Victor Emmanuel III (born 11 November 1869 – 28
December 1947) was a member of the
House
of Savoy and
King of Italy (29 July 1900 – 9
May 1946).
In addition, he claimed the crowns of
Ethiopia and Albania and claimed the titles Emperor of Ethiopia
(1936–43)
and King of Albania
(1939–43)
which were recognised by the great powers in 1937 and 1939.
During his long reign, Victor Emmanuel III saw two world wars and
the birth, rise, and fall of
Fascism in the
Kingdom of Italy.
Biography
Early years
_-_Vittorio_Emanuele_III_da_ragazzo.jpg/150px-Montabone,_Luigi_(18..-1877)_-_Vittorio_Emanuele_III_da_ragazzo.jpg)
Vittorio Emmanuel as a teenager,
1886.
_-_Vittorio_Emanuele_III_di_Savoia.jpg/150px-Brogi,_Carlo_(1850-1925)_-_Vittorio_Emanuele_III_di_Savoia.jpg)
Victor Emmanuel in 1895.
Victor
Emmanuel was born in Naples
, Italy. He was
the only child of
Umberto I,
King of Italy, and his consort,
Princess Margherita of Savoy.
Margherita was the daughter of the duke of
Genoa.
Unlike his paternal first cousin's son, the 1.98 m (6 foot 6")
tall
Amedeo, 3rd Duke of
Aosta, Victor Emmanuel was short of stature even by 19th
century standards, to the point that today he would appear
diminutive. He was just 1.53 m tall (just over 5 feet).
On 24 October 1896, Prince Victor Emmanuel married Princess
Elena of
Montenegro.
Ascension to the throne
On 29 July 1900, at the age of 30, Victor Emmanuel ascended the
throne upon his father's
assassination. He became Victor Emmanuel III
of Italy and Elena became Queen Elena of Italy.
The only advice that his father Umberto ever gave his heir was
"
Remember: to be a king, all you need to know is how to sign
your name, read a newspaper, and mount a horse". His early
years showed evidence that, by the standards of the Savoy monarchy,
he was a man committed to constitutional government. Indeed, even
though his father was killed by an
anarchist, the new King showed a commitment to
constitutional freedoms.
Though Italy was a parliamentary democracy, the monarchy possessed
considerable residual powers, including the right to appoint the
Prime Minister, even if the
individual in question did not command majority support in the
Chamber of Deputies. A
shy and somewhat withdrawn individual, the King hated the
day-to-day stresses of Italian politics, though the country's
chronic political instability forced him to intervene no less than
ten times between 1900 and 1922 to solve parliamentary
crises.
When
World War I began, Italy remained
neutral at first despite being part of the Triple Alliance (albeit it was signed on
defensive terms and Italy objected that the Sarajevo
assassination
did not qualify as aggression). However, in
1915, Italy signed several secret treaties committing to enter the
war on the side of the
Triple
Entente. Most of the people opposed war, however, and the
Italian Chamber of
Deputies forced
Prime
Minister Antonio Salandra to
resign. Victor Emmanuel, however, declined Salandra's resignation
and made the decision to enter the war himself. He legally had the
right to make this decision under the
Statuto Albertino, popular opposition to
the war notwithstanding.
However, the corrupt and disorganised war
effort, the stunning loss of life suffered by the Italian army,
especially at the great defeat of Caporetto
, and the economic depression that followed the war
turned the King against what he perceived as an inefficient
political bourgeoisie. Nevertheless, the king visited the
various areas of northern Italy suffering repeated strikes and
mortar hits from elements of the
Austrian/
Italian fighting
there, where he demonstrated considerable courage and care in
personally visiting many people, with his wife the queen taking
turns with nurses in caring for Italy's wounded. It was at this
time, the period of World War I, that the king enjoyed genuine
affection from the majority of his people.
Support to Mussolini
The economic depression which followed
World
War I had given rise to much extremism among the sorely-tried
working classes of Italy. This caused the country as a whole to
become politically unstable.
Benito
Mussolini, soon to be Italy's
Fascist
dictator, took advantage of this
instability for his rise to power.
March on Rome
In 1922, Mussolini led a force of his Fascist supporters on a
March on Rome.
Prime Minister Luigi
Facta and his cabinet drafted a decree of
martial law.Vittorio Emanuele met the prime
minister just after midnight and agreed to sign the martial law
agreement,he told the libral prime minister to come back 9am the
same morning and he would sign it, however when the prime minister
returned 9am that morning the king had changed his mind about
signing martial law. The King suggested that his
Royal Army (
Regio Esercito) could not
have defended the city against the Fascist march. However,
testimony from the military leaders and surviving military records
challenge his claim.
Fascist violence had been growing in intensity throughout the
summer and autumn of 1922, climaxing with the rumours of a possible
coup. Victor Emmanuel had all the means at his disposal to sweep
Mussolini and his rag-tag
Blackshirt army
to one side.
General Pietro Badoglio
told the King that military would be able to rout the rebels, who
numbered no more than 10,000 men, without any difficulty.
Thereupon, Victor Emmanuel could have ordered Facta to protect Rome
and could have supported a decree proclaiming martial law.
The troops were totally loyal to the King. Even
Cesare Maria De Vecchi, commander of
the Blackshirts, and one of the organisers of the March on Rome,
told Mussolini that he would not act against the wishes of the
monarch. It was at this point that the Fascist leader considered
leaving Italy altogether. But then, in the minute before midnight,
he received a telegram from the King inviting him to Rome. By
midday on 30 October, he had been appointed Prime Minister, at the
age of 39, with no previous experience of office, and with only 35
Fascist deputies in the Chamber.

Victor Emmanuel in Darfo Boario Terme
after the Gleno's Dam disaster, 1923
The King failed to move against the Mussolini regime's abuses of
power (including, as early as 1924, the assassination of
Giacomo Matteotti and other opposition
MPs). Though the King claimed in his memoirs that it was the fear
of a civil war that motivated his actions, it would seem that he
received some 'alternative' advice, possibly from
Antonio Salandra, an ultra conservative
politician and former Prime Minister, and
General Armando Diaz, that it would be better
to do a deal with Mussolini. There were also pro-Fascist elements
in his immediate family, including
Margherita of Savoy, his mother.
Whatever the circumstances, Vittorio Emanuele showed weakness in a
position of strength, with dire future consequences for Italy and
for the monarchy itself. It has been alleged that Victor Emmanuel's
decisions showed not only poor judgment but also undemocratic
sentiments. What is not in doubt is that Fascism offered political
stability and opposition to
left-wing
radicalism. This appealed to many people in Italy at the time, and
certainly to the King. In many ways, the events from 1922 to 1943
demonstrated that the monarchy and the moneyed class, for different
reasons, felt Mussolini and his regime offered an option that,
after years of political chaos, was more appealing than what they
perceived as the alternative:
socialism
and
anarchism. Both the spectre of the
Russian Revolution and
the tragedies of
World War I played
large roles in these political decisions.
Lateran Treaty
In 1929, Mussolini, on behalf of the king, signed the
Lateran Treaty. The treaty was one of the
three agreements made that year between the
Kingdom of Italy and
the
Holy See. On 7 June 1929, the Lateran
Treaty was ratified and the "
Roman
Question" was answered.
Loss of popular support
The Italian monarchy enjoyed popular support for decades.
Foreigners noted how even as late as the 1940s
newsreel images of King Victor Emmanuel III and
Queen Elena, born Princess
Elena of
Montenegro, evoked applause, sometimes cheering, when played in
cinemas, in contrast to the hostile silence shown toward images of
Fascist leaders.
On 30 March 1938, the Italian Parliament established the rank of
First Marshal of the
Empire for Vittorio Emanuele and Mussolini. This new rank was
the highest rank in the Italian military.
As popular as Victor Emmanuel was, several of Victor Emmanuel's
decisions proved fatal to the monarchy.
Among these decisions
were his assumption of the crown of Ethiopia
, his public
silence when Mussolini's Fascist government issued its notorious
racial purity laws, and his assumption of the crown of Albania
.
Emperor of Ethiopia
In 1936, Victor Emmanuel assumed the crown of the
Emperor of Ethiopia. His decision to do
this was not universally accepted.
Victor Emmanuel was only able to assume
the crown after the Italian Royal Army invaded Ethiopia
(Abyssinia)
and had overthrown Emperor Haile
Selassie during the Second Italo-Abyssinian
War. The model for the Italian King thus becoming a
King-Emperor was evidently the British
monarchs who since 1877 were King-Emperor (or Queen-Empress) with a
double throne, of Britain and India respectively.
The
League of Nations decried Italy's
participation in this war and the Italian claim on Ethiopia's
conquest was disputed by some members of the international
community (namely the United States
and the Soviet Union
) but accepted by Great Britain
and France
in
1938. It was undone in 1941 by the Ethiopian restoration
after five years of
Italian
Empire.
The term
of the last acting Italian Viceroy of East
Africa, including Eritrea
and Somalia
, ended 27
November 1941 upon surrender to the allies. King Victor
Emmanuel III renounced his claimed titles of Emperor of Ethiopia in
November 1943, recognizing the previous holders of those titles as
legitimate.
Public silence concerning racial purity laws
In 1938, Victor Emmanuel kept a public silence when the Fascist
government, under pressure from
Nazi
Germany, issued racial purity laws. These laws left his
Jewish subjects open to persecution and
constituted a clear violation of both his
coronation oath and his
oath to the constitution.
King of Albania
In 1939, Victor Emmanuel assumed the crown of the
King of Albania.
Italian forces invaded
the nearly defenseless monarchy across the Adriatic Sea
and caused King Zog I to
flee. The
Italian
invasion of Albania was generally seen as the act of a stronger
nation taking unfair advantage of a weaker neighbour.
In 1941,
while in Tirana
the monarch
escaped an assassination attempt, being slightly wounded.
Later,
the author's act was considered by Communist Albania to be sign of the
overall discontent of the oppressed Albanian population, while the
Italians casted heavy doubts on the event by pointing to a possible
Greek
link
following the monarch's green light to the Greco-Italian War.
Final efforts to save crown
On 10 June 1940, Italian dictator
Benito Mussolini made the fatal decision to
have Italy enter
World War II on the
side of
Nazi Germany. Italy was not
prepared for war and, almost from the beginning, disaster followed
disaster. In 1940 Italian armies in
North
Africa and in Greece suffered humiliating defeats. In late
1941,
Italian East Africa was
lost. In 1942,
Italian Libya was lost.
Early in
1943, the ten divisions of the "Italian Army in Russia" (Armata
Italiana in Russia, or ARMIR) were crushed as an aside to the
Battle of
Stalingrad
. Before the end of 1943, the last Italian
forces in Tunisia
had surrendered and Sicily
fell. After a series of setbacks, the
Royal Navy (
Regia
Marina) became no more than a "
fleet in being."
The Mediterranean Sea
was hardly "Italy's Sea" (Mare Nostrum). The
Royal Air Force (
Regia Aeronautica), while generally
doing better than the Army and the Navy, was chronically short of
modern aircraft and even it was politely uninvited to participate
in the
Battle of Britain.
As Italy's fortunes worsened, the popularity of the King suffered.
One coffee house ditty went as follows:
- "When our Vittorio was plain King,
- Coffee was a common thing.
- When an Emperor he was made,
- Coffee to a smell did fade.
- Since he got Albania's throne,
- Coffee's very smell has flown."
On 19
July 1943, Rome
was bombed for the first
time.
Coup d'état against Mussolini
On 24 July 1943, Count
Dino Grandi and
the
Grand Council of
Fascism voted overwhelmingly to ask Victor Emmanuel to resume
his full constitutional powers—in effect, a
motion of no confidence in
Benito Mussolini. The next afternoon, the
King—who had been planning for some time to get rid of the dictator
himself—summoned Mussolini to the palace and dismissed him as
Prime Minister. The King
replaced Mussolini with
Marshal Pietro Badoglio and then renounced the
usurped Ethiopian and Albanian crowns in favor of the legitimate
monarchs of those states.
Publicly, Victor Emmanuel and Badoglio claimed that Italy would
continue the war as a member of the
Axis. Privately, they both began negotiating
with the
Allies for an
armistice. Court circles had already been putting out feelers to
the Allies before Mussolini's ouster.
Armistice with the Allies
On 8 September 1943, Victor Emmanuel made something of a blunder
when he announced an
armistice with
the Allies without first ordering the Royal Army to defend
Rome. Left without orders, the Italian armed forces everywhere
disintegrated. Many of those units which did not surrender, joined
forces with the Germans. Italian forces in Italy, France, the
Balkans, and the
Dodecanese
Islands were quickly neutralized.
Fearing a
German advance on Rome, Victor Emmanuel and his government fled
south to Brindisi
. This choice may have been necessary to
protect his safety; indeed, Hitler had planned to arrest him
shortly after Mussolini's overthrow. Nonetheless, it still came as
a surprise to many observers inside and outside Italy.
They drew contrasts
to King George VI
and Queen Elizabeth, who
refused to leave London during the Blitz,
and of Pope Pius XII, who mixed with
Rome's crowds and prayed with them after the working class Roman
neighborhood of Quartiere San Lorenzo
was bombed and destroyed.
Ultimately, the Badoglio government in southern Italy raised the
Italian Co-Belligerent
Army (
Esercito Cobelligerante del Sud), the
Italian Co-Belligerent Air
Force (
Aviazione Cobelligerante Italiana), and the
Italian Co-Belligerent
Navy (
Marina Cobelligerante del Sud). All three forces
were loyal to the King.
On 12
September, the Germans launched "Operation Oak
" (Unternehmen Eiche
) and rescued Mussolini. In short time,
he established a new
Fascist state in
northern Italy. Mussolini's
Italian Social Republic
(
Repubblica Sociale Italiana) was never more than a
German-dominated
puppet state, but it
did compete for the allegiance of the Italian people with
Badoglio's government in the south.
Realizing that he was too tainted by his earlier support of the
Fascist regime, Victor Emmanuel transferred most of his powers to
his son,
Crown Prince Umberto,
in April 1944. By doing this, Victor Emmanuel relinquished his
remaining power while retaining the royal title. This status was
formalized shortly after Rome was liberated on 4 June, when he
appointed Umberto
Lieutenant General of the
Realm.
1946 plebiscite
Within a year, public opinion forced a
plebiscite to decide between retaining the
monarchy or becoming a
republic. On 9 May 1946, in hopes of influencing
the vote, Victor Emmanuel formally abdicated. It did not work. 54%
of the voters favored declaring a republic in the referendum held
less than a month later. Widespread irregularities in the vote were
alleged, but never proven, and the Savoy family was required to
leave the country. The
Kingdom of Italy was no
more.
Taking
refuge in Egypt
, Vittorio
Emanuele died in Alexandria
in 1947 and was buried there, behind the altar of
St Catherine's Cathedral. In 1948,
Time magazine included an article about
"The Little King".
Legacy

Busts of King Victor Emmanuel III and
Queen Elena; frontyard of the Russian Orthodox Church (Church of
Christ the Saviour, St. Catherine and St. Seraph).
He has been seldom treated sympathetically by historians. His
almost forced abdication on the eve of a
referendum on the future of the Italian monarchy
achieved nothing — being too little, far too late. At worst, it
reminded undecided voters of the role the monarchy and the King's
own actions (or inactions) had played during the Fascist period, at
precisely the moment when monarchists were hoping that voters would
focus on the positive impression created by
Crown Prince Umberto and
Princess Maria José as the
de facto king and queen of Italy
since 1944. The 'May' King and Queen, Umberto and Maria José, in
their brief, month-long reign, were unable to shift the burden of
recent history and opinion. To this day, his role in the rise of
fascism, his support of Italian imperialism, and his unwillingness
to oppose either ensure that his legacy will always be
negative.
Titles of the Crown of Italy
From 1860 to 1946, the following titles were used by the
King of Italy:
Victor
Emmanuel III, by the Grace of
God and the Will of the Nation, King
of Italy, King of Sardinia,
Cyprus, Jerusalem, Armenia, Duke of Savoy, count of Maurienne
, Marquis (of the Holy
Roman Empire) in Italy; prince of Piedmont, Carignano
, Oneglia
, Poirino
, Trino
; Prince and
Perpetual vicar of the Holy Roman
Empire; prince of Carmagnola
, Montmellian with Arbin and Francin, prince
bailliff of the Duchy of Aosta
, Prince of Chieri
, Dronero
, Crescentino
, Riva di Chieri
e Banna, Busca
, Bene
, Brà
, Duke of Genoa, Monferrat, Aosta
, Duke of
Chablais, Genevois, Duke of Piacenza
, Marquis of Saluzzo
(Saluces), Ivrea
, Susa
, del Maro, Oristano
, Cesana
, Savona
, Tarantasia, Borgomanero
e Cureggio
, Caselle
, Rivoli
, Pianezza
, Govone
, Salussola
, Racconigi
con Tegerone, Migliabruna e Motturone, Cavallermaggiore
, Marene
, Modane
e Lanslebourg
, Livorno
Ferraris
, Santhià
Agliè
, Centallo
e Demonte
, Desana
, Ghemme
, Vigone
, Count of
Barge
, Villafranca
, Ginevra
, Nizza
, Tenda
, Romont
, Asti
, Alessandria
, del Goceano,
Novara
, Tortona
, Bobbio
, Soissons
, Sant'Antioco
, Pollenzo
, Roccabruna
, Tricerro
, Bairo
, Ozegna
, delle
Apertole, Baron of Vaud
e del
Faucigni
, Lord of Vercelli
, Pinerolo
, della Lomellina, della
Valle
Sesia
, del marchesato di Ceva
, Overlord
of Monaco
, Roccabruna
and 11/12th of Menton
, Noble
patrician of Venice
,
patrician of Ferrara
.
Ancestors
Family
In 1896
he married princess Elena of
Montenegro (1873–1952), daughter of Nicholas I, King of Montenegro
. Their issue included:
- Yolanda
Margherita Milena Elisabetta Romana Maria (1901–1986), married
to Giorgio Carlo Calvi, Count Bergolo, (1887–1977);
- Mafalda
Maria Elisabetta Anna Romana (1902–44), married to Prince Philipp of Hesse (1896–1980)
with issue; she died in the Nazi concentration camp at Buchenwald
;
- Umberto Nicola Tommaso Giovanni
Maria, later Umberto II, King of Italy (1904–1983) married to
Princess Marie José of
Belgium (1906–2001), with issue.
- Giovanna
Elisabetta Antonia Romana Maria (1907–2000), married to
Boris III, King of Bulgaria
, and mother of Simeon II,
King and later Prime Minister
of Bulgaria.
- Maria Francesca
Anna Romana (1914–2001), who married Prince Luigi of Bourbon–Parma (1899–1967), with
issue.
See also
References
External links