I have been attending a lecture on XML where it was written "ISO-8859-1 is a Unicode format". It sounds wrong to me, but as I research on it, I struggle understanding precisely what Unicode is.
Can you call ISO-8859-1 a Unicode format ? What can you actually call Unicode ?
ISO 8859-1 is also known as Latin-1. It is not directly a Unicode format.
However, it does have the unique privilege that its code points 0x00 .. 0xFF map one-to-one to the Unicode code points U+0000 .. U+00FF. So, the first 256 code points of Unicode, treated as 1 byte unsigned integers, map to ISO 8859-1.
Peregring-lk observes that ISO 8859-1 does not define the control codes. The Unicode charts for U+0000..U+007F and U+0080..U+00FF suggest that the C0 controls found in positions U+0000..U+001F and U+007F come from ISO/IEC 6429:1992 and the C1 controls found in positions U+0080..U+9F likewise. Wikipedia on the C0 and C1 controls suggests that the standard is ISO/IEC 2022 instead. Note that three of the C1 controls do not have a formal name.
In general parlance, the control code points of the ISO 8859-1 code set are assumed to be the C0 and C1 controls from ISO 6429 (or 2022).