When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Death of Benito Mussolini - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Death_of_Benito_Mussolini

    Aside from Mussolini and Petacci, sixteen of the most prominent of them would be summarily shot in Dongo the following day and a further ten would be killed over two successive nights. [26] Claretta Petacci, Mussolini's mistress, was captured and executed with him. Fighting was still going on in the area around Dongo.

  3. Assassination attempts on Benito Mussolini - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Assassination_attempts_on...

    The next year, on April 7, 1926, Violet Gibson shot a pistol at Mussolini, which grazed his nose. He was bandaged and continued on to give his scheduled speech. [2] Gibson, the daughter of the Irish Lord Chancellor, was nearly lynched, later jailed, and spent the remainder of her life in an asylum. [6]

  4. Benito Mussolini - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Benito_Mussolini

    Mussolini regarded the war against Britain and France as a life-or-death struggle between opposing ideologies—fascism and the "plutocratic and reactionary democracies of the west"—describing the war as "the struggle of the fertile and young people against the sterile people moving to the sunset; it is the struggle between two centuries and ...

  5. Piazzale Loreto massacre - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Piazzale_Loreto_massacre

    Piazzale Loreto massacre was a Nazi-Fascist massacre that took place in Italy, on 10 August 1944 in Piazzale Loreto, Milan, during the World War II.. Fifteen Italian partisans were shot by soldiers of the Oberdan group of the Ettore Muti Mobile Autonomous Legion of the Italian Social Republic, by order of the Nazi Sicherheitsdienst, and their bodies were exposed to the public.

  6. Gran Sasso raid - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gran_Sasso_raid

    During World War II, the Gran Sasso raid (codenamed Unternehmen Eiche, German pronunciation: [ʊntɐˌneːmən ˈaɪ̯çə] ⓘ, literally "Operation Oak", by the German military [1]) on 12 September 1943 was a successful operation by German paratroopers and Waffen-SS commandos to rescue the deposed Fascist dictator Benito Mussolini from custody in the Gran Sasso d'Italia massif.

  7. Giacomo Matteotti - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Giacomo_Matteotti

    On 30 May 1924, he openly spoke in the Italian Parliament alleging the fascists committed fraud in the 1924 general election, and denounced the violence they used to gain votes. Eleven days later, he was kidnapped and killed by the secret political police of Benito Mussolini.

  8. Fall of the Fascist regime in Italy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fall_of_the_Fascist_regime...

    They voted on the OdG Grandi first since it had the most proponents. [131] Scorza was the first to vote, saying "no". After him, Marshal de Bono said "yes" and towed the undecided with him. In the end, the OdG Grandi obtained 19 votes for, with 8 against. [132] Mussolini declared the document approved and asked who should bring the result to ...

  9. Mussolini's War - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mussolini's_War

    Mussolini's War is an account of the rise and fall of Benito Mussolini, until 8 September 1943. [1]"Mussolini's War" by John Gooch, offers a comprehensive examination of the tumultuous period in Italian history spanning from 1935 to 1943, under the authoritarian rule of Benito Mussolini.