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Fascism in Italy

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Fascism in Italy Chapter 13 Section 3 Italy Italy After World War I After WWI, Italian nationalists were outraged when Italy received just some of the territories ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Fascism in Italy


1
Fascism in Italy
  • Chapter 13
  • Section 3

2
Italy
3
Italy After World War I
  • After WWI, Italian nationalists were outraged
    when Italy received just some of the territories
    promised by the Allies
  • Italian nationalists argued that the Allies
    betrayed Italy after World War I
  • Chaos ensued as peasants seized land, workers
    went on strike, veterans faced unemployment,
    trade declined, and taxes rose
  • The government could not end the economic crises
    plaguing Italy

4
Benito Mussolini
  • Into this turmoil stepped Benito Mussolini, the
    organizer of the Fascist Party
  • Mussolini was an intense nationalist
  • Mussolinis supporters, the Black Shirts,
    rejected democratic methods and favored violence
    for solving problems
  • Black Shirts used terror tactics to scare the
    opposition

5
Benito Mussolini
6
Fascist Blackshirts
7
Mussolini Speaking to His People
8
March on Rome
  • In the 1922 March on Rome, tens of thousands of
    Fascists swarmed the capital
  • Protestors demanded the government make changes
    to the economy and society
  • Fearing civil war, the king, under intense
    pressure, asked Mussolini to form a government
    with Mussolini as prime minister
  • Mussolini had legally assumed power in Italy
    because King Emmanuel II appointed him!

9
Mussolinis Fascist Leadership
  • Mussolini takes on the title Il Duce (the Leader)
  • Mussolini soon suppressed rival parties, censored
    the press, rigged elections, and replaced elected
    officials with Fascists
  • Critics were thrown into prison, forced into
    exile, or murdered
  • Secret police and propaganda strengthened the
    regime
  • In 1929, Mussolini also received support from
    Pope Pius XI in return for recognizing Vatican
    City as an independent state
  • Pope, though, disagreed, with some of Mussolinis
    goals

10
Vatican
The smallest independent state in the world.
Pius XI
11
What type of government was leading Italy?
  • Italy was still a parliamentary monarchy
    technically
  • But Italy was now ruled by a terrorizing, fascist
    dictator Benito Mussolini
  • Italy evolved into an evil dictatorship

12
Italian Economy
  • Mussolini brought the economy under state
    control, but basically preserved capitalism
  • Representatives of business, labor, government,
    and Fascist party leaders controlled industry,
    agriculture and trade
  • Mussolinis system of government favored the
    upper classes and industry leaders
  • Workers were not allowed to strike, and their
    wages were kept low

13
Loyalty
  • In Mussolinis new system, loyalty to the state
    replaced conflicting individual goals
  • Italians owed loyalty/allegiance to the state
    first before personal goals
  • State was all-important
  • Individual rights were secondary to the goals of
    the state

14
Obedience to the State
  • Believe! Obey! Fight loudspeakers blared and
    posters proclaimed
  • Fascist youth groups marched in parades chanting
    slogans
  • Men were ruthless, selfless warriors fighting for
    Italian glory
  • Mussolini awarded women for having 14 or more
    children (it was a womens duty to bear children
    to serve the Italian state)

15
Influencing Young Italians
  • Young children were taught loyalty and obedience
    to Italy
  • Fascist youth groups emerged
  • Tough discipline was taught to youngsters
  • Mussolini is always right, people chanted in
    song
  • Mussolini was developing the Italian people for
    an expansion of Mussolinis dream of an expanded
    Italian empire

16
Totalitarianism
  • Mussolini built the first modern totalitarian
    state
  • In this form of government, a one-party
    dictatorship attempts to control every aspect of
    the lives of its citizens
  • Today, we usually use the term fascism to
    describe the underlying ideology of any
    centralized, authoritarian government system that
    is not communist
  • Fascism is rooted in extreme nationalism
  • Fascists believe in action, violence, discipline,
    and blind loyalty to the state

17
Fascism
  • They praise warfare
  • Fascists are anti-democratic, rejecting equality
    and liberty
  • Fascists oppose communists on important issues
  • Communists favored spreading communism
    internationally and the creation of a classless
    society
  • Unlike communism, fascists were most concerned
    with strengthening their own nation

18
Fascism
  • Fascists are nationalists who support a society
    with defined classes (upper, middle, poor)
  • Both base their power on blind devotion to a
    leader (e.g., Mussolini) or the state
    individuals do not matter under Fascism
  • Both flourish during economic hard times
  • Fascism appealed to Italians because it restored
    national pride, provided stability, and ended the
    political feuding that had paralyzed democracy in
    Italy

19
Powerpoint Questions
  • 1. What angered Italian nationalists after World
    War I?
  • 2. Who were the party militants who rejected the
    democratic process in favor of violent action?
  • 3. After the March of Rome, what did the king
    feel pressured to do?
  • 4. Under Mussolinis leadership, what groups
    controlled industry, agriculture, and trade?
  • 5. Explain a totalitarian state.
  • 6. How do you define fascism?

20
Powerpoint Questions
  • 7. Why did fascism appeal to many Italians?
  • 8. How does fascism differ from communism?
    Explain
  • 9. What is fascism rooted in?
  • 10. What four elements do fascists believe in?
    (four points)
  • 11. What slogan did the fascists play on
    loudspeakers?
  • 12. What did the Fascist Party teach young
    children?

21
The End
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