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Sardinia's Day ( ; ; ; ; ), also known as the Sardinian People's Day (), is a holiday in
Sardinia Sardinia ( ; ; ) is the Mediterranean islands#By area, second-largest island in the Mediterranean Sea, after Sicily, and one of the Regions of Italy, twenty regions of Italy. It is located west of the Italian Peninsula, north of Tunisia an ...
commemorating the Sardinian Vespers, which occurred from 1794 to 1796.


History

In the last decades of the 18th century following the Savoyard take-over of the island and the once Spanish Kingdom, tensions had begun to mount among the Sardinians towards the Piedmontese administration. Sardinian peasants resented the feudal rule and both the local nobles and the bourgeoisie were being left out of any active civil and military role, with the viceroy and other people from the Italian mainland being appointed in charge of the island. Such political unrest was bolstered further by the international situation, with particular regard to the ferment developing in other European regions (namely
Ireland Ireland (, ; ; Ulster Scots dialect, Ulster-Scots: ) is an island in the North Atlantic Ocean, in Northwestern Europe. Geopolitically, the island is divided between the Republic of Ireland (officially Names of the Irish state, named Irelan ...
,
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,
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,
Hungary Hungary is a landlocked country in Central Europe. Spanning much of the Pannonian Basin, Carpathian Basin, it is bordered by Slovakia to the north, Ukraine to the northeast, Romania to the east and southeast, Serbia to the south, Croatia and ...
,
Tyrol Tyrol ( ; historically the Tyrole; ; ) is a historical region in the Alps of Northern Italy and western Austria. The area was historically the core of the County of Tyrol, part of the Holy Roman Empire, Austrian Empire and Austria-Hungary, f ...
) and the episodes leading to the French Revolution. In 1793, a French fleet tried to conquer the island along two lines of attack, the first one across the southern coast in
Cagliari Cagliari (, , ; ; ; Latin: ''Caralis'') is an Comune, Italian municipality and the capital and largest city of the island of Sardinia, an Regions of Italy#Autonomous regions with special statute, autonomous region of Italy. It has about 146,62 ...
and the other in the nearby of the Maddalena archipelago. However, the locals managed to resist the invasion by the French, and began expecting the Savoyards to acknowledge the feat and improve their condition in return. The Sardinians thus presented with the King a list of grievances requiring his remedy, amongst which the demand that most of the offices be reserved for native Sardinians, along with autonomy from the Savoyard ruling class.


Insurrection

The
King King is a royal title given to a male monarch. A king is an Absolute monarchy, absolute monarch if he holds unrestricted Government, governmental power or exercises full sovereignty over a nation. Conversely, he is a Constitutional monarchy, ...
's peremptory refusal to grant the island any of these wishes eventually spurred the rebellion against Piedmont's primacy within the Kingdom, with the arrest of two notable figures of the so-called "Patriotic Party" (the lawyers from Cagliari Vincenzo Cabras and Efisio Pintor) being the final spark of unrest amongst the populace. On 28 April 1794, known as ("the day of the pursuit and capture"), people in Cagliari started chasing any Piedmontese functionaries they could find; since many of them started to wear the local robes in order to blend into the crowd, any people suspected to be from the Italian mainland would be asked by the populace to " say chickpea" () in Sardinian: failure in pronouncing the word correctly would give their origin away. By May, all the 514 Savoyard officers were put on a boat and sent back to the mainland. Encouraged by what happened in Cagliari, the people in
Sassari Sassari ( ; ; ; ) is an Italian city and the second-largest of Sardinia in terms of population with 120,497 inhabitants as of 2025, and a functional urban area of about 260,000 inhabitants. One of the oldest cities on the island, it contains ...
and
Alghero Alghero (; ; ; ) is a city of about 45,000 inhabitants in the Italian province of Sassari in the north west of the island of Sardinia, next to the Mediterranean Sea. The city's name comes from ''Aleguerium'', which is a mediaeval Latin word m ...
did the same, and the revolt spread throughout the rest of the island in the countryside. Thus, Sardinia became the first European country to have engaged in a revolution of its own, the episode not being the result of a foreign military importation like in most of Europe.


End

The uprising was then led for another two years by the republican Giovanni Maria Angioy, then a judge of the Royal Hearing ('' Reale Udienza''), but it was later repressed by the loyalist forces that became bolstered by the peace treaty between France and Piedmont in 1796. The revolutionary experiment was thus brought to an end and Sardinia remained under Savoyard rule. A period of restoration of the monarchical and aristocratic values would follow the Sardinian revolution, culminating in the
Perfect Fusion The Perfect Fusion () was the 1847 act of the Savoyard King Charles Albert of Sardinia which abolished the administrative differences between the mainland states (Savoy and Piedmont) and the island of Sardinia within the Kingdom of Sardinia, i ...
between the island and the mainland; however, they did not manage to crack down on a couple of localized but significant antifeudal revolts that would arise, from time to time, up until 1821, like the so-called "Palabanda's Conspiracy" in Cagliari of 1812 and the rebellion in Alghero of 1821.


Institutionalization of the date

The actual date was chosen in 1993Legge Regionale 14 settembre 1993, n. 44
/ref> and public events are being annually held to commemorate the episode, while the schools are closed.


See also

* Su patriottu sardu a sos feudatarios, official Sardinian hymn and a revolutionary anthem * History of Sardinia


Notes


References

* Anonymous author (presumably Michele Obino). ''L'Achille della sarda liberazione'', 1796. * Lorenzo del Piano, ''Salvatore Frassu e i moti rivoluzionari della fine del '700 a Bono'', Chiarella, 1989. * Federico Francioni (ed. by), ''1793: i franco-corsi sbarcano in Sardegna'', Sassari, Condaghes, 1993. * Federico Francioni, ''Vespro sardo : dagli esordi della dominazione piemontese all'insurrezione del 28 aprile 1794'', Cagliari, Condaghes, 2001. * Alberto Loni e Giuliano Carta. ''Sa die de sa Sardigna – Storia di una giornata gloriosa''. Sassari, Isola editrice, 2003. * Girolamo Sotgiu. ''L'insurrezione di Cagliari del 28 aprile 1794'', Agorà, 2005. * Massimo Pistis, ''Rivoluzionari in sottana. Ales sotto il vescovado di mons. Michele Aymerich'', Roma, Albatros Il Filo, 2009. * Adriano Bomboi, ''L'indipendentismo sardo. Le ragioni, la storia, i protagonisti'', Cagliari, Condaghes, 2014. * Omar Onnis, ''La Sardegna e i sardi nel tempo'', Cagliari, Arkadia, 2015. {{Sardinia Sardinia History of Sardinia Revolutions