Italian Social Republic: Difference between revisions
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{{Short description|1943–1945 German puppet state and fascist rump state in Northern Italy}} |
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{{Infobox Former Country |
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{{about|the Italian Republic under a fascist regime from 1943 to 1945|the Kingdom of Italy under fascism|Fascist Italy}} |
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|native_name = ''Repubblica Sociale Italiana'' |
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{{Redirect-distinguish|Republic of Salò|Republic of Salé}} |
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|conventional_long_name = Italian Social Republic |
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{{Use Oxford spelling|date=December 2020}} |
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|common_name = Italy |
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{{Use dmy dates|date=October 2024}} |
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|continent = Europe |
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{{Infobox former country |
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|region = Italy |
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| conventional_long_name = {{nowrap|Italian Social Republic}} |
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|country = Italy |
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| native_name = {{native name|it|Repubblica Sociale Italiana}} |
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|era = World War II |
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| status = [[Puppet state]] of [[Nazi Germany|Germany]]<ref>Renzo De Felice, ''Breve storia del fascismo'', Milano, Mondadori (Collana oscar storia), 2002, pp. 120–121.</ref><ref name="Pauley p228">{{citation|last=Pauley|first=Bruce F.|year=2003|title=Hitler, Stalin and Mussolini: Totalitarianism in the Twentieth Century Italy|location=Wheeling, Illinois|publisher=Harlan Davidson|page=228|edition=2nd|isbn=0-88295-993-X}}</ref><br>[[Rump state]] of [[Fascist Italy|Italy]]<ref>Eric Morris, ''Circles of Hell: The War in Italy 1943-1945'', {{isbn|0091744741}}, 1993, p. 140</ref><ref>{{cite book |last1=Neville |first1=Peter |title=Mussolini |date=2014 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=9781317613046 |page=199 |edition=2nd}}</ref> |
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|status = Client state |
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|empire = |
| empire = [[Third German Empire]]<ref name="Pauley p228"/> |
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| p1 = Kingdom of Italy |
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| flag_p1 = Flag of Italy (1861-1946) crowned.svg |
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|event_start = |
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| s1 = Kingdom of Italy |
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|year_start = 1943 |
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| flag_s1 = Flag of Italy (1861-1946) crowned.svg |
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|date_start = September 23 |
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| national_motto = {{lang|it|Per l'onore d'Italia}}<br />{{small|"For the honour of Italy"}} |
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|event_end = |
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| national_anthem = {{lang|it|[[Giovinezza]]}} (''[[de facto]]'')<!-- see Italian article's note for "nessuno" --><br />{{small|"Youth"}} |
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|year_end = 1945 |
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{{center|[[File:Giovinezza (1943).ogg]]}} |
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|date_end = April 25 |
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| image_flag = File:Flag of Italy.svg |
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| flag_type = [[Flag of Italy#The two world wars and the interwar period|Flag]] |
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| image_coat = Coat of Arms of the Italian Social Republic.svg |
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| symbol_type = [[Emblem of Italy#Italian Social Republic|Coat of arms]] |
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| image_map = Italian Social Republic within Europe 1943.svg |
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|flag_s1 = Flag of Italy (1861-1946).svg |
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| image_map_caption = Location of the Italian Social Republic within Europe in 1943 {{plainlist|class=nowrap|style=padding-left: 0.6em; text-align: left;|{{legend|#008000|Territory nominally administered by the RSI}}{{legend|#72ce72|German Operational Zones ([[Operational Zone of the Alpine Foothills|OZAV]], [[Operational Zone of the Adriatic Littoral|OZAK]])<ref>Both OZAV and OZAK were still formally part of the RSI. But the two regions were put under direct German military administration.</ref>}} |
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}} |
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|image_flag = Flag_of_Italy.svg |
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| image_map2 = Italian Social Republic 1943 Map.png |
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|flag_type = State and Civil Flag |
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| image_map2_caption = Administrative divisions of the Italian Social Republic |
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|image_map = RSI_GL-GL.PNG |
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| capital = {{plainlist| |
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|image_map_caption = From the [[Gustav Line]] to the [[Gothic Line]] |
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*[[Salò]], [[Verona]], and [[Milan]] {{small|(''de facto'')}} |
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|symbol = |
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*[[Rome]] {{small|(''[[de jure]]'')}}}} |
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|symbol_type = Coat of Arms |
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| largest_city = Rome |
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|image_coat = CoA of the RSI.svg |
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| common_languages = {{ubl|[[Italian language|Italian]]|[[Lombard language|Lombard]]|[[Emilian dialects|Emilian]]|[[Venetian language|Venetian]]|[[Romagnol dialects|Romagnol]]|[[Ligurian language|Ligurian]]|[[Piedmontese language|Piedmontese]]|[[German language|German]]|[[Neapolitan language|Neapolitan]]|[[Arpitan language|Franco-Provençal]]}} |
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| religion = [[Catholicism]] |
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| government_type = [[Unitary state|Unitary]] [[republic]] under a [[Italian Fascism|fascist]] [[one-party]] [[Totalitarianism|totalitarian]] [[dictatorship]] |
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|national_motto = |
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| title_leader = {{lang|it|[[Duce]]}} |
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|national_anthem = "''[[Giovinezza]]''" ("The Youth")¹ |
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| leader1 = [[Benito Mussolini]] |
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|common_languages = [[Italian language|Italian]] |
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| year_leader1 = 1943–1945 |
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| title_deputy = [[Plenipotentiary]] |
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|government_type = Republic |
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| year_deputy1 = 1943–1945 |
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| deputy1 = [[Rudolf Rahn]] |
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|title_leader = Head of State |
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| era = {{plainlist| |
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*[[World War II]] |
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|footnotes = ¹ [http://www.nationalanthems.info/it-gio.htm External link] |
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*[[Italian Campaign (World War II)|Italian Campaign]] |
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*[[Italian Civil War]]}} |
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| event_pre = [[Operation Achse]] |
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| date_pre = {{nowrap|8–19 September 1943}} |
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| event_start = {{nowrap|[[#Establishment by Nazi Germany|Mussolini's restoration]]}} |
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| year_start = 1943 |
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| date_start = 23 September |
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| event1 = [[Spring 1945 offensive in Italy|Partisan uprising]] |
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| date_event1 = 25 April 1945 |
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| event2 = [[Death of Benito Mussolini]] |
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| date_event2 = 28 April 1945 |
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| event_end = [[Surrender of Caserta|Surrender of RSI forces]] |
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| date_end = 2 May |
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| event_post = |
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| date_post = |
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| year_end = 1945 |
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| currency = [[Italian lira]] |
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| demonym = |
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| area_km2 = |
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| area_rank = |
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| GDP_PPP = |
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| GDP_PPP_year = |
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| HDI = |
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| today = [[Italy]] |
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}} |
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The '''Italian Social Republic''' ({{langx|it|Repubblica Sociale Italiana}}, {{IPA|it|reˈpubblika soˈtʃaːle itaˈljaːna|lang}}; '''RSI'''; {{langx|de|Italienische Sozialrepublik}}), known prior to December 1943 as the '''National Republican State of Italy''' ({{langx|it|Stato Nazionale Repubblicano d'Italia|links=no}}; '''SNRI'''), but more popularly known as the '''Republic of Salò''' ({{langx|it|Repubblica di Salò|links=no}}, {{IPA|it|reˈpubblika di saˈlɔ|lang}}), was a [[List of World War II puppet states#Germany|German puppet state]] and [[Fascism|fascist]] [[rump state]] with limited [[diplomatic recognition]] that was created during the latter part of [[World War II]]. It existed from the beginning of the [[German-occupied Europe|German occupation of Italy in September 1943]] until the [[Surrender of Caserta|surrender of Axis troops in Italy in May 1945]]. The German occupation triggered widespread [[Italian resistance movement|national resistance]] against it and the Italian Social Republic, leading to the [[Italian Civil War]]. |
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The '''Italian Social Republic''' (''Repubblica Sociale Italiana'' or RSI) was a [[client state]] of [[Nazi Germany]] led by the "Duce of the Nation" and "Minister of Foreign Affairs" [[Benito Mussolini]]. The RSI exercised official [[sovereignty]] in [[northern Italy]] but was largely dependent on the [[Wehrmacht|German Armed Force]] (''[[Wehrmacht]]'') to maintain control. The state was informally known as the '''Salò Republic''' (''Repubblica di Salò'') because the RSI's Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Mussolini) was headquartered in [[Salò]], a small town on [[Lake Garda]]. The Italian Social Republic was the second and last incarnation of a [[Fascist]] Italian state. |
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The Italian Social Republic was the second and last incarnation of the [[Italian fascism|Italian Fascist]] state, led by the Italian dictator [[Benito Mussolini]] and his reformed [[Abolition of monarchy|anti-monarchist]] [[Republican Fascist Party]]. The newly founded state declared [[Rome]] its capital but the ''de facto'' capital was [[Salò]] (hence the colloquial name of the state), a small town on [[Lake Garda]], near [[Brescia]], where Mussolini and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs were headquartered. The Italian Social Republic nominally exercised [[sovereignty]] in [[Northern Italy|Northern]] and [[Central Italy]], but was largely dependent on German troops to maintain control. |
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==The context of RSI's creation== |
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[[Image:Germaniamica.jpg|thumb|150px|left|[[Germany|German]] poster saying: ''"Germany is truly your friend"'']] |
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On [[July 24]] [[1943]], after the [[Allied]] landings in [[Sicily]], the [[Grand Fascist Council]], on a motion by its chairman, [[Dino Grandi]], voted a motion of no confidence in Mussolini. The next day, [[King of Italy|King]] [[Victor Emmanuel III]] dismissed Mussolini from office and ordered him arrested. The new government, under [[Pietro Badoglio, 1st Duke of Addis Abeba|Marshal Pietro Badoglio]], began secret negotiations with the Allied powers and made preparation for the unconditional surrender of Italy. These surrender talks implied a commitment from Badoglio not only to leave the Axis alliance but also to have Italy declare war on Germany. |
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In July 1943, after the [[Allies of World War II|Allies]] had pushed Italy out of North Africa and subsequently [[Allied invasion of Sicily|invaded Sicily]], the [[Grand Council of Fascism]]—with the support of King [[Victor Emmanuel III of Italy|Victor Emmanuel III]]—[[Fall of the Fascist regime in Italy|overthrew and arrested Mussolini]]. The [[First Badoglio government|new government]] began secret peace negotiations with the Allied powers but when the [[Armistice of Cassibile]] was announced on 8 September, Nazi Germany was prepared and quickly intervened. [[Operation Achse|German troops seized control of the northern half of Italy]], [[Gran Sasso raid|freed Mussolini]], and brought him to the German-occupied area to establish a satellite regime. The Italian Social Republic was proclaimed on 23 September 1943.<ref name="Pauley p228"/><ref name="RiseFall">{{cite book |last=Shirer |first=William |title=[[The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich]] |publisher=[[Simon & Schuster]] |year=1960 |isbn=0-671-72868-7 |location=New York City |pages=1055 |author-link=William L. Shirer}}</ref> Although the RSI claimed sovereignty over all of Italy and its colonies, its ''de facto'' jurisdiction only extended to a vastly reduced portion of the country.<ref name="Susan Zuccotti 1996. P. 148">Susan Zuccotti. The ''Italians and the Holocaust: Persecution, Rescue, and Survival''. University of Nebraska Press paperback edition. University of Nebraska Press, 1996. P. 148.</ref> The RSI received diplomatic recognition only from the Axis powers and their satellite states. [[Finland in World War II|Finland]] and [[Vichy France]], although in the German orbit, did not recognize it. Unofficial relations were maintained with [[Argentina]], [[Estado Novo (Portugal)|Portugal]], [[Francoist Spain|Spain]], and, through commercial agent, [[Switzerland]]. [[Vatican City]] did not recognize the RSI. |
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While the Germans formally recognised the new status quo in Italian politics, they quickly intervened by sending some of the best units of the ''[[Wehrmacht]]'' to Italy. This was done both to resist new Allied advances and to face the predictably imminent defection of Italy. While Badoglio still swore loyalty to Germany and the Axis, Italian government emissaries had already signed the [[Armistice with Italy|armistice]] in Allied-occupied [[Sicily]] (in Cassibile) on [[3 September]]. |
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Around 25 April 1945, 19 months after its founding, the RSI [[Italian campaign (World War II)|all but collapsed]]. In Italy, the day is known as [[Liberation Day (Italy)|Liberation Day]] (''festa della liberazione''). On that day, a general partisan uprising, alongside the efforts of Allied forces during their [[Spring 1945 offensive in Italy|final offensive in Italy]], managed to oust the Germans and the remaining RSI forces from Italy almost entirely. [[Death of Benito Mussolini|Mussolini was captured and killed]] by Italian partisans on 28 April as he and an entourage attempted to flee. The RSI Minister of Defense, [[Rodolfo Graziani]], surrendered what was left of the Italian Social Republic on 1 May, one day after the German forces in Italy capitulated. |
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On [[8 September]], the truth finally came out and Badoglio announced Italy's surrender. German dictator [[Adolf Hitler]] and his staff, long aware of the betrayal, acted immediately by ordering German troops to seize control of northern and central Italy. The Germans disarmed the stunned Italian troops and took over all of the Italian Army's materials and equipment. |
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== Context of its creation == |
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Just four days later, on [[12 September]], a daring German paratrooper action in the mountains of [[Abruzzo]], led by [[Otto Skorzeny]] and called ''[[Unternehmen Eiche]]'' (or "Operation Oak"), succeeded in liberating Mussolini and forcing him back into power. While in captivity, the new Italian government had moved Mussolini from place to place in order to frustrate any would-be rescuers. Finally, the Germans determined that he was at the Campo Imperatore Hotel at [[Gran Sasso]]. After being liberated, Mussolini was safely flown to Bavaria. His liberation made it possible for a new, German-dependent Fascist Italian state to be created. |
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{{Main|Fall of the Fascist regime in Italy|Operation Achse}} |
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{{Fascism}} |
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[[File:Bundesarchiv Bild 101I-567-1503A-07, Gran Sasso, Mussolini mit deutschen Fallschirmjägern.jpg|thumb|left|[[Benito Mussolini]] rescued by German troops from his prison in [[Campo Imperatore]] on 12 September 1943]] |
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On 24 July 1943, after the [[Allied invasion of Sicily|Allied landings in Sicily]], on a motion by [[Dino Grandi]], the [[Grand Council of Fascism]] voted a [[motion of no confidence]] in [[Prime Minister of Italy|Prime Minister]] [[Benito Mussolini]]. Mussolini's authority had been undermined by a series of military defeats from the start of Italy's entry into the war during June 1940, including the [[Bombing of Rome in World War II|bombing of Rome]], the loss of the African colonies in the [[East African campaign (World War II)|East African]] and [[North African campaign]]s, the defeat of the [[Italian Army in Russia]] and the [[Allies of World War II|Allied]] [[Operation Husky|invasion of Sicily]]. |
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==History of the RSI== |
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[[Image:Flag_of_RSI.svg|thumb|155px|left|The war flag of the RSI became a common symbol of the state and Italian fascism after 1943.]] |
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The next day, [[King of Italy|King]] [[Victor Emmanuel III of Italy|Victor Emmanuel III]] dismissed Mussolini from office, ordered him arrested, and appointed [[Marshal of Italy|Marshal]] [[Pietro Badoglio]] as new prime minister. By this time, the monarchy, a number of [[Italian fascism|Fascist]] government members, and the general Italian population had grown tired of the futile war effort which had driven Italy into subordination to and subjugation by [[Nazi Germany]]. The failed war effort left Mussolini humiliated at home and abroad as a "sawdust [[Julius Caesar|Caesar]]".<ref name="sawdustcaesar">{{cite book |last1=Wyke |first1=Maria |title=Caesar in the USA |date=2012 |publisher=University of California Press |location=Berkeley |isbn=9780520954274 |pages=128}}</ref> The new government began secret negotiations with the Allied powers and made preparations for the capitulation of Italy. These surrender talks implied a commitment from Badoglio to leave the [[Axis powers|Axis alliance]]. |
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Soon after its establishment, the Republic was forced to cede [[Trieste]], [[Istria]], and [[South Tyrol]] to Germany. During the existence of the Italian Social Republic, Mussolini, whose government had banned [[trade union]]s and [[strike action|strikes]], began to make increasingly [[populism|populist]] appeals to the working class. He claimed to regret many of the decisions he made in supporting the interests of big business in the past. He promised a new beginning if the Italian people would be willing to grant him a second chance. Mussolini claimed that he had never totally abandoned his left-wing influences, he claimed that he had attempted to nationalize property in 1939-40 but he had to delay them for tactical reasons of the war.<ref>Smith, Denis Mack. ''Mussolini; A Biography.'' New York: Vintage Books, 1983. p311</ref> but that with the removal of the monarchy he claimed that the full ideology of Fascism could be pursued and reversed over twenty years of Fascist support of private property and relative economic independence by ordering the nationalization of all companies with over 100 employees.<ref>Smith, p312</ref> Mussolini even reached out to communist [[Nicola Bombacci]], a former student of [[Vladimir Lenin]] to help him in spreading the image that Fascism was a progressive movement.<ref>Smith, p312</ref> |
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The economic policy of RSI was the "[[Fascist socialization|Socialization]]." |
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While the Germans formally recognised the new ''status quo'' in Italian politics, they intervened by sending some of the best units of the ''[[Wehrmacht]]'' to Italy. This was done both to resist new Allied advances and to face the predictably imminent defection of Italy. While Badoglio continued to swear loyalty to Germany and the Axis powers, Italian government emissaries prepared to sign an [[Armistice of Cassibile|armistice]] at [[Cassibile (village)|Cassibile]] in Allied-occupied [[Sicily]], which was finalized on 3 September. |
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[[Image:Rsi_f.jpg|thumb|155px|left|RSI [[Propaganda]] poster]] |
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While Mussolini contended in public that he was in control of the RSI, he admitted to visitors in private that this state was a largely irrelevant and ineffective puppet of the German forces. Indeed, Mussolini was little more than the [[gauleiter]] of [[Lombardy]]. The RSI was mainly used for repression purposes against the [[Italian resistance movement|Italian partisans]] and the Jews. In addition, Hitler forced the new regime to take revenge against [[Badoglio]]'s supporters and any other Fascists, no matter who they were, accused of betrayal. On [[11 January]] [[1944]], Mussolini's own son-in-law [[Galeazzo Ciano]] was executed. |
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On 8 September, Badoglio announced Italy's armistice with the Allies (although termed an "armistice", its terms made it akin to an [[unconditional surrender]]). German ''[[Führer]]'' [[Adolf Hitler]] and his staff, long aware of the negotiations, acted immediately by ordering German troops to seize control of Northern and Central Italy. The Germans quickly [[Operation Achse|occupied Italy, disarmed the Italian troops and took over all of the Italian Army's materials and equipment]], meeting only limited resistance. The Germans also dissolved the [[Italian occupation of France|Italian occupation zone]] in southeastern France and forced Italian troops stationed there to leave. The Italian armed forces were not given clear orders to resist the Germans after the armistice and so resistance to the German takeover was scattered and of little effect. King Victor Emmanuel made no effort to rally resistance to the Germans, instead fleeing with his retinue to the safety of the Allied lines. On 10 September 1943, after two days of battle between the ''[[Wehrmacht]]'' and the remnants of the [[Royal Italian Army]], Rome fell to the Germans. |
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Around [[25 April]] [[1945]], Mussolini's republic came to an end. This day is known as ''Liberation Day''. On this day a general [[Italian resistance movement|partisan uprising]] and the (Western) Allied spring offensive managed largely to oust the Germans from [[Italy]]. The Italian Social Republic had existed for slightly more than one and a half years. |
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The new Italian government had moved Mussolini from place to place while he was in captivity in an attempt to foil any attempts at rescue. Despite this, the Germans eventually pinpointed Mussolini at the [[Hotel Campo Imperatore]] at [[Gran Sasso]]. On 12 September, Mussolini was freed by the Germans in [[Gran Sasso raid|Operation Eiche]] (directed by [[SS]]-[[Obersturmbannführer]] [[Otto Skorzeny]]) in the mountains of [[Abruzzo]].<ref>{{cite book|last=Di Michele|first=Vincenzo|title=The Last Secret of Mussolini|publisher=Il Cerchio|isbn=978-8884744227|year=2015}}</ref> After being freed, Mussolini was flown to [[Bavaria]]. Gathering what support he still had among the Italian population, his liberation made it possible for a new German-dependent Fascist Italian state to be created. |
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On [[28 April]], Mussolini, his mistress ([[Clara Petacci]]), several RSI ministers, and some other Fascist hangers-on were caught attempting to flee. Most of the captives were shot at [[Dongo]] by [[Italian resistance movement|Italian partisans]]. Fifteen of the bodies were taken to a square in the center of [[Milan]] and hanged unceremoniously up-side down in front of a [[gas station]]. |
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{{History of Italy}} |
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== Foreign relations == |
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==RSI Military formations== |
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=== Establishment by Nazi Germany === |
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===Army=== |
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[[File:Germaniamica.jpg|thumb|170px|left|Italian Social Republic propaganda poster saying: "Germany is truly your friend", by [[Gino Boccasile]] (1944)]] |
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Smaller units like the [[Black Brigades]] and the [[Decima Flottiglia MAS]] fought for the RSI during its entire existence. The Germans were satisfied if these units were able to participate in [[Italian resistance movement|anti-partisan activities]]. While definitely a mixed bag of good and bad, some of these units surpassed expectations. |
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Three days following his rescue in the Gran Sasso raid, Mussolini was taken to Germany for a meeting with Hitler in [[Kętrzyn|Rastenburg]] at [[Wolf's Lair|his headquarters]] in [[East Prussia]]. While Mussolini was in poor health and wanted to retire, Hitler wanted him to return to Italy and start a new Fascist state under the protection of the Wehrmacht. Mussolini balked; he was tired of the responsibilities of the war and unwilling to retake power. Hitler told him the alternative would be a German military administration that would treat Italy no differently from other occupied countries. Hitler also threatened to destroy [[Milan]], [[Genoa]] and [[Turin]] unless Mussolini agreed to set up a revived Fascist government. Reluctantly, Mussolini agreed to Hitler's demands.<ref name="lastdays, pp 16–17">{{Cite book| last = Moseley | first = Ray |title =Mussolini: The Last 600 Days of Il Duce| publisher=Taylor Trade| url =https://books.google.com/books?id=UmxaWvOL_IgC&q=Campo+Imperatore+abruzzo+mussolini&pg=PA7 | isbn = 1-58979-095-2 | year = 2004}}</ref> |
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[[Image:Rsi_02p.jpg|thumb|300px|left|2 RSI Recruitment posters: 1 for the Italian SS Legion and the other for the X Flottiglia MAS]] |
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On [[16 October]] [[1943]], the Rastenburg Protocol was signed with Nazi Germany and the RSI was allowed to raise division-sized military formations. This protocol allowed Marshal [[Rodolfo Graziani]] to raise four RSI divisions totalling 52,000 men. In July 1944, the first of these divisions completed training and was sent to the front. |
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Mussolini returned to Italy and settled in Milan, from where on 15 September he announced the creation of the [[Republican Fascist Party]] and, three days later, the resumption of the war alongside Germany and Japan. The Duce immediately announced the formation of a new republican cabinet, although they actually came from a list chosen and appointed by Hitler himself. The Italian Social Republic was proclaimed on 23 September, with Mussolini as both chief of state and prime minister.<ref name="Pauley p228" /><ref name="RiseFall"/> The RSI claimed Rome as its capital, but the ''de facto'' capital became the small town of [[Salò]] on Lake Garda, midway between Milan and [[Venice]], where Mussolini resided along with the foreign office of the RSI. While Rome itself was still under Axis control at the time, given the city's proximity to Allied lines and the threat of civil unrest, neither the Germans nor Mussolini himself wanted him to return to Rome.<ref name="degrand131">De Grand, Alexander J., ''Italian fascism: its origins & development'', 3d edition (illustrated), Publisher: University of Nebraska Press, Year: 2000, {{ISBN|0-8032-6622-7}}, p. 131</ref> |
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Recruiting military forces was difficult for the RSI, most of the Italian army had been interned by German forces in 1943, many Italians had been conscripted into forced labour in Germany and few wanted to participate in the war. The RSI became so desperate for soldiers that it granted convicts freedom if they would join the army and the sentence of death was imposed on anyone who opposed being conscripted. .<ref>Smith, Denis Mack. ''Mussolini; A Biography.'' New York: Vintage Books, 1983. p308</ref> Autonomous military forces in the RSI also fought against the Allies including the notorious ''[[Decima Flottiglia MAS]]'' of Prince [[Junio Valerio Borghese]]. Borghese held no allegiance to Mussolini and even suggested that he would take him prisoner if he could.<ref>Smith, p308</ref> |
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On 18 September, Mussolini made his first public address to the Italian people since his rescue, in which he commended the loyalty of Hitler as an ally while condemning Victor Emmanuel for betraying Italian Fascism.<ref name="lastdays, pp 16–17"/> He declared: "It is not the regime that has betrayed the monarchy, it is the monarchy that has betrayed the regime". He also formally repudiated his previous support of the monarchy, saying: "When a monarchy fails in its duties, it loses every reason for being…The state we want to establish will be national and social in the highest sense of the word; that is, it will be Fascist, thus returning to our origins".<ref name="lastdays, pp 16–17"/> |
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During the winter of 1944-1945, armed Italians were on both sides of the [[Gothic Line]]. On the Allied side were four Italian groups of volunteers from the old Italian army. These Italian volunteers were equipped and trained by the British. On the Axis side were four RSI divisions. Three of the RSI divisions, the 2nd Italian "Littorio" Infantry Division, the 3rd Italian "San Marco" Marine Division, and the 4th Italian "[[Monterosa Division|Monte Rosa]]" Alpine Division, were allocated to the [[Army Group Liguria|LXXXXVII "Liguria" Army]] under Graziani and were placed to guard the western flank of the Gothic Line facing France. The fourth RSI division, the 1st Italian "Italia" Infantry Division, was attached to the German 14th Army in a sector of the Apennine Mountains thought least likely to be attacked.<ref>Blaxland, p243</ref> |
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From the start, the Italian Social Republic was little more than a [[Puppet state#Italian Social Republic|puppet state]] dependent entirely upon Germany and a [[rump state]] for the Fascists who are still loyal to Mussolini.<ref name="degrand131"/><ref>Eric Morris, ''Circles of Hell: The War in Italy 1943-1945'', {{isbn|0091744741}}, 1993, p. 140</ref> Mussolini himself knew this; even as he stated in public that he was in full control of the RSI, he was well aware that he was little more than the ''[[Gauleiter]]'' of [[Lombardy]].<ref name="RiseFall"/> The SS kept Mussolini under what amounted to house arrest; it monitored his communications and controlled his travel. Mussolini later said that he would have preferred being sent to a [[concentration camp]] to the manner that the SS treated him. Real power rested with German General [[Plenipotentiary]] [[Rudolf Rahn]] and SS-''[[Obergruppenführer]]'' [[Karl Wolff]], the commander of the German occupying forces in Italy.<ref name=Payne>{{cite book|title=A History of Fascism, 1914–1945|last=Payne|first=Stanley G.|author-link=Stanley G. Payne|publisher=[[Routledge]]|date=1996|isbn=0203501322}}</ref> |
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On [[26 December]] [[1944]], several size-able RSI military units, including elements of the 4th Italian "[[Monterosa Division|Monte Rosa]]" Alpine Division and the 3rd Italian "San Marco" Marine Division, participated in [[Operation Wintergewitter|Operation Winter Storm]]. This was a combined German and Italian offensive against the [[92nd Infantry Division (United States)|92nd Infantry Division]]. The battle was fought in the Apennines. While limited in scale, this was a successful offensive and the RSI units did their part. |
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The RSI had no constitution or organized economy, and its financing was dependent entirely on funding from Berlin.<ref>{{Harvnb|Pauley|2003|p=228}}</ref> German forces themselves had little respect for Mussolini's failed fascism, and considered the regime merely as a tool for maintaining order, such as repressing the [[Italian resistance movement|Italian partisans]].<ref name="multiref1">{{Harvnb|Mack Smith|1983|p=307}}.</ref> This work was also carried out by the infamous [[Pietro Koch]] and the Banda Koch on Germany's behalf.<ref name="Rees">{{Citation |first=Philip |last=Rees |author-link=Philip Rees |title=[[Biographical Dictionary of the Extreme Right Since 1890]] |year=1990 |page=212 }}</ref> |
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In February 1945, the [[92nd Infantry Division (United States)|92nd Infantry Division]] again came up against RSI units. This time it was [[Bersaglieri]] of the 1st Italian "Italia" Infantry Division. The Italians successfully halted the US division's advance. |
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The RSI took revenge against the 19 members who had voted against Mussolini on the Grand Council with the [[Verona trial]] (''processo di Verona'') which handed down a death sentence to all of the accused but one. Only six of the 19 were in RSI custody ([[Giovanni Marinelli]], [[Carlo Pareschi]], [[Luciano Gottardi]], [[Tullio Cianetti]], [[Emilio De Bono]] and Mussolini's own son-in-law [[Galeazzo Ciano]]). With the exception of Tullio Cianetti, who received a [[life sentence]], they were all executed on 11 January 1944 in the fort of San Procolo in [[Verona]]. |
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The RSI Minister of Defense, [[Rodolfo Graziani]], was even able to say that he commanded an entire Army. This was the Italo-German [[Army Group Liguria]]. |
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=== Territorial losses === |
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On [[29 April]], Graziani surrendered and was present at Caserta when a representative of German General [[Heinrich von Vietinghoff]]-Steel signed the unconditional instrument of surrender for all Axis forces in Italy. But, possibly as a sign of the low esteem in which the Allies held the RSI, Graziani's signature was not required at Caserta. <ref>''The Decline an Fall of Nazi Germany and Imperial Japan'', Hans Dollinger, Library of Congress Catalogue Card Number 67-27047</ref> The surrender was to take effect on [[2 May]]. Graziani ordered the RSI forces under his command to lay down their arms on [[1 May]]. |
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The changing political and military situation re-opened questions regarding the status of Italian territories, particularly those with German-speaking majorities that were formerly under Austrian rule. Previously, Hitler had vigorously suppressed any campaigning for the return of lands such as [[South Tyrol]] in order to maintain good relations with his Italian ally. In the aftermath of Italy's abandonment of the [[Axis powers|Axis]] on 8 September 1943, Germany seized and ''de facto'' incorporated some Italian territories.<ref name="Susan Zuccotti 1996. P. 148"/> However, Hitler refused to officially annex South Tyrol in spite of urging by local German officials and instead supported having the RSI hold official sovereignty over these territories and forbade all measures that would give the impression of official annexation of South Tyrol.<ref>[[Rolf Steininger]]. ''South Tyrol: A Minority Conflict of the Twentieth Century''. Pp. 69.</ref> However, in practice the territory of South Tyrol within the boundaries defined by Germany as ''[[Operational Zone of the Alpine Foothills|Operationszone Alpenvorland]]'' that included [[Trento]], [[Bolzano]] and [[Belluno]] were ''de facto'' incorporated into Germany's ''[[Reichsgau Tirol-Vorarlberg]]'' and administered by its ''[[Gauleiter]]'' [[Franz Hofer]].<ref name="Susan Zuccotti 1996. P. 148" /><ref>Giuseppe Motta. ''The Italian Military Governorship in South Tyrol and the Rise of Fascism''. English translation edition. Edizioni Nuova Cultura, 2012. P. 104.</ref> The region identified by Germany as ''[[Operational Zone of the Adriatic Littoral|Operationszone Adriatisches Küstenland]]'' that included [[Udine]], [[Gorizia]], [[Trieste]], [[Pula|Pola]] and [[Fiume]] were ''de facto'' incorporated into ''[[Reichsgau Kärnten]]'' and administered by its ''Gauleiter'' [[Friedrich Rainer]].<ref>[[Arrigo Petacco]]. ''Tragedy Revealed: The Story of Italians from Istria, Dalmatia, and Venezia Giulia, 1943–1956''. Toronto, Ontario, Canada: [[University of Toronto Press]], 2005. P. 50.</ref> |
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On 10 September 1943, the [[Independent State of Croatia]] (NDH) declared that the [[Treaties of Rome (1941)|Treaties of Rome]] of 18 May 1941 with the Kingdom of Italy were [[null and void]] and annexed the [[Governorate of Dalmatia|portion of Dalmatia]] that had been ceded to Italy as part of those treaties.<ref name="Jozo Tomašević 2001. P. 300">[[Jozo Tomašević]]. ''War and Revolution in Yugoslavia, 1941–1945: Occupation and Collaboration: 1941–1945: Occupation and Collaboration''. [[Stanford University Press]], 2001. P. 300.</ref> The NDH attempted to annex [[Province of Zara|Zara]], which had been a recognized territory of Italy since 1919, but Germany prevented the NDH from doing this.<ref name="Jozo Tomašević 2001. P. 300"/> Because of these actions, the RSI held the NDH in contempt and refused to have diplomatic relations with the NDH or to recognize its territorial claims.<ref name="Jozo Tomašević 2001. P. 300"/> |
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===Air Force=== |
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The National Republican Air Force (''[[Aeronautica Nazionale Repubblicana]]'' or ANR) was the air force of Italian Social Republic and also the air unit of National Republican Army in [[World War II]]. Its tactical organization was: 3 Fighter Groups, 1 Air Torpedo Bomber Group, 1 Bomber Group and other Transport and minor units. The ANR worked closely with German [[Luftwaffe]] in Northern Italy even if the Germans tried, unsuccessfully, to disband the ANR forcing its pilots to enlist in the [[Luftwaffe]]. In 1944, after the withdrawal of all German fighter units in the attempt to stop the increased Allied offensive on the German mainland, ANR fighter groups were left alone and heavily outnumbered, to face the massive Allied air offensive over Northern Italy. In the operation time of 1944 and 1945 the ANR managed to shoot down 262 Allied aircraft with the loss of 158 in action.<ref>Italian Air Forces 1943-1945 - The Aviazone Nazionale Repubblicana by Richard J. Caruana, 1989 Modelaid International Publication</ref> <ref>Aircraft of the Aces 34 Apostolo: Italian Aces of World War 2</ref> <ref>http://surfcity.kund.dalnet.se/italy_drago.htm</ref> |
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[[Image:Mnr_02.jpg|thumb|140px|right|Italian Soldier of the MNR]] |
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After the Italian capitulation, the [[Italian Islands of the Aegean]] were occupied by the Germans (see [[Dodecanese campaign]]). During the German occupation, the islands remained under the nominal sovereignty of the RSI but were ''de facto'' subject to the German military command.<ref>{{cite book|title=Salò-Berlino: l'alleanza difficile. La Repubblica Sociale Italiana nei documenti segreti del Terzo Reich|author1=Nicola Cospito|author2=Hans Werner Neulen|publisher=Mursia|isbn=88-425-1285-0|year=1992|page=128}}</ref> |
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===Navy=== |
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Very little of the [[Regia Marina]] chose to side with the RSI. The RSI's Navy (''Marina Nazionale Repubblicana'') only reached a twentieth the size of the co-belligerent Italian fleet.<ref>Page 100, "The Armed Forces of World War II", Andrew Mollo, ISBN 0-517-54478-4</ref> The RSI Navy included the following craft: Four [[MAS (ships)|Motor Torpedo Boats]] (also known as Torpedo Armed Motorboats or ''Motoscafo Armato Silurante'' or MAS), two anti-submarine vessels, and various other light vessels. There were also five midget submarines stationed in northern Italy and five midget submarines stationed in Romania on the Black Sea. The five submarines stationed in northern Italy all chose to join the RSI Navy. Because of maintenance payment issues, only four of the submarines in Romania were returned to the RSI. |
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Troops of the [[Decima Flottiglia MAS]] fought primarily as an army unit of the RSI. |
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The [[Italian concession of Tientsin]] in China was ceded by the RSI to the Japanese puppet [[Wang Jingwei regime|Reorganized National Government of the Republic of China]]. |
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===Paramilitaries=== |
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The fall of the fascist regime in Italy and the disbandment of the [[Blackshirts|MVSN]] saw the establishment of the [[Guardia Nazionale Repubblicana]] (GNR), and the emergence of the ''brigate nere'' or [[Black Brigades]]. The 40 Black Brigades consisted of former MVSN, former [[Carabinieri]], former soldiers, and others still loyal to the fascist cause. Alongside with their [[Nazism|Nazi]] and ''Schutzstaffel'' ([[SS]]) counterparts, the Black Brigades committed many atrocities in their fight against the [[Italian resistance movement]] and political enemies. |
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=== Diplomatic recognition === |
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==List of RSI Ministers== |
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The RSI was recognized as the legitimate government of Italy by [[Nazi Germany|Germany]], [[Empire of Japan|Imperial Japan]], [[Kingdom of Bulgaria|Bulgaria]], [[Kingdom of Romania|Romania]], [[Kingdom of Hungary (1920–1946)|Hungary]] and [[Thailand]]; it was also recognised by puppet and client States of the Axis, such as the [[Independent State of Croatia]], the [[Slovak Republic (1939–1945)|Slovak Republic]], the [[Reorganized National Government of the Republic of China|Reorganised National Government of the Republic of China]] and the [[Manchukuo|Empire of Manchuria]].<ref name="degrand131" /> |
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The following is a list of RSI ministers. For a variety of reasons many ministers did not live past the end of [[World War II]]. |
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[[Finland]] and [[Vichy France]], despite being in the Axis orbit, did not recognise the RSI. Even otherwise sympathetic States such as [[Francoist Spain|Spain]] or [[Estado Novo (Portugal)|Portugal]] refused to establish formal diplomatic relations with the RSI. The [[Holy See]] did not recognise the RSI.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Felice |first=Renzo De |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=1zE80AEACAAJ |title=Mussolini: Mussolini l'alleato, 1940-1945 ; 2, La guerra civile : 1943-1945 |date=1997 |publisher=Einaudi |isbn=978-88-06-11806-8 |page=358 |language=it}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |last=Viganò |first=Marino |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=DM_wbA1NuuwC |title=Il Ministero degli affari esteri e le relazioni internazionali della Repubblica sociale italiana (1943-1945) |date=1991 |publisher=Editoriale Jaca Book |isbn=978-88-16-95081-8 |language=it}}</ref> |
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* Head of State and Minister of Foreign Affairs - [[Benito Mussolini]] (shot by partisans on 28 April 1945) from 1943 to 1945 |
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* Minister of Defence - [[Rodolfo Graziani]] from 1943 to 1945 |
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* Ministers of the Interior - [[Guido Buffarini Guidi]] (shot by partisans on 10 July 1945) from 1943 to 1945, [[Paolo Zerbino]] (shot by partisans on 28 April 1945) for 1945 |
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* Ministers of Justice - [[Antonino Tringali-Casanova]] (died of natural causes on 30 October, 1943) for 1943, [[Pietro Pisenti]] from 1943 to 1945 |
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* Minister of Finance - [[Domenico Pellegrini Giampietro]] from 1943-1945 |
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* Ministers of Industrial Production - [[Silvio Gai]] for 1943, [[Angelo Tarchi (politician)|Angelo Tarchi]] from 1943-1945 |
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* Minister of Public Works - [[Ruggero Romano]] (shot by partisans on 28 April 1945) from 1943 to 1945 |
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* Minister of Communications - [[Augusto Liverani]] (shot by partisans on 28 April 1945) from 1943 to 1945 |
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* Minister of Labour - [[Giuseppe Spinelli]] for 1945 |
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* Minister of National Education - [[Carlo Alberto Biggini]] (died of natural causes on 19 November 1945) from 1943 to 1945 |
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* Minister of Popular Culture - [[Fernando Mezzasoma]] (shot by partisans on 28 April 1945) from 1943 to 1945 |
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* Minister of Agriculture - [[Edoardo Moroni]] from 1943 to 1945 |
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* Leader of the Republican Fascist Party - [[Alessandro Pavolini]] (shot by partisans on 28 April 1945) from 1943 to 1945 |
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== |
== Economy and war effort == |
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{{further|Italian Civil War|Italian campaign (World War II)}} |
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Most prominent figures of post-war Italian [[far right]] politics (parliamentary or extraparliamentary) were in some way associated with the experience of the RSI. Among them were [[Pino Romualdi]], [[Rodolfo Graziani]], [[Junio Valerio Borghese]] and [[Giorgio Almirante]]. |
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During the existence of the Italian Social Republic, Mussolini, whose former government had banned trade unions and strikes, began to make increasingly [[populism|populist]] appeals to the working class. He claimed to regret many of the decisions made earlier in supporting the interests of big business and promised a new beginning if the Italian people would be willing to grant him a second chance. Mussolini claimed that he had never totally abandoned his left-wing influences, insisting that he had attempted to nationalize property in 1939–1940 but had been forced to delay such action for tactical reasons related to the war.<ref>{{Citation |last=Mack Smith |first=Denis |authorlink= Denis Mack Smith| title=Mussolini: A Biography |location=New York |publisher=Vintage Books |year=1983 |page=311 |isbn=0-394-71658-2}}</ref> With the removal of the monarchy, Mussolini claimed the full ideology of Fascism could be pursued; and to gain popular support he reversed over twenty years of Fascist policy of backing private property and relative economic independence by ordering the nationalization of all companies with over 100 employees.<ref name="multiref2">{{Harvnb|Mack Smith|1983|p=312}}.</ref> Mussolini even reached out to ex-communist [[Nicola Bombacci]] to help him in spreading the image that Fascism was a progressive movement.<ref name="multiref2"/> The economic policy of the RSI was given the name "[[Socialization]]", and Mussolini had even considered the idea of calling his new republic the "Italian 'Socialist' Republic".<ref>[[A. James Gregor]], ''The Ideology of Fascism: The Rationale of Totalitarianism'', New York: NY, The Free Press, 1969, p. 307</ref> In practice, little resulted from the declared socialization of the economy. Unions did not exert real control of their management and took no part in state planning (as they had the power to do on paper after the socialization). The Italian industrial sector was excluded from the new reforms by the Germans and Italian industrialists were opposed to the changes in any case. The Italian labour force (large parts of which had remained leftist despite fascist rule) regarded socialization as a sham and responded with a massive strike on 1 March 1944.<ref name="degrand131"/> |
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In Greece, while the government of the Kingdom of Italy surrendered and many Italian soldiers in the Aegean were tired of the war and had become opposed to Mussolini, Italian Fascist loyalists remained allied to Germany in the Greek campaign; German forces in Greece convinced 10,000 Italians in the Aegean to continue to support their war effort.<ref>Anthony J. Papalas. ''Rebels and Radicals: Icaria 1600–2000''. Wauconda, Illinois, USA: Bolchazi-Carducci Publishers, 2005. pp. 188–190.</ref> |
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Today, a significant number of [[far right]] organizations in [[Italy]], notably the [[Fiamma Tricolore]] party, still explicitly take inspiration for their social and political platform from the RSI experience. The RSI is usually seen as the example of what Fascism should have been.{{Fact|date=February 2007}} As a sign of this legacy, [[Fiamma Tricolore]], for example, guarantees free membership for ex-RSI military.<ref>http://www.fiammatricolore.net/fiamma/tesseramento.asp</ref> A communique from the [[Rome]] section of the Fiamma said: |
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<blockquote> |
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[Fiamma Tricolore] is a movement born to closely approximate the ideals of the Social Republic and its fighters. We would surely have fought on the side of this Republic, if only fate had allowed us to have been born during those years. |
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In 1944, Mussolini urged Hitler to focus on destroying Britain rather than the Soviet Union, as Mussolini claimed that it was Britain that had turned the conflict into a world war and that the British Empire must be destroyed in order for peace to come in Europe.<ref>{{Harvnb|Mack Smith|1983|p=316}}.</ref> Mussolini wanted to conduct a small offensive along the [[Gothic Line]] against the Allies with his new RSI Divisions; in December 1944, the Alpine Division "Monte Rosa" with some German battalions fought the [[Battle of Garfagnana]] with some success. As the situation became desperate, with Allied forces in control of most of Italy and from February 1945 resumed [[Gothic Line#Aftermath|pushing the Axis forces north of the Gothic Line]],<ref>Clark, Mark ''"Calculated Risk."'' Enigma Books, 2007. {{ISBN|978-1-929631-59-9}}. [https://books.google.com/books?id=N8o9SKt1ZjIC&dq=calculated+risk+clark+castello&pg=PA608 P.608]</ref> Mussolini declared that "he would fight to the last Italian" and spoke of turning Milan into the "[[Battle of Stalingrad|Stalingrad]] of Italy", where Fascism would make its last glorious fight.<ref name="multiref3">{{Harvnb|Mack Smith|1983|p=317}}.</ref> Despite such strong rhetoric, Mussolini considered evacuating Fascists into Switzerland, although this was opposed by Germany, which instead proposed that Mussolini and key Fascist officials be taken into exile in Germany.<ref name="multiref3" /> Further disintegration of support for his government occurred as fascist and German military officials secretly tried to negotiate a [[truce]] with Allied forces, without consulting either Mussolini or Hitler.<ref>{{Harvnb|Mack Smith|1983|pp=317–318}}.</ref> |
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And we would have surely fought to win, because for us the political synthesis originating from the thought of Benito Mussolini is for us the only political, economic, and spiritual system able to bring about the freedom and social justice that are today denied to Italians and all other world populations. [...][We] relaunch our battle for a better tomorrow, embodying the ideals of the Black Shirts of [[Alessandro Pavolini]]. |
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</blockquote>(Maurizio Boccacci<ref>http://www.fiammaroma.info</ref>) |
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== RSI military formations == |
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==See also== |
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=== Army === |
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{{Main|National Republican Army}} |
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| caption2 = RSI soldiers deployed to the [[Battle for Anzio]] |
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}} |
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Smaller units like the [[Black Brigades]] (''Brigate nere'') led by [[Alessandro Pavolini]] and the [[Decima Flottiglia MAS]] led by [[Junio Valerio Borghese]] (called "''principe nero''", the Black Prince) fought for the RSI during its entire existence. The Germans were satisfied if these units were able to participate in [[Italian resistance movement|anti-partisan activities]]. |
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In March 1944, the bulk of the [[29th Waffen Grenadier Division of the SS (1st Italian)|1st Italian volunteers Storm Brigade]] were sent to the [[Battle of Anzio|Anzio beachhead]], where they fought alongside their German allies, receiving favourable reports and taking heavy losses. In recognition of their performance, [[Heinrich Himmler]] declared the unit to be fully integrated into the [[Waffen SS]].<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.waffen-ss.no/29.SS-Italianishe.htm|title=WWW.WAFFEN-SS.NO "The 29th Waffen Divisionen der SS (Italianishe Nr. 1)"|website=www.waffen-ss.no}}</ref> |
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On 16 October 1943, the Rastenburg Protocol was signed with Nazi Germany and the RSI was allowed to raise division-sized military formations. This protocol allowed Marshal [[Rodolfo Graziani]] to raise four RSI divisions totalling 52,000 men. In July 1944, the first of these divisions completed training and was sent to the front. |
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Recruiting military forces was difficult for the RSI as most of the Italian Army had been interned by German forces in 1943, many military-aged Italians had been conscripted into forced labour in Germany and few wanted to participate in the war. The RSI became so desperate for soldiers that it granted convicts freedom if they would join the army and imposed a sentence of death on anyone who opposed being conscripted.<ref name="Smith 1983 308">{{Harvnb|Mack Smith|1983|p=308}}.</ref> Autonomous military forces in the RSI also fought against the Allies including the notorious [[Decima Flottiglia MAS]] of Prince [[Junio Valerio Borghese]]. Borghese held no allegiance to Mussolini and even suggested that he would take him prisoner if he could.<ref name="Smith 1983 308"/> |
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During the winter of 1944–1945, armed Italians were on both sides of the [[Gothic Line]]. On the Allied side were four Italian groups of volunteers from the old Italian army. These Italian volunteers were equipped and trained by the British. On the Axis side were four RSI divisions. Three of the RSI divisions, the [[2nd Italian "Littorio" Infantry Division|2nd Grenadier Division "Littorio"]], the [[3rd Marine Infantry Division "San Marco"|3rd Italian "San Marco" Marine Division]] and the [[4th Alpine Division "Monterosa"|4th Italian ''Monterosa'' Alpini Division]] were allocated to the [[Army Group Liguria|LXXXXVII "Liguria" Army]] under Graziani and were placed to guard the western flank of the Gothic Line facing France. The fourth RSI division, the [[1st Bersaglieri Division "Italia"|1st Italian "Italia" Infantry Division]], was attached to the German [[14th Army (Wehrmacht)|14th Army]] in a sector of the Apennine Mountains thought least likely to be attacked.<ref>Blaxland, p243</ref> |
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On 26 December 1944, several sizeable RSI military units, including elements of the 4th Italian "Monterosa Division" Alpine Division and the 3rd Italian "San Marco" Marine Division, participated in [[Battle of Garfagnana|Operation Winter Storm]]. This was a combined German and Italian offensive against the [[United States Army]]'s [[92nd Infantry Division (United States)|92nd Infantry Division]]. The battle was fought in the Apennines. While limited in scale, this was a successful offensive and the RSI units did their part. |
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The RSI military was under the command of General [[Alfredo Guzzoni]] while Field Marshal [[Rodolfo Graziani]], the former governor-general of [[Italian Libya]], was the RSI's Minister of Defense and commander-in-chief of the combined German-Italian [[Army Group Liguria]]. Mussolini, as ''Duce'' and head of state of RSI assumed supreme command over all military forces of the RSI. |
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In February 1945, the 92nd Infantry Division again came up against RSI units. This time it was [[Bersaglieri]] of the 1st Italian "Italia" Infantry Division. The Italians successfully halted the United States division's advance. |
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However, the situation continued to deteriorate for the Axis forces on Gothic Line.<ref>Ibidem. Clark, 2007.</ref> By mid-April 1945, the [[Spring 1945 offensive in Italy|final Allied offensive in Italy]] had led German defences to collapse. At the end of that month, the last remaining troops of RSI were bottled up along with two [[Wehrmacht]] divisions at [[Battle of Collecchio|Collecchio]] by [[Brazilian Expeditionary Force|1st Brazilian Division]] being forced to surrender after some days of fighting.<ref>Popa, Thomas A. ''"Po Valley 1945"'' WWII Campaigns, United States Army Center of Military History, 1996. {{ISBN|0-16-048134-1}}. CMH Pub 72-33. Page 23.</ref><ref>Giannasi, Andrea. ''"Il Brasile in guerra: la partecipazione della Força Expedicionaria Brasileira alla campagna d'Italia (1944–1945)"'' {{in lang|it}} Prospettiva Editrice, 2004. {{ISBN|8874182848}}. Pages 146–48.</ref><ref>Bohmler, Rudolf ''"Monte Cassino: a German View''" Cassell, 1964. ASIN B000MMKAYM. Chapter IX (final).</ref> |
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On 29 April, Graziani surrendered and was present at Caserta when a representative of German General [[Heinrich von Vietinghoff]]-Scheel signed the unconditional instrument of surrender for all Axis forces in Italy, but since the Allies had never recognised the RSI Graziani's signature was not required at Caserta.<ref>''The Decline and Fall of Nazi Germany and Imperial Japan'', Hans Dollinger, Library of Congress Catalogue Card Number 67-27047</ref> The surrender was to take effect on 2 May; Graziani ordered all RSI forces under his command to lay down their arms on 1 May. |
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=== Air Force === |
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{{Main|National Republican Air Force}} |
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The [[National Republican Air Force]] (''Aeronautica Nazionale Repubblicana'' or ANR) was the [[air force]] of Italian Social Republic and also the air unit of National Republican Army. It was organized into three [[Fighter aircraft|fighter]] [[Group (military unit)|groups]], one [[torpedo bomber]] group, one [[bomber]] group, and other [[Transport aircraft|transport]] and minor units. The ANR worked closely with the German Air Force (''[[Luftwaffe]]'') in Northern Italy. |
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In 1944, after the withdrawal of all German fighter units for home air defense over Germany, ANR fighter groups were left alone and heavily outnumbered to face the massive Allied air offensive over Northern Italy. During 1944 and 1945, the ANR shot down 262 Allied aircraft for the loss in action of 158 of its own.<ref>Italian Air Forces 1943–1945 – The Aviazone Nazionale Repubblicana by Richard J. Caruana, 1989 Modelaid International Publication</ref><ref>Aircraft of the Aces 34 Apostolo: Italian Aces of World War 2</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=http://surfcity.kund.dalnet.se/italy_drago.htm|title=Italian biplane fighter aces - Ugo Drago|website=surfcity.kund.dalnet.se}}</ref> |
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=== Navy === |
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{{Main|National Republican Navy (Italy)}} |
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Little of the Italian {{lang|it|[[Regia Marina]]}} (Royal Navy) joined the RSI. This was because the bulk of the ''Regia Marina'' was ordered to steam to [[Malta]] at the time of the September 1943 armistice, where it was out of the reach of the Germans and the RSI. The RSI's [[National Republican Navy (Italy)|National Republican Navy]] (''Marina Nazionale Repubblicana'' or MNR) only reached a twentieth the size of the [[Italian Co-belligerent Navy]] that fought on the Allied side after the September 1943 armistice.<ref>Page 100, "The Armed Forces of World War II", Andrew Mollo, {{ISBN|0-517-54478-4}}</ref> The National Republican Navy consisted of nine [[motor torpedo boat]]s (two large and seven small) and dozens of [[MTSM motor torpedo boat|MTSM]] small motor torpedo boats and [[MT explosive motorboat|MTM]] explosive [[motorboat]]s.<ref>Spencer C. Tucker, ''World War II at Sea: An Encyclopedia: An Encyclopedia'', p. 389</ref> The National Republican Navy also operated 15 [[CB-class midget submarine|''CB''-class]] [[midget submarine]]s (ten in the [[Adriatic Sea]] and five in the [[Black Sea]]) and one larger submarine, ''CM1''.<ref>Jack Greene, Alessandro Massignani, ''The Black Prince and the Sea Devils: The Story of Valerio Borghese and the elite units of the Decima MAS'', p. 42</ref> |
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Troops of the [[Decima Flottiglia MAS]] (the elite Italian [[frogman]] corps) fought primarily as a land unit of the RSI. |
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Some of the naval personnel at the [[BETASOM]] submarine base in [[Bordeaux]], [[France]], remained loyal to Mussolini. |
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=== Paramilitaries === |
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The fall of the Fascist regime in Italy and the disbandment of the MVSN or "[[Blackshirts]]" saw the establishment of the [[National Republican Guard (Italy)|National Republican Guard]] (''Guardia Nazionale Repubblicana'' or GNR) and the [[Republican Police Corps]] (''Corpo di Polizia Repubblicana'') and the emergence of the [[Black Brigades]] (''brigate nere''). The GNR consisted of former [[OVRA]], carabinieri, soldiers, [[Italian Africa Police]], and others still loyal to the Fascist cause, while the Republican Police Corps was the successor agency of the public security complex formed by the Directorate of Public Security and the Public Security Agents Corps. The Black Brigade was formed by the new fascist party members both young and old. Both units fought alongside [[Nazism|Nazi]] ''[[Schutzstaffel]]'' (SS) counterparts against the [[Italian resistance movement]] in an extensive anti-[[Partisan (military)|partisan]] war. The Black Brigades committed many atrocities in their fight against the Italian resistance movement and political enemies. On 15 August 1944, the GNR became part of the National Republican Army. |
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=== Labour battalions === |
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{{main|Ispettorato Militare del Lavoro}} |
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The ''Ispettorato Militare del Lavoro'' (''ILM''),<ref name=Fanti>{{citation |author1=Giorgio Fanti |author2=Lucrezia Fanti |title=Storie dimenticate: Antifascismo, guerra e lotta partigiana nella provincia di Viterbo |volume=2 |publisher=Sette Città |year=2021}}, [https://books.google.com/books?id=_3RQEAAAQBAJ&pg=RA1-PA51 p. 51f].</ref> informally called the '''Organizzazione Paladino'''<ref name=Schreiber>{{citation |author-link=Gerhard Schreiber |author=Gerhard Schreiber |chapter=The End of the North African Campaign and the War in Italy, 1943 to 1945 |pages=1100–1163 |title=[[Germany and the Second World War]] |volume=VIII, The Eastern Front 1943–1944: The War in the East and on the Neighbouring Fronts |translator1=Barry Smerin |translator2=Barbara Wilson |publisher=Clarendon Press |year=2017 |chapter-url=https://archive.org/details/germany-and-the-second-world-war-set-of-9-volumes-in-11-parts-edited-by-the-mili/8%20Germany%20and%20the%20Second%20World%20War.%20Volume%20VIII%2C%20-The%20Eastern%20Front%201943-1944%20-%20The%20war%20in%20the%20East%20and%20on%20the%20neighbouring%20fronts%20by%20Karl-Heinz%20Frieser%2C%20Klaus%20Schmider%20%5Bde%5D%2C%20Klaus%20Sch%C3%B6nhe/page/1100}}.</ref> or '''Azione Graziani''',<ref name=Lavoroforzato>{{citation |author=Amedeo Osti Guerrazzi |title=The Organisation of Forced Labour in Italy (1943–1945) |website=Places Associated with Forced Labour and Deportation from Italy during the Second World War |url=https://lavoroforzato.topografiaperlastoria.org/temi.html?id=6&l=en |publisher=Topografia per la Storia |year=2016}}.</ref> was an organization of the [[Italian Social Republic]] during [[World War II]] composed of volunteer labourers "to collaborate with the German authorities in repairing roads and railways, and in general carry out other work of either a civil or military nature."<ref name=Lavoroforzato/> The organization was proposed by General [[Francesco Paladino]]. With [[Nazi Germany|German]] agreement, Marshal [[Rodolfo Graziani]] appointed Paladino its first director on 6 October 1943. Its headquarters was initially in Rome and it was under the authority of the Ministry of Defence.<ref name=Lavoroforzato/> |
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=== Women auxiliary service === |
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Women volunteers served in uniform as noncombatants in paramilitary units and police formations (''Servizio Ausiliario Femminile''). The commander was the [[brigadier general]] [[Piera Gatteschi Fondelli]].<ref>Petra Terhoeven, "Frauen im Widerstand: Das Beispiel der Italienischen Resistenza", ''Zeitschrift für Geschichtswissenschaft,'' 2004. 52#7 pp 608–625.</ref><ref>M. Fraddosio, "Woman and War: Aspects Of Womens Militancy During Fascism, From Civil Mobilization to the Origins Of The Servizio-Ausiliario-Femminile in the Italian Social-Republic." ''Storia Contemporanea'' 20#6 (1989): 1105–1181. |
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</ref> |
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== Government == |
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{{main|Government of the Italian Social Republic}} |
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[[File:Eagle with fasces.svg|thumb|230px|Eagle with fasces, symbol of the Italian Social Republic]] |
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The Government of the Italian Social Republic held office from 23 September 1943 until 25 April 1945, a total of {{ayd|1943|07|25|1945|04|25}}.<ref>{{Cite wikisource | title = Verbali del Consiglio dei Ministri della Repubblica Sociale Italiana settembre 1943 - aprile 1945/23 settembre 1943 |wslanguage=it |trans-title= Minutes of the Council of Ministers of the Italian Social Republic September 1943 - April 1945/23 September 1943 |year=1943}}</ref> Its head was Benito Mussolini.<ref>''Verbali del Consiglio dei Ministri della Repubblica Sociale Italiana'', September 1943 – April 1945</ref> |
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The Government wrote a constitution for the Italian Social Republic,<ref>{{Cite web |title=Costituzione della Repubblica Sociale Italiana |url=http://www.dircost.unito.it/cs/docs/repubblica.htm |website=[[University of Turin]]}}</ref> but it was never discussed or approved. On 13 October 1943, the Government announced that a Constituent Assembly would be called to write a new constitution, but that was cancelled by Mussolini on 14 November 1943 and delayed until after the end of the war. The disintegration of the Italian Social Republic at the end of the war meant that no new constitution was written. |
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The RSI was led by the [[Republican Fascist Party]], established on 18 September 1943 out of the disbanded [[National Fascist Party]].<ref>{{Cite book |last=D'Angeli |first=Roberto |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=MbAVvgAACAAJ |title=Storia del Partito fascista repubblicano |date=2016 |publisher=Castelvecchi |isbn=978-88-6944-733-4 |language=it}}</ref> The party's official newspaper was ''Il Lavoro Fascista'', formerly the publication of Fascist trade unions; Mussolini was largely indifferent toward the new paper and generally wrote on the ''[[Corriere della Sera]]'' instead. The ''Duce'' explicitly refused to revive his former newspaper ''[[Il Popolo d'Italia]]'', not willing to let it become a mouthpiece of the German occupation.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Vercesi |first=Pier Luigi |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=yPvbCgAAQBAJ |title=Ne ammazza più la penna: Storie d'Italia vissute nelle redazioni dei giornali |date=2014-10-30 |publisher=Sellerio Editore srl |isbn=978-88-389-3300-4 |language=it}}</ref> |
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On 14 February 1945, Mussolini authorized the formation of a second political party called the National Republican Socialist Rally (RNRS), later rebranded as the Italian Socialist Republican Party) under the leadership of Edmondo Cione. The party supported a leftist view of fascism strongly focused on the socialization of the economy, and included several former socialists, such as Pulvio Zocchi, Carlo Silvestri, and Walter Mocchi. It also published a newspaper called ''L'Italia del Popolo''. It was politically insignificant and its membership is unknown.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Leoni |first=Francesco |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Im2XqQWy1QYC&dq=Italia%2C+Repubblica%2C+Socializzazione&pg=PA476 |title=Storia dei partiti politici italiani |publisher=Guida Editori |year=2001 |isbn=978-88-7188-495-0 |pages=474–477 |language=it}}</ref> Mussolini himself privately told German ambassador [[Rudolf Rahn]] that he only authorised the formation of the RNRS in an attempt to sway some working-class voters away from the [[National Liberation Committee]] and that it was never meant to create any real political pluralism.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Spinosa |first=Antonio |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=_dgaSwAACAAJ |title=Mussolini. Il fascino di un dittatore |date=1997 |publisher=Mondadori |isbn=978-88-04-43290-6 |page=293 |language=it}}</ref> |
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== Legacy == |
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=== In post-war Italian politics === |
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While the RSI supported Nazi Germany, it allowed the Italian Fascist movement to build a completely [[totalitarian state]]. During the preceding twenty years of the Fascist association with the [[House of Savoy|Savoy monarchy]] of the Kingdom of Italy, some of the actions of the Fascists had been restricted by the monarchy. However, the formation of the RSI allowed Mussolini to be the official head of an Italian state and it also allowed the Fascists to return to their earlier [[Republicanism|republican]] stances. In one way or another, most of the prominent leaders of the post-war Italian far-right (parliamentary and extraparliamentary) were associated with the experience of the RSI. Among them were [[Filippo Anfuso]], [[Pino Romualdi]], [[Rodolfo Graziani]], [[Junio Valerio Borghese]], [[Licio Gelli]], and [[Giorgio Almirante]]. Most of the 8,000 [[Italian Jews]] who died in the [[The Holocaust in Italy|Holocaust in Italy]] were killed during the 20 months of the Salò regime.<ref>Laura Kolbe. 2019. Basani the Memorious. ''New York Review of Books''. 15 August.</ref> |
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=== Stamps === |
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A number of postage stamps were issued by the Republic of Salò. Initially, existing Italian issues were [[overprint]]ed with a [[fasces]], or the initials "G.N.R." for the Republican National Guard. Later the government designed and printed three series, all of which are very common.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.giorgiobifani.net/index_eng.htm|title=Giorgio Bifani...|website=www.giorgiobifani.net}}</ref> |
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=== Currency === |
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Banknotes in 50, 100, 500, and 1000 [[Lira|lire]] denomination were printed by the Republic. As issuer, the country was not mentioned on them, but rather only the [[Bank of Italy]].<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.papermoneymarket.com/English/Lists/Italian-Social-Republic.html|title=Pettinaro Bros. World Paper Money Market: Italian Social Republic|website=www.papermoneymarket.com}}</ref> |
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=== In the arts === |
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[[Pier Paolo Pasolini]]'s 1975 film ''[[Salò, or the 120 Days of Sodom]]'' is an adaptation of [[Marquis de Sade]]'s ''[[The 120 Days of Sodom]]'', set in the Republic of Salò instead of 18th-century France. It uses the source material as an [[allegory]]; the atrocities in the movie did not actually happen, while most of the choices of milieus, clothing, uniforms, weapons and other details are historically correct. [[Roberto Benigni]]'s 1997 ''[[Life is Beautiful]]'' is also set in the Republic of Salò. |
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[[Bernardo Bertolucci]]'s 1976 ''[[1900 (film)|Novecento]]'' set his story in [[Emilia (region of Italy)|Emilia]], being at the time a province of the Italian Social Republic, even though this is never mentioned in the movie. ''[[Wild Blood (2008 film)|Wild Blood]]'' tells the true story of the Fascist film stars [[Luisa Ferida]] and [[Osvaldo Valenti]] and their support for the Republic. |
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[[Futurist]] writer and poet [[Filippo Tommaso Marinetti]], a Mussolini loyalist who had helped shape Fascist philosophy, remained in the RSI as a propagandist until his death from a heart attack at [[Bellagio, Lombardy|Bellagio]] in December 1944.<ref>Ialongo, Ernest – ''Filippo Tommaso Marinetti: The Artist and His Politics''; Fairleigh Dickinson University Press, 2015; {{ISBN|1611477565}} {{ISBN|978-1611477566}}</ref> |
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== See also == |
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{{Portal|Politics|Italy}} |
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* [[29th Waffen Grenadier Division of the SS (1st Italian)]] |
* [[29th Waffen Grenadier Division of the SS (1st Italian)]] |
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* [[Military history of Italy during World War II]] |
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* [[Operational Zone Adriatic Coast]] |
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* [[Prealpine Operations Zone]] |
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* [[Allied invasion of Italy]] - 1943 |
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* [[Italian Campaign (World War II)]] - 1943/45 |
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* [[Operation Wintergewitter (Winter Storm) - Italian Front]] - 1944 |
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* [[Gothic Line]] - 1944/45 |
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* [[Monterosa Division|"Monte Rosa" Division]] |
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* [[Blackshirts]] (MVSN) |
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* [[Black Brigades]] |
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* [[Decima Flottiglia MAS]] |
* [[Decima Flottiglia MAS]] |
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* [[ |
* [[Italian Civil War]] |
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* [[Italian |
* [[Italian fascism]] |
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* [[ |
* [[Ministry of Occupied Italy]] |
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* [[National Republican Guard (Italy)]] |
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* [[Regia Aeronautica]] |
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* [[Republican Police Corps]] |
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* [[Aeronautica Nazionale Repubblicana]] |
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* [[Ezra Pound]] |
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== |
== References == |
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'''Notes''' |
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{{Reflist}} |
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{{reflist|group=lower-alpha}} |
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'''Further reading''' |
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*[[Pier Paolo Pasolini]]'s [[1976 in film|1976]] film ''[[Salò o le 120 giornate di Sodoma]]'' was set in the Republic of Salò, and partly meant as an [[allegory]] of it. |
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* Bosworth, R.J.B. ''Mussolini's Italy: Life Under the Fascist Dictatorship, 1915–1945'' (2007) |
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* Gat, Moshe. "The Soviet Factor in British Policy towards Italy, 1943–1945", ''Historian'' (1988) 50#4 pp 535–557 |
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* Knox, MacGregor. ''Common Destiny: Dictatorship, Foreign Policy, and War in Fascist Italy and Nazi Germany'' (2000) |
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* Mack Smith, Denis. ''Modern Italy: A Political History'' (1997) [https://www.questia.com/read/7696309?title=Italy%3a%20A%20Modern%20History online] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110605071233/http://www.questia.com/read/7696309?title=Italy%3A%20A%20Modern%20History |date=5 June 2011 }} |
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* Maximiano, Cesar. with Bonalume, Ricardo N. & Bujeiro, Ramiro. [https://web.archive.org/web/20160105203029/https://books.google.com/books?id=L6HVtOSmWAEC&printsec=frontcover&dq=Brazilian+Expeditionary+Force+WWII&hl=pt-BR&sa=X&ei=kgVwUslnwaaRB7_hgaAB&ved=0CDEQ6AEwAA#v=onepage&q=Brazilian%20Expeditionary%20Force%20WWII&f=false ''Brazilian Expeditionary Force in World War II'']. [[Osprey Publishing]] Ltd., 2011. {{ISBN|9781849084833}} (Print version). |
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* Morgan, Philip. ''The Fall of Mussolini: Italy, the Italians, and the Second World War'' (2007) |
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* Moseley, Ray. ''Mussolini: The Last 600 Days of Il Duce'' (2004) |
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* {{cite book |author=Roberto Chiarini |author-link=:it: Roberto Chiarini |title=Mussolini ultimo atto. I luoghi della Repubblica di Salò |location=Roccafranca |publisher=La compagnia della stampa |year=2004 |isbn=88-8486-105-5 |language=it, de |oclc=804881568}} |
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==External links== |
== External links == |
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{{Commons category|Italian Social Republic}} |
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* [http://www.axishistory.com/index.php?id=37 Axis History Factbook - Italy] |
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* [https://web.archive.org/web/20170227174114/http://www.yadvashem.org/holocaust/video-lectures/fascist-italy Fascist Italy and the Jews: Myth versus Reality] an online lecture by Dr. Iael Nidam-Orvieto of [[Yad Vashem]] |
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* [http://www.comandosupremo.com/ Comando Supremo] |
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* {{YouTube|id=lMzX1S4E_NY|title=Italian newsreel: The last speech of Mussolini in Milan on 16 December 1944}} |
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* [https://web.archive.org/web/20060506043053/http://axishistory.com/index.php?id=37 Axis History Factbook – Italy] |
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* [https://comandosupremo.com/ Comando Supremo] |
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* [http://flagspot.net/flags/it_index.html Historical flags of Italy] |
* [http://flagspot.net/flags/it_index.html Historical flags of Italy] |
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* [http://flagspot.net/flags/it-isr.html |
* [http://flagspot.net/flags/it-isr.html War flag of Italian Social Republic] |
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==References== |
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<references /> |
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[[Category:1943 establishments]] |
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[[Category:1945 disestablishments]] |
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[[Category:Former countries on the Italian Peninsula]] |
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[[Category:Italian fascism|Social Republic]] |
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[[Category:Military history of Italy during World War II]] |
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[[Category:Short-lived states of World War II]] |
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[[Category:Short-lived states]] |
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[[Category:Italian Social Republic| ]] |
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[[Category:1943 establishments in Italy]] |
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[[Category:1944 in Italy|*]] |
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[[bg:Република Сало]] |
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[[Category:Axis powers]] |
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[[es:República Social Italiana]] |
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[[Category:Client states of Nazi Germany]] |
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[[eo:Sociala Respubliko Itala]] |
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[[Category:Former republics]] |
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[[it:Repubblica Sociale Italiana]] |
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[[Category:Military history of Italy during World War II]] |
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[[he:הרפובליקה הסוציאלית האיטלקית]] |
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[[Category:States and territories established in 1943]] |
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[[la:Res Publica Socialis Italica]] |
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[[Category:States and territories disestablished in 1945]] |
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[[Category:Totalitarian states]] |
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[[ja:イタリア社会共和国]] |
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Latest revision as of 12:23, 20 December 2024
Italian Social Republic Repubblica Sociale Italiana (Italian) | |||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1943–1945 | |||||||||
Motto: Per l'onore d'Italia "For the honour of Italy" | |||||||||
Anthem: Giovinezza (de facto) "Youth" | |||||||||
Status | Puppet state of Germany[2][3] Rump state of Italy[4][5] | ||||||||
Capital | |||||||||
Largest city | Rome | ||||||||
Common languages | |||||||||
Religion | Catholicism | ||||||||
Government | Unitary republic under a fascist one-party totalitarian dictatorship | ||||||||
Duce | |||||||||
• 1943–1945 | Benito Mussolini | ||||||||
Plenipotentiary | |||||||||
• 1943–1945 | Rudolf Rahn | ||||||||
Historical era | |||||||||
8–19 September 1943 | |||||||||
23 September 1943 | |||||||||
25 April 1945 | |||||||||
28 April 1945 | |||||||||
2 May 1945 | |||||||||
Currency | Italian lira | ||||||||
| |||||||||
Today part of | Italy |
The Italian Social Republic (Italian: Repubblica Sociale Italiana, Italian: [reˈpubblika soˈtʃaːle itaˈljaːna]; RSI; German: Italienische Sozialrepublik), known prior to December 1943 as the National Republican State of Italy (Italian: Stato Nazionale Repubblicano d'Italia; SNRI), but more popularly known as the Republic of Salò (Italian: Repubblica di Salò, Italian: [reˈpubblika di saˈlɔ]), was a German puppet state and fascist rump state with limited diplomatic recognition that was created during the latter part of World War II. It existed from the beginning of the German occupation of Italy in September 1943 until the surrender of Axis troops in Italy in May 1945. The German occupation triggered widespread national resistance against it and the Italian Social Republic, leading to the Italian Civil War.
The Italian Social Republic was the second and last incarnation of the Italian Fascist state, led by the Italian dictator Benito Mussolini and his reformed anti-monarchist Republican Fascist Party. The newly founded state declared Rome its capital but the de facto capital was Salò (hence the colloquial name of the state), a small town on Lake Garda, near Brescia, where Mussolini and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs were headquartered. The Italian Social Republic nominally exercised sovereignty in Northern and Central Italy, but was largely dependent on German troops to maintain control.
In July 1943, after the Allies had pushed Italy out of North Africa and subsequently invaded Sicily, the Grand Council of Fascism—with the support of King Victor Emmanuel III—overthrew and arrested Mussolini. The new government began secret peace negotiations with the Allied powers but when the Armistice of Cassibile was announced on 8 September, Nazi Germany was prepared and quickly intervened. German troops seized control of the northern half of Italy, freed Mussolini, and brought him to the German-occupied area to establish a satellite regime. The Italian Social Republic was proclaimed on 23 September 1943.[3][6] Although the RSI claimed sovereignty over all of Italy and its colonies, its de facto jurisdiction only extended to a vastly reduced portion of the country.[7] The RSI received diplomatic recognition only from the Axis powers and their satellite states. Finland and Vichy France, although in the German orbit, did not recognize it. Unofficial relations were maintained with Argentina, Portugal, Spain, and, through commercial agent, Switzerland. Vatican City did not recognize the RSI.
Around 25 April 1945, 19 months after its founding, the RSI all but collapsed. In Italy, the day is known as Liberation Day (festa della liberazione). On that day, a general partisan uprising, alongside the efforts of Allied forces during their final offensive in Italy, managed to oust the Germans and the remaining RSI forces from Italy almost entirely. Mussolini was captured and killed by Italian partisans on 28 April as he and an entourage attempted to flee. The RSI Minister of Defense, Rodolfo Graziani, surrendered what was left of the Italian Social Republic on 1 May, one day after the German forces in Italy capitulated.
Context of its creation
[edit]On 24 July 1943, after the Allied landings in Sicily, on a motion by Dino Grandi, the Grand Council of Fascism voted a motion of no confidence in Prime Minister Benito Mussolini. Mussolini's authority had been undermined by a series of military defeats from the start of Italy's entry into the war during June 1940, including the bombing of Rome, the loss of the African colonies in the East African and North African campaigns, the defeat of the Italian Army in Russia and the Allied invasion of Sicily.
The next day, King Victor Emmanuel III dismissed Mussolini from office, ordered him arrested, and appointed Marshal Pietro Badoglio as new prime minister. By this time, the monarchy, a number of Fascist government members, and the general Italian population had grown tired of the futile war effort which had driven Italy into subordination to and subjugation by Nazi Germany. The failed war effort left Mussolini humiliated at home and abroad as a "sawdust Caesar".[8] The new government began secret negotiations with the Allied powers and made preparations for the capitulation of Italy. These surrender talks implied a commitment from Badoglio to leave the Axis alliance.
While the Germans formally recognised the new status quo in Italian politics, they intervened by sending some of the best units of the Wehrmacht to Italy. This was done both to resist new Allied advances and to face the predictably imminent defection of Italy. While Badoglio continued to swear loyalty to Germany and the Axis powers, Italian government emissaries prepared to sign an armistice at Cassibile in Allied-occupied Sicily, which was finalized on 3 September.
On 8 September, Badoglio announced Italy's armistice with the Allies (although termed an "armistice", its terms made it akin to an unconditional surrender). German Führer Adolf Hitler and his staff, long aware of the negotiations, acted immediately by ordering German troops to seize control of Northern and Central Italy. The Germans quickly occupied Italy, disarmed the Italian troops and took over all of the Italian Army's materials and equipment, meeting only limited resistance. The Germans also dissolved the Italian occupation zone in southeastern France and forced Italian troops stationed there to leave. The Italian armed forces were not given clear orders to resist the Germans after the armistice and so resistance to the German takeover was scattered and of little effect. King Victor Emmanuel made no effort to rally resistance to the Germans, instead fleeing with his retinue to the safety of the Allied lines. On 10 September 1943, after two days of battle between the Wehrmacht and the remnants of the Royal Italian Army, Rome fell to the Germans.
The new Italian government had moved Mussolini from place to place while he was in captivity in an attempt to foil any attempts at rescue. Despite this, the Germans eventually pinpointed Mussolini at the Hotel Campo Imperatore at Gran Sasso. On 12 September, Mussolini was freed by the Germans in Operation Eiche (directed by SS-Obersturmbannführer Otto Skorzeny) in the mountains of Abruzzo.[9] After being freed, Mussolini was flown to Bavaria. Gathering what support he still had among the Italian population, his liberation made it possible for a new German-dependent Fascist Italian state to be created.
History of Italy |
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Foreign relations
[edit]Establishment by Nazi Germany
[edit]Three days following his rescue in the Gran Sasso raid, Mussolini was taken to Germany for a meeting with Hitler in Rastenburg at his headquarters in East Prussia. While Mussolini was in poor health and wanted to retire, Hitler wanted him to return to Italy and start a new Fascist state under the protection of the Wehrmacht. Mussolini balked; he was tired of the responsibilities of the war and unwilling to retake power. Hitler told him the alternative would be a German military administration that would treat Italy no differently from other occupied countries. Hitler also threatened to destroy Milan, Genoa and Turin unless Mussolini agreed to set up a revived Fascist government. Reluctantly, Mussolini agreed to Hitler's demands.[10]
Mussolini returned to Italy and settled in Milan, from where on 15 September he announced the creation of the Republican Fascist Party and, three days later, the resumption of the war alongside Germany and Japan. The Duce immediately announced the formation of a new republican cabinet, although they actually came from a list chosen and appointed by Hitler himself. The Italian Social Republic was proclaimed on 23 September, with Mussolini as both chief of state and prime minister.[3][6] The RSI claimed Rome as its capital, but the de facto capital became the small town of Salò on Lake Garda, midway between Milan and Venice, where Mussolini resided along with the foreign office of the RSI. While Rome itself was still under Axis control at the time, given the city's proximity to Allied lines and the threat of civil unrest, neither the Germans nor Mussolini himself wanted him to return to Rome.[11]
On 18 September, Mussolini made his first public address to the Italian people since his rescue, in which he commended the loyalty of Hitler as an ally while condemning Victor Emmanuel for betraying Italian Fascism.[10] He declared: "It is not the regime that has betrayed the monarchy, it is the monarchy that has betrayed the regime". He also formally repudiated his previous support of the monarchy, saying: "When a monarchy fails in its duties, it loses every reason for being…The state we want to establish will be national and social in the highest sense of the word; that is, it will be Fascist, thus returning to our origins".[10]
From the start, the Italian Social Republic was little more than a puppet state dependent entirely upon Germany and a rump state for the Fascists who are still loyal to Mussolini.[11][12] Mussolini himself knew this; even as he stated in public that he was in full control of the RSI, he was well aware that he was little more than the Gauleiter of Lombardy.[6] The SS kept Mussolini under what amounted to house arrest; it monitored his communications and controlled his travel. Mussolini later said that he would have preferred being sent to a concentration camp to the manner that the SS treated him. Real power rested with German General Plenipotentiary Rudolf Rahn and SS-Obergruppenführer Karl Wolff, the commander of the German occupying forces in Italy.[13]
The RSI had no constitution or organized economy, and its financing was dependent entirely on funding from Berlin.[14] German forces themselves had little respect for Mussolini's failed fascism, and considered the regime merely as a tool for maintaining order, such as repressing the Italian partisans.[15] This work was also carried out by the infamous Pietro Koch and the Banda Koch on Germany's behalf.[16]
The RSI took revenge against the 19 members who had voted against Mussolini on the Grand Council with the Verona trial (processo di Verona) which handed down a death sentence to all of the accused but one. Only six of the 19 were in RSI custody (Giovanni Marinelli, Carlo Pareschi, Luciano Gottardi, Tullio Cianetti, Emilio De Bono and Mussolini's own son-in-law Galeazzo Ciano). With the exception of Tullio Cianetti, who received a life sentence, they were all executed on 11 January 1944 in the fort of San Procolo in Verona.
Territorial losses
[edit]The changing political and military situation re-opened questions regarding the status of Italian territories, particularly those with German-speaking majorities that were formerly under Austrian rule. Previously, Hitler had vigorously suppressed any campaigning for the return of lands such as South Tyrol in order to maintain good relations with his Italian ally. In the aftermath of Italy's abandonment of the Axis on 8 September 1943, Germany seized and de facto incorporated some Italian territories.[7] However, Hitler refused to officially annex South Tyrol in spite of urging by local German officials and instead supported having the RSI hold official sovereignty over these territories and forbade all measures that would give the impression of official annexation of South Tyrol.[17] However, in practice the territory of South Tyrol within the boundaries defined by Germany as Operationszone Alpenvorland that included Trento, Bolzano and Belluno were de facto incorporated into Germany's Reichsgau Tirol-Vorarlberg and administered by its Gauleiter Franz Hofer.[7][18] The region identified by Germany as Operationszone Adriatisches Küstenland that included Udine, Gorizia, Trieste, Pola and Fiume were de facto incorporated into Reichsgau Kärnten and administered by its Gauleiter Friedrich Rainer.[19]
On 10 September 1943, the Independent State of Croatia (NDH) declared that the Treaties of Rome of 18 May 1941 with the Kingdom of Italy were null and void and annexed the portion of Dalmatia that had been ceded to Italy as part of those treaties.[20] The NDH attempted to annex Zara, which had been a recognized territory of Italy since 1919, but Germany prevented the NDH from doing this.[20] Because of these actions, the RSI held the NDH in contempt and refused to have diplomatic relations with the NDH or to recognize its territorial claims.[20]
After the Italian capitulation, the Italian Islands of the Aegean were occupied by the Germans (see Dodecanese campaign). During the German occupation, the islands remained under the nominal sovereignty of the RSI but were de facto subject to the German military command.[21]
The Italian concession of Tientsin in China was ceded by the RSI to the Japanese puppet Reorganized National Government of the Republic of China.
Diplomatic recognition
[edit]The RSI was recognized as the legitimate government of Italy by Germany, Imperial Japan, Bulgaria, Romania, Hungary and Thailand; it was also recognised by puppet and client States of the Axis, such as the Independent State of Croatia, the Slovak Republic, the Reorganised National Government of the Republic of China and the Empire of Manchuria.[11]
Finland and Vichy France, despite being in the Axis orbit, did not recognise the RSI. Even otherwise sympathetic States such as Spain or Portugal refused to establish formal diplomatic relations with the RSI. The Holy See did not recognise the RSI.[22][23]
Economy and war effort
[edit]During the existence of the Italian Social Republic, Mussolini, whose former government had banned trade unions and strikes, began to make increasingly populist appeals to the working class. He claimed to regret many of the decisions made earlier in supporting the interests of big business and promised a new beginning if the Italian people would be willing to grant him a second chance. Mussolini claimed that he had never totally abandoned his left-wing influences, insisting that he had attempted to nationalize property in 1939–1940 but had been forced to delay such action for tactical reasons related to the war.[24] With the removal of the monarchy, Mussolini claimed the full ideology of Fascism could be pursued; and to gain popular support he reversed over twenty years of Fascist policy of backing private property and relative economic independence by ordering the nationalization of all companies with over 100 employees.[25] Mussolini even reached out to ex-communist Nicola Bombacci to help him in spreading the image that Fascism was a progressive movement.[25] The economic policy of the RSI was given the name "Socialization", and Mussolini had even considered the idea of calling his new republic the "Italian 'Socialist' Republic".[26] In practice, little resulted from the declared socialization of the economy. Unions did not exert real control of their management and took no part in state planning (as they had the power to do on paper after the socialization). The Italian industrial sector was excluded from the new reforms by the Germans and Italian industrialists were opposed to the changes in any case. The Italian labour force (large parts of which had remained leftist despite fascist rule) regarded socialization as a sham and responded with a massive strike on 1 March 1944.[11]
In Greece, while the government of the Kingdom of Italy surrendered and many Italian soldiers in the Aegean were tired of the war and had become opposed to Mussolini, Italian Fascist loyalists remained allied to Germany in the Greek campaign; German forces in Greece convinced 10,000 Italians in the Aegean to continue to support their war effort.[27]
In 1944, Mussolini urged Hitler to focus on destroying Britain rather than the Soviet Union, as Mussolini claimed that it was Britain that had turned the conflict into a world war and that the British Empire must be destroyed in order for peace to come in Europe.[28] Mussolini wanted to conduct a small offensive along the Gothic Line against the Allies with his new RSI Divisions; in December 1944, the Alpine Division "Monte Rosa" with some German battalions fought the Battle of Garfagnana with some success. As the situation became desperate, with Allied forces in control of most of Italy and from February 1945 resumed pushing the Axis forces north of the Gothic Line,[29] Mussolini declared that "he would fight to the last Italian" and spoke of turning Milan into the "Stalingrad of Italy", where Fascism would make its last glorious fight.[30] Despite such strong rhetoric, Mussolini considered evacuating Fascists into Switzerland, although this was opposed by Germany, which instead proposed that Mussolini and key Fascist officials be taken into exile in Germany.[30] Further disintegration of support for his government occurred as fascist and German military officials secretly tried to negotiate a truce with Allied forces, without consulting either Mussolini or Hitler.[31]
RSI military formations
[edit]Army
[edit]Smaller units like the Black Brigades (Brigate nere) led by Alessandro Pavolini and the Decima Flottiglia MAS led by Junio Valerio Borghese (called "principe nero", the Black Prince) fought for the RSI during its entire existence. The Germans were satisfied if these units were able to participate in anti-partisan activities.
In March 1944, the bulk of the 1st Italian volunteers Storm Brigade were sent to the Anzio beachhead, where they fought alongside their German allies, receiving favourable reports and taking heavy losses. In recognition of their performance, Heinrich Himmler declared the unit to be fully integrated into the Waffen SS.[32]
On 16 October 1943, the Rastenburg Protocol was signed with Nazi Germany and the RSI was allowed to raise division-sized military formations. This protocol allowed Marshal Rodolfo Graziani to raise four RSI divisions totalling 52,000 men. In July 1944, the first of these divisions completed training and was sent to the front.
Recruiting military forces was difficult for the RSI as most of the Italian Army had been interned by German forces in 1943, many military-aged Italians had been conscripted into forced labour in Germany and few wanted to participate in the war. The RSI became so desperate for soldiers that it granted convicts freedom if they would join the army and imposed a sentence of death on anyone who opposed being conscripted.[33] Autonomous military forces in the RSI also fought against the Allies including the notorious Decima Flottiglia MAS of Prince Junio Valerio Borghese. Borghese held no allegiance to Mussolini and even suggested that he would take him prisoner if he could.[33]
During the winter of 1944–1945, armed Italians were on both sides of the Gothic Line. On the Allied side were four Italian groups of volunteers from the old Italian army. These Italian volunteers were equipped and trained by the British. On the Axis side were four RSI divisions. Three of the RSI divisions, the 2nd Grenadier Division "Littorio", the 3rd Italian "San Marco" Marine Division and the 4th Italian Monterosa Alpini Division were allocated to the LXXXXVII "Liguria" Army under Graziani and were placed to guard the western flank of the Gothic Line facing France. The fourth RSI division, the 1st Italian "Italia" Infantry Division, was attached to the German 14th Army in a sector of the Apennine Mountains thought least likely to be attacked.[34]
On 26 December 1944, several sizeable RSI military units, including elements of the 4th Italian "Monterosa Division" Alpine Division and the 3rd Italian "San Marco" Marine Division, participated in Operation Winter Storm. This was a combined German and Italian offensive against the United States Army's 92nd Infantry Division. The battle was fought in the Apennines. While limited in scale, this was a successful offensive and the RSI units did their part.
The RSI military was under the command of General Alfredo Guzzoni while Field Marshal Rodolfo Graziani, the former governor-general of Italian Libya, was the RSI's Minister of Defense and commander-in-chief of the combined German-Italian Army Group Liguria. Mussolini, as Duce and head of state of RSI assumed supreme command over all military forces of the RSI.
In February 1945, the 92nd Infantry Division again came up against RSI units. This time it was Bersaglieri of the 1st Italian "Italia" Infantry Division. The Italians successfully halted the United States division's advance.
However, the situation continued to deteriorate for the Axis forces on Gothic Line.[35] By mid-April 1945, the final Allied offensive in Italy had led German defences to collapse. At the end of that month, the last remaining troops of RSI were bottled up along with two Wehrmacht divisions at Collecchio by 1st Brazilian Division being forced to surrender after some days of fighting.[36][37][38]
On 29 April, Graziani surrendered and was present at Caserta when a representative of German General Heinrich von Vietinghoff-Scheel signed the unconditional instrument of surrender for all Axis forces in Italy, but since the Allies had never recognised the RSI Graziani's signature was not required at Caserta.[39] The surrender was to take effect on 2 May; Graziani ordered all RSI forces under his command to lay down their arms on 1 May.
Air Force
[edit]The National Republican Air Force (Aeronautica Nazionale Repubblicana or ANR) was the air force of Italian Social Republic and also the air unit of National Republican Army. It was organized into three fighter groups, one torpedo bomber group, one bomber group, and other transport and minor units. The ANR worked closely with the German Air Force (Luftwaffe) in Northern Italy.
In 1944, after the withdrawal of all German fighter units for home air defense over Germany, ANR fighter groups were left alone and heavily outnumbered to face the massive Allied air offensive over Northern Italy. During 1944 and 1945, the ANR shot down 262 Allied aircraft for the loss in action of 158 of its own.[40][41][42]
Navy
[edit]Little of the Italian Regia Marina (Royal Navy) joined the RSI. This was because the bulk of the Regia Marina was ordered to steam to Malta at the time of the September 1943 armistice, where it was out of the reach of the Germans and the RSI. The RSI's National Republican Navy (Marina Nazionale Repubblicana or MNR) only reached a twentieth the size of the Italian Co-belligerent Navy that fought on the Allied side after the September 1943 armistice.[43] The National Republican Navy consisted of nine motor torpedo boats (two large and seven small) and dozens of MTSM small motor torpedo boats and MTM explosive motorboats.[44] The National Republican Navy also operated 15 CB-class midget submarines (ten in the Adriatic Sea and five in the Black Sea) and one larger submarine, CM1.[45]
Troops of the Decima Flottiglia MAS (the elite Italian frogman corps) fought primarily as a land unit of the RSI.
Some of the naval personnel at the BETASOM submarine base in Bordeaux, France, remained loyal to Mussolini.
Paramilitaries
[edit]The fall of the Fascist regime in Italy and the disbandment of the MVSN or "Blackshirts" saw the establishment of the National Republican Guard (Guardia Nazionale Repubblicana or GNR) and the Republican Police Corps (Corpo di Polizia Repubblicana) and the emergence of the Black Brigades (brigate nere). The GNR consisted of former OVRA, carabinieri, soldiers, Italian Africa Police, and others still loyal to the Fascist cause, while the Republican Police Corps was the successor agency of the public security complex formed by the Directorate of Public Security and the Public Security Agents Corps. The Black Brigade was formed by the new fascist party members both young and old. Both units fought alongside Nazi Schutzstaffel (SS) counterparts against the Italian resistance movement in an extensive anti-partisan war. The Black Brigades committed many atrocities in their fight against the Italian resistance movement and political enemies. On 15 August 1944, the GNR became part of the National Republican Army.
Labour battalions
[edit]The Ispettorato Militare del Lavoro (ILM),[46] informally called the Organizzazione Paladino[47] or Azione Graziani,[48] was an organization of the Italian Social Republic during World War II composed of volunteer labourers "to collaborate with the German authorities in repairing roads and railways, and in general carry out other work of either a civil or military nature."[48] The organization was proposed by General Francesco Paladino. With German agreement, Marshal Rodolfo Graziani appointed Paladino its first director on 6 October 1943. Its headquarters was initially in Rome and it was under the authority of the Ministry of Defence.[48]
Women auxiliary service
[edit]Women volunteers served in uniform as noncombatants in paramilitary units and police formations (Servizio Ausiliario Femminile). The commander was the brigadier general Piera Gatteschi Fondelli.[49][50]
Government
[edit]The Government of the Italian Social Republic held office from 23 September 1943 until 25 April 1945, a total of 1 year, 274 days.[51] Its head was Benito Mussolini.[52]
The Government wrote a constitution for the Italian Social Republic,[53] but it was never discussed or approved. On 13 October 1943, the Government announced that a Constituent Assembly would be called to write a new constitution, but that was cancelled by Mussolini on 14 November 1943 and delayed until after the end of the war. The disintegration of the Italian Social Republic at the end of the war meant that no new constitution was written.
The RSI was led by the Republican Fascist Party, established on 18 September 1943 out of the disbanded National Fascist Party.[54] The party's official newspaper was Il Lavoro Fascista, formerly the publication of Fascist trade unions; Mussolini was largely indifferent toward the new paper and generally wrote on the Corriere della Sera instead. The Duce explicitly refused to revive his former newspaper Il Popolo d'Italia, not willing to let it become a mouthpiece of the German occupation.[55]
On 14 February 1945, Mussolini authorized the formation of a second political party called the National Republican Socialist Rally (RNRS), later rebranded as the Italian Socialist Republican Party) under the leadership of Edmondo Cione. The party supported a leftist view of fascism strongly focused on the socialization of the economy, and included several former socialists, such as Pulvio Zocchi, Carlo Silvestri, and Walter Mocchi. It also published a newspaper called L'Italia del Popolo. It was politically insignificant and its membership is unknown.[56] Mussolini himself privately told German ambassador Rudolf Rahn that he only authorised the formation of the RNRS in an attempt to sway some working-class voters away from the National Liberation Committee and that it was never meant to create any real political pluralism.[57]
Legacy
[edit]In post-war Italian politics
[edit]While the RSI supported Nazi Germany, it allowed the Italian Fascist movement to build a completely totalitarian state. During the preceding twenty years of the Fascist association with the Savoy monarchy of the Kingdom of Italy, some of the actions of the Fascists had been restricted by the monarchy. However, the formation of the RSI allowed Mussolini to be the official head of an Italian state and it also allowed the Fascists to return to their earlier republican stances. In one way or another, most of the prominent leaders of the post-war Italian far-right (parliamentary and extraparliamentary) were associated with the experience of the RSI. Among them were Filippo Anfuso, Pino Romualdi, Rodolfo Graziani, Junio Valerio Borghese, Licio Gelli, and Giorgio Almirante. Most of the 8,000 Italian Jews who died in the Holocaust in Italy were killed during the 20 months of the Salò regime.[58]
Stamps
[edit]A number of postage stamps were issued by the Republic of Salò. Initially, existing Italian issues were overprinted with a fasces, or the initials "G.N.R." for the Republican National Guard. Later the government designed and printed three series, all of which are very common.[59]
Currency
[edit]Banknotes in 50, 100, 500, and 1000 lire denomination were printed by the Republic. As issuer, the country was not mentioned on them, but rather only the Bank of Italy.[60]
In the arts
[edit]Pier Paolo Pasolini's 1975 film Salò, or the 120 Days of Sodom is an adaptation of Marquis de Sade's The 120 Days of Sodom, set in the Republic of Salò instead of 18th-century France. It uses the source material as an allegory; the atrocities in the movie did not actually happen, while most of the choices of milieus, clothing, uniforms, weapons and other details are historically correct. Roberto Benigni's 1997 Life is Beautiful is also set in the Republic of Salò.
Bernardo Bertolucci's 1976 Novecento set his story in Emilia, being at the time a province of the Italian Social Republic, even though this is never mentioned in the movie. Wild Blood tells the true story of the Fascist film stars Luisa Ferida and Osvaldo Valenti and their support for the Republic.
Futurist writer and poet Filippo Tommaso Marinetti, a Mussolini loyalist who had helped shape Fascist philosophy, remained in the RSI as a propagandist until his death from a heart attack at Bellagio in December 1944.[61]
See also
[edit]- 29th Waffen Grenadier Division of the SS (1st Italian)
- Decima Flottiglia MAS
- Italian Civil War
- Italian fascism
- Ministry of Occupied Italy
- National Republican Guard (Italy)
- Republican Police Corps
References
[edit]Notes
- ^ Both OZAV and OZAK were still formally part of the RSI. But the two regions were put under direct German military administration.
- ^ Renzo De Felice, Breve storia del fascismo, Milano, Mondadori (Collana oscar storia), 2002, pp. 120–121.
- ^ a b c d Pauley, Bruce F. (2003), Hitler, Stalin and Mussolini: Totalitarianism in the Twentieth Century Italy (2nd ed.), Wheeling, Illinois: Harlan Davidson, p. 228, ISBN 0-88295-993-X
- ^ Eric Morris, Circles of Hell: The War in Italy 1943-1945, ISBN 0091744741, 1993, p. 140
- ^ Neville, Peter (2014). Mussolini (2nd ed.). Routledge. p. 199. ISBN 9781317613046.
- ^ a b c Shirer, William (1960). The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich. New York City: Simon & Schuster. p. 1055. ISBN 0-671-72868-7.
- ^ a b c Susan Zuccotti. The Italians and the Holocaust: Persecution, Rescue, and Survival. University of Nebraska Press paperback edition. University of Nebraska Press, 1996. P. 148.
- ^ Wyke, Maria (2012). Caesar in the USA. Berkeley: University of California Press. p. 128. ISBN 9780520954274.
- ^ Di Michele, Vincenzo (2015). The Last Secret of Mussolini. Il Cerchio. ISBN 978-8884744227.
- ^ a b c Moseley, Ray (2004). Mussolini: The Last 600 Days of Il Duce. Taylor Trade. ISBN 1-58979-095-2.
- ^ a b c d De Grand, Alexander J., Italian fascism: its origins & development, 3d edition (illustrated), Publisher: University of Nebraska Press, Year: 2000, ISBN 0-8032-6622-7, p. 131
- ^ Eric Morris, Circles of Hell: The War in Italy 1943-1945, ISBN 0091744741, 1993, p. 140
- ^ Payne, Stanley G. (1996). A History of Fascism, 1914–1945. Routledge. ISBN 0203501322.
- ^ Pauley 2003, p. 228
- ^ Mack Smith 1983, p. 307.
- ^ Rees, Philip (1990), Biographical Dictionary of the Extreme Right Since 1890, p. 212
- ^ Rolf Steininger. South Tyrol: A Minority Conflict of the Twentieth Century. Pp. 69.
- ^ Giuseppe Motta. The Italian Military Governorship in South Tyrol and the Rise of Fascism. English translation edition. Edizioni Nuova Cultura, 2012. P. 104.
- ^ Arrigo Petacco. Tragedy Revealed: The Story of Italians from Istria, Dalmatia, and Venezia Giulia, 1943–1956. Toronto, Ontario, Canada: University of Toronto Press, 2005. P. 50.
- ^ a b c Jozo Tomašević. War and Revolution in Yugoslavia, 1941–1945: Occupation and Collaboration: 1941–1945: Occupation and Collaboration. Stanford University Press, 2001. P. 300.
- ^ Nicola Cospito; Hans Werner Neulen (1992). Salò-Berlino: l'alleanza difficile. La Repubblica Sociale Italiana nei documenti segreti del Terzo Reich. Mursia. p. 128. ISBN 88-425-1285-0.
- ^ Felice, Renzo De (1997). Mussolini: Mussolini l'alleato, 1940-1945 ; 2, La guerra civile : 1943-1945 (in Italian). Einaudi. p. 358. ISBN 978-88-06-11806-8.
- ^ Viganò, Marino (1991). Il Ministero degli affari esteri e le relazioni internazionali della Repubblica sociale italiana (1943-1945) (in Italian). Editoriale Jaca Book. ISBN 978-88-16-95081-8.
- ^ Mack Smith, Denis (1983), Mussolini: A Biography, New York: Vintage Books, p. 311, ISBN 0-394-71658-2
- ^ a b Mack Smith 1983, p. 312.
- ^ A. James Gregor, The Ideology of Fascism: The Rationale of Totalitarianism, New York: NY, The Free Press, 1969, p. 307
- ^ Anthony J. Papalas. Rebels and Radicals: Icaria 1600–2000. Wauconda, Illinois, USA: Bolchazi-Carducci Publishers, 2005. pp. 188–190.
- ^ Mack Smith 1983, p. 316.
- ^ Clark, Mark "Calculated Risk." Enigma Books, 2007. ISBN 978-1-929631-59-9. P.608
- ^ a b Mack Smith 1983, p. 317.
- ^ Mack Smith 1983, pp. 317–318.
- ^ "WWW.WAFFEN-SS.NO "The 29th Waffen Divisionen der SS (Italianishe Nr. 1)"". www.waffen-ss.no.
- ^ a b Mack Smith 1983, p. 308.
- ^ Blaxland, p243
- ^ Ibidem. Clark, 2007.
- ^ Popa, Thomas A. "Po Valley 1945" WWII Campaigns, United States Army Center of Military History, 1996. ISBN 0-16-048134-1. CMH Pub 72-33. Page 23.
- ^ Giannasi, Andrea. "Il Brasile in guerra: la partecipazione della Força Expedicionaria Brasileira alla campagna d'Italia (1944–1945)" (in Italian) Prospettiva Editrice, 2004. ISBN 8874182848. Pages 146–48.
- ^ Bohmler, Rudolf "Monte Cassino: a German View" Cassell, 1964. ASIN B000MMKAYM. Chapter IX (final).
- ^ The Decline and Fall of Nazi Germany and Imperial Japan, Hans Dollinger, Library of Congress Catalogue Card Number 67-27047
- ^ Italian Air Forces 1943–1945 – The Aviazone Nazionale Repubblicana by Richard J. Caruana, 1989 Modelaid International Publication
- ^ Aircraft of the Aces 34 Apostolo: Italian Aces of World War 2
- ^ "Italian biplane fighter aces - Ugo Drago". surfcity.kund.dalnet.se.
- ^ Page 100, "The Armed Forces of World War II", Andrew Mollo, ISBN 0-517-54478-4
- ^ Spencer C. Tucker, World War II at Sea: An Encyclopedia: An Encyclopedia, p. 389
- ^ Jack Greene, Alessandro Massignani, The Black Prince and the Sea Devils: The Story of Valerio Borghese and the elite units of the Decima MAS, p. 42
- ^ Giorgio Fanti; Lucrezia Fanti (2021), Storie dimenticate: Antifascismo, guerra e lotta partigiana nella provincia di Viterbo, vol. 2, Sette Città, p. 51f.
- ^ Gerhard Schreiber (2017), "The End of the North African Campaign and the War in Italy, 1943 to 1945", Germany and the Second World War, vol. VIII, The Eastern Front 1943–1944: The War in the East and on the Neighbouring Fronts, translated by Barry Smerin; Barbara Wilson, Clarendon Press, pp. 1100–1163.
- ^ a b c Amedeo Osti Guerrazzi (2016), "The Organisation of Forced Labour in Italy (1943–1945)", Places Associated with Forced Labour and Deportation from Italy during the Second World War, Topografia per la Storia.
- ^ Petra Terhoeven, "Frauen im Widerstand: Das Beispiel der Italienischen Resistenza", Zeitschrift für Geschichtswissenschaft, 2004. 52#7 pp 608–625.
- ^ M. Fraddosio, "Woman and War: Aspects Of Womens Militancy During Fascism, From Civil Mobilization to the Origins Of The Servizio-Ausiliario-Femminile in the Italian Social-Republic." Storia Contemporanea 20#6 (1989): 1105–1181.
- ^ Wikisource. [Minutes of the Council of Ministers of the Italian Social Republic September 1943 - April 1945/23 September 1943] (in Italian). 1943 – via
- ^ Verbali del Consiglio dei Ministri della Repubblica Sociale Italiana, September 1943 – April 1945
- ^ "Costituzione della Repubblica Sociale Italiana". University of Turin.
- ^ D'Angeli, Roberto (2016). Storia del Partito fascista repubblicano (in Italian). Castelvecchi. ISBN 978-88-6944-733-4.
- ^ Vercesi, Pier Luigi (30 October 2014). Ne ammazza più la penna: Storie d'Italia vissute nelle redazioni dei giornali (in Italian). Sellerio Editore srl. ISBN 978-88-389-3300-4.
- ^ Leoni, Francesco (2001). Storia dei partiti politici italiani (in Italian). Guida Editori. pp. 474–477. ISBN 978-88-7188-495-0.
- ^ Spinosa, Antonio (1997). Mussolini. Il fascino di un dittatore (in Italian). Mondadori. p. 293. ISBN 978-88-04-43290-6.
- ^ Laura Kolbe. 2019. Basani the Memorious. New York Review of Books. 15 August.
- ^ "Giorgio Bifani..." www.giorgiobifani.net.
- ^ "Pettinaro Bros. World Paper Money Market: Italian Social Republic". www.papermoneymarket.com.
- ^ Ialongo, Ernest – Filippo Tommaso Marinetti: The Artist and His Politics; Fairleigh Dickinson University Press, 2015; ISBN 1611477565 ISBN 978-1611477566
Further reading
- Bosworth, R.J.B. Mussolini's Italy: Life Under the Fascist Dictatorship, 1915–1945 (2007)
- Gat, Moshe. "The Soviet Factor in British Policy towards Italy, 1943–1945", Historian (1988) 50#4 pp 535–557
- Knox, MacGregor. Common Destiny: Dictatorship, Foreign Policy, and War in Fascist Italy and Nazi Germany (2000)
- Mack Smith, Denis. Modern Italy: A Political History (1997) online Archived 5 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine
- Maximiano, Cesar. with Bonalume, Ricardo N. & Bujeiro, Ramiro. Brazilian Expeditionary Force in World War II. Osprey Publishing Ltd., 2011. ISBN 9781849084833 (Print version).
- Morgan, Philip. The Fall of Mussolini: Italy, the Italians, and the Second World War (2007)
- Moseley, Ray. Mussolini: The Last 600 Days of Il Duce (2004)
- Roberto Chiarini [in Italian] (2004). Mussolini ultimo atto. I luoghi della Repubblica di Salò (in Italian and German). Roccafranca: La compagnia della stampa. ISBN 88-8486-105-5. OCLC 804881568.
External links
[edit]- Fascist Italy and the Jews: Myth versus Reality an online lecture by Dr. Iael Nidam-Orvieto of Yad Vashem
- Italian newsreel: The last speech of Mussolini in Milan on 16 December 1944 on YouTube
- Axis History Factbook – Italy
- Comando Supremo
- Historical flags of Italy
- War flag of Italian Social Republic
- Italian Social Republic
- 1943 establishments in Italy
- 1944 in Italy
- 1945 disestablishments in Italy
- Axis powers
- Client states of Nazi Germany
- Italian states
- Former republics
- Military history of Italy during World War II
- States and territories established in 1943
- States and territories disestablished in 1945
- Totalitarian states
- Rump states
- Salò, Lombardy