Italy under Fascism Flashcards

Explain rise and impact of fascism in Italy. (140 cards)

3
Q

What was one major weakness left by Italian unification by c. 1900?

A

Regional division

Unification had created a state, but North and South remained sharply unequal in wealth and development.

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4
Q

What was the main economic contrast within Italy c. 1900?

A

North-South divide

The North was more industrial and prosperous, while the South remained poorer and more rural.

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5
Q

What was the conflict between Church and State in Liberal Italy?

A

A dispute over legitimacy

Many Catholics remained hostile to the Italian state after the loss of papal territory.

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6
Q

Why did the conflict with the Church weaken Liberal Italy?

A

It limited national unity

The new state struggled to win full loyalty from all sections of society.

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7
Q

What major social division weakened Italy c. 1900 besides the regional split?

A

Class division

Tensions between elites, middle classes, workers and peasants helped destabilise politics.

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8
Q

True or False:

By c. 1900, Italy was a fully united and socially harmonious nation-state.

A

False

Italy was formally united, but deep regional, religious and class divisions remained.

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9
Q

What was the role of the monarchy in Liberal Italy?

A

Head of state

The king retained important constitutional influence and could shape government formation.

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10
Q

Who dominated government in Liberal Italy before the First World War?

A

The Liberal Oligarchy

A narrow political elite controlled parliament and limited mass participation.

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11
Q

What is meant by Giolittianism?

A

Giolitti’s style of flexible rule

Giolitti tried to manage political tensions through compromise, manipulation and limited reform.

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12
Q

Which politician is most associated with Liberal Italy’s pre-war system?

A

Giolitti

Giovanni Giolitti was the key figure of parliamentary politics before 1915.

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13
Q

What was anticlericalism in the context of Liberal Italy?

A

Hostility to Church influence

Many liberals wanted politics and education freed from clerical control.

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14
Q

Why was Giolitti important to the stability of Liberal Italy?

A

He managed competing interests

His system helped contain tensions without fundamentally transforming the state.

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15
Q

True or False:

Giolitti created a fully democratic political system based on mass popular participation.

A

False

Liberal Italy remained dominated by elites, even under Giolitti’s leadership.

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16
Q

How did industrialisation challenge the ruling elites in early twentieth-century Italy?

A

It created new social forces

Urban workers and new middle-class groups demanded greater political influence.

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17
Q

What political movement grew with industrial and social change in Italy?

A

socialism

Socialist ideas gained support among workers and alarmed conservative elites.

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18
Q

Why did socialism worry the liberal ruling classes?

A

It threatened the existing order

Socialist organisation and protest raised fears of class conflict and revolution.

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19
Q

What was the Triple Alliance?

A

Italy’s alliance with Germany and Austria-Hungary

It linked Italy to two central European powers before the First World War.

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20
Q

Why was Italy’s membership of the Triple Alliance politically awkward?

A

Austria-Hungary was a rival

Many Italians still resented Austrian control of Italian-speaking territories.

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21
Q

Which African country symbolised Italy’s earlier colonial humiliation?

A

Abyssinia

Italy’s defeat there damaged national prestige and encouraged later imperial ambition.

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22
Q

Which North African territory did Italy seize before the First World War?

A

Libya

The Libyan war reflected Italian efforts to appear as a Great Power.

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23
Q

True or False:

Italy’s colonial policy before 1914 was unimportant to national prestige and politics.

A

False

Colonial ambition was tied to nationalism, status and elite legitimacy.

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24
Q

Why did Italy decide to enter the war?

A

To gain territory and status

Leaders hoped war would bring national gains and strengthen Italy’s place in Europe.

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25
Q

Fill in the blank:

Italy entered the First World War in _____.

A

1915

Entry was driven by ambition as well as alliance politics.

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26
Q

What did Italy hope to achieve by joining the war?

A

Territorial expansion

Italian leaders expected gains at Austria-Hungary’s expense.

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27
What was one major **weakness** of Italy’s war effort?
Military strain ## Footnote The army faced harsh conditions, heavy losses and serious command problems.
28
What was **Caporetto**?
A major Italian defeat ## Footnote The disaster of 1917 exposed weaknesses in the army and shook morale.
29
Why was **Caporetto** so important?
The defeat intensified **criticism of the war effort** and the liberal state.
30
# True or False: **Caporetto** was celebrated in **Italy** as proof of military strength and national unity.
False ## Footnote It was a severe defeat that deepened political and social tensions.
31
# Fill in the blank: The disastrous Italian **defeat** of 1917 was known as _\_\_\_\_.
Caporetto ## Footnote It became a symbol of wartime crisis.
32
How did **war** affect the Italian **Home Front**?
It increased **hardship** and **anger** ## Footnote Inflation, shortages and casualties worsened discontent with the state.
33
What is meant by the **‘Mutilated Victory’**?
Belief that Italy had been **cheated in peace** ## Footnote Many nationalists felt the post-war settlement gave Italy too little for its sacrifices.
34
Why did the idea of a **‘Mutilated Victory’** matter politically?
Nationalists used it to attack the post-war government as **weak** and **dishonoured**.
35
Who seized **Fiume** in defiance of the post-war settlement?
d’Annunzio ## Footnote His action showed how nationalism and paramilitary politics were undermining the state.
36
What post-war **economic problems** hit **Italy** after 1918?
Unemployment and inflation ## Footnote Economic hardship added to the social and political instability of the period.
37
How did post-war **economic crisis** affect Italian **politics**?
It increased unrest ## Footnote Hardship fuelled strikes, radicalism and distrust of parliamentary government.
38
# True or False: After 1918, Italy enjoyed **stable prosperity** and a **calm political** climate.
False ## Footnote The post-war years were marked by crisis, instability and rising extremism.
39
Which **socialist party** grew stronger after the **war**?
PSI ## Footnote The Italian Socialist Party benefited from labour unrest and social anger.
40
Which **Catholic-based party** emerged as a new force in post-war **Italy**?
Popolari ## Footnote The Popular Party broadened mass politics and weakened the old liberal system.
41
Which **movement** emerged on the **Right** to challenge both **socialism** and **liberalism**?
The Fascist Party ## Footnote Fascism presented itself as militant, nationalist and anti-socialist.
42
# Fill in the blank: The rise of the **PSI**, the **Popolari** and the **Fascists** showed the collapse of _\_\_\_\_ politics.
liberal ## Footnote The old ruling system was losing control of mass politics.
43
Why did **strikes** matter in post-war **Italy**?
They deepened fears of revolution ## Footnote Elite anxiety about socialism helped open the way for Fascist violence.
44
What role did **political violence** play in **Mussolini’s rise**?
It broke parliamentary order ## Footnote Fascist squads used violence to intimidate enemies and weaken the state.
45
Why did **parliamentary government** collapse in Italy after the war?
It could not contain crisis ## Footnote Liberal institutions proved too weak to handle unrest, division and extremism.
46
# True or False: Political **extremism** declined after 1919 because **parliament** regained public confidence.
False ## Footnote Violence and instability instead made extremist solutions more attractive to some elites.
47
What was the **March on Rome**?
A Fascist show of force ## Footnote It pressured the political system and helped bring Mussolini to power in 1922.
48
# Fill in the blank: _\_\_\_\_ became prime minister after the **March on Rome**.
Mussolini ## Footnote The event became central to Fascist mythology.
49
What tactic did **Mussolini** use to gain **power** in 1922?
Pressure mixed with legality ## Footnote He combined threats of force with negotiation and elite compromise.
50
What role did the **King** play in **Mussolini’s appointment**?
He invited Mussolini to govern ## Footnote Victor Emmanuel III refused stronger resistance and helped legitimise Fascist power.
51
Why did **ruling elites** compromise with Mussolini?
They feared socialism and disorder ## Footnote Many conservatives thought they could use Fascism to restore stability.
52
# True or False: **Mussolini** seized power entirely alone, without help from the **King** or conservative **elites**.
False ## Footnote His success depended heavily on elite backing and political miscalculation.
53
What was **one core idea** in Fascist ideology?
National rebirth through authority ## Footnote Fascism rejected liberal weakness and promised unity, strength and action.
54
Why was the **Fascist movement** not fully united internally?
It contained different factions ## Footnote Revolutionaries, conservatives and opportunists all existed within the party.
55
How did **Fascist propaganda** help **Mussolini**?
It created a heroic image ## Footnote Propaganda presented him as the saviour of Italy from chaos and decline.
56
# Fill in the blank: _\_\_\_\_ propaganda helped portray **Mussolini** as a dynamic national leader.
Fascist ## Footnote Image-making was a major part of the movement’s appeal.
57
What **personal role** did Mussolini claim within **Fascism**?
Il Duce ## Footnote He cultivated the image of a decisive, charismatic and indispensable leader.
58
How did **Mussolini** consolidate **power** after 1922?
By compromise and coercion ## Footnote He worked with elites while using violence and law to destroy opposition.
59
Why were compromises with **elites** important to **Mussolini’s consolidation**?
They gave him legitimacy ## Footnote Support from the monarchy, army and business strengthened the regime.
60
# True or False: **Mussolini** relied only on constitutional methods and rejected intimidation or violence.
False ## Footnote Terror and squadrist violence were central tools of Fascist power.
61
What role did **terror** play in the creation of **Fascist Italy**?
It crushed opponents ## Footnote Violence intimidated socialists, trade unionists and other critics of Fascism.
62
What constitutional **change** helped move **Italy** towards dictatorship?
Erosion of parliamentary government ## Footnote Legal and institutional changes steadily reduced political pluralism.
63
# Fill in the blank: By 1926, **Italy** had moved far towards a _\_\_\_\_-party state.
one ## Footnote Opposition parties and free politics had been heavily curtailed.
64
How did **Fascist** economic and foreign policy **successes** help **Mussolini**?
They boosted popularity ## Footnote Achievements, or claims of achievement, helped win support and silence some critics.
65
By 1926, how extensive was **Mussolini’s political control**?
Substantial but not total ## Footnote He had created a dictatorship, though some traditional institutions still remained.
66
Why did some **Italians** support **Mussolini** by 1926?
He seemed to restore order ## Footnote After years of instability, many welcomed discipline and national confidence.
67
# True or False: By 1926, all **Italians** openly opposed **Mussolini’s regime**.
False ## Footnote Support existed, though opposition and dissent had not disappeared entirely.
68
What happened to **opposition** and **dissent** by 1926?
It was weakened and repressed ## Footnote Critics remained, but they faced censorship, intimidation and political exclusion.
69
# Fill in the blank: By 1926, **Mussolini’s regime** rested on control, propaganda and the repression of _\_\_\_\_.
dissent ## Footnote Fascist Italy had largely ended the liberal political order.
70
How did **Fascist propaganda** portray **Mussolini**?
As the saviour of Italy ## Footnote Propaganda exaggerated his energy, wisdom and indispensability.
71
# Fill in the blank: Fascist propaganda promoted the cult of _\_\_\_\_ **Duce**.
Il ## Footnote The leader cult was meant to bind loyalty to Mussolini personally.
72
What was one main aim of Fascist control of the **media**?
To shape public opinion ## Footnote Newspapers, radio and film were used to glorify the regime and reduce criticism.
73
Why was **education** important to **Fascist propaganda**?
Schools helped spread obedience, nationalism and loyalty to the regime.
74
# True or False: Fascist **education** encouraged pupils to question authority and reject nationalism.
False ## Footnote Schools promoted discipline, patriotism and support for Fascism.
75
What was the role of **Fascist organisations** in society?
To mobilise and control people ## Footnote They sought to involve Italians in regime-approved activities from youth onwards.
76
Why were **youth organisations** important to **Mussolini**?
They trained future loyalists ## Footnote Young Italians were taught discipline, militarism and devotion to the state.
77
# Fill in the blank: Fascist **organisations** were designed to mobilise society and build loyalty to the _\_\_\_\_.
regime ## Footnote Membership and participation helped spread Fascist influence.
78
What is meant by the **police state** in **Fascist Italy**?
Rule backed by surveillance and repression ## Footnote The regime used policing and intimidation to limit opposition and dissent.
79
What was one key **method** used to deal with **opposition** in **Fascist Italy**?
Censorship ## Footnote The regime restricted criticism and controlled political expression.
80
What was another key **method** used against **dissent** besides censorship?
Intimidation ## Footnote Violence, arrests and surveillance discouraged open resistance.
81
# True or False: **Fascist Italy** allowed full freedom of political opposition after 1926.
False ## Footnote Opposition was increasingly crushed through coercion and legal restriction.
82
What were the **race laws of 1938**?
Anti-Jewish discriminatory laws ## Footnote They marked a significant hardening of regime policy and reflected closer ties to Nazi Germany.
83
Why were the **race laws of 1938** significant?
They deepened repression ## Footnote The laws targeted Jews and showed Fascism becoming more radical and exclusionary.
84
# Fill in the blank: The **Fascist race laws** were introduced in _\_\_\_\_.
1938 ## Footnote These measures showed the regime moving closer to Nazi-style racism.
85
What was the **Corporate State** supposed to do?
Organise the economy by sectors ## Footnote In theory it would harmonise employers and workers under state supervision.
86
What was the main **aim** of the **Corporate State** in **Fascist theory**?
Class cooperation ## Footnote Fascism claimed it could end class conflict by subordinating interests to the nation.
87
# True or False: The **Corporate State** was designed to encourage free trade unions and worker independence.
False ## Footnote It aimed to control labour and subordinate workers to the state and employers.
88
How did **Fascist economic policy** respond to the **Depression**?
With greater intervention ## Footnote The regime increased state direction as economic pressures intensified in the 1930s.
89
What happened to **living standards** for many **Italians** under **Fascism**?
They remained limited ## Footnote Propaganda claimed success, but many Italians saw only modest or disappointing gains.
90
# Fill in the blank: Fascist military **expansion** placed increasing strain on the Italian _\_\_\_\_.
economy ## Footnote Rearmament and war preparation diverted resources and created pressure.
91
How did **military expansion** affect the **Fascist economy**?
It weakened it ## Footnote Imperial ambition and rearmament imposed heavy costs on a fragile economy.
92
What major **agreement** improved relations between the **Fascist regime** and the **Church**?
The Lateran Agreements ## Footnote These settlements helped end the long conflict between Church and state.
93
Why were good relations with the **Church** valuable to **Mussolini**?
They increased legitimacy ## Footnote Cooperation with Catholicism broadened acceptance of the regime.
94
# True or False: **Fascist Italy** remained in open and permanent conflict with the **Catholic Church** throughout the 1930s.
False ## Footnote Relations improved significantly after settlement with the papacy.
95
How did **Fascist organisations** affect **women**?
They reinforced traditional roles ## Footnote Women were encouraged to focus on motherhood and family rather than independence.
96
How did **Fascist organisations** affect **workers**?
They restricted independence ## Footnote Workers were drawn into controlled organisations rather than free unions.
97
How did **Fascist organisations** affect **peasants**?
They extended regime influence into rural life ## Footnote The regime sought to build support and control beyond the cities.
98
# Fill in the blank: Fascist policy towards **women** stressed motherhood rather than social _\_\_\_\_.
equality ## Footnote The regime upheld conservative gender roles.
99
By 1940, to what extent had Italian society been fully **Fascistised**?
Only partially ## Footnote The regime penetrated society deeply, but traditional loyalties and limits remained.
100
# True or False: By 1940 **Mussolini** had completely transformed every part of Italian society in a total and uncontested way.
False ## Footnote Fascist influence was extensive, but not total.
101
What was one main **foreign policy ambition** of **Mussolini**?
To restore Italian prestige ## Footnote He wanted Italy to be treated as a major power.
102
What did **‘Mare Nostrum’** mean in **Fascist foreign policy**?
Mediterranean domination ## Footnote Mussolini hoped to make the Mediterranean an area of Italian influence.
103
# Fill in the blank: Fascist dreams of Mediterranean dominance were summed up by the phrase _\_\_\_\_ **Nostrum**.
Mare ## Footnote This idea reflected ambitions for power and prestige.
104
Why was **empire** in **Africa** important to **Mussolini**?
It symbolised Great Power status ## Footnote Imperial expansion was meant to prove Italy’s strength and virility.
105
How did **Mussolini** try to act as a **statesman** in the 1920s and early 1930s?
By balancing between powers ## Footnote He sought influence through diplomacy as well as aggression.
106
What was the **Stresa Front**?
An anti-German diplomatic agreement ## Footnote Italy, Britain and France cooperated briefly against German treaty violations.
107
# True or False: The **Stresa Front** marked a firm and lasting anti-**Hitler** alliance including **Italy**.
False ## Footnote It was short-lived and later undermined by Mussolini’s own actions.
108
Why was Italian influence in **Austria** important to **Mussolini**?
It checked German expansion ## Footnote Austria was seen as a useful buffer against Hitler’s Germany.
109
What was the significance of the **invasion of Abyssinia**?
It created an empire by force ## Footnote The war boosted Mussolini’s image at home but damaged relations abroad.
110
# Fill in the blank: **Mussolini’s** African conquest of the 1930s was the invasion of _\_\_\_\_.
Abyssinia ## Footnote The war became a major test of collective security.
111
How did the **Abyssinian War** affect **Mussolini’s popularity** in **Italy**?
It increased it temporarily ## Footnote Many Italians saw the conquest as a sign of strength and national glory.
112
How did the **Abyssinian War** affect **Mussolini’s international standing**?
It damaged it ## Footnote The invasion worsened relations with Britain and France and encouraged alignment with Hitler.
113
# True or False: The invasion of **Abyssinia** improved **Italy’s** relationship with the **League of Nations** and Western democracies.
False ## Footnote It led to condemnation and greater diplomatic isolation.
114
Why was the **Spanish Civil War** important for **Fascist Italy**?
It pushed Italy closer to Germany ## Footnote Intervention deepened ideological and military links with Hitler.
115
How did relations between **Italy** and **Germany** change in the late 1930s?
They grew closer ## Footnote Earlier caution gave way to increasing alignment with Nazi Germany.
116
# Fill in the blank: The **agreement** that symbolised close Italo-German ties was the **Pact of** _\_\_\_\_.
Steel ## Footnote It committed Italy more closely to Germany’s side.
117
Why was the **invasion of Albania** significant?
It showed continued expansionism ## Footnote The move demonstrated Mussolini’s determination to build prestige through aggression.
118
Why did **Italy** remain neutral at the outbreak of **war** in 1939?
It was not ready ## Footnote Despite bold rhetoric, Italian military and economic weakness limited immediate action.
119
# True or False: **Italy** in 1939 was fully prepared for a long modern **war**.
False ## Footnote Italian armed forces and industry were not ready for sustained conflict.
120
Why did **Mussolini** decide to enter the **war** in 1940?
To gain rewards from victory ## Footnote He hoped to benefit from German success before the war ended.
121
# Fill in the blank: **Mussolini** entered the **war** in _\_\_\_\_.
1940 ## Footnote He expected a short conflict and easy gains.
122
What was **Italy’s contribution** to the **conquest of France** in 1940?
Limited late intervention ## Footnote Italy joined when France was already close to defeat.
123
What problem did the continuation of **war** create for **Italy**?
It exposed weakness ## Footnote A longer war demanded more resources and effectiveness than Italy possessed.
124
# True or False: **Mussolini** entered the war expecting a long struggle that **Italy** was fully equipped to sustain.
False ## Footnote He gambled on a short war and quick gains.
125
How did **Italy’s war effort** affect the **economy**?
It increased strain and hardship ## Footnote War worsened shortages, disruption and public suffering.
126
How did the **war** affect **ordinary Italians**?
It brought hardship and disillusionment ## Footnote Bombing, shortages and failures undermined faith in the regime.
127
# Fill in the blank: During the war, **Italy** became increasingly dependent on **Nazi** _\_\_\_\_.
Germany ## Footnote The unequal alliance exposed Fascist weakness.
128
During the war, how did **Italy** become increasingly dependent on **Nazi Germany**?
* Military failures forced German support. * Economy weakened, needed German supplies. * German troops defended collapsing Italy.
129
What happened to the relationship with **Nazi Germany** during the war?
Italy became subordinate ## Footnote German strength increasingly overshadowed and controlled Italian policy.
130
What triggered the **fall of Mussolini** in 1943?
Allied invasion of Sicily ## Footnote Military failure and internal crisis destroyed confidence in his leadership.
131
Who removed **Mussolini** from power in 1943?
The Grand Council and the King ## Footnote Fascist leaders and Victor Emmanuel III turned against him.
132
# True or False: **Mussolini** was overthrown in 1943 by a popular election.
False ## Footnote He was removed by regime insiders and the monarchy during crisis.
133
# Fill in the blanks: After **Mussolini’s fall** came the period known as the _\_\_\_\_ _\_\_\_\_ _\_\_\_\_.
Forty Five Days ## Footnote This was a brief transitional phase before deeper conflict developed.
134
What happened in **Italy** after the **Forty Five Days**?
War and civil war continued ## Footnote Germany intervened and Italy became divided between rival authorities.
135
What was the **Salo Republic**?
Mussolini’s restored puppet regime ## Footnote It was set up in northern Italy under German control after his rescue.
136
Why is the **Salo Republic** important?
* Showed Mussolini’s total German dependence. * Used to enforce brutal repression. * Symbolised Fascism’s final collapse. ## Footnote The regime became more brutal, dependent and desperate.
137
# Fill in the blank: **Mussolini’s** last regime in northern **Italy** is known as the _\_\_\_\_ **Republic**.
Salo ## Footnote It existed only under German protection.
138
What role did the **partisans** play in the final phase of the **war** in **Italy**?
They resisted Fascism and occupation ## Footnote Partisan activity intensified the civil war and weakened Axis control.
139
What ended **German occupation** in **Italy**?
Allied advance and Axis collapse ## Footnote Military defeat and internal resistance together brought occupation to an end.
140
# True or False: **Mussolini** survived the **war** and peacefully retired from politics after 1945.
False ## Footnote He was captured and killed as Fascism collapsed.
141
How did **Mussolini** die?
He was executed ## Footnote His death symbolised the violent end of Fascist rule in Italy.
142
What is one key element of **Mussolini’s legacy**?
Dictatorship and disaster ## Footnote He built a powerful regime, but led Italy into repression, war and ruin.