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  2. Socialism in Italy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Socialism_in_Italy

    Biennio Rosso was a two-year period between 1919 and 1920. After the First World War, it had a great impact on Italian and European socialism, and there were a great number of intense social conflicts in Italy during that time. [1] During this period, conflicts between reformists and communist wings of the Italian Socialist Party (PSI) occurred ...

  3. Italian Socialist Party - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Italian_Socialist_Party

    The PSI dominated the Italian left until after World War II, when it was eclipsed in status by the Italian Communist Party (PCI). The two parties formed an alliance lasting until 1956 and governed together at the local level, particularly in some big cities and the so-called red regions until the 1990s.

  4. Fascist and anti-Fascist violence in Italy (1919–1926 ...

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fascist_and_anti-Fascist...

    Violence grew in 1921 with Royal Italian Army officers beginning to assist the fascists with their violence against communists and socialists. [2] With the fascist movement growing, anti-fascist of various political allegiances but generally of the international left combined into the Arditi del Popolo (People's Militia) in 1921. [3]

  5. Italian road to socialism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Italian_road_to_socialism

    The Italian road to socialism (it. Via italiana al socialismo) was the ideology and the political practice pursued by the Italian Communist Party, which had its roots in Antonio Gramsci's thought, and was formalized during the VIII Congress in 1956 by the general secretary Palmiro Togliatti. [1] [2] The famous election poster "Vote communist".

  6. Fascist syndicalism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fascist_syndicalism

    Fascist syndicalism was an Italian trade syndicate movement (syndicat means trade union in French) that rose out of the pre-World War II provenance of the revolutionary syndicalist movement led mostly by Edmondo Rossoni, Sergio Panunzio, Angelo Oliviero Olivetti, Michele Bianchi, Alceste De Ambris, Paolo Orano, Massimo Rocca, and Guido Pighetti ...

  7. Avanti! (newspaper) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Avanti!_(newspaper)

    The first number of Avanti! was published on 25 December 1896, on Christmas, because the new newspaper sought to represent Italian socialism as intended as "a new voice that does not descend from the airy high sky, but it lifts up from workshops and fields and predicts the peace to men of good will" or their own rendition of what they ...

  8. 1922 Italian general strike - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1922_Italian_general_strike

    Mussolini famously referred to this as the "Caporetto of Italian Socialism". Rudolph Rocker, an active Anarcho-Syndicalist of this period, claimed the event in his book: "When in 1922 the general strike against Fascism broke out, the democratic government armed the Fascist hordes and throttled this last attempt at the defence of freedom and ...

  9. Propaganda in Fascist Italy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Propaganda_in_Fascist_Italy

    In addition to attacking the Italian socialists through the pro-war Fascist newspaper Il Popolo d'Italia ("The People of Italy"), Mussolini often also attacked the liberal establishment of the Kingdom of Italy, which he regarded as responsible for the so-called "mutilated victory", a term used to describe Italian nationalists' dissatisfaction ...