- Italy in the early Middle Ages
- Italy in the 14th and 15th centuries
- Early modern Italy (16th to 18th century)
- Revolution, restoration, and unification
- Italy from 1870 to 1945
Social changes
In 1871 there were 26.8 million Italians. Both birth and death rates were high, and almost half the children born alive died before age five. Large-scale transatlantic emigration began in the 1880s; in 1888 alone more than 200,000 Italians went to the Americas in search of jobs, 10 times as many as a decade previously. The most popular destinations were Argentina, Brazil, and the United States. Most emigrants in this early phase, whether bound for the Americas or for other parts of Europe, were northerners, often seasonal migrants from hill and mountain areas of peasant ownership, where jobs were scarce and where younger sons who stayed behind had little prospect of marriage. But even in 1888 more than a quarter of the emigrants were southerners, and the great exodus of southern emigrants to both North and South America was just about to begin. Most people (nearly 70 percent in 1871) were illiterate and usually spoke only dialect. The compulsory schooling law of 1877 was widely ignored in practice; in any case, it provided for only two years of schooling, not enough to guarantee the ability to read and count. Conscripts were likely to be taught to read during military service, but only one-fourth of the age group was actually called up into the army. Italian education was more successful at the secondary level in the towns, where the “technical schools” and “technical institutes” taught science, engineering, and accounting and had high prestige among urban parents. As for the universities, they mainly trained lawyers and doctors, both professions in which supply considerably exceeded demand.