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Nov 30, 2011 · A documentary about Italy's ruthless dictator Benito Mussolini will show unseen images of the tyrant's corpse. Presented at Turin Film Festival, The Body of the Duce, by horror film-maker...
1 day ago · She also took photographs of daily life; women and children in their neighborhoods and streets, contrasting the wealth of the area with the misery of a city resigned to its fate. She said of these communities: “I searched for their dream, to find love, adventures, peace, freedom, beauty, a fantastic future. In them I find myself as a child."
Luigi Mussini. Self-portrait (c.1850) Game of Chess between Ruy Lopez and Leonardo da Cutro at the Spanish Court. Luigi Mussini (19 December 1813 – 18 June 1888) was an Italian painter, linked especially to the Purismo movement and to the Nazarenes.
Apr 28, 2015 · In death, Mussolini seemed a little man. He wore a Fascist Militia uniform — grey breeches with a narrow black stripe, a green-grey tunic and muddy black riding boots. A bullet had pierced his...
- Inside Benito Mussolini’s Rise to Power
- A Transformation Into A Brutal Dictator
- How IL Duce Entered World War II
- The Downfall of Benito Mussolini
- How Did Benito Mussolini Die?
- How Mussolini’s Corpse Was Mutilated After His Death
- The Aftermath of Mussolini’s Death
Benito Mussolini took control of Italy thanks to the pen just as much as the sword. Born July 29, 1883, in Dovia di Predappio, Benito Amilcare Andrea Mussolini was intelligent and inquisitive from an early age. In fact, he first set out to be a teacher but soon decided that career wasn’t for him. Still, he voraciously read the works of great Europe...
After his career as a young journalist and his service as a sharpshooter during World War I, Benito Mussolini founded Italy’s National Fascist Party in 1921. Backed by increasing numbers of supporters and strongarm paramilitary squads dressed in black, the Fascist leader calling himself “Il Duce” soon became known for fiery speeches fueled by his e...
Five years after the Ethiopian invasion, Benito Mussolini watched from the sidelines as Hitler invaded France. In his own mind, Il Duce felt it should be Italy fighting the French. Undoubtedly, however, the German military was bigger, better equipped, and had better leaders. Thus Mussolini could only watch, align himself with Hitler fully, and decl...
Facing pressure on the home front due to increasingly stressful wartime conditions and rebelliousness from within his own ranks, Benito Mussolini was removed from office by the king and the Grand Council in July of 1943. The Allies had re-taken northern Africa away from Italy and Sicily was now in Allied hands as they prepared to invade Italy itsel...
By the spring of 1945, the war in Europe was over and Italy was broken. The south was in ruins as Allied troops advanced. The country was battered, and it was, many thought, all Il Duce’s fault. But arresting Il Duce was no longer a viable course of action. Even though Hitler was surrounded by Allied troops in Berlin, Italy didn’t want to take any ...
The night after Benito Mussolini’s death, a cargo truck roared into Milan’s Square of the Fifteen Martyrs. A cadre of 10 men unceremoniously dumped 18 bodies out of the back. They were those of Mussolini, the Petaccis, and the 15 suspected Fascists. It was the same square where, a year earlier, Mussolini’s men had gunned down 15 anti-Fascists in a ...
Word of Benito Mussolini’s death spread quickly. Hitler, for one, heard the news on the radio and vowed to not have his corpse desecrated in the same fashion as Mussolini’s. People in Hitler’s inner circle reported that he said, “This will never happen to me.” In his final will, scrawled on a piece of paper, Hitler said, “I do not wish to fall into...
- William Delong
Oct 17, 2014 · In this poignant and delicate story, just like in a tale by the author herself, a young Japanese woman (played by Rinko Kikuchi, who was Oscar-nominated for Babel) is given only four days to say goodbye to her six-year-old son (Ken Brady), after losing custody of him in a divorce.
During his dictatorship, representations of Mussolini's body—for example pictures of him engaged in physical labour either bare-chested or half-naked—formed a central part of fascist propaganda. His body remained a potent symbol after his death, causing it to be either revered by supporters or treated with contempt and disrespect by ...