Italian Empire
{{Short description|Italy and its colonies and territories}}
{{About|the modern Italian colonial empire||Imperial Italy (disambiguation)}}
{{For|the ancient Roman Empire|Roman Empire}}
{{Infobox former country
| conventional_long_name = Italian Empire
| native_name = {{native name|it|Impero italiano}}
| event_pre = Purchase of Assab
| date_pre = 1869
| event_start = Italian Eritrea
| year_start = 1882
| event1 = Eritrea War
| date_event1 = 1887–1889
| event2 = Italian Somalia
| date_event2 = 1889
| event3 = Boxer Rebellion
| date_event3 = 1899–1901
| event4 = Italo-Turkish War
| date_event4 = 1911–1912
| event6 = Pacification of Libya
| date_event6 = 1923–1932
| event7 = 2nd Italo-Ethiopian War
| date_event7 = 1935–1937
| event8 = Italian rule over Albania
| date_event8 = 1939–1943
| event9 = East Africa Campaign
| date_event9 = 1940–1941
| event10 = North African campaign
| date_event10 = 1940–1943
| event_end = {{nowrap|Empire formally relinquished}}
| date_end = 1947
| event_post = {{nowrap|Trust Territory of Somaliland}}
| date_post = 1950–1960
| life_span = 1882–1960
| image_flag = Flag of Italy (1861-1946) crowned.svg
| flag = Flag of Italy#Italian unification
| flag_type = Flag of Italy
| flag_caption = Flag of Italy
Top (until 1946)
Bottom (from 1946)
| image_flag2 = Flag of Italy.svg
| image_coat = Coat of arms of the Kingdom of Italy (1890).svg
| symbol = Coat of arms of Italy
| capital = Rome
| official_languages = Italian
| government_type = Monarchy (until 1946)
Republic (after 1946)
| area_km2 = 3,775,294
| common_languages = Somali, Amharic, Tigrinya, Oromo, Afar, Arabic, Albanian, Greek
| title_leader = King
| leader1 = Victor Emmanuel II
| year_leader1 = 1869–1878
| leader2 = Umberto I
| year_leader2 = 1878–1900
| leader3 = {{nowrap|Victor Emmanuel III}}
| year_leader3 = 1900–1946
| leader4 = Umberto II
| year_leader4 = 1946
| status = Colonial empire
| image_map = File:Italian Colonial Empire (orthographic projection).svg
| map_caption = The Italian empire at greatest extent, c. 1942.
{{leftlegend|#4a9447|Kingdom of Italy}}
{{leftlegend|#c9ff6b|Colonies and Possessions of Italy}}
{{leftlegend|#666666|Protectorates and WWII-occupied territories (not all held at once)}}
| image_map_size =
| flag_s1 = Flag of Italy.svg
| flag_s2 = Flag of the Ethiopian Empire.svg
| s2 = Ethiopian Empire{{!}}1941:
Ethiopian Empire
| flag_s3 = Flag of Albania (1946–1992).svg
| s3 = People's Socialist Republic of Albania{{!}}1944:
Communist Albania
| flag_s4 = State Flag of Greece (1863-1924 and 1935-1973).svg
| s4 = Kingdom of Greece
| flag_s5 = Flag of Yugoslavia.svg
| s5 = Socialist Republic of Yugoslavia{{!}} Yugoslavia
| flag_s6 = Flag of Libya.svg
| s6 = United Kingdom of Libya{{!}}1951:
United Kingdom of Libya
| flag_s7 = Flag of Somalia.svg
| s7 = Somali Republic {{!}}1960:
Somalia
| today =
| stat_year1 = 1938
| stat_area1 = 3798000
| stat_year2 = 1941
| stat_area2 = {{Formatnum:{{#expr:340409+3484470}}}}
| ref_area2 = {{Cite book|url=https://archive.org/details/Tornisterschrift-des-Oberkommandos-der-Wehrmacht-Soldaten-Atlas|title=Soldaten-Atlas (Tornisterschrift des Oberkommandos der Wehrmacht, Heft 39)|publisher=Bibliographisches Institut |year=1941|location=Leipzig|page=32}}
| p1 = Ethiopian Empire{{!}}1936:
Ethiopian Empire
| s1 = Italy{{!}}Italy (Rep.)
| flag_p1 = Flag of the Ethiopian Empire.svg
| flag_p2 = Flag of Albania (1939–1943).svg
| p2 = Albanian Kingdom (1928–1939){{!}}1939:
Kingdom of Albania
| flag_p3 = State Flag of Greece (1863-1924 and 1935-1973).svg
| p3 = Kingdom of Greece{{!}}1941:
Kingdom of Greece
| flag_p5 = Flag of Yugoslavia.svg
| p5 = Kingdom of Yugoslavia
}}
{{History of Italy}}
The Italian colonial empire ({{langx|it|Impero coloniale italiano}}), also known as the Italian Empire (Impero italiano) between 1936 and 1941, was founded in Africa in the 19th century. It comprised the colonies, protectorates, concessions and dependencies of the Kingdom of Italy. In Africa, the colonial empire included the territories of present-day Libya, Eritrea, Somalia and Ethiopia (the last three being officially named "Africa Orientale Italiana", AOI); outside Africa, Italy possessed the Dodecanese Islands (following the Italo-Turkish War), Albania (initially a protectorate, then in personal union from 1939 to 1943)Nigel Thomas. Armies in the Balkans 1914–18. Osprey Publishing, 2001, p. 17. and also had some concessions in China.
The Fascist government that came to power under the leadership of the dictator Benito Mussolini after 1922 sought to increase the size of the Italian empire and it also sought to satisfy the claims of Italian irredentists. Systematic "demographic colonization" was encouraged by the government,Chapin Metz, Helen, ed., Libya: A Country Study. Chapter XIX. and by 1939, Italian settlers numbered 120,000{{cite journal|last=Istat|author-link=National Institute of Statistics (Italy)|title=I censimenti nell'Italia unita I censimenti nell'Italia unita Le fonti di stato della popolazione tra il XIX e il XXI secolo ISTITUTO NAZIONALE DI STATISTICA SOCIETÀ ITALIANA DI DEMOGRAFIA STORICA Le fonti di stato della popolazione tra il XIX e il XXI secolo|journal=Annali di Statistica|date=December 2010|volume=2|series=XII|page=263|url=http://www3.istat.it/dati/catalogo/20120911_00/Annali_serie_XII_vol_2_anno_141_I_Censimenti_nell'Italia_unita_bis.pdf|access-date=24 December 2013|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140803195051/http://www3.istat.it/dati/catalogo/20120911_00/Annali_serie_XII_vol_2_anno_141_I_Censimenti_nell'Italia_unita_bis.pdf|archive-date=3 August 2014|url-status=dead|df=dmy-all}}–150,000{{cite web|url=https://www.britannica.com/eb/article-46562/Libya|title=Libya - History, People, & Government |website=Britannica.com|access-date=11 January 2018}} in Italian Libya and 165,000 in Italian East Africa.
During World War II, Italy allied itself with Nazi Germany in 1940 and it also occupied British Somaliland, western Egypt, much of Yugoslavia, Tunisia, parts of south-eastern France and most of Greece; however, it then lost those conquests and its African colonies to the invading Allied forces by 1943. In 1947, Italy officially relinquished claims on its former colonies. In 1950, former Italian Somaliland, then under British administration, was turned into the Trust Territory of Somaliland until it became independent in 1960.
History
=Background and pre-unification era=
{{See also|Roman Empire|Maritime republics|Italy and the colonization of the Americas}}
Imperialism in Italy dates back to ancient Rome, and the Latin notion of mare nostrum ("Our Sea", referring to the Mediterranean) has historically been the basis for Italian imperialism, especially during the fascist era.Betts (1975), p.12 During the Middle Ages and the modern period, the Republic of Venice and the Republic of Genoa controlled networks of "colonies" in the Mediterranean region known as the Venetian Empire and the Genoese Empire respectively. Between the 15th and 16th centuries, Italian explorers contributed to the colonial enterprises of other European countries in the Americas: Cristopher Columbus from Genoa served Spain, Amerigo Vespucci from Florence served Portugal, the Cabot brothers from Venice served England, and Giovanni da Verrazzano from Florence served France. However, no Italian power took an active role in the scramble for the Americas, with the notable exception of the Pope who acted as an arbiter between European colonial powers during the Renaissance. The geographical position of Italy, located in the center of an internal sea, without an open free access to the ocean, contributed to this purely Mediterranean policy. Ferdinand I, Grand Duke of Tuscany, made the only Italian attempt to create a colony in the Americas, in what is now French Guiana, organizing in 1608 an expedition to explore the north of Brazil and the Amazon river in 1608 under the command of the English captain Robert Thornton. However, Thornton, on his return from the preparatory expedition in 1609, found Ferdinand I dead and his successor, Cosimo II, was not interested in the project. In 1651, Giovanni Paolo Lascaris, Italian nobleman and Grand Master of the Knights Hospitaller of Malta (at the time a vassal state of the Kingdom of Sicily), possessed four Caribbean islands: Saint Christopher, Saint Martin, Saint Barthélemy, and Saint Croix, which were colonized from 1651 until 1665.{{cite book|last=Dubé|first=Jean-Claude|translator=Elizabeth Rapley|title=The Chevalier de Montmagny (1601-1657): First Governor of New France|url=https://archive.org/details/chevalierdemontm0000dube|url-access=registration|year=2005|publisher=University of Ottawa Press|isbn=978-0-7766-0559-3|pages=[https://archive.org/details/chevalierdemontm0000dube/page/263 263]–287}}{{cite book|last=Mifsud|first=A.|title=Knights Hospitallers of the Ven. Tongue of England in Malta|url=https://archive.org/details/bub_gb_yK80AQAAMAAJ|year=1914|publisher=AMS Press|page=246|chapter=Attempts to reestablish the Tongue|isbn=9780404170097 }} No other colonial attempt in the ocean was made and, by 1797, the Venetian and Genoese possessions in the Mediterranean were lost.
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=Scramble for an empire=
==East Africa==
{{main|Italian Eritrea|Italian Somalia}}
{{see also|Giuseppe Sapeto|Raffaele Rubattino|Mahdist War|Italo-Ethiopian War of 1887–1889{{!}}Eritrea War|First Italo-Ethiopian War|Majeerteen Sultanate|Sultanate of Hobyo|Hiraab Imamate|Geledi Sultanate|Slap of Tunis}}
File:Francesco Crispi crop.jpg promoted Italian colonialism in Africa in the late 1800s.]]
Once unified as a nation-state in the late 19th century, Italy intended to compete with the other European powers for the new age of European colonial expansion. It saw its interests in the Mediterranean and in the Horn of Africa, a region yet to be colonized and with access to the ocean. Italy had arrived late to the colonial race and its status as the least of the Great Powers, a position of relative weakness in international affairs, meant that it was dependent on the acquiescence of Britain, France and Germany towards its empire-building.Betts (1975), p.97
Italy had long considered the Ottoman province of Tunisia, where a large community of Tunisian Italians lived, within its economic sphere of influence. It did not consider annexing it until 1879, when it became apparent that Britain and Germany were encouraging France to add it to its colonial holdings in North Africa.Lowe, p.21 A last-minute offer by Italy to share Tunisia between the two countries was refused, and France, confident in German support, ordered its troops in from French Algeria, imposing a protectorate over Tunisia in May 1881 under the Treaty of Bardo.Lowe, p.24 The shock of the "Slap of Tunis", as it was referred to in the Italian press, and the sense of Italy's isolation in Europe, led it into signing the Triple Alliance in 1882 with Germany and Austria-Hungary.Lowe, p.27
File:Assab 1880.jpg, 1880]]
While attempts were made to buy the Nicobar Islands from Denmark in 1864 and 1865,{{Cite book |title=Storia Militare della Colonia Eritrea, Vol. I |date=1935 |publisher=Ministero della Guerra |location=Roma |publication-date=1935 |pages=15–16}} the genesis of the Italian colonial empire was the purchase in 1869 of Assab Bay on the Red Sea by an Italian navigation company which intended to establish a coaling station at the time the Suez Canal was being opened to navigation.Mia Fuller, [http://www.oxfordbibliographies.com/view/document/obo-9780199846733/obo-9780199846733-0150.xml "Italian Colonial Rule"], Oxford Bibliographies Online. Retrieved 12 October 2017. This was taken over by the Italian government in 1882, becoming modern Italy's first overseas territory.Theodore M. Vestal, "Reflections on the Battle of Adwa and Its Significance for Today", in The Battle of Adwa: Reflections on Ethiopia's Historic Victory Against European Colonialism (Algora, 2005), p. 22.
File:Alfred Pearse - Second Battle of Agordat (Battles of the nineteenth century, 1901).jpg during the Mahdist War, 1893]]
File:Possessions italiennes en Afrique-1896.jpg in 1896]]
Italy's search for colonies continued until February 1885, when, by secret agreement with Britain, it annexed the port of Massawa in Eritrea on the Red Sea from the crumbling Egyptian Empire. Italian annexation of Massawa denied the Ethiopian Empire of Yohannes IV an outlet to the sea.Pakenham (1992), p.280 This led Ras Alula to unsuccessfully besiege the Italian possession of Saati. He then ambushed and killed five hundred Italian troops at the Battle of Dogali.Killinger (2002), p.122 This caused the Italian government to send reinforcements, which occupied the Eritrean highlands, including Keren and Asmara in 1889. The Italian Prime Minister Francesco Crispi, who coveted Ethiopia itself, signed the Treaty of Wuchale in 1889 with Menelik II, the new emperor. This treaty ceded Ethiopian territory around Massawa to Italy to form the colony of Italian Eritrea, and – at least, according to the Italian version of the treaty – made Ethiopia an Italian protectorate.Pakenham, p.470 Relations between Italy and Menelik deteriorated over the next few years until the First Italo-Ethiopian War broke out in 1895, when Crispi ordered Italian troops into the country. Vastly outnumbered and poorly equipped,Killinger, p.122 the result was a decisive defeat for Italy at the hands of Ethiopian forces at the Battle of Adwa in 1896.Pakenham (1992), p.7 On Italy's side, the death toll was 6,889, including 4,133 Italians.{{sfn|Clodfelter|2017|p=202}} The Ethiopians suffered at least 4,000 dead and 10,000 wounded.{{sfn|Clodfelter|2017|p=202}}{{efn|Total Italian, Eritrean, and Somali deaths, including those from disease, were estimated at 9,000.{{sfn|Clodfelter|2017|p=202}}}}
Around the same time, Italy occupied territory on the south side of the horn of Africa, forming what would become Italian Somaliland.Pakenham, p.281 Italy gradually secured much of this territory in the 1880s through a series of protection treaties over the Sultanate of Hobyo and the Majeerteen Sultanate in the north, and by the Hiraab Imamate and the Geledi Sultanate in the south.L'Italia in Africa: serie storica. La politica coloniale dell'Italia negli atti, decumenti e discussioni parlamentari; testo di Giacomo Perticone, e note redanionali di richiam agli atti parlamentari a cura di Guglielmo Guglielmi, pg 246–247Mariam Arif Gassem, Somalia: clan vs. nation (s.n.: 2002), p.4 Starting in the 1890s, the Bimaal and Wa'dan revolts near Merca marked the beginning of Banadir resistance to Italian expansion, coinciding with the rise of the Dervish movement in the north calling for independence from the British and Italian colonisers and for the defeat of Ethiopian forces.{{cite book|author1=Emmanuel Kwaku Akyeampong|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=39JMAgAAQBAJ|title=Dictionary of African Biography|author2=Steven J. Niven|publisher=Oxford University Press|year=2012|isbn=978-0-19-538207-5|pages=35–37}}{{cite book|author=Abdullah A. Mohamoud|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ahHabajshuwC|title=State Collapse and Post-conflict Development in Africa: The Case of Somalia (1960-2001)|publisher=Purdue University Press|year=2006|isbn=978-1-55753-413-2|pages=60–61, 70–72 with footnotes}}
Italy fought in the Mahdist War, and since 1890 it defeated Mahdist troops in the Battle of Serobeti and the First Battle of Agordat. In December 1893, Italian colonial troops and Mahdists fought again in the Second Battle of Agordat; Ahmed Ali campaigned against the Italian forces in eastern Sudan and led about 10–12,000 men east from Kassala, encountering 2,400 Italians and their Eritrean Ascaris commanded by Colonel Arimondi. The Italians won again, and the outcome of the battle constituted "the first decisive victory yet won by Europeans against the Sudanese revolutionaries".{{cite book|title=The rise and fall of the new Roman empire: Italy's bid for world power, 1890–1943 |url=https://archive.org/details/risefallof00barc |url-access=registration |first=Glen St John |last=Barclay |year=1973 |isbn=9780283978623 |place=London}}{{Page needed|date=October 2021}} A year later, Italian colonial forces seized Kassala after the successful Battle of Kassala; Italy returned the city to the British at the end of the war three years later.
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==Forts and concessions in China==
{{main|Concessions of Italy in China|Italian concession of Tientsin}}
{{see also|Boxer Rebellion}}
File:Italian concessions and forts in China.jpg
In 1898, in the wake of the acquisition of leased territories by Germany, Russia, Britain and France in China earlier that year, the Italian government, as a matter of national prestige and to assert Italy's great power status, demanded the cession of Sanmen Bay to serve as a coaling station. Aware that Italy did not have sufficient naval power in Asian waters to back up its demand, the Chinese imperial government rejected the ultimatum and all subsequent requests, arguing that Italy had no real political or economic interests in China. Italy's main newspaper considered this a national humiliation and claimed it made the country appear "like a third or fourth-rate power", provoking the fall of the Italian government. This prompted Italy to take part in the international expedition in Beijing at the outbreak of the Boxer Rebellion the following year, and resulted in the acquisition of a concession in Tianjin in 1901, the only example of Italian colonialism in Asia, and other minor concessions, these not administrated by the Italian government.[https://books.google.com/books?id=n5hEAgAAQBAJ&dq=Italy%2C+sanmen+bay.+1898&pg=PT59 Italy’s Encounters with Modern China: Imperial Dreams, Strategic Ambitions], edited by Maurizio Marinelli and Giovanni Andornino, Palgrave Macmillan, 2014Maurizio Marinelli, Self-portrait in a Convex Mirror: Colonial Italy Reflects on Tianjin [https://journals.openedition.org/transtexts/147?file=1] The concession was administered by the Italian consul in Tianjin.
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==North Africa and Dodecanese==
{{main|Italian Tripolitania|Italian Cyrenaica|Italian colonization of Libya|Italian Islands of the Aegean}}
{{see also|Italo-Turkish War|Italian invasion on Libya}}
File:Italoturca1.jpg, 1911]]
A wave of nationalism that swept Italy at the turn of the 20th century led to the founding of the Italian Nationalist Association, which pressed for the expansion of Italy's empire. Newspapers were filled with talk of revenge for the humiliations suffered in Ethiopia at the end of the previous century, and of nostalgia for the Roman era.
Libya, it was suggested, as an ex-Roman colony, should be "taken back" to provide a solution to the problems of Southern Italy's population growth. Fearful of being excluded altogether from North Africa by Britain and France, and mindful of public opinion, Prime Minister Giovanni Giolitti ordered the declaration of war on the Ottoman Empire, of which Libya was part, in October 1911.Killinger (2002), p.133
As a result of the Italo-Turkish War, Italy gained Libya (then divided in the colonies of Tripolitania and Cyrenaica) the Dodecanese Islands from the Ottoman Empire.
The 1912 Libya desert war featured the first use of an armoured fighting vehicle in military history and marked the first significant employment of air power in warfare.{{sfn|Clodfelter|2017|p=353}}{{efn|Nine Italian aircraft flew both combat and support missions during the campaign.{{sfn|Clodfelter|2017|p=353}} Furthermore, the Italian dirigibles P2 and P3 discover and make a highly effective bombing attack against Ottoman Army cavalry during a battle at Zanzur in the Italo-Turkish War, making an important contribution to the Italian Army's offense in this battle. History's first war death of a pilot occurred when an aircraft crashed during a recon sortie.{{sfn|Clodfelter|2017|p=353}}}}
A significant number of Italian settlers moved to Tripolitania and Cyrenaica, and Italian presence was still felt long after the decolonisation process began. Although native resistance to the Italian colonisers was less prevalent in Tripolitania than Cyrenaica (which waged significant guerilla warfare), a resistance group did form the short-lived Tripolitanian Republic in 1918. Although it didn't succeed in setting up a republic, it demonstrated attempts to resist colonial control. The Italian colonisers set up various infrastructure projects, most notably roads and railways. Archeology was another important feature of the Italian presence in Tripolitania, as they focused efforts in excavations in old Roman cities.
File:Massaua 1886. Veduta del campo Gherar. Soldati de Genio Ferrovieri fra le rotaie che avrebbero collegato Massaua a Saati (Foto Ledru e Nicorta).jpg|Italian soldiers of the Ferrovieri Engineer Regiment during the construction of the rails to connect Massawa to Saati, Italian Eritrea, 1886.
File: The first Locomotive arrived in Tripoli Harbor.jpg|Arrival of the first Italian locomotive in the harbor of Tripoli, Italian Tripolitania, 1912
File:Zaptié, Arabien.jpg|An Italian Carabiniere and a Libyan Zaptié patrolling in Tripoli, 1914
File:Derna - Bar e Ristorante Cirenaica - Trenio Materiale (stamped on 29 Dec 1916).jpg|Restaurant and goods train in Derna, Italian Cyrenaica, 1916
File:Municipi di Bengasi.jpg|The Italian Benghazi Municipio (City Hall), Italian Cyrenaica, 1920s
File:Albergo1938villaggioducaabruzzi.png|Hotel Albergo Villaggio Duca degli Abruzzi in the Villabruzzi village, Italian Somalia, founded in 1920
File:Mogadishu, Bank of Italy.jpg|Bank of Italy in Mogadishu
File:Offices of the Prefecture of the Dodecanese 02.jpg|Palazzo Governale (today the offices of the Prefecture of the Dodecanese) in Rhodes, built during the Italian period
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=World War I and aftermath=
{{main|Military history of Italy during World War I|Allied occupation of the eastern Adriatic|Partition of the Ottoman Empire|Italian occupation of Adalia|Italian protectorate over Albania|Oltre Giuba}}
In 1914 Italy remained neutral and did not join its ally Germany in World War I. The Allies made promises and in 1915 Italy joined them. It was promised territorial spoils mainly from Austria and Turkey.Renzi, 1968.
Prior to direct intervention in World War I, in December 1914, Italy occupied the Albanian port of Vlorë and the Sazan Island in front of it. From 1916 to 1918, Italians conducted a campaign in Albania against Austrian forces (who had occupied Northern and Central Albania in pursuing the forces of Serbia and Montenegro). In the fall of 1916, Italy started to occupy southern Albania. In 1916, Italian forces recruited Albanian irregulars to serve alongside them. Italy, with permission of the Allied command, occupied Northern Epirus on 23 August 1916, forcing the neutralist Greek Army to withdraw its occupation forces from there. In June 1917, general Giacinto Ferrero proclaimed the Italian-controlled territory in Albania to be independent under Italian protection. By 31 October 1918, French and Italian forces expelled the Austro-Hungarian Army from Albania. However, in 1920, an Albanian rebellion led the Italians to agree to return the occupied bay of Vlorë to Albania, while they annexed Sazan Island to the Italian kingdom.
File:Vlora zur Zeit der italienischen Besatzung 1916-1920.jpg in Vlorë, Albania during World War I]]
File:TreatyOfSevres.png of 1919. The light green marked area is the territory from Anatolia allocated to an Italian sphere of influence. Sèvres was overturned by the Treaty of Lausanne of 1923 where Turkey was restored to all of Anatolia.]]
Dalmatia was a strategic region during World War I that both Italy and Serbia intended to seize from Austria-Hungary. The Treaty of London guaranteed Italy the right to annex a large portion of Dalmatia in exchange for Italy's participation on the Allied side. From 5–6 November 1918, Italian forces were reported to have reached Lissa, Lagosta, Sebenico, and other localities on the Dalmatian coast.Giuseppe Praga, Franco Luxardo. History of Dalmatia. Giardini, 1993. Pp. 281. By the end of hostilities in November 1918, the Italian military had seized control of the entire portion of Dalmatia that had been guaranteed to Italy by the Treaty of London and by 17 November had seized Fiume as well.Paul O'Brien. Mussolini in the First World War: the Journalist, the Soldier, the Fascist. Oxford, England, UK; New York, New York, USA: Berg, 2005. Pp. 17. In 1918, Admiral Enrico Millo declared himself Italy's Governor of Dalmatia. Famous Italian nationalist Gabriele D'Annunzio supported the seizure of Dalmatia, and proceeded to Zara (today's Zadar) in an Italian warship in December 1918.A. Rossi. The Rise of Italian Fascism: 1918–1922. New York, New York, USA: Routledge, 2010. Pp. 47.
At the concluding Treaty of Versailles in 1919, Italy received less in Europe than had been promised and none overseas mandate except for a promise of colonial compensations made on 7 May 1919 during the partition of Germany's colonies between France and Britain. To satisfy this promise, France and Britain directly or indirectly gave Italy, from 1919 to 1935, a number of territories to expand Libya (Cufra, Sarra, Giarabub, the Aouzou strip, other lands in the Sahara), Somalia (Jubaland), the Dodecanese (Kastellorizo), and Eritrea (Raheita, the Hanish islands). In April 1920, it was agreed between the British and Italian foreign ministers that Jubaland would be Italy's first compensation from Britain, but London held back on the deal for several years, aiming to use it as leverage to force Italy to cede the Dodecanese to Greece.Lowe, p.187
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=Fascism and the Italian Empire=
{{main|Italian Libya|Italian Ethiopia|Italian East Africa|Kingdom of Albania (1939–1943)}}
{{see also|Pacification of Libya|Second Italo-Ethiopian War|Italian invasion of Albania|Italian imperialism under Fascism}}
File:Italy aims Europe 1936.pngs;}}{{Legend|#083A39|Claimed territories to be annexed;}}{{Legend|#107776|Territories to be transformed into client states.}} Albania, which was a client state, was considered a territory to be annexed.]]
File:ProgettoImperoItaliano.jpg (the orange line delimits metropolitan Italy, the green line the borders of the enlarged Italian Empire)]]
In 1922, the leader of the Italian fascist movement, Benito Mussolini, became Prime Minister and dictator. Mussolini resolved the question of sovereignty over the Dodecanese at the 1923 Treaty of Lausanne, which formalized Italian administration of both Libya and the Dodecanese Islands, in return for a payment to Turkey, the successor state to the Ottoman Empire, though he failed in an attempt to extract a mandate of a portion of Iraq from Britain.
The month following the ratification of the Lausanne treaty, Mussolini ordered the invasion of the Greek island of Corfu after the Corfu incident. The Italian press supported the move, noting that Corfu had been a Venetian possession for four hundred years. The matter was taken by Greece to the League of Nations, where Mussolini was convinced by Britain to evacuate Italian troops, in return for reparations from Greece. The confrontation led Britain and Italy to resolve the question of Jubaland in 1924, which was merged into Italian Somaliland.Lowe, pp. 191–199
During the late 1920s, imperial expansion became an increasingly favoured theme in Mussolini's speeches.Smith, Dennis Mack (1981). Mussolini, p. 170. Weidenfeld and Nicolson, London. Amongst Mussolini's aims were that Italy had to become the dominant power in the Mediterranean that would be able to challenge France or Britain, as well as attain access to the Atlantic and Indian Oceans. Mussolini alleged that Italy required uncontested access to the world's oceans and shipping lanes to ensure its national sovereignty.Salerno, Reynolds Mathewson (2002). Vital crossroads: Mediterranean origins of the Second World War, 1935–1940, [https://archive.org/details/vitalcrossroadsm00sale/page/106 pp. 105–106]. Cornell University Press This was elaborated on in a document he later drew up in 1939 called "The March to the Oceans", and included in the official records of a meeting of the Grand Council of Fascism. This text asserted that maritime position determined a nation's independence: countries with free access to the high seas were independent; while those who lacked this, were not. Italy, which only had access to an inland sea without French and British acquiescence, was only a "semi-independent nation", and alleged to be a "prisoner in the Mediterranean":
{{blockquote|The bars of this prison are Corsica, Tunisia, Malta, and Cyprus. The guards of this prison are Gibraltar and Suez. Corsica is a pistol pointed at the heart of Italy; Tunisia at Sicily. Malta and Cyprus constitute a threat to all our positions in the eastern and western Mediterranean. Greece, Turkey, and Egypt have been ready to form a chain with Great Britain and to complete the politico-military encirclement of Italy. Thus Greece, Turkey, and Egypt must be considered vital enemies of Italy's expansion ... The aim of Italian policy, which cannot have, and does not have continental objectives of a European territorial nature except Albania, is first of all to break the bars of this prison ... Once the bars are broken, Italian policy can only have one motto – to march to the oceans.|Benito Mussolini|The March to the Oceans}}
File:ZaptiefromItalianSomalia.jpg in Italian Somaliland]]
File:Tripoli, Suk el Turk.jpg and indigenous Libyans in Tripoli, capital of Italian Tripolitania and later of Italian Libya]]
In the Balkans, the Fascist regime claimed Dalmatia and held ambitions over Albania, Slovenia, Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Vardar Macedonia, and Greece based on the precedent of previous Roman dominance in these regions.Robert Bideleux, Ian Jeffries. A history of eastern Europe: crisis and change. London, England, UK; New York, New York, USA: Routledge, 1998. Pp. 467. Dalmatia and Slovenia were to be directly annexed into Italy while the remainder of the Balkans was to be transformed into Italian client states.Allan R. Millett, Williamson Murray. Military Effectiveness, Volume 2. New edition. New York, New York, USA: Cambridge University Press, 2010. P. 184. The regime also sought to establish protective patron-client relationships with Austria, Hungary, Yugoslavia, Romania, and Bulgaria.
In both 1932 and 1935, Italy demanded a League of Nations mandate of the former German Cameroon and a free hand in Ethiopia from France in return for Italian support against Germany (see Stresa Front).Burgwyn, James H. (1997). Italian foreign policy in the interwar period, 1918–1940, [https://books.google.com/books?id=PNHxISN-dmQC&dq=mussolini+cameroons&pg=PA68 p. 68]. Praeger Publishers. This was refused by French Prime Minister Édouard Herriot, who was not yet sufficiently worried about the prospect of a German resurgence.
File:Depiction of Mussolini in Mekelle.jpg, 1935]]
In its second invasion of Ethiopia in 1935–36, Italy was successful and it merged its new conquest with its older east African colonies to create Italian East Africa ({{langx|it|Africa Orientale Italiana}}). On 9 May 1936 Mussolini proclaimed the establishment of the Italian Empire in East Africa ("l'Impero"), with King Victor Emmanuel III as Emperor of Ethiopia.{{Cite book|title=Guida dell'Africa Orientale Italiana|publisher=CTI|year=1938|location=Milano|language=it|page=33}} In 1939, Italy invaded Albania and incorporated it into the Fascist state. During the Second World War (1939–1945), Italy occupied British Somaliland, parts of south-eastern France, western Egypt and most of Greece, but then lost those conquests and its African colonies, including Ethiopia, to the invading allied forces by 1943. It was forced in the peace treaty of 1947 to relinquish sovereignty over all its colonies. It was granted a trust to administer former Italian Somaliland under United Nations supervision in 1950. When Somalia became independent in 1960, Italy's eight-decade experiment with colonialism had ended.
The Second Italo-Ethiopian War cost Italy 4,359 killed in action—2,313 Italians, 1,086 Eritreans, 507 Somalis and Libyans, and 453 Italian laborers.{{sfn|Clodfelter|2017|p=355}} Ethiopian military and civilian dead, many of them from Italian bomb and mustard gas attacks, were estimated as high as 275,000.{{sfn|Clodfelter|2017|p=355}}
In July 1936, Francisco Franco of the Nationalist faction in the Spanish Civil War requested Italian support against the ruling Republican faction, and guaranteed that, if Italy supported the Nationalists, "future relations would be more than friendly" and that Italian support "would have permitted the influence of Rome to prevail over that of Berlin in the future politics of Spain".Sebastian Balfour, Paul Preston. Spain and the Great Powers in the Twentieth Century. London, England, UK; New York, New York, USA: Routledge, 1999. P. 152. Italy intervened in the civil war with the intention of occupying the Balearic Islands and creating a client state in Spain.R. J. B. Bosworth. The Oxford handbook of fascism. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press, 2009. Pp. 246. Italy sought the control of the Balearic Islands due to its strategic position – Italy could use the islands as a base to disrupt the lines of communication between France and its North African colonies and between British Gibraltar and Malta.John J. Mearsheimer. The Tragedy of Great Power Politics. W. W. Norton & Company, 2003. After the victory by Franco and the Nationalists in the war, Italy pressured Franco to permit an Italian occupation of the Balearic Islands but he did not do so.The Road to Oran: Anglo-French Naval Relations, September 1939 – July 1940. Pp. 24.
File:Unione tunisi 31octobre1938.jpg]]
After the United Kingdom signed the Anglo-Italian Easter Accords in 1938, Mussolini and foreign minister Ciano issued demands for concessions in the Mediterranean by France, particularly regarding Djibouti, Tunisia and the French-run Suez Canal.Reynolds Mathewson Salerno. Vital Crossroads: Mediterranean Origins of the Second World War, 1935–1940. Cornell University, 2002. p 82–83. Three weeks later, Mussolini told Ciano that he intended for Italy to demand an Italian takeover of Albania. Mussolini professed that Italy would only be able to "breathe easily" if it had acquired a contiguous colonial domain in Africa from the Atlantic to the Indian Oceans, and when ten million Italians had settled in them. In 1938, Italy demanded a sphere of influence in the Suez Canal in Egypt, specifically demanding that the French-dominated Suez Canal Company accept an Italian representative on its board of directors."French Army breaks a one-day strike and stands on guard against a land-hungry Italy", LIFE, 19 Dec 1938. Pp. 23. Italy opposed the French monopoly over the Suez Canal because, under the French-dominated Suez Canal Company, all Italian merchant traffic to its colony of Italian East Africa was forced to pay tolls on entering the canal.
In 1939, Italy invaded and captured Albania and made it a part of the Italian Empire as a separate kingdom in personal union with the Italian crown. The region of modern-day Albania had been an early part of the Roman Empire, which had actually been held before northern parts of Italy had been taken by the Romans, but had long since been populated by Albanians, even though Italy had retained strong links with the Albanian leadership and considered it firmly within its sphere of influence.Dickson (2001), pg. 69 It is possible that Mussolini simply wanted a spectacular success over a smaller neighbour to match Germany's absorption of Austria and Czechoslovakia. Italian King Victor Emmanuel III took the Albanian crown, and a fascist government under Shefqet Verlaci was established to rule over Albania.
File:Mogadishu 1923.jpg|Italian Mogadishu, 1923
File:Avenue in Asmara (1930s).jpg|Avenue in Asmara, 1930s
File:Cinema Impero in Asmara.jpg|Cinema Impero in Asmara
File:Maydan Shajara Piazza Cagni During Italian Rule.jpg|Women in Piazza Cagni in Benghazi, Italian Libya, 1938
File:Italo Balbo welcomes Italian Colonists in Libya (1938).jpg|Governor Italo Balbo welcomes arriving Italian colonists in Tripoli, Italian Libya, 1938
==World War II==
{{main|Italian governorate of Montenegro|Province of Ljubljana|Governorate of Dalmatia|Independent State of Croatia|Hellenic State (1941–1944)}}
{{see also|Military history of Italy during World War II}}
File:Amadeo Aosta3rd 01.jpg led Italian forces at the Battle of Amba Alagi.Time Magazine [https://web.archive.org/web/20090829184022/http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,790095,00.html Aosta on Alag?]]]
Mussolini entered World War II in June 1940 on the side of Adolf Hitler with plans to enlarge Italy's territorial holdings. He had designs on an area of western Yugoslavia, southern France, Corsica, Malta, Tunisia, part of Algeria, an Atlantic port in Morocco, French Somaliland and British-controlled Egypt and Sudan.Calvocoressi (1999) p.166
On 10 June 1940, Mussolini declared war on Britain and France; both countries had been at war with Nazi Germany since September of the previous year. In July 1940, Italian foreign minister Count Ciano presented Hitler with a list of Italy's goals that included: the annexation of Corsica, Nice, and Malta; protectorate in Tunisia and a buffer zone in Eastern Algeria; independence with Italian military presence and bases in Lebanon, Palestine, Syria, and Transjordan as well as expropriation of oil companies in those territories; military occupation of Aden, Perim and Sokotra; Cyprus given to Greece in exchange for Ionian islands and Ciamuria given to Italy; Italy is given British Somaliland, Djibuti, French Equatorial Africa up to Ubangi-Shari, as well as Ciano adding at the meeting that Italy wanted Kenya and Uganda as well.Santi Corvaja, Robert L. Miller. Hitler & Mussolini: The Secret Meetings. New York, New York, USA: Enigma Books, 2008. Pp. 132. Hitler made no promises.
In October 1940, Mussolini ordered the invasion of Greece from Albania, but the operation was unsuccessful.Dickson (2001) p.100 In April 1941, Germany launched an invasion of Yugoslavia and then attacked Greece. Italy and other German allies supported both actions. The German and Italian armies overran Yugoslavia in about two weeks and, despite British support in Greece, the Axis troops overran that country by the end of April. The Italians gained control over portions of both occupied Yugoslavia and occupied Greece. A member of the House of Savoy, Prince Aimone, 4th Duke of Aosta, was appointed king of the newly created Independent State of Croatia.
During the height of the Battle of Britain, the Italians launched an invasion of Egypt in the hope of capturing the Suez Canal. By 16 September 1940, the Italians advanced {{convert|60|mi|km|-1|order=flip}} across the border. However, in December, the British launched Operation Compass and, by February 1941, the British had cut off and captured the Italian 10th Army and had driven deep into Libya.Dickson (2001) p.101 A German intervention prevented the fall of Libya and the combined Axis attacks drove the British back into Egypt until summer 1942, before being stopped at El Alamein. Allied intervention against Vichy French-held Morocco and Algeria created a two-front campaign. German and Italian forces entered Tunisia in late 1942 in response, however, forces in Egypt were soon forced to make a major retreat into Libya. By May 1943, Axis forces in Tunisia were forced to surrender.
The East African Campaign started with Italian advances into British-held Kenya, British Somaliland, and Sudan.[http://www.centrorsi.it/notizie/images/stories/casssa/cassa%20nastro%20azzurro117.jpg Italian Map showing with green lines the territories conquered in 1940 by the Italians in Sudan and Kenya. British and French somaliland are shown in white, as part of the A.O.I. (Africa Orientale Italiana)] In the summer of 1940, Italian armed forces successfully invaded all of British Somaliland.Dickson (2001) p.103 But, in the spring of 1941, the British had counter-attacked and pushed deep into Italian East Africa. By 5 May, Haile Selassie I of Ethiopia had returned to Addis Ababa to reclaim his throne. In November, the last organised Italian resistance ended with the fall of Gondar.Jowett (2001) p.7 However, following the surrender of East Africa, some Italians conducted a guerrilla war which lasted for two more years.
In November 1942, when the Germans occupied Vichy France during Case Anton, Italian-occupied France was expanded with the occupation of Corsica.
= End of the empire =
File:Keren Battlefield 008.jpg]]
File:LA CATTEDRALE DI TRIPOLI 1960.jpg and the former FIAT centre in the 1960s]]
By the autumn of 1943, the Italian Empire and all dreams of an Imperial Italy effectively came to an end. On 7 May, the surrender of Axis forces in Tunisia and other near continuous Italian reversals, led King Victor Emmanuel III to plan the removal of Mussolini. Following the Invasion of Sicily, all support for Mussolini evaporated. A meeting of the Grand Council of Fascism was held on 24 July, which managed to impose a vote of no confidence to Mussolini. The "Duce" was subsequently deposed and arrested by the King on the following afternoon. Afterwards, Mussolini remained a prisoner of the King until 12 September, when, on the orders of Hitler, he was rescued by German paratroops and became leader of the newly established Italian Social Republic.
After 25 July, the new Italian government under the King and Field Marshal Pietro Badoglio remained outwardly part of the Axis. But, secretly, it started negotiations with the Allies. On the eve of the Allied landings at Salerno, which started the Allied invasion of Italy, the new Italian government secretly signed an armistice with the Allies. On 8 September, the armistice was made public. In Albania, Yugoslavia, the Dodecanese, and other territories still held by the Italians, German military forces successfully attacked their former Italian allies and ended Italy's rule. During the Dodecanese Campaign, an Allied attempt to take the Dodecanese with the cooperation of the Italian troops ended in total German victory. In China, the Imperial Japanese Army occupied Italy's concession in Tientsin after getting news of the armistice. Later in 1943 the Italian Social Republic formally ceded control of the concession to Japan's puppet regime in China, the Reorganized National Government of China under Wang Jingwei.
In 1947, the Treaty of Peace with Italy formally ended the empire that was now totally defunct. There were discussions to maintain Tripolitania (a province of Italian Libya) as the last Italian colony, but these were not successful. In November 1949 the former Italian Somaliland then under British military administration, was made a 10-year United Nations Trust Territory under Italian administration (Trust Territory of Somaliland). On 1 July 1960, Somalia merged with British Somaliland to form the independent Somali Republic.
Former colonies, territories in personal union and occupied areas
File:Greater German Reich in 1942.png
- Italian Eritrea (1882–1947)
- Italian Somalia (1889–1947)
- Trans-Juba (1924–1926)
- Trust Territory of Somaliland (1950–1960)
- Libya (1911–1947)
- Italian Tripolitania and Italian Cyrenaica (1911–1934)
- Italian Libya (1934–1943)
- Italian East Africa (1936–1941)
- Italian Ethiopia (1936–1941)
- Italian concessions in China
- Italian concession of Tientsin (1901–1943)
- Italian Albania (personal union, 1939–1943)
- Italian Islands of the Aegean (1912–1947)
- Italian occupation of France (1940–1943)
- Italian occupation of Corsica (1942-1943)
- Independent State of Croatia (1941–1945)
- Italian occupation of Montenegro (1941–1943)
- Hellenic State (1941–1943)
- Tunisia (1942–1943)
Notes
{{notelist}}
References
{{reflist}}
Bibliography
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{{Refend}}
External links
- {{in lang|it}} [http://amshistorica.unibo.it/diglib.php?inv=166 Atlas of Italian colonies], written by Baratta Mario and Visintin Luigi in 1928
- Simona Berhe: [https://encyclopedia.1914-1918-online.net/article/colonies_italy/ Colonies (Italy)], in: [https://encyclopedia.1914-1918-online.net/home.html/ 1914-1918-online. International Encyclopedia of the First World War].
{{Italian colonial empire}}
{{Italian colonial campaigns}}
{{Italy topics}}
{{Colonialism}}
{{Authority control}}
Category:1882 establishments in Italy
Category:1960 disestablishments in Italy
Category:States and territories established in 1882
Category:States and territories disestablished in 1960
Category:History of European colonialism