The class was a pair of ironclad warships built for the Italian (Royal Navy) in the 1860s. The class comprised two ships, and . Initially ordered for the (Royal Sardinian Navy), by the time they were completed the Kingdom of Sardinia had unified the rest of the Italian states and created the . They were the first ironclads built for the Italian fleet. Wooden-hulled vessels plated with of wrought iron, they were armed with a battery of twenty guns in a broadside arrangement.
Both vessels were involved in the operations off Lissa in July 1866, but neither took part in the Battle of Lissa on 20 July. had been damaged by Austrian coastal fortifications the day before, and had withdrawn for repairs; was ready for action, but had been preparing to attack Lissa and was too far south to take an active role in the battle. Both ships saw minimal use in the 1870s and 1880s, until both were withdrawn from service for use as training ships. and served in this capacity until 1903 and 1904, respectively, when they were sold and broken up for scrap.
The two ships of the class were ordered by Camillo Benso, Count of Cavour, then both the Prime Minister and Naval Minister of the Kingdom of Sardinia for the Royal Sardinian Navy in 1860, shortly before the unification of Italy. The ships were originally intended to be armored floating batteries, but they were redesigned as sea-going ironclads after construction began. These ships were the first components of a major naval expansion program that was designed to prepare a fleet of ironclad warships capable of defeating the Austrian Navy. Italy considered the Austrian Empire to be its main rival, since it controlled predominantly Italian areas, including Venice. Their construction marked the onset of the Austro-Italian ironclad arms race.
The -class ships were wooden-hulled vessels, sheathed with wrought iron armor that was thick. They were long between perpendiculars and and long overall. They had a beam of and an average draft of . The ships displaced normally and up to at full load. Each vessel had a crew of 371 officers and enlisted men.
Their propulsion system consisted of one single-expansion marine steam engine that drove a single screw propeller, with steam supplied by six coal-fired, rectangular boilers. The boilers were trunked into a single funnel. Their engines produced a top speed of from , though s boilers produced a slightly higher horsepower, at . They could steam for about at their top speed. To supplement the steam engine, the ships were schooner-rigged with three masts.
The ships of the class were originally intended to be armed with thirty guns, but after their conversion to sea-going broadside ironclads, their armament was reduced to twenty guns. These consisted of four guns and sixteen rifled muzzle-loading guns. Their armament was revised several times throughout their careers. In 1878, both ships had their battery reduced to eight 203 mm guns. was re-armed with two guns, two guns, and four guns for service as a training ship in 1885. Two years later, was similarly converted into a training ship, equipped with only six 4.7 in guns.
The first ironclads to enter service in the of the newly-unified Kingdom of Italy, and served as the core of the fleet that was later fleshed out by the , , and es that would see action during the Third Italian War of Independence against the Austrian Navy. The war broke out in June 1866, as Italy, which had allied with Prussia, sought to take advantage of the Austro-Prussian War to seize Austrian-controlled Venice. After initially remaining in port, the Italian fleet under Admiral Carlo Pellion di Persano launched an attack on the island of Lissa in mid-July; the Austrian fleet under Rear Admiral Wilhelm von Tegetthoff sortied to mount a counterattack, which resulted in the Battle of Lissa on 20 July. , which had been badly damaged during an engagement with Austrian coastal fortifications on Lissa the day before, had withdrawn by the time Tegetthoff arrived and took no part in the battle. also played no role in the action, as she had been stationed too far to the south in preparation for another attack on the island, and she arrived on the scene of the battle only after the two fleets had disengaged.
The two ships, which rapidly became obsolescent due to the development of central battery ironclads and later turret ships, remained in service until the 1880s, having been modernized with new boilers and guns in the 1870s. Neither ship played a role in the attack on Civitavecchia in 1870—the last stage of the Italian wars of unification—owing to the very poor state of the in the aftermath of Lissa. served as a gunnery training ship from 1887 to 1903, when she was discarded. also served as a training ship, beginning in 1885; she was sold for scrap in 1904 and broken up thereafter.