The
Kingdom of Italy ( ) was a state forged in 1861 by
the unification of Italy under
the influence of the Kingdom of
Sardinia which is its legal predecessor State, and with the
decisive help of France
and the
United
Kingdom
. It existed until 1946 when the Italians
opted for a
republican constitution.
Italy
declared war on Austria
in alliance
with Prussia in 1866: despite an
unsuccessful campaign, it received the region of Venice
following
Bismarck's victory.
Italian
troops entered Rome
in 1870,
ending more than one thousand years of Papal temporal power.
Italy accepted Bismarck's proposal to enter in a
Triple Alliance with Germany and
Austria in 1882, following strong disagreements with France about
the respective colonial expansions.
However, even if relations with Berlin
became very
friendly, the alliance with Vienna
remained
purely formal. So, in 1915, Italy accepted British invite to
join the Allies into
World War I. The
victory in the war gave Italy the status of a major power, with a
permanent seat in the Council of the
League of Nations.
During the time of the regime of the
National Fascist Party from 1922 to
its ousting in 1943, under the dictatorship of
Benito Mussolini, the name often given by
some historians to the Kingdom of Italy during this period is
Fascist Italy. Under fascism, the Kingdom allied
with
Nazi Germany in World War II until
1943. In the remaining two years of
World
War II, the Kingdom of Italy switched sides to the Allies after
ousting Mussolini as Prime Minister and banned the Fascist party.
The remnant fascist state that continued fighting against the
Allies was a puppet state of Nazi Germany, the "
Italian Social Republic", still led
by Mussolini and his loyalist Fascists in northern Italy. Shortly
after the war, civil discontent led to a
referendum in 1946 on whether
Italy would remain a monarchy or become a republic.
Italians decided to
abandon the monarchy and form the Italian Republic
, which is the present form of Italy
today.
Territory
The Kingdom of Italy claimed all of the territory which is
modern-day Italy. The development of the Kingdom's territory
progressed under
Italian
unification until 1870.
The state for a long period of time did not
have Trieste
or Trentino-Alto Adige, which are in Italy
today, and only received them in 1919. After the Treaties of
Versailles and St Germain, the state
was given Gorizia
, Trieste and
Istria
(now part of Croatia
and Slovenia
), and small parts of modern-day northwestern
Croatia
as well as a
minuscule portion of the Croatian province of Dalmatia. During the second World War, the
Kingdom gained more territory in Slovenia and more territory from
Dalmatia. After the Second World War, the borders of present-day
Italy were founded and the Kingdom abandoned its land claims.
The
Kingdom of Italy also held colonies and protectorates and puppet
states, such as modern-day Eritrea
, Somalia
, Libya
, Ethiopia
(occupied by Italy in 1936, and then occupied by
the British in World War II), Albania
, Greece
(occupied in
World War II), Croatia
(Italian and German puppet state in World War II),
Kosovo
(occupied in World War II), and Montenegro
(occupied in World War II), and a small 46 hectare section of land from China
in Tianjin
(see
Italian
concession in Tianjin).
Government
The Kingdom of Italy was theoretically a
constitutional monarchy. Executive
power belonged to the monarch, as executed through appointed
ministers. Two chambers of parliament restricted the monarch's
power an appointive Senate and an elective Chamber of Deputies. The
kingdom's
constitution was the
Statuto Albertino, the former governing
document of the Kingdom of Sardinia. In theory, ministers were
solely responsible to the king. However, in practice, it was
impossible for an Italian government to stay in office without the
support of Parliament.
Members of the Chamber of Deputies were elected by majority
(
winner-take-all) elections
in uninominal districts. A candidate needed the support of 50% of
those voting, and of 25% of all enrolled voters, to be elected on
the first round of balloting. If not all seats were filled on the
first ballot, a runoff was held shortly afterwards for the
remaining vacancies.
After a brief multinominal experimentation in 1882,
proportional representation into
large, regional, multi-seat electoral constituencies, was
introduced after World War I.
Socialists
became the major party, but they were unable to form a government
into a parliament splitted into three different factions, with
Christian
Popular and ancient
Liberal. Elections took place in 1919, 1921 and
1924: in this last occasion, Mussolini abolished the PR replacing
it with a block voting system on national bases, which gave to the
Fascist Party the absolute majority of the Chamber seats.
Between 1925 and 1943, Italy was in fact a
fascist dictatorship, though the constitution
formally remained in effect.
Monarchs
The monarchs of the
House of Savoy
who led Italy were
Unification: 1859–1870

The creation of the Kingdom of Italy
was the result of concerted efforts of Italian nationalists and
monarchists loyal to the
House of
Savoy to establish a united kingdom encompassing the entire
Italian Peninsula.
After the
Revolutions of 1848,
the apparent leader of the Italian unification movement was Italian
revolutionary
Giuseppe Garibaldi.
He was popular amongst southern Italians and in the world was
renowned for his extremely loyal followers. Garibaldi led the
Italian republican drive for unification in southern Italy, but the
northern Italian monarchy of the
House of
Savoy in the
Kingdom of
Sardinia, a
de facto Piedmontese state, whose government was led by
Camillo Benso, conte di
Cavour, also had ambitions of establishing a united Italian
state.
Though the kingdom had no physical
connection to Rome
(deemed the
natural capital of Italy, but still capital of the Papal States
), the kingdom had successfully challenged Austria
in the Second Italian War of
Independence, liberating Lombardy-Venetia from Austrian
rule. The kingdom also had established important
alliances which helped it improve the possibility of Italian
unification, such as Britain
and the Second
French Empire in the Crimean
War. Sardinia was dependent on France being
willing to protect it and in 1860, Sardinia was forced to cede
territory to France to maintain relations, including Garibaldi's
birthplace Nice
.
Cavour moved to challenge republican
unification efforts by Garibaldi by organizing popular revolts in
the Papal
States
. He used these revolts as a pretext to
invade the country, even though the invasion angered the
Catholics, whom he told that the invasion was an
effort to protect the
Roman
Catholic Church from the anti-clerical secularist nationalist
republicans of Garibaldi. Only a small portion of the Papal States
around Rome remained in the control of
Pope
Pius IX. Despite their differences, Cavour agreed to include
Garibaldi's
Southern Italy allowing
it to join the union with Piedmont-Sardinia in 1860. Subsequently
Cavour declared the creation of the Kingdom of Italy on February
18, 1861, composed of both
Northern
Italy and Southern Italy. King
Victor Emmanuel II of
Piedmont-Sardinia from the
House of Savoy was then declared
King of Italy. This title had been out of use
since the abdication of
Napoleon I
of France on April 6, 1814.
Following the unification of most of Italy, tensions between the
monarchists and republicans erupted. In April 1861, Garibaldi
entered the Italian parliament and challenged Cavour's leadership
of the government, accusing him of dividing Italy and spoke of the
threat of civil war between the Kingdom in the north and
Garibaldi's forces in the south. On June 6, 1861, the Kingdom's
strongman Cavour died. During the ensuing political instability,
Garibaldi and the republicans became increasingly revolutionary in
tone. Garibaldi’s arrest in 1862 set off worldwide
controversy.
In 1866 Otto
von Bismarck, Minister
President of Prussia offered Victor Emmanuel II an alliance
with the Kingdom of
Prussia
in the Austro-Prussian War
. In exchange Prussia would allow Italy to
annex Austrian-controlled Venice
. King
Emmanuel agreed to the alliance and the
Third Italian War of
Independence began. Italy fared poorly in the war with a badly
organized military against Austria, but Prussia's victory allowed
Italy to annex Venice. The one major obstacle to Italian unity
remained Rome.
In 1870, Prussia went to war with France starting the
Franco-Prussian War. To keep the large
Prussian Army at bay, France abandoned
its positions in Rome - which protected the remnants of the Papal
States and Pius IX - in order to fight the Prussians. Italy
benefited from Prussia's victory against France by being able to
take over the Papal States from French authority. Rome was captured
by the kingdom of Italy after several battles and guerilla-like
warfare by
Papal Zouaves and
official troops of the Holy See against the Italian invaders.
Italian unification was completed, and shortly afterward Italy's
capital was moved to Rome. Economic conditions in the united Italy
were poor:, there were no industry or transportation facilities,
extreme poverty (especially in the
Mezzogiorno), high illiteracy, and only a small
percent of wealthy Italians had the right to vote. The unification
movement had largely been dependent on the support of foreign
powers and remained so afterwards.
Following the capture of Rome in 1870 from French forces of
Napoleon III, Papal troops
and
Zouaves, relations between
Italy and the
Vatican remained sour for the
next sixty years with the
Popes declaring
themselves to be
prisoners in
the Vatican. The Catholic Church frequently protested the
actions of the secular and anticlerical-influenced Italian
governments, refused to meet with envoys from the King and urged
Catholics not to vote in Italian elections. It would not be until
1929, that positive relations would be restored between the Kingdom
of Italy and the Vatican after the signing of the
Lateran Pacts.
Liberal period
Government
After unification, Italy's politics favoured
liberalism: the right was regionally fragmented,
and conservative Prime Minister
Marco
Minghetti only held on to power by enacting revolutionary and
left-leaning policies (such as the nationalization of railways) to
appease the opposition. In 1876, Minghetti was ousted and replaced
by liberal
Agostino Depretis, who
began the long Liberal Period. The Liberal Period was marked by
corruption, government instability, continued poverty in southern
Italy, and use of authoritarian measures by the Italian
government.
Depretis began his term as Prime Minister by initiating an
experimental political idea called
Trasformismo (transformism). The theory of
trasformismo was that a cabinet should select a variety of
moderates and capable politicians from a non-partisan perspective.
In practice,
trasformismo was authoritarian and corrupt,
Depretis pressured districts to vote for his candidates if they
wished to gain favourable concessions from Depretis when in power.
The results of the
Italian general election,
1876resulted in only four representatives from the right being
elected, allowing the government to be dominated by Depretis.
Despotic and corrupt actions are believed to be the key means in
which Depretis managed to keep support in southern Italy. Depretis
put through authoritarian measures, such as banning public
meetings, placing "dangerous" individuals in internal exile on
remote penal islands across Italy and adopting militarist policies.
Depretis enacted controversial legislation for the time, such as
abolishing arrest for debt, making elementary education free and
compulsory while ending compulsory religious teaching in elementary
schools.
In 1887,
Francesco Crispi became
Prime Minister and began focusing government efforts on foreign
policy.
Crispi worked to build Italy as a great
world power though increased military expenditures, advocacy of
expansionism, and trying to win the favour of the German Empire
. Italy joined the
Triple Alliance which included both
Germany and
Austria–Hungary
in 1882 and which remained officially intact until 1915. While
helping Italy develop strategically, he continued
trasformismo and was authoritarian, once suggesting the
use of martial law to ban opposition parties. Despite being
authoritarian, Crispi put through liberal policies such as the
Public Health Act of 1888 and establishing tribunals for redress
against abuses by the government.
Culture and society
Italian society after unification and throughout most of the
Liberal Period was sharply divided along class, linguistic,
regional, and social lines.
Common cultural traits in Italy in this time were
social conservative in nature, including
a strong belief in the family as an institution and
patriarchal values. In other areas, Italian
culture was divided.
Aristocratic,
noble, and
upper middle class families in Italy at
this time were highly traditional in nature, with the upper
middle-class even being known to often settle differences between
each other by duels. After unification, a number of descendents of
former royal nobility became residents of Italy, numbering at 7,387
nobile families upon unification. Many of Italy's elites were
wealthy landowners who maintained a
feudal society in regards to their
agricultural system's utilization of large numbers of peasants.
Italian society in this period remained highly divided along
regional and local sub-societies which often had historical
rivalries with each other.
Upon
unifying, Italy effectively did not have a single national language
as official Italian was only commonly used in Florence
while outside of Florence, regional dialects were
dominant. Even the kingdom's first king,
Victor Emmanuel II was known to
speak almost entirely in
Piedmontese and
French, even to his cabinet
ministers. In addition to this, literacy was extremely poor in this
era with an 1871 census indicating that 61.9 percent Italian men
were illiterate and 75.7 percent of women were illiterate. This
illiteracy rate was far higher than that of western European
countries in the same time period. Some historians have claimed
that census at this time for literacy were very lax as they only
rated whether someone could write their own name and read a single
passage, which may indicate that literacy in Italy was worse than
what census projected. The level of illiteracy was compounded by
the fact that Italy had very few public schools upon unification
and no popular press was available across Italy due to the language
division of the regional dialects. The Italian government in the
Liberal Period attempted to reduce illiteracy by establishing
state-funded schools to teach the official Italian language.
Literacy and illiteracy variated in levels in the different regions
of Italy where there were different levels of quality of public
education, with the worst being in Southern Italy at the time which
received minimal funding.
Living standards were low during the Liberal Period, especially in
southern Italy due to various diseases such as
malaria and epidemics that occurred during the
period. As a whole, there was initially a high death rate in 1871
at 30 people dying per 1000 people, though this reduced to 24.2 per
1000 by the 1890s. In addition, the mortality rate of children
dying in their first year after birth in 1871 was 22.7 percent
while the number of children dying before reaching their fifth
birthday was very high at 50 percent. The morality rate of children
dying in their first year after birth decreased to an average of
17.6 percent in the time period of 1891 to 1900.
Economy
With unification, the new kingdom faced serious economic problems
and economic division along political, social, and regional lines.
In the Liberal Period, Italy remained highly economically dependent
on foreign trade and the international price of coal and
grain.
Upon unifying, Italy had a predominantly agricultural society as 60
percent of the active population worked in agriculture. Advances in
technology, the sale of vast Church estates, foreign competition
along with export opportunities rapidly transformed the
agricultural sector in Italy shortly after unification .
However
these developments did not benefit all of Italy in this period, as
southern Italy’s agriculture suffered from hot summers and aridity
damaged crops while the presence of malaria
prevented cultivation of low-lying areas along Italy’s Adriatic
coast.
The overwhelming attention paid to foreign policy alienated the
agricultural community in Italy which had been in decline since
1873. Both radical and conservative forces in the Italian
parliament demanded that the government investigate how to improve
agriculture in Italy. The investigation which started in 1877 and
was released eight years later, showed that agriculture was not
improving, that landowners were earning revenue from their lands
and contributing almost nothing to the development of the land.
Lower class Italians were hurt by the break-up of communal lands to
the benefit of landlords. Most of the workers on the agricultural
lands were not
peasants but short-term
labourers who at best were employed for one year. Peasants without
stable income were forced to live off meager food supplies, disease
was spreading rapidly, plagues were reported, including a major
cholera epidemic which killed at least
55,000 people.
The Italian government could not deal with the situation
effectively because of overspending by the Depretis government that
left Italy heavily in debt. Italy also suffered economically as a
consequence of overproduction of grapes by their vineyards. In the
1870s and 1880s,
France's
vineyard industry was suffering from vine disease caused by
insects. Italy prospered as
the largest
exporter of wine in Europe. But following the recovery of
France in 1888, southern Italy was overproducing and had to cut
back, which caused greater unemployment and bankruptcies.
The Italian government invested heavily in developing railways in
the 1870s, more than doubling the existing length of
railway line between 1870 and
1890.
Italy’s population remained severely divided between wealthy elites
and impoverished workers especially on regional lines. An 1881
census found that over 1 million southern day-labourers were
chronically under-employed and were very likely to become seasonal
emigrants in order to economically sustain themselves. Southern
peasants as well as small landowners and tenants often were in a
state of conflict and revolt throughout the late
19th century.
There were exceptions to the generally
poor economic condition of agricultural workers of the south, as
some regions near cities such as Naples
and
Palermo
as well as along the Tyrrhenian coast. The
1910 Commission of Inquiry into the South indicated that
the Italian government thus far had failed to ameliorate the severe
economic differences and the limitation of voting rights only to
those with sufficient property allowed rich landowners to exploit
the poor.
Early colonialism (1861–1921)
A number of colonial projects were undertaken by the government.
These were done to gain support of Italian nationalists and
imperialists, who wanted to rebuild a Roman Empire.
Already, Italy had
large settlements in Alexandria
, Cairo
, and
Tunis
. Italy first attempted to gain colonies
through negotiations with other world powers to make colonial
concessions. These negotiations failed. Italy also sent
missionaries to uncolonized lands to investigate the potential for
Italian colonization. The most promising and realistic of these
were parts of
Africa.
Italian missionaries
had already established a foothold at Massawa
(in present day Eritrea
) in the 1830s and had entered deep into the
Ethiopian Empire.
On 5
February 1885, shortly after the fall of Egyptian
rule in Khartoum
, Italy landed soldiers at Massawa. In 1888,
Italy annexed Massawa by force, creating the colony of Italian
Eritrea.
In 1895, Ethiopia led by Emperor
Menelik II abandoned an agreement
signed in 1889 to follow Italian foreign policy. Italy used this
renunciation as a reason to invade Ethiopia.
Ethiopia gained the
help of the Russian
Empire
, whose own interests in East
Africa led the government of Nicholas II of Russia to sent large
amounts of modern weaponry to the Ethiopians to hold back an Italian
invasion. In response, Britain decided to back the
Italians to challenge Russian influence in Africa and declared that
all of Ethiopia was within the sphere of Italian interest. On the
verge of war, Italian militarism and nationalism reached a peak,
with Italians flocking to the
Royal
Italian Army, hoping to take part in the upcoming war.
The
Italian army failed on the battlefield and were overwhelmed by a
huge Ethiopian army at the Battle of Adwa
. Italy was forced to retreat into Eritrea.
The failed Ethiopian campaign was an international embarrassment to
Italy.
From
November 2, 1899, to September 7, 1901, Italy participated as part
of the Eight-Nation Alliance
forces during the Boxer Rebellion in
China
. On September 7,
1901, a concession in Tientsin
was ceded to the Italy by the Qing Dynasty
. On
June 7,
1902, the concession was taken into Italian possession
and administered by an Italian
consul.
In 1911,
Italy declared war on the Ottoman
Empire and invaded Tripolitania,
Fezzan
, and
Cyrenaica. These provinces together
formed what became known as
Libya.
The war
ended only a year later, but the occupation resulted in acts of
discrimination against Libyans such as the forced deportation of
Libyans to the Tremiti
Islands
in October 1911. By 1912, a third of these
Libyan refugees had died from a lack of food and shelter.
The
annexation of Libya led nationalists to advocate Italy's domination
of the Mediterranean Sea
by occupying the Kingdom of Greece and the Adriatic coastal
region of Dalmatia.
Giovanni Giolitti
In 1892,
Giovanni Giolitti became
Prime Minister of Italy for his first term. Although his first
government quickly collapsed a year later, Giolitti returned in
1903 to lead Italy's government during a fragmented period that
lasted until 1914. Giolitti had spent his earlier life as a civil
servant, and then took positions within the cabinets of Crispi.
Giolitti was the first long-term Italian Prime Minister in many
years because he mastered the political concept of
trasformismo by manipulating, coercing and bribing
officials to his side. In elections during Giolitti's government,
voting fraud was common, and Giolitti helped improve voting only in
well-off, more supportive areas, while attempting to isolate and
intimidate poor areas where opposition was strong. Southern Italy
was in terrible shape prior to and during Giolitti's tenure as
Prime Minister. Four-fifths of southern Italians were illiterate
and the dire situation there ranged from problems of large numbers
of absentee landlords to rebellion and even starvation. Corruption
was such a large problem that Giolitti himself admitted that there
were places "where the law does not operate at all".
In 1911, Giolitti's government sent forces to occupy Libya. While
the success of the Libyan War improved the status of the
nationalists, it did not help Giolitti's administration as a whole.
The government attempted to discourage criticism by speaking about
Italy's strategic achievements and inventiveness of their military
in the war: Italy was the first country to use the
airship for military purposes, and undertook
aerial bombing on the Ottoman forces.
The war radicalized the
Italian
Socialist Party: anti-war revolutionaries led by future-Fascist
dictator
Benito Mussolini called
for violence to bring down the government. Giolitti returned as
Prime Minister only briefly in 1920, but the era of liberalism was
effectively over in Italy.
World War I and aftermath
Prelude to war, internal dilemma
In the lead-up to the
World War I, the
Kingdom of Italy faced a number of short-term and long-term
problems in determining its allies and objectives.
Italy's recent
success in occupying Libya
as a result
of the Italo-Turkish War had
sparked tension with its Triple
Alliance allies, the German Empire
and Austria-Hungary,
because both countries had been seeking closer relations with the
Ottoman Turkish Empire. In
Munich, Germans reacted to Italy's aggression by singing
anti-Italian songs. Italy's relations with the
French Third Republic also were in bad
shape: France felt betrayed by Italy’s support of Prussia in the
Franco-Prussian War, opening the
possibility of war erupting between the two countries.
Italy's relations
with the United Kingdom of Great Britain and
Ireland
had also been impaired by constant Italian demands
for more recognition in the international stage following the
occupation of Libya, and its demands that other nations accept its
spheres of influence in East Africa and the
Mediterranean.
the Mediterranean, Italy’s relations with the
Kingdom of Greece were aggravated when
Italy occupied the Greek-populated
Dodecanese Islands, including
Rhodes
, from 1912
to 1914. These islands had been formerly controlled by the Ottoman
Empire.
Italy and Greece were also in open rivalry
over the desire to occupy Albania
. King Emmanuel III himself was uneasy about
Italy pursuing distant colonial adventures, and said that Italy
should prepare to take back Italian-populated land from
Austria-Hungary, as the "completion of the
Risorgimento". This idea put Italy at odds with
Austria-Hungary.
A major hindrance to Italy's decision on what to do about the war
was the political instability throughout Italy in 1914. After the
formation of the government of Prime Minister
Antonio Salandra in March 1914, the
government attempted to win the support of nationalists and moved
to the political right. At the same time the left became more
repulsed by the government after the killing of three
anti-militarist demonstrators in June. Many elements of the left
including
syndicalists,
republicans and
anarchists protested against this and the
Italian Socialist Party
declared a
general strike in Italy.
The protests that ensued became known as "
Red
Week" as leftists rioted and various acts of civil disobedience
occurred in major cities and small towns such as seizing railway
stations, cutting telephone wires, and burning tax-registers.
However only two days later the strike was officially called off,
though the civil strife continued.
Militarist nationalists and
anti-militarist leftists fought on the streets until the Italian Royal Army forcefully restored
calm after having used thousands of men to put down the various
protesting forces following the invasion of Serbia
by Austria-Hungary in 1914, World War I broke
out. Despite Italy's official alliance to the German Empire
and in the
Triple Alliance, she
initially remained neutral, claiming that the Triple Alliance was
only for defensive purposes.
In Italy, society was divided over the war: Italian socialists
generally opposed the war and supported pacificism, while
nationalists militantly supported the war. Long-time nationalists
Gabriele D'Annunzio and
Luigi Federzoni and an obscure Marxist
journalist and new convert to nationalist sentiment, future Fascist
dictator
Benito Mussolini, demanded
that Italy join the war. For nationalists, Italy had to maintain
its alliance with the
Central
Empires, in order to obtain colonial territories in expenses of
France. For the liberals, the war presented Italy a long-awaited
opportunity to use an alliance with the
Entente to gain certain
Italian-populated and other territories from Austria-Hungary, which
had long been part of Italian patriotic aims since unification. In
1915, relatives of Italian revolutionary and republican hero
Giuseppe Garibaldi died on the
battlefield of France, where they had volunteered to fight.
Federzoni used the memorial services to declare the importance of
Italy joining the war, and to warn the monarchy of the consequences
of continued disunity in Italy if it did not:
Mussolini
used his new newspaper Il Popolo
d'Italia and his strong oratorical skills to urge
nationalists and patriotic revolutionary leftists to support
Italy's entry into the war to gain back Italian populated
territories from Austria-Hungary, by saying "enough of Libya, and on to Trent and Trieste
".
Mussolini claimed that it was in the interests of socialists to
join the war to tear down the aristocratic
Hohenzollern dynasty of Germany which he
claimed was the enemy of all European workers. Mussolini and other
nationalists warned the Italian government that Italy must join the
war or face revolution and called for violence against pacifists
and neutralists.
Left-wing
nationalism also erupted in southern Italy, socialist and
nationalist
Giuseppe De
Felice-Giuffrida saw joining the war as essential to relieving
southern Italy of the rising cost of bread which had caused riots
in the south, and advocated a "war of revolution".
With nationalist sentiment firmly on the side of reclaiming Italian
territories of Austria-Hungary, Italy entered negotiations with the
Triple Entente. The negotiations ended successfully in April 1915
when the
London Pact was brokered with
the Italian government. The pact ensured Italy the right to attain
all Italian-populated lands it wanted from Austria-Hungary, and
even land in the
Balkans and
German colonies in Africa. The
proposal fulfilled the desires of Italian nationalists and Italian
imperialism, and was agreed to. Italy joined the Triple Entente in
its war against Austria-Hungary.
The reaction in Italy was divided: former Prime Minister
Giovanni Giolitti was furious over Italy's
decision to go to war against its former defence allies
Austria-Hungary. He claimed that Italy would fail in the war,
predicting high numbers of mutinies, Austro-Hungarian occupation of
more Italian territory, and that the failure would produce a
catastrophic rebellion that would destroy the liberal-democratic
monarchy and the liberal-democratic secular institutions of the
state.
Italy's war effort
The
outset of the campaign against Austria-Hungary looked initially to
favour Italy: Austria-Hungary's army was spread to cover its fronts
with Serbia
and Russia
, and Italy
had a numerical superiority against the Austro-Hungarian Army.
However,
this advantage was never fully utilized because Italian military
commander Luigi Cadorna insisted on a
dangerous frontal assault against Austria-Hungary in an attempt to
occupy the Slovenian plateau and Ljubljana
. This assault would put the Italian army not
far away from Austria-Hungary's imperial capital, Vienna
.
After eleven failed offensives with enormous loss of life, the
Italian campaign to take Vienna collapsed.
Upon entering the war, geography was also a difficulty for Italy,
as its border with Austria-Hungary was along mountainous terrain.
In May 1915, Italian forces at 400,000 men along the border
outnumbered the Austrian and Germans almost precisely four to one.
However the Austrian defenses were strong even though they were
undermanned and managed to hold off the Italian offensive. The
battles with the Austro-Hungarian Army along the Alpine foothills
in the trench warfare there were drawn-out, long engagements with
little progress. Italian officers were poorly trained in contrast
to the Austro-Hungarian and
German armies, Italian artillery
was inferior to the Austrian machine guns and the Italian forces
had dangerously low supply of ammunition, this shortage would
continually hamper attempts to make advances into Austrian
territory. This combined with the constant replacement of officers
by Cadorna resulted in few officers gaining the experience
necessary to lead military missions. In the first year of the war,
poor conditions on the battlefield led to outbreaks of cholera
causing a significant number of Italian soldiers to die. Despite
these serious problems, Cadorna refused to back down the offensive.
Naval battles occurred between the Italian Royal Navy (
Regia Marina) and the
Austro-Hungarian Navy.
Italy's warships were
outclassed by the Austro-Hungarian fleet and the situation was made
more dire for Italy in that both the French
Navy and the (British) Royal Navy
were not send into the Adriatic Sea
. Their respective governments viewed the
Adriatic as far too dangerous to operate due the concentration of
the Austro-Hungarian fleet there.
Morale fell among Italian soldiers who lived a tedious life when
not on the front lines: they were forbidden to enter theatres or
bars even when on leave. However when battles were about to occur,
alcohol was made freely available to the soldiers in order to
reduce tension before the battle.In order to escape the tedium
after battles, some groups of soldiers worked to create improvised
brothels.
In order to maintain morale, the Italian
army had propaganda lectures of the importance of the war to Italy,
especially in order to retrieve Trento
and Trieste
from
Austria-Hungary. Some of these lectures were carried out by
popular nationalist war proponents such as
Gabriele D'Annunzio. D'Annunzio himself
would participate in a number of paramilitary raids on Austrian
positions along the Adriatic coastline during the war and lost an
eye one of the battles. Prominent pro-war advocate
Benito Mussolini was prevented from giving
lecture by the government, most likely because of his revolutionary
socialist past.
The Italian government became increasingly aggravated in 1915 with
the passive nature of the
Serbian army which had not
engaged in a serious offensive against Austria-Hungary for months.
The Italian government blamed Serbian military inactiveness for
allowing the Austrians to muster their armies against Italy.
Cadorna suspected that Serbia was attempting to negotiate an end to
fighting with Austria and addressed this to foreign minister
Sidney Sonnino who himself bitterly
claimed that the Serbia was an unreliable ally. Relations between
Italy and Serbia became so cold that the other Entente members were
forced to abandon the idea of forming a united Balkan front against
Austria-Hungary. In negotiations, Sonnino remained willing to allow
Bosnia to join Serbia, but refused
to discuss the fate of
Dalmatia which was
claimed by Italy and
Pan-Slavists in
Serbia.
As Serbia fell to the Austro-Hungarian and
German forces in 1915, Cadorna proposed sending 60,000 men to land
in Thessaloniki
to help the Serbs now in exile in Greece and the
Principality of Albania to
fight off the opposing forces, but the Italian government's
bitterness to Serbia resulted in the proposal being
rejected.
After
1916, the situation for Italy grew steadily worse, the
Austro-Hungarian army managed to push the Italian Army back into
Italy as far as Verona
and
Padua
in their Strafexpedition. At the same time
Italy faced a shortage of warships, increased attacks by
submarines, soaring freight charges threatening the ability to
supply food to soldiers, lack of raw materials and equipment, and
Italians faced high taxes to pay for the war. Austro-Hungarian and
German forces had gone deep into northern Italian territory, and
finally in November 1916, Cadorna ended offensive operations and
began a defensive approach.
In 1917, France, the United Kingdom and the
United
States
offered to send troops to Italy to help it fend off
the offensive of the Central Powers,
but the Italian government refused, as Sonnino did not want Italy
to be seen as a client state of the
Allies and preferred isolation
as the more brave alternative. Italy also wanted to keep the
Kingdom of Greece out of the war,
as the Italian government feared that should Greece join the war on
the side of the Allies, it would intend to annex Albania, which
Italy wanted as its own. Fortunately for Italy, the
Venizelist pro-war advocates in Greece failed to
succeed in pressuring
Constantine I of Greece to bring the
country into the conflict, and Italian aims on Albania remained
unthreatened.
The
Russian
Empire
collapsed in a 1917 Russian Revolution, eventually
resulting in the rise of the communist
Bolshevik regime of Vladimir Lenin. The resulting
marginalization of the
Eastern Front, allowed for more
Austro-Hungarian and German forces arriving on the front against
Italy. Internal dissent against the war grew with increasingly poor
economic and social conditions in Italy due to the strain of the
war. Much of the profit of the war was being made in the cities
while rural areas were losing income. The number of men available
for agricultural work had fallen from 4.8 million to 2.2 million,
though through the help of women, agricultural production managed
to be maintained at 90 percent of its pre-war total during the war.
Many pacifist and internationalist Italian socialists turned to
Bolshevism and advocated negotiations
with the workers of Germany and Austria-Hungary to help end the war
and bring about Bolshevik revolutions. The newspaper
Avanti! of the
Italian Socialist Party declared
"Let the bourgeoisie fight its own war". Leftist women in northern
Italian cities led protests demanding action against the high cost
of living and demanding an end to the war.
In Milan
in May
1917, Bolshevik revolutionaries organized and engaged in rioting
calling for an end to the war, and managed to close down factories
and stop public transportation. The Italian army was
forced to enter Milan
with tanks
and machine guns to face Bolsheviks and anarchists who fought
violently until May 23 when the army gained control of the city
with almost fifty people killed (three of which were Italian
soldiers) and over 800 people arrested.
After the
Battle of
Caporetto
in 1917, Italian forces were forced far back into
Italian territory, and the humiliation led to the arrival of
Vittorio Orlando as Prime Minister
who managed to solve some of Italy's wartime problems.
Orlando abandoned the previous isolationist approach to the war and
increased coordination with the Allies and the use of the convoy
system to fend off submarine attack, allowed Italy to be able to
end food shortages from February 1918 onward, and Italy received
more raw materials from the Allies. Also in 1918, began the
official repression of enemy aliens and Italian socialists were
increasingly repressed by the Italian government. The Italian
government was infuriated with the
Fourteen Points of
Woodrow Wilson, the
President of the United
States, as the advocation of national
self-determination meant that Italy would
not gain Dalmatia as had been promised in the
Treaty of London. In the
Parliament of Italy, nationalists
condemned Wilson's fourteen points as betraying the Treaty of
London, while socialists claimed that Wilson's points were valid
and claimed the Treaty of London was an offense to the rights of
Slavs,
Greeks,
and
Albanians.
Negotiations between
Italy and the Allies, particularly the new Yugoslav delegation
(replacing the Serbian delegation), agreed to a trade off between
Italy and the new Kingdom of Yugoslavia
, which was that Dalmatia as claimed by Italy would
be accepted as Yugoslav, while Istria
as claimed
by the Yugoslavs would be accepted as Italian.
At the
Battle of
the Piave River
the Italian army managed to hold off the
Austro-Hungarian and German armies. The opposing armies
repeatedly failed afterwards in major battles such as Battle of
Asiago
and the Battle of Vittorio Veneto
. The Italian Army crushed the Austrian
offensive in the latter battle. Austria-Hungary ended the fighting
against Italy with the armistice on 11 November 1918 which ended
World War I.
During the war, the Italian Royal Army increased in size from
15,000 men in 1914 to 160,000 men in 1918, with 5 million recruits
in total entering service during the war. This came at a terrible
cost: by the end of the war, Italy had lost 700,000 soldiers and
had a budget deficit of twelve billion lira. Italian society was
divided between the majority pacifists who opposed Italian
involvement in the war and the minority of pro-war nationalists who
had condemned the Italian government for not having immediately
gone to war with Austria in 1914.
Italy's territorial settlements and the reaction
As the war came to an end,
Italian Prime Minister Vittorio Emanuele Orlando met with
British Prime
Minister David Lloyd George,
French President
Georges Clemenceau, and
United States President
Woodrow Wilson in
Versailles, to discuss how the borders of
Europe should be redefined to help avoid a
future European war.
The talks provided little territorial gain to Italy because Wilson,
during the peace talks, promised freedom to all European
nationalities to form their own nation states. As a result, the
Treaty of Versailles did not
assign Dalmatia and Albania to Italy, as had been promised in the
Treaty of London .
Furthermore, the British and French decided to divide the German
overseas colonies into mandates of their own, with Italy receiving
none of them. Despite this, Orlando signed the Treaty of
Versailles, which caused uproar against his government. Civil
unrest erupted in Italy between nationalists who supported the war
effort and opposed the "mutilated victory" (as nationalists called
it) and leftists who were opposed to the war.
Furious
over the peace settlement, Italian nationalist revolutionary
Gabriele D'Annunzio led
nationalists to form the Free State of Fiume
in September 1919. His popularity among
nationalists led him to be called
Il
Duce (The Leader) and he used blackshirted paramilitary in
his assault on Fiume, the blackshirt paramilitary uniform would
later become synonymous with the fascist movement of
Mussolini. The demand for annexation of Fiume
spread to all sides of the political spectrum, including
Mussolini's revolutionary fascists. D'Annunzio’s stirring speeches
drew Croatian nationalists to his side. He also kept contact with
the
Irish Republican Army and
Egyptian nationalists.
The occupation ended one year later, but Fiume later was annexed by
Italy in 1924. Mussolini learned from D'Annunzio the ways to arouse
patriotism in order to gain support from nationalists, socialists,
anarchists, and army veterans.
Fascism
Rise of Fascism into power
In 1914,
Benito Mussolini was
forced out of the
Italian
Socialist Party after calling for Italian intervention against
Austria. Prior to World War I, Mussolini had opposed military
conscription, protested Italy's occupation of Libya, and was the
editor of the Socialist Party's official newspaper,
Avanti!. Over time, he
simply called for revolution, without mentioning class struggle.
Mussolini's nationalism enabled him to raise funds from
Ansaldo (an armaments firm) and
other companies to create his own newspaper
Il Popolo d'Italia to convince
socialists and revolutionaries to support the war. France, Britain,
and Russia, wanting to draw Italy to the Entente, helped finance
the newspaper. This newspaper became Fascist Italy's
officially-supported newspaper years later. During the war,
Mussolini served in the Italian army and was wounded once during
the war. The wound is widely believed to be the result of an
accident in grenade practice, although he claimed to have been
wounded in battle.
Following the end of the war and the Treaty of Versailles, in 1919,
Mussolini created the
Fasci
di Combattimento or Combat League. It was originally
dominated by patriotic socialist and
syndicalist veterans who opposed the
pacifist nature of the Italian Socialist Party. The
Fascists initially had a platform far more inclined to the left,
promising social revolution, proportional representation, women's
suffrage, and dividing private property held by estates. On 15
April 1919, the Fascists made their debut in political violence,
when a group of members from the
Fasci di Combattimento
attacked the offices of
Avanti! Recognizing the failures
of the Fascists' initial revolutionary and left-leaning policy,
Mussolini moved the organization away from the left and turned the
revolutionary movement into an electoral movement in 1921 named the
Partito Nazionale Fascista (
National Fascist Party). The party
copied the nationalist themes of D'Annunzio and rejected
parliamentary democracy while still operating within to destroy it.
Mussolini changed his original revolutionary policies, such as
moving away from anti-clericalism to supporting the Catholic Church
and abandoned his public opposition to the monarchy. Fascist
support and violence began to grow in 1921 and Fascist-supporting
army officers began taking arms and vehicles from the army to use
in counterrevolutionary attacks on socialists.
In 1920, Giolitti had come back as Prime Minister in an attempt to
solve Italy's deadlock. One year later, Giolitti's government had
already become unstable, and a growing socialist opposition further
endangered his government. Giolitti believed that the Fascists
could be toned down and used to protect the state from the
socialists. He decided to include Fascists on his electoral list
for the 1921 elections. In the elections, the Fascists did not make
large gains, but Giolitti's government failed to gather a large
enough coalition to govern and offered the Fascists placements in
his government. The Fascists rejected Giolitti's offers and joined
with socialists in bringing down his government. A number of
descendants of those who had served Garibaldi's revolutionaries
during unification were won over to Mussolini's nationalist
revolutionary ideals. His advocacy of
corporatism and futurism had attracted advocates
of the "third way". But most importantly he had won over
politicians in Italy like Facta and Giolitti who did not condemn
him for his Blackshirts' mistreatment of socialists.
In October 1922, Mussolini took advantage of a general strike by
workers in Italy, and announced his demands to the Italian
government to give the Fascist Party political power or face a
coup. With no immediate response, a small number of Fascists began
a long trek across Italy to Rome which was called the
March on Rome, claiming to Italians that
Fascists were intending to restore law and order. Mussolini himself
did not participate until the very end of the march, with
d'Annunzio at being hailed as leader of the march until it was
learned he had been pushed out of a window and severely wounded in
a failed
assassination attempt,
depriving him of the possibility of leading an actual coup d'état
orchestrated by an organization originally founded by himself. The
Fascists, under the leadership of Mussolini demanded Prime Minister
Luigi Facta's resignation and that
Mussolini be named Prime Minister. Although the Italian Army was
far better armed than the Fascist paramilitaries, the Italian
government under King
Victor Emmanuel III faced a
political crisis. The King was forced to choose which of the two
rival movements in Italy would form the government: Mussolini's
Fascists, or the anti-monarchist
Italian Socialist Party. He selected
the Fascists.

Mussolini was initially a highly
popular leader in Italy until Italy's military failures in World
War II.
Here Mussolini salutes to crowds of thousands of people.
On October 28, 1922, Victor Emmanuel III selected Mussolini to
become Italian Prime Minister, allowing Mussolini and the Fascist
Party to pursue their political ambitions as long as they supported
the monarchy and its interests. Mussolini was a very young
political leader (at the age of 39) compared to other Italian prime
ministers and world leaders at the time. Mussolini was called
Il Duce, or "The Leader" by his supporters, an unofficial
title that was commonly used to describe Mussolini's position
during the Fascist era. A personality cult was developed that
portrayed him as the nation's saviour which was aided by the
personal popularity he held with Italians already which would
remain strong until Italy faced continuous military defeats in
World War II.
Upon taking power, Mussolini formed a legislative coalition with
nationalists, liberals and populists. However goodwill by the
Fascists towards parliamentary democracy faded quickly: Mussolini's
coalition passed the electoral
Acerbo Law
of 1923, which gave two thirds of the seats in parliament to the
party or coalition that achieved 25% of the vote. The Fascist Party
used violence and intimidation to achieve the 25% threshold in the
1924 election, and became the ruling political party of
Italy.
Following the election, Socialist deputy
Giacomo Matteotti was assassinated after
calling for an annulment of the elections because of the
irregularities. Following the assassination, the Socialists walked
out of parliament, allowing Mussolini to pass more authoritarian
laws. In 1925, Mussolini accepted responsibility for the Fascist
violence in 1924, and then declared a Fascist dictatorship in which
he would be the unopposed Prime Minister of Italy with the assent
of the King.
The result of Mussolini's takeover of the government was the
creation of a
diarchy in Italy, with
Mussolini wielding enormous political powers as the effective ruler
of Italy, while the King remained a figurehead, though he retained
some rights including the ability to remove the Prime Minister
which was seen as a minor power but would be pivotal in the fall of
Mussolini from power years later.
Culture and society
After rising to power, the Fascist regime set Italy on a course to
becoming a one-party state and to integrate Fascism into all
aspects of life. A
totalitarian state
as was officially declared in the
Doctrine of Fascism of 1935,
With the concept of totalitarianism, Mussolini and the Fascist
regime set an agenda of improving Italian culture and society based
on ancient Rome, personal dictatorship, and some futurist aspects
of Italian intellectuals and artists.
Under Fascism, the definition of the Italian nationality rested on
a
militarist foundation and the Fascist's
"new man" ideal in which loyal Italians would rid themselves of
individualism and autonomy and see
themselves as a component of the Italian state and be willing to
sacrifice their lives for it. Under such a totalitarian society,
only Fascists would be considered "true Italians" and membership
and endorsement of the Fascist Party was necessary for people to
gain "Complete Citizenship", those who did not swear allegiance to
Fascism were banished from public life and could not gain
employment. The Fascist regime also reached out to Italian
expatriates living abroad to endorse the Fascist
cause and identify with Italy rather than their place of residence.
Despite
efforts to mould a new culture for fascism, Fascist Italy's efforts
were not as drastic or successful in comparison to other one-party
states like Nazi Germany and the
Soviet
Union
in creating a new culture.
In Fascist Italy, Mussolini was idolized as the nation's saviour.
In public and in propaganda the Fascist regime attempted to make
him omnipresent in Italian society. Much of Fascism's appeal in
Italy was based on the personality cult around Mussolini and his
popularity. Mussolini's passionate oratory and personality cult was
displayed at huge rallies and parades of his Blackshirts in Rome
which served as an inspiration to
Adolf
Hitler and the
National Socialist German
Workers Party in Germany.
The Fascist regime established propaganda in newsreels, radio
broadcasting, and a few feature films deliberately endorsing
Fascism. In 1926, laws were passed to require that propaganda
newsreels be shown prior to all feature films in cinemas. These
newsreels were more effective in influencing the Italian public
than propaganda films or radio, as few Italians had radio receivers
at the time. Fascist propaganda was widely present in posters and
state-sponsored art of the time. Art and literature in Fascist
Italy were not strictly controlled, and were only censored if they
were blatantly against the state.
Relations with the
Roman Catholic
Church improved significantly during Mussolini's regime.
Despite earlier opposition to the Church, after 1922, Mussolini
made an alliance with the pro-church
Partito Popolare Italiano or
Italian People's Party. Mussolini negotiated with the Pope over
granting sovereignty to the territory of the Vatican as part of a
"
conciliazione" (conciliation) in a concordat called the
Lateran Treaty to improve Italy's
official relations with the Church. The negotiations however were
initially tense: the Vatican and the Fascist regime engaged in
bitter arguments over what such a pact would mean and how it should
be interpreted. Giovanni Montini (the future
Pope Paul VI), who was involved with
pro-Catholic politics in Italy, questioned the value of the
concordat in ensuring Vatican sovereignty, once saying "If the
liberty of the Pope cannot be guaranteed by the strong faith of a
free people, and especially by the Italian people, then no
territory and no treaty will be able to do so.".
The Fascist regime nevertheless proceeded with its intent to
resolve the problem of Vatican sovereignty. A plebiscite was held
in March 1929 in which Italians were asked to vote on the
government's proposed recognition of Vatican sovereignty. Those who
opposed the concordat felt intimidated by the Fascist regime: the
Catholic Action party (
Azione
Cattolica) instructed Italian Catholics to vote for Fascist
candidates to represent them in positions in churches, Mussolini
claimed that "no" votes were of those "...few ill-advised
anti-clericals who refuse to accept the Lateran Pacts". In the
French newspaper
Le Monde,
Guido Miglioni spoke of the attitude
of the Fascist regime and what he saw was the nature of the Lateran
pact: "These two years have witnessed the gradual but inexorable
submission of the Pope to the demands of the Regime" Despite
opposition to the nature of the negotiations, many Italians feared
that a "no" vote would incite Fascist reprisals and attacks on the
individuals who opposed the concordat. When the plebiscite was
held, 8.63 million Italians or 90 per cent of the registered
electorate voted. Of this number, only 135,761 voted "no". The
Lateran Treaty was signed and the Vatican's sovereignty was
recognized. Despite earlier troubles, relations between the Church
and the regime and moreover Italy itself, improved significantly.
The Lateran Treaty remains in place to this day.
In 1933, Italy made multiple technological achievements.
The
Fascist government spent large sums of money on technological
projects such as the construction of the new Italian ocean liner
SS
Rex
which in 1933 made a transatlantic sea crossing
record of four days. as well as funding the development of the
Macchi M.C.72 seaplane which became the world's fastest seaplane
in 1933 and retained the title in 1934. In 1933, Fascist
government member Italo Balbo, who was
also an aviator made a transatlantic flight in a flying boat to
Chicago for the World's Fair called the
Century of
Progress
. The flight symbolized the power of Fascist
leadership and the industrial and technological progress the state
had made under Fascist direction.
On the issue of anti-Semitism, the Fascists were divided on what to
do, especially with the rise of
Adolf
Hitler in Germany. A number of Fascist members were Jewish, and
Mussolini himself did not personally believe in anti-Semitism, but
to appease Hitler, anti-Semitism within the Fascist party steadily
increased. In 1936, Mussolini made his first written denounciation
of Jews by claiming that anti-Semitism had only arisen because Jews
had become too predominant in the positions of power of countries
and claimed that Jews were a "ferocious" tribe who sought to
"totally banish" Christians from public life. In 1937, Fascist
member
Paolo Orano criticized the
Zionist movement as being part of British
foreign policy which designed to secure British hold of the area
without respecting the Christian and Muslim presence in
Palestine. On the matter of Jewish Italians, Orano
said that they "should concern themselves with nothing more than
their religion" and not bother boasting of being patriotic
Italians.In 1938 under pressure from Nazi Germany, Mussolini made
the regime adopt a policy of
anti-Semitism, which was extremely unpopular
in Italy and in the Fascist Party itself. As a result of the laws,
the Fascist regime lost its propaganda director,
Margherita Sarfatti, who was Jewish and
had been Mussolini's mistress. A minority of high-ranking Fascists
were pleased with anti-Semitic policy such as
Roberto Farinacci who claimed that Jews
through intrigue had taken control key positions of finance,
business and schools and he noted that Jews sympathized with
Ethiopia during Italy's war with it and that Jews had sympathized
with
Republican Spain during the
Spanish Civil War. In its alliance
with Nazi Germany, the Fascist regime aided the Nazis in the
deportation of Jews to
concentration
camps, labour camps, and extermination camps during
the Holocaust. In 1938, Farinacci became the
minister in charge of culture, and adopted racial laws designed to
prevent racial intermixing which included anti-Semitism. Italy
itself established a number of concentration and internment camps
across its held territories, but these camps were not like those of
Nazi Germany, as families were allowed to stay together and there
no campaign of deliberate mass murder as what was happening in
German held territory.
[445546]
Education
The Fascist government endorsed a stringent education policy in
Italy aiming at eliminating illiteracy which was a serious problem
in Italy at the time and improving loyalty of Italians to the
state. To reduce drop-outs, the government changed the minimum age
of leaving school from twelve to fourteen and strictly enforced
attendance. The Fascist government's first minister of education
from 1922 to 1924,
Giovanni Gentile
recommended that education policy should focus on indoctrination of
students into Fascism, and to educate youth to respect and be
obedient to authority. In 1929, education policy took a major step
towards being completely taken over by the agenda of
indoctrination. In that year, the Fascist government took control
of the authorization of all textbooks, all secondary school
teachers were required to take an oath of loyalty to Fascism, and
children began to be taught that they owed the same loyalty to
Fascism as they did to God. In 1933, all university teachers were
required to be members of the National Fascist Party. From 1930s to
1940s, Italy's education focused on the history of Italy displaying
Italy as a force of civilization during the
Roman era, displaying the rebirth of Italian
nationalism and the struggle for Italian independence and unity
during the
Risorgimento. In
late 1930s, the Fascist government copied
Nazi Germany's education system on the issue of
physical fitness, and began an agenda that demanded that Italians
become physically healthy.
Intellectual talent in Italy was rewarded and promoted by the
Fascist government through the
Royal Academy of Italy which was
created in 1926 to promote and coordinate Italy's intellectual
activity.
Social welfare
A major success in social policy in Fascist Italy was the creation
of the
Opera Nazionale
Dopolavoro (OND) or "National After-work Program" in 1925.
The OND was the state's largest recreational organizations for
adults. The
Dopolavoro was so popular that, by the 1930s,
all towns in Italy had a
Dopolavoro clubhouse and the
Dopolavoro was responsible for establishing and
maintaining 11,000 sports grounds, over 6,400 libraries, 800 movie
houses, 1,200 theatres, and over 2,000 orchestras. Membership in
the
Dopolavoro was voluntary but had high participation
because of its nonpolitical nature. In the 1930s under the
direction of
Achille Starace the OND
became primarily recreational, concentrating on sports and other
outings. It is estimated that by 1936 the OND had organized 80% of
salaried workers. Nearly 40% of the industrial workforce had been
recruited into the Dopolavoro by 1939 and the sports activities
proved popular with large numbers of workers. The OND had the
largest membership of any of the mass Fascist organizations in
Italy. The enormous success of the
Dopolavoro in Fascist
Italy was the key factor in Nazi Germany creating its own version
of the
Dopolavoro, the
Kraft durch Freude (KdF) or
"Strength through Joy" program, which was even more successful than
the
Dopolavoro.
Security
For security of the regime, Mussolini advocated complete state
authority, and created the
Milizia
Volontaria per la Sicurezza Nazionale or National Security
Volunteer Militia in 1923, which are commonly referred to as the
Blackshirts for the colour of their uniforms. Most of the
Blackshirts were members from the
Fasci di Combattimento.
A secret police force called the
Organizzazione
di Vigilanza Repressione dell'Antifascismo (Organisation
for Vigilance and Repression of Anti-Fascism) or OVRA was created
in 1927. It was led by
Arturo
Bocchini to crack down on opponents of the regime and Mussolini
(there had been several near-miss assassination attempts on
Mussolini's life in his early years in power).
This force was
effective, but unlike the Schutzstaffel
(SS) in Nazi Germany or
the NKVD of the Soviet Union
, the OVRA caused far fewer deaths of political
opponents. However Fascists methods of repression were cruel
which included physically forcing opponents of Fascism to swallow
castor oil which would cause severe
diarrhea and dehydration, leaving the victim in a painful and
physically debilitated state which would sometimes would result in
death.
To combat
organized crime, especially the Mafia in
Sicily and other parts of southern Italy, the
Fascists gave special powers in 1925 to Cesare Mori, the prefect of Palermo
. These powers gave him the ability to
prosecute the Mafia, forcing many Mafiosi to flee abroad (many to
the United
States
) or risk being jailed. Mori was fired
however, when he began to investigate Mafia links within the
Fascist regime. He was removed from his position in 1929, and the
Fascist regime declared that the threat of the Mafia had been
eliminated. Mori's actions weakened the Mafia, but did not destroy
them. From 1929 to 1943, the Fascist regime completely abandoned
its previously aggressive measures against the Mafia, and the
Mafiosi were left relatively undisturbed.
[445547]
Economy
Mussolini and the Fascist Party promised Italians a new economic
system called
corporatism. Corporatism
was the fusion of capitalism and socialism into a new economic
system that would retain class hierarchy and class divisions while
allowing workers to be able to negotiate on equal grounds with
business owners on wages, hours of work, working conditions,
etc.
In 1935, the
Doctrine of
Fascism was published under Mussolini's name, although it
was most likely written by
Giovanni
Gentile. It described the role of the state in the economy
under corporatism. By this time, Fascism had been drawn more
towards the support of market forces being dominant over state
intervention.
Fascists claimed that this system would be egalitarian and
traditional at the same time. The economic policy of corporatism
quickly faltered: the left-wing elements of the Fascist manifesto
were opposed by industrialists and landowners who supported the
party because it pledged to defend Italy from communism and
socialism. As a result, corporatist policy became dominated by the
industries. Throughout the Mussolini era, economic legislation
mostly favoured the wealthy industrial and agrarian classes by
allowing privatization, liberalization of rent laws and dismantling
of non-Fascist unions. While the Fascist unions could not protect
workers from all economic consequences, they were responsible for
the handling of social security benefits, claims for severance pay,
and could sometimes negotiate contracts that benefited
workers.
After the Great Depression hit the world economy in 1929, the
Fascist regime followed other nations in enacting protectionist
tariffs and attempted to set direction for the economy.
In the
1930s, the government increased wheat production, and made Italy
self-sufficient for wheat, ending imports of wheat from Canada
and the
United
States
. However the transfer of agricultural land
to wheat production reduced the production of vegetables and fruit.
Despite improving production for wheat, the situation for peasants
themselves did not improve. 0.5% of the Italian population (usually
wealthy), owned 42 percent of all agricultural land in Italy, and
income for peasants did not increase while taxes did increase. The
Depression caused unemployment to rise from 300,000 to 1 million in
1933. It also caused a 10 percent drop in real income and a fall in
exports. Italy fared better than most western nations during the
Depression: its welfare services did reduce the impact of the
Depression. Its industrial growth from 1913 to 1938 was even
greater than that of Germany for the same time period.
Only the United Kingdom
and the Scandinavian
nations had a higher industrial growth during that
period.
Italy's colonial expansion into Ethiopia in 1936, proved to have a
negative impact on Italy's economy. The budget of the colony of
Italian East Africa in the
1936-37 fiscal year requested from Italy 19.136 billion lire to be
used create the necessary infrastructure for the colony. At the
time Italy's entire revenue that year was only 18.581 billion
lire.
Foreign and colonial policy (1922–1946)
Benito Mussolini and the Fascist Party promised to bring Italy back
as a
Great Power in
Europe, making it a "New Roman Empire".
Mussolini promised
that Italy would hold power over the Mediterranean Sea
. In propaganda, Fascists used the ancient
Roman "
Mare Nostrum"
(
Latin for "Our Sea") to describe the
Mediterranean.
The Fascist regime increased funding and
attention to military projects, and began plans to create an
Italian Empire in Africa, and reclaim
dominance in the Mediterranean and Adriatic Sea
. The Fascists considered wars to conquer
Dalmatia, Albania
and Greece
for the
Italian Empire.

The Italian Empire in 1940
Colonial efforts in Africa began in the 1920s, as civil war plagued
Italian North Africa
(
Africa Settentrionale Italiana, or ASI) as the Arab
population there refused to accept Italian colonial rule. Mussolini
sent
Marshal Rodolfo Graziani to lead a
punitive pacification campaign against
the Arab nationalists.
Omar Mukhtar,
led the Arab resistance movement. After a much-disputed truce on 3
January 1928, the Fascist policy in Libya increased in brutality.
A
barbed wire fence was built
from the Mediterranean
to the oasis of Al-Jaghbub
to sever lines critical to the resistance.
Soon afterwards, the colonial administration began the wholesale
deportation of the people of the
Jebel
Akhdar to deny the rebels the support of the local population.
The
forced migration of more than 100,000 people ended in concentration
camps in Suluq
and
Al-'Aghela where tens of thousands died
in squalid conditions. It's estimated that the number of
Libyans who died - killed either through combat or starvation and
disease - is at a minimum of 80,000 or even up to half of the
Cyrenaican population. After Al-Mukhtar's capture September 15,
1931 and his execution in Benghazi, the resistance petered out.
Limited resistance to the Italian occupation crystallized round the
person of
Sheik Idris, the Emir of
Cyrenaica.
Negotiations occurred with the British government on expanding the
borders of the colony of Libya.
The first negotiations began in 1925 to
define the border between Libya and British-held Egypt
.
These negotiations resulted in Italy gaining previously undefined
territory.
In 1934, once again the Italian government
requested more territory for Libya from British-held Sudan
.
Britain allowed Italy to gain some territory from Sudan to add to
Libya.
[445548] These concessions were probably
allowed because of the relatively good relations between Italy and
Britain prior to 1935.
In 1935, Mussolini believed that the time was right for Italy to
invade
Ethiopia (a.k.a. Abyssinia)
to make it a colony. As a result, the
Second Italo-Abyssinian War)
erupted.
Italy invaded Ethiopia from the Italian
colonies of Eritrea
and Italian
Somaliland. Italy committed atrocities against
Ethiopians during the war, including the use of aircraft to drop
poison gas on the defending Ethiopian
soldiers. Ethiopia surrendered in 1936, completing Italy's revenge
for its failed colonial conquest of the 1880s. King
Victor Emmanuel III was soon
proclaimed
Emperor
of Abyssinia. The international consequences for Italy's
belligerence resulted in its isolation at the
League of Nations. France and Britain
quickly abandoned their trust of Mussolini. The only nation to back
Italy's aggression was Nazi Germany. After being condemned by the
League of Nations, the
Grand
Council of Fascism declared Italy's decision to leave the
League on December 11, 1937 and Mussolini denounced the League as a
mere "tottering temple".
After pressure was placed on Italy by Nazi Germany to promote a
racist agenda, the Fascist regime moved away from its previous
promotion of colonialism based on the spread of Italian culture to
a directly racist colonial agenda. The Fascist regime declared that
it would promote mass Italian settlements in the colonies that
would in the Fascist regime's terms, "create in the heart of the
African continent a powerful and homogeneous nucleus of whites
strong enough to draw those populations within our economic orbit
and our Roman and Fascist civilization". Fascist rule in its
Italian colonies differed from region to region. Rule in
Italian East Africa (
Africa
Orientale Italiana, or AOI), a colony including Ethiopia,
Eritrea, and Italian Somaliland, was harsh for the native peoples
as Fascist policy sought to destroy native culture.
In February 1937,
Rodolfo Graziani ordered Italian
soldiers to pillage native settlements in Addis Ababa
, which resulted in hundreds of Ethiopians being killed and their homes being
burned to the ground. After the occupation of Ethiopia
, the Fascist regime endorsed racial segregation to reduce the number
of mixed offspring in Italian colonies which they claimed would
"pollute" the Italian race. Marital and sexual relationships
between Italians and Africans in its colonies were made a criminal
offense when the Fascist regime implemented decree-law No. 880 of
April 19, 1937 which gave sentences of one to five years
imprisonment to Italians caught in such relationships. The law did
not give any sentences to native Africans, as the Fascist
government claimed that only those Italians were to blame for
damaging the prestige of their race. Despite racist language used
in some propaganda, the Fascist regime accepted recruitment of
native Africans who wanted to join Italy's colonial armed forces
and native African colonial recruits were displayed in
propaganda.
[445549][445550] In
Italian
Libya, Mussolini downplayed racist policies as he attempted to
earn the trust of Arab leaders there. Individual freedom,
inviolability of home and property, right to join the military or
civil administrations, and the right to freely pursue a career or
employment were guaranteed to
Libyans by
December 1934.
In famous trip to Libya in 1937, a
propaganda event was created when on March 18 Mussolini posed with
Arab dignitaries who gave him an honorary
"Sword of Islam" (that had actually
been made in Florence
) which was to symbolize Mussolini as a protector of
the Muslim Arab peoples there. In
1939, laws were passed that allowed Muslims to be permitted to join
the
National Fascist Party
and in particular the
Muslim Association of the
Lictor (
Associazione Musulmana del Littorio) for
Muslim Libya, and the 1939 reforms allowed the creation of Libyan
military units within the Italian army.
The Fascist regime also engaged in interventionist foreign policy
in Europe.
In 1923, Italian soldiers captured the Greek
island of Corfu
as part of
the Fascists' plan to eventually take over Greece
.
Corfu was later returned to Greece and war between Greece and Italy
was avoided. In 1925, Italy forced Albania to become a
de
facto protectorate which helped
Italy's stand against Greek sovereignty.
Corfu was important
to Italian imperialism and nationalism due to its presence in the
former Republic of
Venice
which left behind significant Italian cultural
monuments and influence, though the Greek population there,
especially youth, heavily protested the Italian occupation.
Relations with France were mixed, the Fascist regime consistently
had the intention to eventually wage war on France to regain
Italian-populated areas of France, but with the rise of Hitler, the
Fascists immediately became more concerned of Austria's
independence and the potential threat of Germany to Italy, if it
demanded the German-populated areas of
Tyrol. Due to concerns of German
expansionism, Italy joined the
Stresa
Front with France and the United Kingdom against Germany which
existed from 1935 to 1936. The Fascist regime held negative
relations with Yugoslavia, as they long wanted the implosion of
Yugoslavia in order to territorially expand and increase Italy's
power. Italy pursued
espionage in
Yugoslavia, as Yugoslav authorities on multiple occasions
discovered spy rings in the Italian Embassy in Yugoslavia such as
in 1930. In 1929, the Fascist government accepted Croatian extreme
nationalist
Ante Pavelić as a
political exile to Italy from Yugoslavia. The Fascists gave Pavelić
financial assistance and a training ground in Italy to develop and
train his newly formed fascist militia and terrorist group, the
Ustaše.
This organization later became the ruling
force of the Independent State of Croatia
, and murdered hundreds of thousands of Serbs, Jews and other minorities
during World War II. In 1936 in
Spain, the Fascist regime made its most significant pre-war
military intervention. The
Spanish Republic was divided in the
Spanish Civil War between the
anticlerical socialist Republicans and
the Church-supporting, monarchy-backed nationalists led by
Francisco Franco under his fascist
Falange movement. Italy sent aircraft, weapons, and
a total of over 60,000 troops to aid the Spanish nationalists. The
war helped train the Italian military for war and improve relations
with the Catholic Church. It was a success that secured Italy's
naval access in and out of the Mediterranean to the Atlantic and
its ability to pursue its policy of
Mare Nostrum without fear of
opposition by Spain. The other major foreign contributor to the
Spanish Civil War was Nazi Germany. This was the first time that
Italian and German forces fought together since the Austro-Prussian
War in the 1860s. During the 1930s, Italy built many large
battleships and other warships to solidify Italy's hold on the
Mediterranean.
After
Germany annexed Czechoslovakia
, Mussolini decided to capture Albania
to avoid becoming second-rate member of
Axis. On April 7, 1939,
Italy invaded Albania. After
short campaign Albania was occupied, and its parliament crowned
Victor Emmanuel III
King of Albania.
The historical justification for the annexation of Albania laid in
the ancient history of the
Roman Empire
in which the region of Albania had been an early conquest for the
Romans, even before northern Italy had been taken by Roman forces.
But obviously by the time of annexation, little connection to Italy
remained amongst
Albanians. In actuality,
the annexation of Albania was far from a military conquest as the
country had been a de facto protectorate of Italy since the 1920s
and much of its army were commanded by Italian officers sent from
Italy. The occupation was not appreciated by King Emmanuel III, who
feared that it had isolated Italy even further than its war against
Ethiopia.
Relations with Germany under Hitler
When the
National Socialist
German Workers Party (NSDAP, a.k.a. Nazi Party) attained power
in Germany in 1933, Mussolini and the Fascist regime in public
showed approval of Hitler's regime, with Mussolini saying "The
victory of Hitler is our victory". The Fascist regime also spoke of
creating an alliance with the new regime in Germany.In private,
Mussolini and the Italian Fascists showed disapproval of the Nazi
government despite ideological similarities and Mussolini had a
disapproving view of Hitler.
The Fascists distrusted Hitler's Pan-German ideas which they saw as a threat to
territories in Italy that previously had been part of Austrian
Empire
. Although other Nazis disapproved of
Mussolini and Fascist Italy, Hitler had long idolized Mussolini's
oratorical and visual persona, and adopted much of the symbolism of
the Fascists into the Nazi Party, such as the Roman, straight-armed
salute, dramatic oratory, the use of uniformed paramilitaries for
political violence, and the use of mass rallies to demonstrate the
power of the movement.
In 1922 Hitler tried to ask for Mussolini's
guidance on how to organize his own version of the March on Rome which would be a "March on
Berlin" (which came into being as the failed Beer Hall
Putsch
in 1923). Mussolini did not respond to
Hitler's requests as he did not have much interest in Hitler's
movement and regarded Hitler to be somewhat crazy. Mussolini did
attempt to read
Mein Kampf to
find out what Hitler's
National Socialist
movement was but was immediately disappointed, saying that
Mein Kampf was "a boring
tome that I
have never been able to read" and remarked that Hitler's beliefs
were "little more than commonplace clichés." While Mussolini like
Hitler believed in the cultural and moral superiority of whites
over coloured peoples, he opposed Hitler's
anti-Semitic beliefs. A number of Fascists were
Jewish, including Mussolini's mistress
Margherita Sarfatti, the director of
Fascist art and propaganda, and there was little support amongst
Italians for anti-Semitism. Mussolini also did not evaluate race as
being a precursor of superiority, but rather culture.
Hitler and the Nazis continued to try to woo Mussolini to their
cause, and eventually Mussolini gave financial assistance to the
Nazi party and allowed Nazi paramilitaries to train in Italy in the
belief that despite differences, a fascist regime in Germany could
be beneficial to Italy. Suspicion of the Nazis increased after
1933, Mussolini sought to insure that Nazi Germany would not become
the dominant fascist state in Europe. To do this, Mussolini opposed
German efforts to annex Austria after the assassination of fascist
Austrian President
Engelbert
Dollfuss in 1934, and promised the Austrians military support
if Germany were to interfere. This promise helped save Austria from
annexation in 1934.

Following the occupation of Ethiopia,
Mussolini and Hitler improved their countries' relations, though in
private, personal and political tensions would remain.
Public appearances and propaganda constantly portrayed the
closeness of Mussolini and Hitler and the similarities between
Italian
Fascism and German
National Socialism. While both ideologies had
significant similarities, the two factions were suspicious of each
other, and both leaders were in competition for world influence.
Hitler and Mussolini first met in June 1934, as the issue of
Austrian independence was in crisis. In private, after the visit in
1934, Mussolini said that Hitler was just "a silly little
monkey".
After Italy became isolated in 1936, the government had little
choice but to work with Germany to regain a stable bargaining
position in international affairs and reluctantly abandoned its
support of Austrian independence from Germany. On October 28, 1937,
Mussolini declared Italy's support of Germany regaining its
colonies lost in
World War I,
declaring"
With no significant opposition from Italy, Hitler proceeded with
Anschluß, the annexation of
Austria in 1938.
Germany later claimed the Sudetenland, a province of Czechoslovakia
inhabited mostly by Germans. Mussolini felt he had little choice
but to help Germany to avoid isolation. With the annexation of
Austria by Germany in 1938, the Fascist regime began to be
concerned about the majority ethnic German population in southern
Tyrol, and whether they would want to join a
Greater Germany. The Fascists were also
concerned about whether Italy should follow Nazi anti-Semitic
policies in order to gain favour from those Nazis who had mixed
feelings about Italy as an ally. In 1938, Mussolini pressured
fellow Fascist members to support the enacting of anti-Semitic
policies, but this was not well taken, as a number of Fascists were
Jewish and anti-Semitism was not an active political concept in
Italy. Nevertheless, Mussolini forced through anti-Semitic
legislation even while his own son-in-law and prominent Fascist
Count Galeazzo
Ciano personally condemned such laws. In turn for enacting the
extremely unpopular anti-Semitic laws, Mussolini and the Fascist
government demanded a concession from Hitler and the Nazis. In 1939
the Fascists demanded from Hitler that his government willingly
accept the Italian government's plan to have all Germans in south
Tyrol either leave Italy or be forced to accept Italianization.
Hitler agreed and thus the threat to Italy from the south Tyrol
Germans was neutralized.
As war approached in 1939, the Fascist regime stepped up an
aggressive press campaign against France claiming that Italian
people were suffering in France.
This was important to the alliance as
both regimes mutually had claims on France, Germany on
German-populated Alsace-Lorraine
and Italy on the mixed Italian and French populated
Savoy and Corsica
. In May 1939, a formal alliance was
organized. The alliance was known as the
Pact of Steel which obliged Italy to fight
alongside Germany if war broke out against Germany. Mussolini felt
obliged to sign the pact in spite of his own concerns that Italy
could not fight a war in the near future. This obligation grew from
his promises to Italians that he would build an empire for them and
from his personal desire to not allow Hitler to become the dominant
leader in Europe.
Mussolini was repulsed by the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact
agreement where Germany and the Soviet Union
agreed to partition the Second
Polish Republic
into German and Soviet zones for an impending
invasion. The Fascist government saw this as a betrayal of
the
Anti-Comintern Pact, but
decided to remain officially silent.
World War II and the fall of Fascism
When Germany
invaded
Poland on 1 September 1939 beginning
World War II, Mussolini publicly declared on
September 24, 1939, that Italy had the choice of entering the war
or to remain neutral which would cause the country to lose its
national dignity. Nevertheless, despite his aggressive posture,
Mussolini kept Italy out of the conflict for many months. Mussolini
told his son in law, Count Ciano, that he was personally jealous
over Hitler's accomplishments and hoped that Hitler's prowess would
be slowed down by Allied counterattack.
Mussolini went as far
to lessen Germany's successes in Europe by giving advanced notice
to Belgium
and the Netherlands
of an imminent German invasion, of which Germany
had informed Italy.
In drawing out war plans, Mussolini and the Fascist regime decided
that Italy would aim to annex large portions of Africa and the
Middle East to be included in its colonial empire. Hesitance
remained from the King and military commander
Pietro Badoglio who warned Mussolini that
Italy had too few
tanks,
armoured vehicles, and
aircraft available to be able to carry out a
long-term war and Badoglio told Mussolini "It is suicide" for Italy
to get involved in the
European conflict.
Mussolini and the Fascist regime took the advice to a degree and
waited as France was invaded by Germany before deciding to get
involved.
As France collapsed under the German
Blitzkrieg, Italy declared war on France and
Britain on 10 June 1940, fulfilling its obligations of the Pact of
Steel.
Italy hoped to quickly conquer Savoy, Nice
, Corsica
, and the African colonies of Tunisia
and Algeria
from the French, but this was quickly stopped when
Germany signed an armistice with the French commander Philippe Petain who established the puppet
state of Vichy France which retained
control over Savoy, Nice, Corsica, Tunisia and Algeria. This
decision by Germany angered the Fascist regime.
The one Italian strength that concerned the Allies was the Italian
Royal Navy (
Regia Marina), the
fourth largest navy in the world at the time.
In 1940, the British
Royal Navy launched a surprise air attack
on the Italian fleet at Taranto
which crippled Italy's major warships.
Although
the Italian fleet did not inflict serious damage as was feared, it
did keep significant British
Commonwealth naval forces in the Mediterranean Sea
. This fleet had to fight the Italian fleet
to keep British Commonwealth forces in Egypt and the Middle East
from being cut off from Britain.
In 1941 on the Italian-controlled island
of Kastelorizo
, off the coast of Turkey
, Italian
forces succeeded in repelling British and Australian forces
attempting to occupy the island during Operation
Abstention
. In December 1941, a covert attack by Italian
forces took place in Alexandria
, Egypt
, in which
Italian divers attached explosives to British warships resulting in
two British battleships being sunk. This was known as the
Raid on
Alexandria
. In 1942, the Italian navy inflicted a
serious blow to a British convoy fleet attempting to reach Malta
during
Operation
Harpoon
, sinking multiple British vessels. Over
time, the Allied navies inflicted serious damage to the Italian
fleet, and ruined Italy's one advantage to Germany.
Continuing indications of Italy's subordinate nature to Germany
arose during the
Greco-Italian
War, which was disastrous for the poorly armed Italian Army.
Mussolini had intended the war with Greece to prove to Germany that
Italy was no minor power in the alliance, but a capable empire
which could hold its own weight. Mussolini boasted to his
government that he would even resign from being Italian if anyone
found fighting the Greeks to be difficult. Within days of invading
Greece, the Greek army pushed the Italian army back into Albania
and humiliatingly put Italy on the defensive. Hitler and the German
government were frustrated with Italy's failing campaigns, but so
was Mussolini. Mussolini in private angrily accused Italians on the
battlefield of becoming "overcome with a crisis of artistic
sentimentalism and throw in the towel."
To gain
back ground in Greece, Germany reluctantly began a Balkans Campaign alongside Italy which
resulted also in the destruction of the Kingdom of
Yugoslavia
in 1941 and the ceding of Dalmatia to Italy.
Mussolini
and Hitler compensated Croatian nationalists by endorsing the
creation of the Independent State of Croatia
under the extreme nationalist Ustaše. In order to receive the support
of Italy, the Ustaše agreed to concede the main central portion of
Dalmatia as well as various Adriatic
islands to Italy, as Dalmatia held a significant number of
Italians.
The ceding of the Adriatic islands by
Croatia was a minimal loss for their government, as in exchange for
those cessions, Croatia was allowed to annex all of modern-day
Bosnia and
Herzegovina
and to persecute the Serb population there to make
way for future Croat habitation there. Officially, Croatia
was a kingdom and an Italian protectorate, ruled by Italian
House of Savoy member
Tomislav II of Croatia, however he
never personally set foot on Croatian soil, and the government was
run by
Ante Pavelić, the leader of
the Ustaše. Italy did however hold military control across all of
Croatia's coast, which combined with Italian control of Albania and
Montenegro, gave Italy complete control of the Adriatic Sea, thus
completing a key part of the
Mare
Nostrum policy of the Fascists. The Ustaše movement proved
valuable to Italy and Germany as a means to counter
Royalist Chetnik guerrillas
(although they did work with them because they did not really like
the Ustaše movement whom they left up to the Germans) and the
communist
Yugoslav Partisans
under
Josip Broz Tito who opposed
the occupation of Yugoslavia.
In 1940,
Italy invaded Egypt and was soon
driven far back into Libya
by British
Commonwealth forces. The German army sent a detachment to
join the Italian army in Libya to save the colony from the British
advance. German army units in the
Afrika
Korps under General
Erwin Rommel
were the mainstay in the campaign to push the British out of Libya
and into central Egypt in 1941 to 1942. The victories in Egypt were
almost entirely credited to Rommel's strategic brilliance. The
Italian forces received little media attention in
North Africa because of their dependence on the
superior weaponry and experience of Rommel's forces. For a time in
1942, Italy from an official standpoint controlled large amounts of
territory along the Mediterranean.
With the collapse of Vichy France, Italy
gained control of Corsica
(which had a mixed population of French and
Italians), Nice and other portions of southwestern France.
Italy also oversaw a military occupation over significant sections
of southern France. But despite the official territorial
achievements, the so called "Italian Empire" was a
paper tiger by 1942: it was faltering as its
economy failed to adapt to the conditions of war, and Italian
cities were being bombed by the Allies. Also, despite Rommel's
advances in 1941 and early 1942, the campaign in North Africa began
to collapse in late 1942. Complete collapse came in 1943 when
German and Italian forces fled North Africa to
Sicily.
By 1943, Italy was failing on every front, by January of the year,
half of the Italian forces serving on the Eastern Front had been
destroyed,, the African campaign had collapsed, the Balkans
remained unstable, and Italians wanted an end to the war. King
Victor Emmanuel III urged Count Ciano to overstep Mussolini to try
to begin talks with the Allies. In mid 1943, the
Allies commenced an
invasion of Sicily in an effort to
knock Italy out of the war and establish a foothold in
Europe. Allied troops landed in Sicily with little
initial opposition from Italian forces. The situation changed as
the Allies ran into German forces, who held out for some time
before Sicily was taken over by the Allies. The invasion made
Mussolini dependent on the German Armed Forces (
Wehrmacht) to protect his regime. The Allies
steadily advanced through Italy with little opposition from
demoralized Italian soldiers, while facing serious opposition from
German forces.
"Badoglio government"
By 1943, Mussolini had lost the support of the Italian population
for having led a disastrous war effort. To the world, Mussolini was
viewed as a "sawdust caesar" for having led his country to war with
ill-equipped and poorly trained armed forces which failed in
battle. The embarrassment of Mussolini to Italy led
King Victor Emmanuel III and
even members of the Fascist Party to desire Mussolini's removal.
The first stage of his ouster took place when Fascist Party's Grand
Council under the direction of Fascist member
Dino Grandi voted to remove Mussolini as the
party's leader. Days later, Emmanuel III officially removed
Mussolini from the post of Prime Minister and replaced him with
Marshal
Pietro Badoglio. Upon
removal, Mussolini was immediately arrested. The new "Badoglio
government" stripped away the final elements of Fascist rule by
banning the Fascist Party. Italy then signed an
armistice with
the Allied armed forces and the Kingdom of Italy joined the
Allies in their war against
Nazi Germany. The new
Royalist government of Victor Emmanuel III and
Marshal Badoglio raised an
Italian Co-Belligerent Army, an
Italian Co-Belligerent
Navy, and an
Italian Co-Belligerent Air
Force. The Bagdolio government attempted to establish a
non-partisan administration and a number of political parties were
allowed to exist again after years of ban under Fascism. These
ranged from liberal to communist parties which all were part of the
government. Italians celebrated the fall of Mussolini and as more
Italian territory was taken by the Allies, the Allies were welcomed
as liberators by Italians, who opposed the German occupation.
However, Mussolini's reign in Italy was not over. A German commando
unit led by
Otto Skorzeny rescued
Mussolini from the mountain hotel where he was being held under
arrest. Hitler instructed Mussolini to establish the
Italian Social Republic in
German-held northern Italy. The Italian Social Republic was a
German
puppet state. The Fascist
state's armed forces were a combination of Mussolini loyalist
Fascists and German armed forces. However Mussolini had little
power, Hitler and the German armed forces led the campaign against
the Allies and saw little interest in preserving Italy as little
more than a buffer zone against an Allied invasion of
Germany.
Life for Italians under German occupation was hard especially in
Rome. Rome's citizens by 1943 had grown tired of the war and upon
Italy signing an armistice with the Allies on September 8, 1943,
Rome's citizens took to the streets chanting "Viva la pace!" ("Long
live the peace!) but within hours, German forces raided the city,
and attacked anti-Fascists, royalists, and Jews. Roman citizens
were harassed by German soldiers to provide them food and fuel and
German authorities would arrest all opposition and many were sent
into forced labour. Rome's citizens upon being liberated reported
that during the first week of German occupation of Rome, crimes
against Italian citizens took place, as German soldiers looted
stores and robbed Roman citizens at gunpoint. Martial law was
imposed on Rome by German authorities requiring all citizens to
obey a curfew forbidding people to be out on the street after 9
p.m. During winter of 1943, Rome's citizens were denied access to
sufficient food, firewood, and coal which were taken by German
authorities to be given to German soldiers housed in occupied
hotels. These actions left Rome's citizens to live in the harsh
cold and were on the verge of starvation. German authorities began
arresting able-bodied Roman men to be conscripted into forced
labour. On June 4, 1944, the German occupation of Rome came to an
end as German forces retreated as the Allies advanced.
Mussolini was captured by communist
Italian partisans while trying to escape
Italy. On 28 April 1945, the communist partisans executed him.
Afterwards, the bodies of Mussolini, his
mistress, and about fifteen other Fascists were taken to Milan
where they
were brutally abused and disfigured by mobs of angry
Italians. The mauled bodies were then hung up on meat hooks
for public display. Days later on 2 May 1945, the German Army
(
Wehrmacht Heer) in Italy
surrendered.
Dissolution of the Kingdom of Italy
The aftermath of World War II left Italy with a destroyed economy,
a divided society, and anger against the monarchy for its
endorsement of the Fascist regime for the previous twenty years.
Anger flourished as well over Italy's embarrassment of being
occupied by the Germans and then by the Allies.
Even prior to the rise of the Fascists, the monarchy was seen to
have performed poorly, with society extremely divided between the
wealthy north and poor south. World War I resulted in Italy making
few gains and was seen as what fostered the rise of Fascism. These
frustrations compacted into a revival of the Italian republican
movement.
Following Victor Emmanuel III's abdication as king in 1946, his
son, the new king
Umberto II,
was pressured by the threat of civil war to call a referendum to
decide whether Italy should remain a monarchy or become a republic.
On 2 June 1946, the republican side won 54% of the vote and Italy
officially became a republic. There was, however, a significant
split between the Republican North and pro-Monarchist South. Some
Monarchist groups claimed that there was manipulation by Northern
Republicans and Socialists. Others argued that Italy was still too
chaotic in 1946 to have an accurate referendum. Regardless, to
prevent civil war, Umberto II abdicated the Italian throne, and a
new republic was born
with bitter resentment by the new government against the
House of Savoy. All male members of the Savoy
family were barred from entering Italy in 1948. This ban was only
repealed in 2002.
Military structure
King of Italy Supreme commander of the
Italian Royal Army, Navy, and later Air Force, from 1861 to 1938
and 1943 to 1946.
First Marshal of the
Empire - Supreme commander of the Italian Royal Army, Air
Force, Navy, and the Voluntary Militia for National Security from
1938 to 1943 during the Fascist era, held by both
Victor Emmanuel III and
Benito Mussolini.
See also
Notes
- (Smith, Dennis Mack (1997) Modern Italy; A Political
History, Ann Arbor: The University of Michigan Press, ISBN
0472108956, p15)
- (Smith (1997), pp23–24)
- (Smith (1997), p61)
- (Smith (1997), pp95–96)
- (Smith (1997), p91)
- (Smith (1997), pp. 95–107)
- (Smith (1997), pp132–133)
- (Smith (1997), p133)
- (Smith (1997), p128)
- Clark, Martin. “Modern Italy: 1871–1982.” Longman History
of Italy. London and New York: Longman. Pp. 35
- Clark, pp. 33
- Clark, pp. 29
- Clark, pp. 30
- Clark, pp. 36
- Clark, pp. 35
- Clark, Pp. 35
- Clark, pp. 35–36
- Clark, pp. 38
- Clark. Pp. 14
- Clark, pp. 31
- Clark, Pp. 27
- Clark. Pp. 12
- (Smith (1997), p138)
- (Smith (1997), p136)
- (Smith (1997), p137)
- (Smith (1997), p139)
- Clark. Pp. 27
- Clark. Pp. 15
- Clark. Pp. 16
- Clark. Pp. 17 –18.
- (Smith (1997), pp115–117)
- (Barclay (1997), p34)
- (Barclay (1973), p33–34)
- (Barclay (1973), p35)
- (Bosworth, RJB (2005) Mussolini's Italy, New Work:
Allen Lane, ISBN 0713996978, p50)
- (Bosworth (2005), p49)
- (Smith, Dennis Mack (1997) Modern Italy; A Political
History, Ann Arbor: The University of Michigan Press, ISBN
0472108956, p199)
- (Smith (1997), p209–210)
- (Smith (1997), p199)
- (Bosworth, Richard. (1983). Italy and the Approach of the
First World War. London: The Macmillan Press Ltd, p42)
- (Bosworth (1983), pp99–100)
- (Bosworth (1983), p101)
- (Bosworth (1983), p112)
- (Bosworth (1983), pp112–114)
- (Bosworth (1983), p119)
- (Clark, 1984. p.180)
- (Clark, Martin. 1984. Modern Italy: 1871-1982. London
and New York: Longman Group UK Limited. p.180)
- (Thayer, p272)
- (Thayer, p253)
- (Thayer, p254)
- (Clark, Martin. 1984. Modern Italy: 1871-1982. London
and New York: Longman Group UK Limited. p.184)
- Seton-Watson, Christopher. 1967. Italy from Liberalism to
Fascism: 1870 to 1925. London: Methuen & Co. Ltd. Pp.
451
- Seton-Watson, Pp. 451
- (Clark, Martin. 1984. Modern Italy: 1871-1982. London
and New York: Longman Group UK Limited. p.185)
- (Clark, 1984. p.186)
- Seton-Watson, Pp. 452
- (Clark, 1984. p.187)
- Seton-Watson, Pp. 502
- Seton-Watson, Pp. 452-3
- Seton-Watson, Pp. 453
- Seton-Watson, Pp. 456
- Seton-Watson, Pp. 461-2
- Seton-Watson, Pp. 463
- Seton-Watson, Pp. 468-9
- Seton-Watson, Pp. 468
- Seton-Watson, Pp. 469
- Seton-Watson, Pp. 470
- Seton-Watson, Pp. 471
- Seton-Watson, Pp. 486
- Seton-Watson, Pp. 493
- Seton-Watson, Pp. 495
- Smith (1997), p293
- Bosworth (2005), pp112–113.
- Smith, Dennis Mack (1997) Modern Italy; A Political
History, Ann Arbor: The University of Michigan Press, 1997,
ISBN 0472108956, pp293–294
- Smith (1997), p284
- Clark, Martin. Modern Italy:1871-1982. London and New
York: Longman Group UK Limited. p.183
- Smith (1997), pp284–286)
- Smith (1997), p298
- Smith (1997), p302
- Bosworth (2005), p112
- (Smith (1997), p312
- Smith (1997), p312
- Smith (1997), p315
- Pauley, Bruce F (2003) Hitler, Stalin, and Mussolini:
Totalitarianism in the Twentieth Century Italy, Wheeling:
Harlan Davidson, Inc., p107
- Gentile, Emilio. The Struggle For Modernity Nationalism
Futurism and Fascism (Westport, CT: Praeger, 2003), p87.
- Gentile, p81.
- Gentile, p146.
- Pauley, p108
- Pauley, p109
- Pollard, John F. (1985). The Vatican and Italian Fascism,
1929-32. Cambridge, USA: Cambridge University Press. p53
- Pollard, p54
- Pollard, p49
- Pollard, p55
- Pollard, p61
- greatoceanliners.net - rex
- Sarti, p199.
- Sarti, p200.
- Sarti, p198.
- Pauley, pp. 117.
- Pauley, pp. 117
- Pauley, Pp. 117
- Cannistraro, Philip V. (1982) Historical Dictionary of Fascist
Italy, Westport, Conn.; London : Greenwood Press, ISBN
0-313-21317-8. Pp. 474
- Pauley, p113
- de Grazia, Victoria. The Culture of Consent: Mass
Organizations of Leisure in Fascist Italy. Cambridge,
1981.
- Kallis, Aristotle, ed. (2003). The Fascism Reader,
London: Routledge, pages 391-395.
- Pauley, p113–114
- The Straight Dope: Did Mussolini use castor oil as
an instrument of torture?
- Mafia Trial, Time, October 24, 1927
- Mafia Scotched
- Pauley, p85
- Pauley, p86
- Pauley, p87
- Pauley, p88
- Cannistraro, Philip V. 1982. Historical Dictionary of
Fascist Italy. Westport, Connecticut; London, England:
Greenwood Press. Pp. 5
- Cannistraro, pp. 5
- IBS No. 10 - Libya (LY) & Sudan (SU)
1961
- Gilbert, Martin (introduction). 1989. The Illustrated London
News: Marching to War, 1933-1939. Toronto, Canada: Doubleday Canada
Ltd. Pp 137
- Sarti, Roland. 1974. The Ax Within: Italian Fascism in
Action. New York: New Viewpoints. p189.
- Sarti, p191.
- Sarti, p190.
- Sarti, p194.
- Sarti, p196.
- Smith. 1983. p172
- Glenny, Misha. Balkans: Nationalism, War and the Great Powers,
1804-1999. New York, USA: Penguin Books, 2001. Pp. 431
- Smith, 1997. p398-399
- Smith, Denis Mack. 1983. Mussolini: A Biography. New
York: Vintage Books. p181
- Smith, 1983. p181
- Smith, 1983. p172
- What happened in June 1934 - Historical Events, News
Archives
- Smith, 1997. 397
- Smith, 1997. p401
- Smith, 1997. 401
- Smith, 1997. p402.
- Smith, 1997. p402
- Smith, 1997. 405
- Smith, 1997. p406
- Smith, 1997. p407
- Smith, 1997. p408
- Smith, 1997. p409
- Smith, 1997. p412
- Smith, 1997. p412-413
- Smith, 1997. p418.
- Smith, 1997. p419
- Wallace, Robert. 1979. World War II: The Italian
Campaign. New York: Time-Life Books. Pp. 36
- Wallace, 1979. Pp. 36
- Wallace, 1979. Pp. 41-42
- Wallace, 1979. Pp. 45
References
- Barclay, Glen St. J. 1973. The Rise and Fall of the New
Roman Empire. London: Sidgwick & Jackson.
- Bosworth, Richard J. B. 1983. Italy and the Approach of the
First World War. London: The Macmillan Pres Ltd.
- Bosworth, Richard J. B. 2005. Mussolini's Italy. New
Work: Allen Lane.
- Clark, Martin. 1984. Modern Italy: 1871-1982. London
and New York: Longman Group UK Limited.
- de Grazia, Victoria. 1981. The Culture of Consent: Mass
Organizations of Leisure in Fascist Italy. Cambridge.
- Gentile, Emilio. 2003. The Struggle For Modernity:
Nationalism, Futurism and Fascism. Westport, CT: Praeger.
- Glenny, Misha. Balkans: Nationalism, War and the Great
Powers, 1804-1999. New York, USA: Penguin Books, 2001.
- Mussolini, Benito. 1935. Fascism: Doctrine and
Institutions. Rome: Ardita Publishers.
- Pauley, Bruce F. 2003. Hitler, Stalin, and Mussolini:
Totalitarianism in the Twentieth Century. Wheeling: Harlan
Davidson, Inc.
- Pollard, John F. 1985. The Vatican and Italian Fascism,
1929-32. Cambridge, USA: Cambridge University Press.
- Sarti, Roland. 1974. The Ax Within: Italian Fascism in
Action. New York: New Viewpoints.
- Smith, Dennis Mack. 1997. Modern Italy; A Political
History. Ann Arbor: The University of Michigan Press.
- Seton-Watson, Christopher. 1967. Italy from Liberalism to
Fascism: 1870 to 1925. London: Methuen & Co. Ltd.
- Thayer, John A. 1964. Italy and the Great War. Madison
and Milwaukee: University of Wisconsin Press.
External links