  last years of his life were spent mainly in London, but at the end he
  returned to Italy, where he died on March 10, 1872. Hardly has any age seen a
  political martyr of a purer or nobler type.
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Mazzini’s essay on Byron and Goethe is more than literary
  criticism, for it  
exhibits that philosophical quality which gives so
  remarkable a unity to the  
writings of Mazzini, whether literary, social, or
  political. 
 
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What was the role of Mazzini in the
  unification of Italy? 
 
Mazzini  found several
       organizations aimed at the unification or liberation of other
       nations.Famous of them were Young Italy and Young Europe.The "Young Europe" movement also inspired
       a group of young Turkish army cadets and students.Young Italy was a secret society formed to promote
       Italian unification.In 1843 he organized another riot in 
       Bologna. Mazzini accused the British government of having
       passed information about the expeditions to the Neapolitans, and
       question was raised in the British Parliament.Mazzini nationalism was based upon ridding Italy of
       foreign rule, and because of this assisted and supported Garibaldi in
       his quest in Italy and Sicily.On
       February 9, 1849 a Republic was declared in Rome.Mazzini was appointed as "triumvir" of the
       new republic on March 29, becoming soon the true leader of the
       government and showing good administrative capabilities in social
       reforms.On February 21, 1859, together with 151 republicans he
       signed a manifesto against the alliance between Piedmont and the King of
       France which resulted in the  second war of Italian independence
       and the conquest of Lombardy.In 1862 he again joined Garibaldi during his failed attempt
       to free Rome. 
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Mazzini
  and his impact on the Indian national movement 
     Vinayak Damodar Sawarkar
        founded a secret society called Mitra Mela (Friends’ Group) which
       later became Abhinav Bharat (Young
       India Society) on the model of the Italian revolutionary Giuseppe Mazzini’s
       ‘Young Italy’.After graduating from the
       college in 1905 he moved to Bombay to
       study Law. In the meantime he received a scholarship to study in England and
       set sail for London in
       1906.During his student days in England he
       started the ‘Free India Society’ and
       organised Indian students for revolutionary activities and spread his
       revolutionary ideas through pamphlets, booklets and books.He translated the
       life of Mazzini into Marathi, and some consider him as the
       personification of Mazzini 
 
 
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