Benito Mussolini Essay

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    This essay will compare the three leaders who are famous for their dictatorship and totalitarianism during the 30's decade-Adolf Hitler, Benito Mussolini and Joseph Stalin. Totalitarianism is when a government gains absolute and total control over the country, including the freedom of thought and will as well as the citizen?s lifestyle, no other political parties are allowed and has the concept where the country is most important. The difference and similarity between their ideology, usage of propaganda

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    Benito Mussolini

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    sports, especially football, as a political tool. Benito Mussolini capitalized on the fact that the 1934 World Cup was to take place in Italy, by “drawing on the athletic imagery of the Roman Empire,” where Mussolini himself chose the referees for each game, culminating in the Italians bringing the trophy home that year (Duffy, 2003). Jules Rimet, president of FIFA, remained seated when the Italian national team gave the fascist salute to Mussolini after the game (Eisenberg, 2005). The 1936 Olympics

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    Benito Mussolini was a pompous Italian dictator who strived and accomplished in making Italy a fascist state. There are various factors that lead to the popularity and power of the despot leader such as the outcomes of the Treaty of Versailles, the inefficient government and democratic system, fear of the Blackshirts, and the poor economy. Italy fought alongside the Allies during World War One, for this reason the Italian government was assured in the Treaty of London to receive parts of different

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    Mussolini was a part of the Fascist party. After the World War I, Italy had many economic and political problems. Mussolini used this as a way to gain power. Mussolini and his followers (known as Black Shirts) got the support if Italians by “attacking communists and socialists”. He led the March on Rome to prevent a communist revolution

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    were involved in the war, Benito Mussolini and his Italian army sought to settle their differences with many nations. Benito’s fascist views, his idea of a nation built by one race, and his relationship with Adolf Hitler ultimately led to his involvement in the war. His responsibility, in essence, was to ally himself with the superpowers of the world, and lead his people into a war that they could not fight. "Il Duce", (the leader), was the name that Benito Mussolini gave himself as his rise to

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    Fascism Dbq

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    especially during times of need. To start, Benito Mussolini who was a newspaper editor and politician who pledged to rescue Italy during their time of desperate need. Fascism was on the rise in Italy, it was fueled by their disappointment and failure to win large territorial gains. People gravitated towards the new and vastly improving idea of Fascism. Italians wanted a leader who would take action and they found their answer in Benito Mussolini. Mussolini had vowed to provide strong leadership to

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    authoritarian and nationalistic right-wing systems such as fascism. The Italian fascist dictator, Benito Mussolini, was one of the main leaders of this ideological movement. Mussolini shared many traits

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    Chancellor Adolf Hitler of Nazi Germany and Prime Minister Benito Mussolini of Italy Andrew Chen 6 February 2017 Period 4 Chen 2 Both Benito Mussolini and Adolf Hitler had the same burning, profound desire for their nations to become well-respected and invincible superpowers of the world. As a matter of fact, Hitler respected and admired Mussolini; Hitler was influenced heavily by Mussolini, in fact, he looked upon Mussolini’s work and imitated him, while adding his own personal style and

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    Mussolini Essay

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    Benito Mussolini Like his father, Benito became a burning socialist. Mussolini had huge goals of running a political machine based on his own beliefs. Born in the poverty-stricken village of Romagna, Italy, he was wild, nomadic, and defiant as a young adult lived the life of a bum. Showing fierce aggression at such a young age, he was expelled from two schools for knife-assaults on other students. His father a village blacksmith and his mother a schoolmistress, he lived life in poverty that seemed

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    provided, in addition to a comparing and contrasting of the two selected sources, on the course of their utility, Mussolini on Fascism and The Late Loyalists: Northern Reflections of the Early American Republic, the former being primary and latter secondary. As such, it is best to provide a brief intent and purpose of each selection. By its very nature, but yet despite its length, Mussolini on Fascism, or as its titled, What is Fascism, is a critical resource that is needed for one to fully appreciate

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