'Benito Amilcare Andrea Mussolini' (
July 29,
1883 –
April 28,
1945) was the
prime minister of
Italy from 1922 until 1943, when he was overthrown. He established a
fascist regime that valued
nationalism,
militarism and
anti-communism combined with strict
censorship and state
propaganda.
Mussolini became a close ally of
German dictator
Adolf Hitler, whom he influenced. Mussolini entered
World War II in June 1940 on the side of
Nazi Germany. Three years later, the
Allies invaded Italy. In April 1945, Mussolini attempted to escape to Switzerland, only to be captured and
executed near
Lake Como by partisans.
Early years
Mussolini was born in
Dovia di Predappio in the province of
Forlì in
Emilia-Romagna on
July 29 1883, to Alessandro and Rosa Maltoni. He was not
baptised as a child.
[4]
He was named ''Benito'' after
Mexican reformist President
Benito Juárez; the names ''Andrea'' and ''Amilcare'' were for Italian socialists
Andrea Costa and . His mother, Rosa Maltoni, was a
teacher. His father, Alessandro, was a
blacksmith and a socialist activist.
[Like his sister, who was a member of Marx and Engels's first
Socialist International, Benito became a socialist and rose through the ranks of the
Italian Socialist Party to become one of its most important leaders by the time he was thirty.]
By age eight, he was banned from his mother's church for pinching people in the pews and throwing stones at them outside after church. He was sent to
boarding school later that year and at age 11 was expelled for stabbing a fellow student in the hand and throwing an inkpot at a teacher. He did, however, receive good grades, and qualified as an elementary schoolmaster in 1901.
[5]
In 1902, he
emigrated to
Switzerland to escape military service. During a period when he was unable to find a permanent job there, he was arrested for
vagrancy and jailed for one night. Later, after becoming involved in the socialist movement, he was
deported and returned to Italy to do his military service. He returned to Switzerland immediately, and a second attempt to deport him was halted when Swiss socialist parliamentarians held an emergency debate to discuss his treatment.
Later, a job was found for him in the city of
Trento, which was ethnically Italian but then under the control of
Austria-Hungary, in February 1909. There, he did office work for the local socialist party and edited its newspaper ''L'Avvenire del Lavoratore'' ("The Future of the Worker"). It did not take him long to make contact with
irredentist politician and journalist
Cesare Battisti, and to agree to write for and edit his newspaper ''Il Popolo'' ("The People") in addition to the work he did for the party. For Battisti's publication he wrote a novel, ''Claudia Particella, l'amante del cardinale'', which was published serially in 1910. He later dismissed it as written merely to smear the religious authorities. The novel was subsequently translated into English as ''The Cardinal's Mistress''. In 1915, he had a son from
Ida Dalser, a woman born in Sopramonte, a village near Trento.
[6]
By the time his novel hit the pages of ''Il Popolo'', Mussolini was already back in Italy. His
polemic style and growing defiance of Royal authority and, as hinted,
anti-clericalism got him in trouble with the authorities until he was finally deported at the end of September. After his return to Italy (prompted by his mother's illness and death) he joined the staff of the "Central Organ of the Socialist Party",
[7] ''
Avanti!'' ("Forward!").
Service in World War I
The term
Fascism is derived from the word "
Fascio," which literally means a 'bundle of sticks', in reference to a corporatist structure uniting politics, industry and labor as a coherent unit. Italian groups from the left and right, advocated such a corporatist structure of government. A section of revolutionary
syndicalists broke with the Socialists over the issue of Italy's entry into the
First World War (the Socialists adhered to the principle of
internationalism and opposed the war on the grounds that it strengthened capitalism). The syndicalists, on the other hand, harbored nationalist feelings. They formed a group called ''Fasci d'azione rivoluzionaria internazionalista'' in October 1914. Mussolini violently opposed intervention at first, but he changed his mind. He soon became as violent a supporter of the war as he had been an opponent.
Mussolini, at the time, was an official party functionary in the Socialist Party, as well as editor of the Socialist newspaper "Avanti!" ('Forward').
Massimo Rocca and
Tullio Masotti asked Mussolini to settle the contradiction of his support for interventionism and still being a Socialist, so Mussolini responded by resigning from the paper, and he was expelled from the party. Two weeks later, he joined the
Milan ''fascio''.
With the help of a publisher who favored Italy's entrance to the war, Mussolini founded a new paper, ''
Il Popolo d'Italia'' (The People of Italy) in 1914. Italy was a member of the
Triple Alliance, thereby allied with Imperial Germany and Austria-Hungary. It did not join the war in 1914, but did in 1915, as Mussolini wished, on the side of
Britain and
France
Called up for military service, Mussolini served at the front between September 1915 and February 1917. During that period he kept a war diary in which he prefigured himself as a charismatic heroic leader of a socially conservative national warrior community. In reality, he spent most of the war in quiet sectors and saw very little action.
[8] It has always been thought that he was seriously wounded by a Mortar bomb in 1917 and that this accounts for his return to Milan to the editorship of his paper. But recent research has shown that he in fact used what were only very minor injuries to cover the more serious affliction of
neurosyphilis.
[9]
Birth of fascism
By the time of his return from the front, Mussolini gave little credence to socialism (though for a time, his paper still called itself "a Socialist paper"). By February 1918, he was calling for the emergence of a leader "ruthless and energetic enough to make a clean sweep." In May, he hinted in a speech in
Bologna that he might be that leader.
On
February 23,
1919, Mussolini reformed the Milan ''fascio'' as the ''Fasci Italiani di Combattimento'' (Italian Fighting League), consisting of 200 members. Its first
manifesto promised broad reforms. It became an organized political movement a month later. The Fascisti, led by one of Mussolini's close confidants,
Dino Grandi, formed armed squads of war veterans called
Blackshirts (or ''squadristi'') to terrorise
anarchists,
socialists and
communists. The government rarely interfered. The Fascisti grew so rapidly that within two years, it transformed itself into the
National Fascist Party at a congress in
Rome. Also in 1921, Mussolini was elected to the
Chamber of Deputies for the first time.
In return for the support of a group of industrialists and agrarians, Mussolini gave his approval (often active) to
strikebreaking, and he abandoned revolutionary agitation; he even dropped his earlier support for overthrowing the
monarchy and transforming Italy into a "social republic." When the governments of
Giovanni Giolitti,
Ivanoe Bonomi, and
Luigi Facta failed to stop the spread of chaos, and after Fascists had organised the demonstrative and threatening ''Marcia su Roma'' ("
March on Rome") on
October 28,
1922); Mussolini—despite commanding the support of only 22 other Fascist deputies—was invited by
King Victor Emmanuel III to form a new government. At age 39, he became the youngest prime minister in Italian history on
October 29,
1922.
[10]
Mussolini did not become prime minister because of the march on Rome. Rather, Victor Emmanuel feared that if he did not choose a government under either the fascists or socialists, Italy would soon be involved in a
civil war. Then as now, Italian governments were frequently formed without a majority, resulting in weak and indecisive administrations. Many conservatives saw Mussolini and fascism as the best answer to the possibility of a communist takeover. They also feared a socialist government might take away what the Italian left called excessive war profits, give too much power to labor unions and force higher wages. They also feared possible government control of key industries. The king accordingly asked Mussolini to become prime minister, obviating the need for the march on Rome. However, because fascists were already arriving from all around Italy, he decided to continue. In effect, the threatened seizure of power became nothing more than a victory parade. Fascists from all over Italy came to Rome to cheer the "revolution." Thus, the march on Rome became a piece of fascist legend: that fascism had taken over through force rather than compromise. But it is not entirely accurate to say that Mussolini came to power solely through legal means.
Early years in power
Mussolini's fascist state, established nearly a decade before
Adolf Hitler's rise to power, would provide a model for Hitler's later economic and political policies.
As Prime Minister, the first years of Mussolini's rule were characterized by a right-wing coalition government composed of fascists, nationalists, liberals and even two Catholic ministers from the
Popular Party. In fact, the fascists made up a small minority in his original governments. Nonetheless, Mussolini's domestic goal was the eventual establishment of a
totalitarian state with himself as supreme leader (''
Il Duce'') a message that was articulated by the Fascist newspaper Il Popolo which was now edited by Mussoliini's brother Arnaldo. To that end , Mussolini obtained dictatorial powers for one year. He favored the complete restoration of state authority, with the integration of the ''Fasci di Combattimento'' into the armed forces (the foundation in January 1923 of the ''Milizia Volontaria per la Sicurezza Nazionale'') and the progressive identification of the party with the state. In political and social economy, he passed legislation that favored the wealthy industrial and agrarian classes (privatisations, liberalisations of rent laws and dismantlement of the unions).
In June 1923, the government passed the
Acerbo Law, which transformed Italy into a single national constituency. It also granted a two-thirds majority of the seats in Parliament to the party or group of parties which had obtained at least 25% of the votes. This law was punctually applied in the elections of
April 6,
1924. The "national alliance," consisting of Fascists, most of the old Liberals and others, won 64% of the vote largely by means of violence and voter intimidation. These tactics were especially prevalent in the south.
The assassination of the socialist deputy
Giacomo Matteotti, who had requested the annulment of the elections because of the irregularities committed, provoked a momentary crisis of the Mussolini government. The murderer, a squadristi named Dumini, reported to Mussolini soon after the murder. Mussolini ordered a cover-up, but witnesses saw the car used to transport Matteotti's body parked outside Matteotti's residence, which linked Dumini to the murder. The Matteotti crisis provoked cries for justice against the murder of an outspoken critic of Fascist violence. The government was shocked into paralysis for a few days, and Mussolini later confessed that a few resolute men could have alerted public opinion and started a coup that would have swept fascism away. Dumini was imprisoned for 2 years. On release he told others that Mussolini was responsible, for which he served further prison time. For the next 15 years, Dumini received an income from Mussolini, the Fascist Party, and other sources. This was clearly
hush money, for he left a dossier full of incriminating evidence to a
Texas lawyer in case of his own death.
The opposition parties responded weakly or were generally unresponsive. Many of the socialists, liberals and moderates boycotted Parliament in the
Aventine Secession, hoping to force Victor Emmanuel to dismiss Mussolini. But despite the leadership of communists such as
Antonio Gramsci, socialists such as
Pietro Nenni and liberals such as
Piero Gobetti and
Giovanni Amendola, they were incapable of transforming their posturing into a mass antifascist action. The king, fearful of violence from the Fascist squadristi, kept Mussolini in office. Because of the boycott of Parliament, Mussolini could pass any legislation unopposed. The political violence of the squadristi had worked only too well, for there was no popular demonstration against the murder of Matteotti.
Within his own party, Mussolini faced doubts during these critical weeks. The more violent were angry that Mussolini had only killed a few dozen, and a bloodbath ensued that killed thousands. Fifty senior militia leaders burst into his office and told him to act forcefully or that they would depose him. One account claims Mussolini recalled them to a sense of discipline. Another account claims that Mussolini burst into tears.
Whatever the case, on
January 3,
1925, Mussolini made a speech before the Chamber in which he took responsibility for squadristi violence (though he did not mention the assassination of Matteotti). Promising a crackdown on dissenters, he dropped all pretense of collaboration and set up a total dictatorship. Before his speech, fascist militia beat up the opposition and prevented opposition newspapers from publishing. Mussolini correctly predicted that as soon as public opinion saw him firmly in control the "fence-sitters", the silent majority and the "place-hunters" would all place themselves behind him. In 1925, all opposition was silenced. And so the Matteotti crisis was the turning point between a parliamentary state ruled by a fascist party to a fascist dictatorship. From late 1925 until the mid-1930s, fascism experienced little and isolated opposition, although that which it did was memorable.
While failing to outline a coherent program, fascism evolved into a new political and economic system that combined totalitarianism, nationalism, anti-communism and anti-liberalism into a state designed to bind all classes together under a
corporatist system (the "Third Way"). This was a new system in which the state seized control of the organisation of vital industries. Under the banners of nationalism and state power, Fascism seemed to synthesise the glorious Roman past with a futuristic utopia.
Building a dictatorship
Police state
Over the next two years, Mussolini progressively dismantled all constitutional and conventional restraints on his power, thereby building a
police state. A law passed on
Christmas Eve 1925 changed Mussolini's title from "president of the Council of Ministers" (prime minister) to "head of the government." He was no longer responsible to Parliament and could only be removed by the king. Only Mussolini could determine the body's agenda. Local autonomy was abolished, and
podestas appointed by the
Italian Senate replaced elected mayors and councils.
Mussolini's skill in propaganda was such that he had surprisingly little opposition to suppress. Nonetheless, he was "slightly wounded in the nose" when he was shot on
April 7 1926 by
Violet Gibson, an
Irish woman and sister of
Baron Ashbourne.
[The Times, Thursday, April 8 1926; pg. 12; Issue 44240; col A ] He also survived a failed assassination attempt in Rome by
anarchist Gino Lucetti,
[11] and a planned attempt by
American anarchist Michael Schirru, which ended with his capture and execution.
[12]
At various times after 1922, Mussolini personally took over the ministries of the interior, foreign affairs, colonies, corporations, defense, and public works. Sometimes he held as many as seven departments simultaneously, as well as the premiership. He was also head of the all-powerful Fascist Party and the armed local fascist militia, the
MVSN or "Blackshirts," who terrorised incipient resistances in the cities and provinces. He would later form an institutionalised
secret police that carried official state support, the
OVRA. In this way he succeeded in keeping power in his own hands and preventing the emergence of any rival.
All other parties were outlawed in 1928, though in practice Italy had been a one-party state since Mussolini's 1925 speech. In the same year, an electoral law abolished parliamentary elections. Instead, the
Grand Council of Fascism selected a single list of candidates to be approved by plebiscite. The Grand Council had been created five years earlier as a party body but was "constitutionalised" and became the highest constitutional authority in the state.
Economic policy
Main articles: Economy of Italy under Fascism, 1922-1943
Main articles: Economics of fascism
Mussolini launched several public construction programs and government initiatives throughout Italy to combat economic setbacks or unemployment levels. His earliest, and one of the best known, was Italy's equivalent of the
Green Revolution, known as the "Battle for Grain", in which 5,000 new farms were established and five new agricultural towns on land reclaimed by draining the
Pontine Marshes. This plan diverted valuable resources to grain production, away from other more economically viable crops. The huge
tariffs associated with the project promoted widespread inefficiencies, and the government subsidies given to farmers pushed the country further into debt. Mussolini also initiated the "Battle for Land", a policy based on
land reclamation outlined in 1928. The initiative had a mixed success; while projects such as the draining of the Pontine Marsh in 1935 for
agriculture were good for propaganda purposes, provided work for the
unemployed and allowed for great land owners to control
subsidies, other areas in the Battle for Land were not very successful. This program was inconsistent with the Battle for Grain (small plots of land were inappropriately allocated for large-scale wheat production), and the Pontine Marsh was lost during
World War II. Fewer than 10,000
peasants resettled on the redistributed land, and peasant poverty remained high. The Battle for Land initiative was abandoned in 1940.
He also combated an economic recession by introducing the "Gold for the Fatherland" initiative, by encouraging the public to voluntarily donate
gold jewelery such as necklaces and wedding rings to government officials in exchange for steel armbands bearing the words "Gold for the Fatherland". The collected gold was then melted down and turned into gold bars, which were then distributed to the
national banks. According to some historians, the gold was never melted down and was thrown into a lake, found at the end of the war.
Mussolini pushed for government control of business: by 1935, Mussolini claimed that three quarters of Italian businesses were under state control. That same year, he issued several edicts to further control the economy, including forcing all banks, businesses, and private citizens to give up all their foreign-issued stocks and bonds to the Bank of Italy. In 1938, he also instituted wage and
price controls.
[13] He also attempted to turn Italy into a self-sufficient
autarky, instituting high barriers on trade with most countries except
Germany.
Most of Mussolini's economic policies were carried out with more consideration to his popularity in mind than economic reality. Thus, while the impressive nature of his economic reforms won him support from many within Italy, there is serious disagreement about the success of the Italian economy in this period. Some believe it seriously underperformed under ''Il Duce's'' reign and others credit the industrialisation that occurred under Fascism as laying the foundation for the "economic miracle" in Italy in the 1950s and 1960s.
Government by propaganda
As dictator of Italy, Mussolini's foremost priority was the subjugation of the minds of the Italian people and the use of
propaganda to do so; whether at home or abroad, and here his training as a journalist was invaluable. Press, radio, education, films — all were carefully supervised to create the illusion that fascism was ''the'' doctrine of the twentieth century, replacing liberalism and democracy. The principles of this doctrine were laid down in the article on fascism, written by
Giovanni Gentile and signed by Mussolini that appeared in 1932 in the ''
Enciclopedia Italiana''. In 1929, a concordat with the
Vatican was signed, the
Lateran treaties, by which the Italian state was at last recognised by the
Roman Catholic Church, and the independence of
Vatican City was recognised by the Italian state. In 1927, Mussolini was baptised by a Roman Catholic
priest in order to take away certain Catholic opposition, who were still very critical of a regime which had taken away papal property and virtually blackmailed several popes inside the Vatican. However, Mussolini was never known to be a practicing Catholic. But since 1927, and more even after 1929, Mussolini, with his anti-Communist doctrines, convinced many Catholics to actively support him.
The law codes of the
parliamentary system were rewritten. All teachers in schools and universities had to swear an oath to defend the fascist regime. Newspaper editors were all personally chosen by Mussolini and no one who did not possess a certificate of approval from the fascist party could practice journalism. These certificates were issued in secret; Mussolini thus skillfully created the illusion of a "free press". The trade unions were also deprived of any independence and were integrated into what was called the
"corporative" system. The aim (never completely achieved), inspired by medieval guilds, was to place all Italians in various professional organisations or "corporations", all of which were under clandestine governmental control.
Large sums of money were spent on highly visible public works, and on international prestige projects such as the ''
SS Rex''
Blue Riband ocean liner and aeronautical achievements such as the world's fastest
seaplane the
Macchi M.C.72 and the transatlantic flying boat cruise of
Italo Balbo, who was greeted with much fanfare in the
United States when he landed in
Chicago.
Foreign policy
In foreign policy, Mussolini soon shifted from the pacifist anti-imperialism of his lead-up to power to an extreme form of aggressive
nationalism. An early example was his bombardment of
Corfu in 1923. Soon after he succeeded in setting up a puppet regime in
Albania and in ruthlessly consolidating Italian power in
Libya, which had been loosely a colony since 1912. It was his dream to make the
Mediterranean ''mare nostrum'' ("our sea" in Latin), and he established a large naval base on the Greek island of
Leros to enforce a strategic hold on the eastern Mediterranean.
Conquest of Ethiopia
Main articles: Second Italo-Abyssinian War
The invasion of
Ethiopia was carried out rapidly (the proclamation of Empire took place in May of 1936) and involved several atrocities such as the use of
chemical weapons, (
mustard gas and
phosgene), and the indiscriminate slaughter of much of the local population to prevent opposition. Mussolini relied heavily on Michael Kenyhercz's propaganda machine to defend these actions, though many Italians never accepted these ideals as legitimate. The armed forces used a vast arsenal of
grenades and bombs loaded with mustard gas, which were dropped from airplanes. This substance was also sprayed directly from above on to enemy combatants and villages. Mussolini authorised the use of the weapons:
"Rome, 27 October '35. A.S.E. Graziani. The use of gas as an ''ultima ratio'' to overwhelm enemy resistance and in case of counterattack is authorised. Mussolini."
"Rome, 28 December '35. A.S.E. Badoglio. Given the enemy system I have authorised V.E. the use even on a vast scale of any gas and flamethrowers. Mussolini."
Mussolini and his generals attempted to keep secret their use of chemical weapons, but it was revealed to the world through the denunciations of the
International Red Cross and of many foreign observers. The Italian reaction to these revelations consisted in the allegedly "erroneous" bombardment (at least 19 times) of Red Cross tents posted in the areas of military encampment of the Ethiopian resistance.
Regarding the Ethiopian population, the orders given by Mussolini were very clear:
"Rome, 5 June 1936. A.S.E. Graziani. All rebels taken prisoner must be killed. Mussolini."
"Rome, 8 July 1936. A.S.E. Graziani. I have authorised once again V.E. to begin and systematically conduct a politics of terror and extermination of the rebels and the complicit population. Without the ''legge taglionis'' one cannot cure the infection in time. Await confirmation. Mussolini."
The predominant part of the work of repression was carried out by Italians who, besides the bombs laced with mustard gas, instituted forced labor camps, installed public
gallows, killed hostages, and mutilated the corpses of their enemies.
Graziani ordered the elimination of captured guerrillas by throwing them out of airplanes in mid-flight. Many Italian troops had themselves photographed next to cadavers hanging from gallows, or standing beside chests full of cut-off heads.
One episode in the Italian occupation of Ethiopia was the slaughter of Addis Ababa in February 1937, which followed an attempt to assassinate Graziani. In the course of an official ceremony, a bomb exploded next to the general. The response was immediate and cruel. The thirty or so Ethiopians present at the ceremony were impaled, and immediately after, the black shirts of the fascist militias poured out into the streets of Addis Ababa where they tortured and killed all of the men, women and children that they encountered in their path. They also set fire to homes in order to prevent the inhabitants from leaving, and organised the mass executions of groups of 50-100 people.
[14]
Although Mussolini's forces had modern military hadware such as planes and guns to conquer Ethiopia, and the Ethiopians were ill-equipped and badly trained, the Italian conquest of Ethiopia took ''eight months'' to complete.

Benito Mussolini and
Adolf Hitler stand together on a reviewing stand during an official visit to occupied Yugoslavia
Spanish Civil War
Main articles: Spanish Civil War and Foreign Involvement
His active intervention in 1936 - 1939 on the side of
Franco in the
Spanish Civil War ended any possibility of reconciliation with
France and
Britain. As a result, his relationship with Hitler became closer, and he chose to accept the German annexation of
Austria in 1938 and the dismemberment of
Czechoslovakia in 1939. At the
Munich Conference in September 1938, he posed as a moderate working for European peace, although he was really negotiating in the interests of Hitler, resulting in Nazi control of the Sudatenland. His "axis" with Germany was confirmed when he made the "
Pact of Steel" with Hitler in May 1939, as the previous "
Rome-Berlin Axis" of 1936 had been unofficial. Members of
TIGR, a Slovene anti-fascist group, plotted to kill Mussolini in
Kobarid in 1938, but their attempt was unsuccessful.
Axis of blood and steel
Main articles: Pact of Steel
The term "
Axis Powers" was coined by Mussolini in November 1936 when he spoke of a Rome-Berlin axis in reference to the treaty of friendship signed between Italy and Germany on
October 25 1936. His "Axis" with Germany was confirmed when he made
another treaty with Germany in May 1939. Mussolini described the relationship with Germany as a "Pact of Steel", something he had earlier referred to as a "Pact of Blood".
Germany's influence on Italian policy increased, which alarmed many Italian citizens and proved unpopular. King
Victor Emanuel III was also wary of this new axis, favouring the more traditional allies of Britain and France. In 1938, Italian soldiers began marching using the German
goose step, which Mussolini called the ''passo romano'' ("Roman step"). The passing of the
Charter of Race in 1938 demonstrated the enormous influence of Hitler over Mussolini, who had always been more interested in cultural superiority rather than racial superiority. These
anti-Semitic laws meant that Jews were fired from government jobs and barred from marrying Italian "Aryans."
World War II
Main articles: Military history of Italy during World War II
As World War II approached, Mussolini announced his intention of annexing
Malta,
Corsica, and
Tunis. He spoke of creating a "
New Roman Empire" that would stretch east to
Palestine and south through
Libya and
Egypt to
Kenya.
In April 1939, after a brief war, he annexed
Albania. Mussolini decided to remain
non-belligerent in the larger conflict until he was quite certain which side would win.
War declared
From the start, Mussolini did not do well in
World War II. Indeed, many fascists had opposed entering the war.
On
10 June,
1940, Mussolini finally declared war on Britain and France. Italian forces on the French border were able to make extremely
limited gains before France surrendered to Germany. The Italians suffered over 4,000 casualties in this brief campaign (the French lost just over 200 men).
[15] From the start, Italy was little more than a military satellite to Hitler.
On
3 August,
1940, Mussolini sent his forces in
East Africa to attack British forces in the
Sudan,
Kenya, and
British Somaliland during the
East African Campaign. After some initial successes, the Italian forces were stopped.
On
13 September,
1940, Mussolini forces attacked British forces in
Egypt. By
16 September, after a short advance, the Italians in Egypt were stalemated.
On
25 October,
1940, Mussolini sent an expeditionary air force contingent to Belgium in order to take part in the
Battle of Britain. But, once pitted against the
Royal Air Force Fighter Command on its home ground, the mixed Italian fighter/bomber force was badly mauled and was retired to defensive duties.
[16]
On
28 October,
1940, in an attempt to impress Hitler, Mussolini
attacked Greece. But, after a brief period of success, the Italians were repelled by a relentless Greek counterattack. This resulted in the loss of one-quarter of Italian-controlled Albania. The Italian forces in Albania were stalled, and Mussolini was embarrassed into calling for Hitler's help. This was expecially embarrassing inasmuch as Hitler had to commit forces to the Balkans in opposition to the Allies who hurried to defend Greece; this caused a critical delay for Hitler in his plan to invade the
Soviet Union before the Russian
winter set in.
On
11 November,
1940, Mussolini's fleet was
attacked and crippled at Taranto. The Italian navy in the Mediterranean was rarely committed to action again.
Despite continued problems, Mussolini expanded Italy's participation in the war throughout 1941. By
7 February, the British had completed
Operation Compass in
North Africa, and the Italians were surrendering in droves. By
18 May, the commander of the Italian forces in East Africa, the
Duke of Aosta, had surrendered to the British at Amba Alagi near Gondar. In April, after a failed spring offensive, only the intercession by the Germans saved Mussolini's campaign against Greece from complete failure. In June, Mussolini declared war on the Soviet Union and sent an army
to fight in Russia. In December, after the
attack on Pearl Harbor, he declared war on the
United States.
Throughout 1942, with few exceptions, Mussolini's troops continued to perform poorly everywhere. They were hampered by a lack of supplies. Italy went into the war with almost no tanks or antitank guns. Clothing, fuel, food and vehicles were in short supply. Italian factories did not have enough raw materials to produce the weapons needed to fight a war of such magnitude, a problem that became more serious when the Allies began bombing factories in the north. In March 1943, the factories in
Milan and
Turin shut down to give workers and their families a chance to evacuate.
Replaced by Badoglio
By 1943, following the
Axis defeat in North Africa, setbacks on the
Eastern Front, and the
Anglo-American landing in Sicily, most of Mussolini's colleagues (including Grandi and Count
Galeazzo Ciano, the foreign minister and Mussolini's son-in-law) turned against him. Italy's position had become untenable by this time, and court circles were already putting out feelers to the Allies.
On the night of
24 July, Mussolini summoned the
Fascist Grand Council to its first meeting since the start of the war. At this meeting, Mussolini announced that the Germans were thinking of evacuating the south. This led Grandi to launch a blistering attack on his longtime comrade. Grandi moved a resolution asking the king to resume his full constitutional powers—in effect, a
vote of no confidence in Mussolini. The motion carried by an unexpectedly large margin, 19-7.
Mussolini did not think the vote had any substantive value and appeared for work the next morning as normal. That afternoon,
Victor Emmanuel III summoned him to the palace and dismissed him from office in the king's unrelated separate plot to replace Mussolini.
[17] Upon leaving the palace, Mussolini was arrested. For the next two months he was moved to various places to hide him from the Germans. Ultimately Mussolini was sent to
Gran Sasso, a mountain resort in central Italy (
Abruzzo). He was kept there in complete isolation.
Mussolini was replaced by
Marshal (''Maresciallo d'Italia'') Pietro Badoglio, who immediately declared in a famous speech, "''La guerra continua a fianco dell'alleato germanico''" ("The war continues at the side of our Germanic ally"). In fact, Badoglio was working to negotiate a surrender.
40 days later, on
3 September,
1943, Badoglio signed an armistice with the Allies. The armistice was made public by the Allies five days later on
8 September, throwing Italy into chaos. Badoglio and the king, fearing German retaliation, fled from Rome. They left the entire Italian Army without orders. Many units simply disbanded; some reached the Allied-controlled zone and surrendered; a few decided to start a
partisan war against the Nazis; and a few rejected the switch of sides and remained allied with the Germans. In retaliation for the Italian armistice, the Germans launched Operation Axis (''Operation Achse'') which included the ruthless disarming of the Italian Army.
''Repubblica Sociale Italiana''
Main articles: Italian Social Republic
About two months after he was stripped of power, Mussolini was rescued by the Germans in Operation Oak (''
Unternehmen Eiche''). This was a spectacular raid planned by General
Kurt Student and carried out by Senior Storm Unit Leader (''
Obersturmbannführer'')
Otto Skorzeny. The Germans relocated Mussolini to northern Italy where he set up a new fascist state, the
Italian Social Republic (''Repubblica Sociale Italiana'', RSI).
Mussolini lived in
Gargnano on Lago di Garda in
Lombardy during this period. But he was little more than a
puppet under the protection of his German liberators—indeed, he was little more than the ''
Gauleiter'' of Lombardy.
Mussolini executed some of the fascist leaders who had abandoned him. Those executed included his son-in-law,
Galeazzo Ciano.
As Head of State and Minister of Foreign Affairs for the Italian Social Republic, Mussolini used much of his time to write his memoirs. Along with his autobiographical writings of 1928, these writings would be combined and published by Da Capo Press as ''My Rise and Fall.''
Death

Cross marking the place in Mezzegra where Mussolini was shot
On
27 April,
1945, in the afternoon, near the village of Dongo (
Lake Como), just before the Allied armies reached
Milan, as they headed for
Switzerland to board a plane to escape to German controlled Austria, Mussolini and his mistress
Clara Petacci were caught by Italian communist partisans. Mussolini had been traveling with retreating German forces and was apprehended while attempting to escape recognition by wearing a German military uniform. After several unsuccessful attempts to take them to
Como they were brought to Mezzegra. They spent their last night in the house of the De Maria family.
The day after, on
28 April, Mussolini and his mistress were both shot, along with most of the members of their fifteen-man train, primarily ministers and officials of the Italian Social Republic. The shootings took place in the small village of
Giulino di Mezzegra. According to the official version of events, the shootings were conducted by "Colonel Valerio" (''Colonnello Valerio''). Colonel Valerio's real name was Walter Audisio. Audisio was the communist partisan commander who was reportedly given the order to kill Mussolini by the National Liberation Committee.
[18] When Audisio entered the room where Mussolini and the other fascists were being held, he reportedly announced: "I have come to rescue you!" He then had them loaded into transports, driven a short distance, and, finally, lined them up before a firing squad.
However, a witness, Bruno Giovanni Lonati — another partisan in the socialist-communist Garibaldi brigades though not a communist — abruptly confessed in the 1990s to having killed Mussolini and Petacci with an Italian-English officer from the British secret services, called "John". Lonati's version has never been confirmed but neither has it been debunked; a
polygraph test on Lonati proved inconclusive.
[19]
On
29 April, the bodies of Mussolini and his mistress were taken to the Piazzale Loreto (in
Milan) and hung upside down on meat hooks. They were hung this way, along with those of other fascists, to show the population the dictator was dead. This was both to discourage any fascists to continue the fight and an act of revenge for the hanging of many partisans in the same place by Axis authorities. The corpse of the deposed leader became subject to ridicule and abuse by many who felt oppressed by the former Italian dictator's policies.
When German dictator
Adolf Hitler heard of how Mussolini was executed and put on public display, he vowed that he would not let this happen to him. On
30 April, during the
Battle for Berlin, Hitler gave poison to his mistress and new wife,
Eva Braun. He then swallowed some poison and shot himself in the mouth. Following Hitler's orders, their bodies were placed in a shell hole and burned. This was done in a garden of the old
Reich Chancellery. The garden was located above Hitler's Berlin bunker (the
Fuhrerbunker). After
Berlin fell on
2 May, the Soviets found remains of his teeth.
Mussolini's body was eventually taken down and later buried in an unmarked grave in a Milan
cemetery until the 1950s, when his body was moved back to Predappio. It was stolen briefly in the late 1950s by
neo-fascists, then again returned to Predappio. Here he was buried in a
crypt (the only posthumous honour granted to Mussolini; his tomb is flanked by
marble fasces and a large idealised marble
bust of himself sits above the
tomb.)
Legacy
Mussolini was survived by his wife,
Donna Rachele Mussolini, by two sons, Vittorio and
Romano Mussolini, and his daughter
Edda, the widow of Count Ciano and Anna Maria. A third son, Bruno, was killed in an air accident while flying a P108 bomber on a test mission, on
7 August 1941.
[20] Sophia Loren's sister, Anna Maria Scicolone, was formerly married to Romano Mussolini, Mussolini's son.
Mussolini's granddaughter
Alessandra Mussolini, daughter of Romano Mussolini, is currently a member of the
European Parliament for the extreme
right-wing party
Alternativa Sociale; other relatives of Edda (Castrianni) moved to England after the Second World War.
Actor Antonio Banderas starred as Mussolini in
Benito - The Rise and Fall of Mussolini in 1993. The film covers his life from his school teacher days to the beginning on WWI, prior to his rise as dictator. The last few days of Mussolini's life have been depicted in
Carlo Lizzani's movie
''Mussolini: Ultimo atto'' (''Mussolini: The last act'', 1974).
Mussolini's
National Fascist Party was banned in the postwar
Constitution of Italy, but a number of successor neo-fascist parties emerged to carry on its legacy. Mussolini's grand-daughter,
Alessandra Mussolini, runs one of the primary neo-fascist parties in modern Italy,
Azione Sociale; another neo-fascist party is the
Destra Sociale. Historically, the strongest neo-fascist party was
MSI (''Movimento Sociale Italiano''), which was declared dissolved in
1995 and replaced by the
National Alliance (Italy), which took the distances from Fascism (its leader
Gianfranco Fini once declared that Fascism was "an absolute evil"). These parties were united under
Silvio Berlusconi's
House of Freedoms coalition and the leader of the
National Alliance,
Gianfranco Fini, was one of Berlusconi's most trusted advisors. In 2006, the
House of Freedoms coalition was narrowly defeated by
Romano Prodi's coalition,
L'Union
See also
★
Military history of Italy during World War II
★
Economy of Italy under Fascism, 1922-1943
★
Faisceau
★
Margherita Sarfatti
★
Squadrismo
★
Ida Dalser
References
1. John Pollard (1998). "Mussolini's Rival's: The Limits of the Personality Cult in Fascist Italy," New Perspective 4(2). http://www.users.globalnet.co.uk/~semp/facistitaly.htm
2. The Vatican in World Politics, , Avro, Manhattan, , 1949,
3. "But Mussolini talked in two tongues. By 1922 this former republican was reassuring the officer corps he was in favour of the monarchy. The ex-atheist was singing the praises of the Catholic church." ''The resistible rise of Benito Mussolini and Italy's fascists'', Socialist Worker Online, 16 November 2002, issue 1826 (Accessed 6 June 2007)
4. "Benito a Christian?" ''Time'', August 25, 1924
5. http://gi.grolier.com/wwii/wwii_mussolini.html
6. http://www.fpp.co.uk/History/Mussolini/first_wife.html
7. Speech by Vladimir Lenin: Greetings to the Italian Socialist Party
8. Mussolini in the First World War. The Journalist, the Soldier, the Fascist, Paul O'Brien, , , Berg, Oxford and NY, 2005,
9. ''Al capezzale di Mussolini. Ferite e malattie 1917-1945'', Paul O'Brien, , , , Italia Contemporanea, March 2002, pp. 5-29,
10. Dictatorship (from Benito Mussolini)
11. The attempted assassination of Mussolini in Rome
12. 1931: The murder of Michael Schirru
13. The Vampire Economy: Italy, Germany, and the US, Jeffrey Herbener, Mises Institute, October 13, 2005
14. I gas di Mussolini, Angelo Del Bocca and Giorgio Rohat, , , Editori Riuniti, 1996, ISBN=8835940915
15. Page 82, "The Armed Forces of World War II", Andrew Mollo, ISBN 0-517-54478-4
16. Page 91, "The Armed Forces of World War III", Andrew Mollo, ISBN 0-517-54478-4
17. Hitler's Raid to Save Mussolini, , Greg, Annussek, Da Capo Press, 2005,
18. The Capture and Shooting of Mussolini
19. Italian Wikipedia
20. ''Comando Supremo: Events of 1941
Further reading
★ ''The Birth of Fascist Ideology, From Cultural Rebellion to Political Revolution'',
Zeev Sternhell, with Mario Sznajder and Maia Asheri, trans. by David Maisel, Princeton University Press, NJ, 1994. pg 214.
★ ''Mussolini's Cities: Internal Colonialism in Italy, 1930-1939'', Cambria Press: 2007
★ ''Mussolini's Rome: rebuilding the Eternal City'', Borden W. Painter, Jr., 2005
★ ''Mussolini: A biography'', Denis Mack Smith ,New York: Random House 1982
★ ''Mussolini'',
Renzo De Felice, Torino : Einaudi, 1995.
★ ''Mussolini: A New Life'', Nicholas Farrell, London: Phoenix Press, 2003.
★ ''Mussolini: The Last 600 Days of Il Duce'', Ray Moseley, Dallas: Taylor Trade Publishing, 2004.
★ ''Mussolini in the First World War: The Journalist, the Soldier, the Fascist''. O'Brien, Paul. Oxford: Berg Publishers, 2004 (hardback, ISBN 1-84520-051-9; (paperback, ISBN 1-84520-052-7).
★ ''Mastering Modern World History'' by Norman Lowe "Italy, 1918-1945: the first appearance of fascism.
★ ''Europe 1870-1991'' by Terry Morris and Derrick Murphy
★ ''Il Duce'' - Christopher Hibbert
★ ''The Last Centurion'' by Rudolph S.Daldin www.benito-mussolini.com ISBN 0-921447-34-5
Writings of Mussolini
★ ''Giovanni Hus (
Jan Hus), il veridico'' Rome (1913) Published in America under ''John Hus'' (New York: Albert and Charles Boni, 1929) Republished by the Italian Book Co., NY (1939) under ''John Hus, the Veracious''.
★ ''The Cardinal's Mistress'' (trans. Hiram Motherwell, New York: Albert and Charles Boni, 1928)
★ There is an essay on "The Doctrine of Fascism" credited to Benito Mussolini but ghost written by
Giovanni Gentile that appeared in the 1932 edition of the
Enciclopedia Italiana, and excerpts can be read at
Doctrine of Fascism. There are also links to the complete text.
★ ''La Mia Vita'' ("My Life"), Mussolini's autobiography written upon request of the American Ambassador in Rome (Child). Mussolini, at first not interested, decided to dictate the story of his life to Arnaldo Mussolini, his brother. The story covers the period up to 1929, includes Mussolini's personal thoughts on Italian Politics and the reasons that motivated his new revolutionary idea. It covers the march on Rome and the beginning of the dictatorship and includes some of his most famous speeches in the Italian Parliament (Oct 1924, Jan 1925).
External links
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Mussolini In pictures
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Comando Supremo: Benito Mussolini
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Did Mussolini really make the trains run on time?
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Photograph of Mussolini's corpse and article about the theft of his body
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Is Mussolini quote on corporatism accurate?
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2 Mussolini autobiographies in one book. English. Searchable. Click on the result titled "My Rise and Fall" (usually the top result). Then use the search form in the left column titled "search within this book."
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The 1928 autobiography of Benito Mussolini. Online. ''My Autobiography''. Book by Benito Mussolini; Charles Scribner's Sons, 1928.
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Michael Schirru's failed attempt on Mussolini's life
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The Jewish mother of Fascism ''Haaretz'' article on Margherita Sarfatti by Saviona Mane
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''Il Duce 'sought Hitler ban', BBC News 27 September, 2003
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Biography resources dedicated to Benito Mussolini