Kingdom of North Italy (Failed Revolutions)

The Kingdom of North Italy  was an Italian State that existed from 1814 to 1826 from the union of the Kingdom of Sardinia-Piedmont and the Papal States in 1814 to the Invasion of Venice and the declaration of the Kingdom of Italy in 1826.

In 1800, as a result of the Second Italian Wars , the Kingdom of Sardinia-Piedmont became one of the dominant powers in the Italian Peninsula along with the Papal States whom both nations occupied a two- thirds of Southern Italy following the Partition of the former Kingdom of Naples. Eventually negotiations began between the King of Sardinia-Piedmont , Victor Emmanuel I and the Pope Pius VII and with the Ottoman Expansion posing a threat to the nations of Europe they both agreed to unite their territories in order to establish a Kingdom of North Italy under Victor Emmanuel I as the defender of Italy and of the Catholic Faith as well as establishing the United Provinces of South Italy as a Client Government of North Italy headed by Gabriele Rossetti a well known Italian Nationalist who was the leader of the Carbonari Movement in which was advocated for Italian Unification.

During and After the Great Turkish War, the Kingdom of North Italy was a member of the United Coalition and began supporting the French against the Prussians sending Volunteers to assist the French Directorate in 1822. Under the rule of Carlo I, North Italy joined the United Coalition in the Clauswitizan Wars and sent an Army to aid the French and Spanish Liberate France from the Prussian Puppet State installed by the Prussians and after the Congress of Vienna , the Kingdom of North Italy aided by the Austrians invaded the isolated Republic of Venice in 1826 resulting in the Italian Unification Act and the formation of the Kingdom of Italy.