Fascism
... Mussolini tried to keep on good terms with France and Britain as well. In June 1933, he invited representatives from France, Germany and Britain to a meeting in Rome. They signed the Four Power Pact. This, according to Mussolini, was a sign of the growing power Italy had: these countries came to Rom ...
... Mussolini tried to keep on good terms with France and Britain as well. In June 1933, he invited representatives from France, Germany and Britain to a meeting in Rome. They signed the Four Power Pact. This, according to Mussolini, was a sign of the growing power Italy had: these countries came to Rom ...
World War II People
... Leading the Japanese Military during it’s Imperialistic attacks of China and during World War II. ...
... Leading the Japanese Military during it’s Imperialistic attacks of China and during World War II. ...
the-state-of-italian-foreign-relations-diagram_student
... Rome-Berlin Axis ................................................................................................................................ 6 Spanish Civil War ................................................................................................................................ 6 Str ...
... Rome-Berlin Axis ................................................................................................................................ 6 Spanish Civil War ................................................................................................................................ 6 Str ...
Mussolini and Italy - Assets
... In northern and central Italy agriculture was more developed, and more modern farming methods and machinery were used. Even here, however, productivity was much lower than in the countries of northern Europe. There were also significant social divisions in even the more advanced agricultural areas. ...
... In northern and central Italy agriculture was more developed, and more modern farming methods and machinery were used. Even here, however, productivity was much lower than in the countries of northern Europe. There were also significant social divisions in even the more advanced agricultural areas. ...
Jews and Fascism in Italy and Britain - H-Net
... verso il popolo) had gone into crisis and Mussolini charted here for the first time in English. Almost as important is an imperial course with the conquest of Ethiopia, recy- the consummate erudition with which Pavan frames this cling a standard nationalist theme, Italy as a proletar- topic, present ...
... verso il popolo) had gone into crisis and Mussolini charted here for the first time in English. Almost as important is an imperial course with the conquest of Ethiopia, recy- the consummate erudition with which Pavan frames this cling a standard nationalist theme, Italy as a proletar- topic, present ...
Mussolini - Mr. Weldon
... 1. Dissatisfaction with the Treaty of Versailles. Italians expected more land that they were given. Eg.-Fiume, Croatia occupied by war hero and poet, Gabriele D’Annunzio, set up Fascist style govt. 2. High unemployment and inflation after WW1 3. Workers and farmers strikes inspired by Bolsheviks and ...
... 1. Dissatisfaction with the Treaty of Versailles. Italians expected more land that they were given. Eg.-Fiume, Croatia occupied by war hero and poet, Gabriele D’Annunzio, set up Fascist style govt. 2. High unemployment and inflation after WW1 3. Workers and farmers strikes inspired by Bolsheviks and ...
Benito Mussolini
... Germany – Resented the harsh terms of the Treaty of Versailles. Italy – Felt it had been slighted by the other Allies in treaties. Japan resented that European powers maintained control of colonies in the far east. Japanese militarism – By the 1930’s Japan had fallen under control of the mil ...
... Germany – Resented the harsh terms of the Treaty of Versailles. Italy – Felt it had been slighted by the other Allies in treaties. Japan resented that European powers maintained control of colonies in the far east. Japanese militarism – By the 1930’s Japan had fallen under control of the mil ...
WWII All Readings
... Originally a revolutionary Socialist, he abandoned his party to advocate Italian intervention in World War I. Following the war, in which he served as a rifleman, Mussolini decided his destiny was to rule Italy as a modern Caesar and re-create the Roman Empire. He forged the paramilitary Fascist mov ...
... Originally a revolutionary Socialist, he abandoned his party to advocate Italian intervention in World War I. Following the war, in which he served as a rifleman, Mussolini decided his destiny was to rule Italy as a modern Caesar and re-create the Roman Empire. He forged the paramilitary Fascist mov ...
Independence High School Global History Regents Mr. Wisell Unit 3
... Hitler’s Germany or Stalin’s Soviet Union. The Italian Fascist Party did not completely destroy the country’s old power structure. Some institutions, including the armed forces, were not absorbed into the Fascist state but managed to keep most of their independence. Victor Emmanuel III remained king ...
... Hitler’s Germany or Stalin’s Soviet Union. The Italian Fascist Party did not completely destroy the country’s old power structure. Some institutions, including the armed forces, were not absorbed into the Fascist state but managed to keep most of their independence. Victor Emmanuel III remained king ...
WWII War Ends
... Axis forces- Nazi Germany, Italy, and their allies Liberate- to set free Holocaust- the systematic killing of 11 million people by the Nazis and their allies, including 6 million Jews, Gypsies, Slavs, and other political prisoners Atrocities- brutal, violent, and unjustified mass killings, usually c ...
... Axis forces- Nazi Germany, Italy, and their allies Liberate- to set free Holocaust- the systematic killing of 11 million people by the Nazis and their allies, including 6 million Jews, Gypsies, Slavs, and other political prisoners Atrocities- brutal, violent, and unjustified mass killings, usually c ...
Fascism Reading
... control of private enterprise, repression of opposition and extreme nationalism. Mussolini knew how to appeal to Italy’s wounded national pride, and played on their fears of economic collapse and communism. Mussolini promised order and stability and was not content to merely rule the nation, but wit ...
... control of private enterprise, repression of opposition and extreme nationalism. Mussolini knew how to appeal to Italy’s wounded national pride, and played on their fears of economic collapse and communism. Mussolini promised order and stability and was not content to merely rule the nation, but wit ...
Slide 1
... up all the bridges in the area and the steep countryside gave them an advantage. On Dec. 27th the Canadians captured Ortona ...
... up all the bridges in the area and the steep countryside gave them an advantage. On Dec. 27th the Canadians captured Ortona ...
Rise of Fascism in Italy under Mussolini
... Rise of Fascism in Italy under Mussolini Public opinion was upset and annoyed with the small gains made by Italy in Paris 1919. Vittorio Orlando, Italian PM, lacked the political skill at an international level to negotiate. The nationalists and the fascists claimed that Italy had been cheated out o ...
... Rise of Fascism in Italy under Mussolini Public opinion was upset and annoyed with the small gains made by Italy in Paris 1919. Vittorio Orlando, Italian PM, lacked the political skill at an international level to negotiate. The nationalists and the fascists claimed that Italy had been cheated out o ...
Political Forces in the 1920s
... – Social Democrats, committed to economic change, redistribution of wealth – increasingly part of system ...
... – Social Democrats, committed to economic change, redistribution of wealth – increasingly part of system ...
Global Struggles
... • Striking the Soft Underbelly – The idea was to attack Italy – if we attacked Italy then Italy would pull out of the war – General Eisenhower commanded the invasion – July 10, 1943 • Invasion of Italy began • Allied troops made it ashore with few casualties • American troops smashed through enemy l ...
... • Striking the Soft Underbelly – The idea was to attack Italy – if we attacked Italy then Italy would pull out of the war – General Eisenhower commanded the invasion – July 10, 1943 • Invasion of Italy began • Allied troops made it ashore with few casualties • American troops smashed through enemy l ...
Outcome: Causes of World War II
... 1. Underlying Causes of World War II a. Totalitarian Dictators gained power around the world i. ...
... 1. Underlying Causes of World War II a. Totalitarian Dictators gained power around the world i. ...
15-Italian Fascism & German Nazism
... In what is known as the “Beer Hall Putsch” Nazi brownshirts assembled in a Munich beer hall where Hitler jumped on a platform, fired a pistol into the ceiling and proclaimed, “the national revolution has ...
... In what is known as the “Beer Hall Putsch” Nazi brownshirts assembled in a Munich beer hall where Hitler jumped on a platform, fired a pistol into the ceiling and proclaimed, “the national revolution has ...
2012 Perantoni (all rights reserved)
... and Hitler established a new fascist front to oppose the Allies advancing northward, and they founded a new fascist government with headquarters in the town of Salo’ on lake Garda. Without delay the restored Duce disarmed the Italian Police Force (Carabinieri) and replaced it with the new “Guardia N ...
... and Hitler established a new fascist front to oppose the Allies advancing northward, and they founded a new fascist government with headquarters in the town of Salo’ on lake Garda. Without delay the restored Duce disarmed the Italian Police Force (Carabinieri) and replaced it with the new “Guardia N ...
MUSSOLINI`S ECONOMIC POLICIES
... the taxpayer but may have saved Italy from the worse impacts of the Great Depression. Two million Italians were unemployed (8%) but it was not as bad as in Germany or the US. On the other hand Italy’s backward economy with its’ limited international trade and grinding poverty may have been less vuln ...
... the taxpayer but may have saved Italy from the worse impacts of the Great Depression. Two million Italians were unemployed (8%) but it was not as bad as in Germany or the US. On the other hand Italy’s backward economy with its’ limited international trade and grinding poverty may have been less vuln ...
00 Key Terms - 6-4
... Omar Bradley – (1893-1981) known as Brad; took command of Patton’s group in March 1943 when Patton moved on; in May 1943, the remaining German and Italian forces in North Africa - ~240,000 troops – surrendered Q: How did geographic factors affect the war on the North Atlantic, at Stalingrad, and in ...
... Omar Bradley – (1893-1981) known as Brad; took command of Patton’s group in March 1943 when Patton moved on; in May 1943, the remaining German and Italian forces in North Africa - ~240,000 troops – surrendered Q: How did geographic factors affect the war on the North Atlantic, at Stalingrad, and in ...
Italian Empire
The Italian Empire (Italian: Impero Italiano) comprised the colonies, protectorates, concessions, dependencies and trust territories of the Kingdom of Italy and, after 1946, the Italian Republic. The genesis of the Italian colonial empire was the purchase, in 1869, by a commercial company of the coastal town of Assab on the Red Sea. This was taken over by the Italian government in 1882, becoming Italy's first overseas territory. Over the next two decades the pace of European acquisitions in Africa increased, causing the so-called ""Scramble for Africa"". By the start of the First World War in 1914, Italy had acquired in Africa alone a colony on the Red Sea coast (Eritrea), a large protectorate in Somalia and administrative authority in formerly Turkish Libya. Outside of Africa, Italy possessed a small concession in Tientsin in China and the Dodecanese Islands off the coast of Turkey.From early in the ""scramble"", Italy had designs on the Ethiopian Empire, but was twice defeated in the 19th century: first at the Battle of Dogali in 1887 and then in first invasion of Ethiopia in 1895–96. During the First World War, Italy occupied southern Albania to prevent if from falling to Austria-Hungary. In 1917, it established a protectorate over Albania, which remained in place until 1920. The Fascist government that came to power with Benito Mussolini in 1922 sought to increase the size of the Italian empire and to satisfy the claims of Italian irredentists. In 1935–36, in its second invasion of Ethiopia Italy was successful and it merged its new conquest with its older east African colonies. In 1939, Italy invaded Albania and incorporated it into the Fascist state. During the Second World War (1939–45), Italy made several conquests and annexations, but was forced in the final peace to abandon all its colonies and protectorates. It was granted a United Nations trust to administer Somaliland in 1950. When Somalia became independent in 1960, Italy's eight-decade experience with colonialism ended.