Italy–Poland relations
Italy |
Poland |
---|
Italy–Poland relations are cultural and political relations between Italy and Poland. Due to strong connections between both, such as religion and historical similarities, many referred the relationship as Polish–Italian brotherhood.
Historical and cultural relations
Middle ages
Bona Sforza, member of the powerful Milanese House of Sforza, in 1518 became the second wife of Sigismund I the Old. Planning to give the Jagiello family financial independence, she succeeded in taking over the Grand Duchy of Lithuania in 1536-1546. She is also commonly credited with the introduction of salads and vegetables in Polish cuisine (called sometimes until today włoszczyzna, i.e. Italian).
Renaissance in Poland started spreading in the 15th and 16th century. This was a result of Italian artists (Francesco Fiorentino, Bartholommeo Berecci, Santi Gucci, Mateo Gucci, Bernardo Morando, Giovanni Battista di Quadro, etc.), merchants (the Boner family, the Montelupi family)[1] and thinkers (Filip Callimachus) who had come to Poland since the late 15th. Most of them came to Kraków, the Polish capital until 1611. Polish scientists and poets studied in Italy: Nicolaus Copernicus in Bologna, Witelo, Jan Kochanowski and Klemens Janicki at the University of Padua. Bernardo Morando designed Zamość, Tomaszów Lubelski and a number of buildings.
18th century
Bernardo Bellotto, known in Poland and Germany as Canaletto (1697–1768) was a Venetian painter who painted 26 views of Warsaw, which were used in rebuilding the city after its near-complete destruction by German troops during World War II. Giacomo Casanova visited Poland in 1766,[2] later Alessandro Cagliostro arrived.
Antonio Corazzi (1792–1877) was an Italian architect who designed a number of buildings in Warsaw, including Staszic Palace (1820) and Teatr Wielki.
19th century
In the Napoleonic period, many Polish soldiers, officers and volunteers therefore emigrated, especially to Italy and to France, forming the Polish Legions, considered a Polish army in exile, under French command. Their Polish commanders included Jan Henryk Dąbrowski, Karol Kniaziewicz, Józef Wybicki and Antoni Amilkar Kosiński. It was then that the future Polish national anthem, Mazurek Dąbrowskiego, was created by Józef Wybicki, with words promising 'the return of the Polish army from Italy to Poland'.
Parts of today's Poland and Italy belonged for long time to Austria-Hungary, being subject to the Crown of Saint Stephan. The Imperial Royal Austrian State Railways allowed to travel between Kraków and Trieste.
The Mickiewicz's Legion was a military unit formed in 1848 in Rome by one of the most notable Polish poets, Adam Mickiewicz, to take part in the liberation of Italy after the failure of the Greater Poland Uprising of 1848. After unsuccessfully pleading Pope Pius IX for support, Mickiewicz was joined in Milan by a military detachment of Polish emigrants, led by Mikolaj Kaminski. Growing to 120 members by June, the legion, commanded by Kaminski, engaged in several battles. They fought alongside others in Lombardy and on barricades of Genoa against the royalists, in the defence of the Roman Republic.[3]
The Garibaldi Legion was a unit of Italian volunteers who fought for Polish independence in the January Uprising of 1863. The unit was named after the Italian revolutionary and nationalist Giuseppe Garibaldi, organized in Italy by his son Menotti Garibaldi and led by the general Francesco Nullo. Nullo arrived in Kraków from Italy in April 1863. The unit's first battle in Poland was at Podłęże on May 3, 1863 where it defeated a Russian force. Subsequently, it took part in the Battle of Krzykawka, where along with the French organized Zouaves of Death it suffered heavy casualties; Nullo was killed and his adjutant mortally wounded and died several days later. Francesco Nullo is considered an independence hero in both Italy and Poland.
20th century
In 1918, Italy was the first country in Europe to recognise Poland’s sovereignty. The Italian anthem (Il Canto degli Italiani) and the Polish anthem (Poland Is Not Yet Lost) bear mutual historical references, a unicum in the history of National anthems in the world.
Polish II Corps participated in the Italian Campaign. 11,379 men died, many of them buried at the Monte Cassino Polish War Cemetery or at Casamassima.
Polish writer Gustaw Herling-Grudziński settled in Naples, where he married Lidia, a daughter of the philosopher Benedetto Croce. He also wrote for the Italian "Tempo presente" run by Nicola Chiaromonte and for various dailies and periodicals. His book A World Apart: Imprisonment in a Soviet Labor Camp During World War II was published in Italy only in 1958. Polish journal Kultura was originally published in Rome. Polish writer Jarosław Iwaszkiewicz has written several texts about Italy, among others a book "Italian Novellas" and libretto of King Roger, an opera by Karol Szymanowski.
Polish-Italian 1946 movie Wielka droga was the only uncensored Polish movie until 1989. Polish comedy "Giuseppe in Warsaw" presents adventures of an Italian soldier in Nazi occupied Warsaw.
Polski Fiat was a Polish car brand. Fiat 508 was produced in Poland since 1932, Polski Fiat 125p since 1967, later also Fiat 126 and others. Lancia Ypsilon will be produced in Tychy.[4]
In June–December 1966, Italian and Polish diplomats bore a joint effort to reach a compromise solution to the Vietnam War, thanks to the Italian ambassador in Saigon, Giovanni D'Orlandi, and his Polish counterpart, Janusz Lewandowski (member of the International Control Commission), in the so-called Operation Marigold. The Marigold peace efforts were supported by the Italian foreign minister Amintore Fanfani. The final compromise reached between D'Orlandi and Lewandowski in September included: free elections under international control before 2 years; a South Vietnam government including representatives of the extreme parts (general Ky and the NLF), and keeping to a policy of neutrality; a final withdrawal of the American troops. The peace efforts were halted by the reprise of the American bombing over Hanoi on 2 and 4 December 1966.[5]
In 1978, the Pole Karol Wojtyla was elected as Catholic Pope, the first non-Italian pope since the 16th century.
In 2003, both countries supported the Invasion of Iraq by a US-led coalition. Poland took part in the invasion operations, Italy only in the post-invasion occupation of Iraq.
Italian singers Farida, Drupi, Marco Antonelli, In-Grid have been popular in Poland, sometimes more than in Italy. Polish songwriter and singer Czesław Niemen performed in Italy in 1969 and 1970 participating in Cantagiro and producing several singles in Italian, e.g. "Arcobaleno" (Over the Rainbow).
"September the 11-th, 1683" is a Polish-Italian movie about the Battle of Vienna.
-
Banner of the 1st Legion of the Polish Legions in Italy
Current foreign relations
- Italy has an embassy in Warsaw and 2 honorary consulates (in Gdynia and Kraków).[6]
- Poland has an embassy in Rome and 2 general consulates (in Catania and Milan).[7]
- Both countries are full members of the Council of Europe, of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, of NATO and of the European Union.
- There are around 109.018 Poles living in Italy.[8]
- Both of the countries' largest religion is Roman Catholicism.
List of Italian Ambassadors in Poland
- Francesco Tommasini (1919–1923)
- Giovanni Cesare Majoni (1923–1929)
- Alberto Martin Franklin (1929–1931)
- Luigi Vannutelli Rey (1931–1932)
- Giuseppe Bastianini (1932–1936)
- Pietro Arone di Valentino (1936–1939)
- Eugenio Reale (1945–1947)
- Ambrogio Donini (1947–1948)
- Giovanni De Astis (1948–1952)
- Giovanni Battista Guarnaschelli (1952–1955)
- Luigi Cortese (1955–1958)
- Pasquale Jannelli (1958–1962)
- Enrico Aillaud (1962–1968)
- Manilo Castronovo (1968–1971)
- Alessandro Tassoni Estense di Castelvecchio (1971–1973)
- Mario Mondello (1974–1976)
- Mario Profili (1976–1978)
- Marco Favale (1978–1983)
- Guglielmo Folchi (1983–1986)
- Paolo Galli (1986–1988)
- Vincenzo Manno (1988–1993)
- Giuseppe Balboni Acqua (1993–1997)
- Luca Daniele Biolato (1997–2001)
- Giancarlo Leo (2001–2006)
- Anna Blefari Melazzi (2006–2008)
- Aldo Mantovani (2008–2011)
- Riccardo Guariglia (2011–present)
See also
Notes
- ↑ "Montelupi". encyklopedia.interia.pl (in Polish). Retrieved 2010-08-14.
- ↑ Memoirs, ch. XXI, XXII
- ↑ Pekacz, Jolanta T. "Poles in European revolutions 1848-1849", Encyclopedia of 1848 Revolutions. Retrieved on 2 May 2009.
- ↑ New Lancia Ypsilon from Tychy
- ↑ Mario Sica, Marigold non fiorì; Florence, 1991
- ↑ Italian embassy in Warsaw
- ↑ Poland embassy in Rome
- ↑
External links
- (Italian) (Polish) Italian Embassy in Warsaw, History of Italian-Polish relations
- Economical cooperation