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Benito Mussolini (1883-1945) and Fascism in Italy All within the state, nothing outside the state, nothing against the state The seizure of power. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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1
All within the state, nothing outside the state,
nothing against the state
  • Benito Mussolini (1883-1945) and Fascism in Italy

2
The seizure of power.
  • In the early 19th Italy
  • - liberal state with civil rights and
    constitutional monarchy
  • On the eve of First World War
  • the universal male suffrage were given and Italy
    appeared to be moving toward democracy
  • Problems
  • Much of the population poor
  • peasants were attached to their villages and
    local interests
  • relation between the state and church were often
    tense
  • Class differences were extreme

3
  • The war worsened the political situation.

Government disappointed .
thus by 1921
Workers and peasants
Italian nationalists
didnt deliver social and land reform
Italy modest gains at Versailles
  • The Russian revolution inspired Italys
    revolutionary social movement
    workers and peasant began occupying factories and
    seizing land in 1920
  • pope lifted his ban on participation by Catholics
    in Italian politics a strong
    Catholic party quickly emerged

4
  • Benito Musssolini
  • born on 29th July 1883 Predappio in northern
    central Italy
  • the son of a village schoolteacher and a poor
    blacksmith
  • 1902 Mussolini moved to Switzerlan, where he
    became involved in socialist politics
  • 1904 returned to Italy and worked as a radical
    journalist in the socialist press
  • 1915 broke with the pacifism of the socialists
    (editorialized for Italy's involvement in the war
    on the side of the Allies, claiming that France's
    defeat would end liberty in Europe)
  • The Socialist Party responded by expelling him
  • started his own newspaper, The People of Italy
  • September 1915 he was drafted into the Italian
    army , sent to front
  •  February 1917 - wounded during hand grenade
    practice.
  • Returning home, he began organizing bitter war
    veterans into a band of fascists from the
    Italian word for a union of forces. He
    organized them into armed squads known as Black
    Shirts
  • Mussolini advanced himself by publishing
    his Diary of the War

5
  • - February 1918, Mussolini joined those who spoke
    with disgust about parliamentary squabbling.
    described parliamentary democracy as "effete." 
    Italy, he claimed, should set things right by
    making a clean sweep. Italy, he said, needed a
    dictator.
  • - In addition, he proclaimed his opposition to
    the monarchy to the Catholic Church and his
    favor of a minimum wage, an eight-hour day,
    worker participation in management, confiscation
    of excessive war profits, and giving the vote to
    women.
  • Mussolini presented himself as a progressive
    nationalist or as a national socialist.

6
The regime in action.
  • Mussolini's coalition government lasted through
    the whole of 1923 and beyond.
  • 1) He was committed to an ambitious
    modernization program draining swamps,
    developing hydroelectricity and
    improving the railways.
  • 2) The Fascists continued to be a minority in
    Parliament, holding only forty seats. Then, in
    the elections in April 1924, with the
    Fascists employing terror and illegalities,
    they won a parliamentary majority 374 seats.
  • 3) had a secret police force led by a clique of
    high-ranking fascist officials, a force he
    affectionately called the Cheka, a force that was
    in the habit of attacking anyone who made
    themselves obnoxious to Mussolini's interests.
  • 4) Mussolini then strengthened his regime by
    signing an agreement with the industrialists,
    assuring
    them control over their own industries.
    He made a
    similar agreement with the
    large employers in
    agriculture commerce.
  • 5) Mussolini found it opportune to make an
    agreement with the
    Catholic Church.

7
Mussolini's Italy was described as a corporate
state, and the declared objective of the
corporate state was both social revolution and
national cohesion -- as opposed to the class
warfare of Marxism and the Bolshevik Revolution.
  • were supposed to play a role in
    strengthening state power. And it was everyone's
    duty to contribute to the strength and
    glorification of the state.
  • the monarchy, the army, government
    bureaucracy,
  • the Church
  • the middle class

8
Mussolini, however, didnt complete the
establishment of a modern totalitarian state. Why?
  • Fascist party never became all-powerful. It never
    destroyed the old power structure, or succeeded
    in dominated it.
  • There was no land reform.
  • Mussolinis government didnt pass radical laws
    until 1938 and didnt persuade Jews
    savagery until late in the
    2 World War when Italy
    were under Nazi control.
  • Didnt established a truly ruthless
    police state.

9
  • Although Mussolini began as a revolutionary
    socialist, like Stalin, he turned against the
    working class and successfully sought the support
    of conservatives. At the same time Mussolini and
    his supporters were the first to call themselves
    fascists - revolutionaries determined to
    create a certain kind of totalitarian state. Yet
    few scholars today would argue that Mussolini
    succeeded. His dictatorship was brutal and
    theatrical, but it remained a halfway house
    between conservative authoritarianism and dynamic
    totalitarianism.

10
  • Many in Italy were inclined to the old habit
    of devotion to figures of authority, and
    Mussolini was becoming an object of adulation.
    Many admired Mussolini for having saved Italy
    from Bolshevism. In many households across Italy,
    people pasted his picture, cut out of newspapers,
    on their wall. His birthplace became a place of
    pilgrimage. Given their belief in miracles, it
    became rumored that the blind could see again
    after Mussolini embraced them. And it was
    believed that those who kissed his hands would
    die in peace.

11
  • On 24 July 1943 Mussolini was defeated in the
    vote at the Grand Council of Fascism, and the day
    after the King let him arrest.
  • On 12 September 1943, Mussolini was rescued from
    prison. Following his rescue, Mussolini headed
    the Italian Social Republic in parts of Italy
    that were not occupied by Allied forces.
  • In late April 1945, with total defeat looming,
    Mussolini attempted to escape north, only to be
    quickly captured and summarily executed. His body
  • was then taken
    to Milan where it was
  • hung upside down
    at a petrol station
  • for public
    viewing and to provide
  • confirmation of
    his demise.
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