Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-rdxmf Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-25T05:15:47.798Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Tourist Planning in Fascist Italy and the Limits of a Totalitarian Culture

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 September 2008

Extract

The historiography of Italian fascism has reached a curious pass. Once, especially in the English-language world, all was dominated by the study of politics, diplomacy and war. Moreover, these studies were automatically ‘intentionalist’ in their interpretation. For Denis Mack Smith as, ironically, for Renzo De Felice, it did not seem possible to think of the period from 1922 to 1945 except as ‘Mussolini's Italy’; any analysis of fascist Italy could not depart far from the dominant and dominating figure of the Duce.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1997

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1 For my own brief and comparative analysis of the literature, see Bosworth, R.J.B., Explaining Auschwitz and Hiroshima: History Writing and the Second World War 1945–1990 (London: Routledge, 1993), 118–41.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

2 De Grazia, V., How Fascism Ruled Women: Italy 1922–1945 (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1992)Google Scholar; cf. also her pioneering account of much of fascist society, The Culture of Consent: Mass Organization of Leisure in Fascist Italy (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1981). See also the more narrowly focused Fraddosio, M., ‘The Fallen Hero: the Myth of Mussolini and Fascist Women in the Italian Social Republic (1943–5)‘, Journal of Contemporary History, Vol. 31, no. 1 (1996), 99124.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

3 Morris, J., The Political Economy of Shopkeeping in Milan 1886–1922 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1993).CrossRefGoogle Scholar

4 Davis, J.A., ‘Remapping Italy's Path to the Twentieth Century’, Journal of Modem History, Vol. 66, no. 2 (1994), 291320;CrossRefGoogle Scholar cf., e.g. Romanelli, R., ‘Urban Patricians and “Bourgeois” Society: a Study of Wealthy Elites in Florence, 1862–1904’, Journal of Modem Italian Studies, Vol. 1, no. 2 (1995), 321.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

5 And to argue that the post-1943-ish anti-fascists had never ‘really– been contaminated by the regime. For a neat demolition of some of these myths, see Ben-Ghiat, R., ‘Fascism, Writing and Memory: the Realist Aesthetic in Italy, 1930–1950’, Journal of Modem History, Vol. 67, no. 2 (1995), 627–65.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

6 The most evident influence on Gentile is George Mosse, one of the founding editors of the Journal of Contemporary History, in his work on the cultural background of Nazi Germany. For an English-language example of Gentile's debt to Mosse, see Gentile, E., ‘Fascism as a Political Religion’, Journal of Contemporary History, Vol. 25, no. 2 (1990), 229–51.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

7 Gentile, E., La via italiana al totalitarismo: il Partito e lo Stato nel regime fascista (Rome: La Nuova Italia Scientifica, 1995).Google Scholar

8 Schnapp, J.T., ‘18 BL: Fascist Mass Spectacle’, Representations, Vol. 43, no. 2 (1993), 92–3.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

9 For the most accessible English-language example, see Gentile, E., ‘Fascism in Italian Historiography: in Search of an Individual Historical Identity’, Journal of Contemporary History, Vol. 21, no. 2 (1986), 179208;CrossRefGoogle Scholar for a more recent re-statement of this belief, see an article by a colleague of Gentile's, , Zapponi, N., ‘Fascism in Italian Historiography, 1986–1993: a Fading National Identity’, Journal of Contemporary History, Vol. 29, no. 2 (1994).Google Scholar

10 Bosworth, R.J.B., Italy and the Wider World 1860–1960 (London: Routledge, 1996), 159–81.Google Scholar The most serious Italian regional case study of tourism, which, unfortunately, does not continue into the Fascist era, is Scattarreggia, M., San Remo 1815–1915: turismo e trasformazione territoriale (Milan: F. Angeli, 1986).Google Scholar

11 Stringher, B., Gli scambii con l'estero e la politica commerciale italiana dal 1860 al 1910 (Rome: Tipografia della R. Accademia dei Lincei, 1912), 122–5.Google Scholar

12 For brief Italian reviews of these matters, see Treves, A., ‘Alle origini dell'intervento pubblico per il turismo in Italia’, in L'Italia the cambia: il contributo della geografia, Vol. 2 (Catania, 1989), 155–66Google Scholar, and idem, ‘Anni di guerra, anni di svolta. Il turismo italiano durante la prima guerra mondiale’, in Botta, G., ed., Studi geografici sul paesaggio (Milan: Cisalpino-Goliardico, 1989), 249–99.Google Scholar

13 Here, cf. the convincing efforts of Australian historian, Richard White, to depict the response, at least of Australian soldiers at the war fronts, as itself a variety of tourist experience. His ideas might fruitfully be applied to other nations’ war experiences. See, White, e.g. R., ‘Australians' First Impressions of England’, Australian Cultural History, Vol. 5, no. 2 (1986), 4459;Google Scholar ‘Motives for Joining Up: Self-sacrifice, Self-interest and Social Class 1914–18’, Journal of the Australian War Memorial, Vol. 9, no. 1 (1986), 3–16.

14 Among Nitti's key advisers were Meucci Ruini, the Under-Secretary for Industry, Trade and Work, and Ruini's Chef de Cabinet, Angelo Mariotti. Ruini would be a notable critic of Mussolini's regime during the Matteotti crisis and remain unreconciled with the regime, opposing, for example, the creation of the Corporate State. After 1943 he would re-emerge on the political scene. See, e.g. De Felice, R., Mussolini il fascista: I. La conquista del potere 1921–1925 (Turin: Einaudi, 1966), 398, 682Google Scholar; Aquarone, A., L'organizzazione dello stato totalitario (Turin: Einaudi, 1965), 124;Google Scholar and, in English, Delzell, C.F., Mussolini's Enemies: the Italian Anti-Fascist Resistance (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1961), 18; 21819; 389–91Google Scholar; for Ruini's own enthusiasms, see Ruini, M., La montagna in guerra e dopo la guerra (Rome, 1919).Google Scholar For Mariotti, a splendid embodiment of continuity in Italian history, see Bosworth, Italy and the Wider World 1860–1960, 172–3.

15 My reference here is to Arthur Marwick's useful concept of the ‘test of war’, his idea that participation in a modern war will uncover the bases of a modem state and show up its relationship with society. See, e.g. Marwick, A., War and Social Change in the Twentieth Century: a Comparative Study of Britain, France, Germany, Russia and the United States [but not Italy] (London: Macmillan, 1974).Google Scholar

16 Bonatti, M., Nascita e sviluppo di una åttà termale: Salsomaggiore (Parma: Quaderni Fidentini, 1981), 35–8.Google Scholar Rebucci was a fervent advocate of state control of the local spa industry. See, e.g. A.M. Rebucci, ‘Per l'industria termale italiana’, Nuova Antologia, f. 1205 (1 June 1922), 253–6.

17 Rebucci, A.M., ‘Visioni di economia turistica’, Riviste delle stazioni di cura, soggiorno e turismo, Vol. 17, no. 6–7 (1941).Google Scholar

18 Mariotti, G., Il turismo fra le due guerre (Rome: Edizioni Mercurio, [1941])Google Scholar; see also his La Svizzera turistica (Genoa: Camera di Commercio, Industria e Agricoltura, 1948).

19 Mariotti, Il turismo, 219–20.

20 For a fundamental account of this era of Mussolini's ‘going to the people’ in order, at last, to construct the ‘new Fascist man and woman’k, see De Felice, R., Mussolini il duce: lo stato totalitario 1936–1940 (Turin: Einaudi, 1981).Google Scholar

21 Mariotti, , Il turismo, 224.Google Scholar

22 Ibid., 225.

23 Ibid., 243–8.

24 It was hardly surprising, then, that Mariotti would, only four years later, be the author of one of the first guides to post-fascist Italy, although the flavour of his English would be somewhat cloying as he sought to forget or obscure the immediate past: ‘Running out into the middle of the Mediternanean like a flower-bedecked bridge between the Alps and Africa, this land has all the charms that may be found in a country. When we find that some of its sons do not come up to our expectations, they may jar or even arouse our scorn, we need only to conjure up Italy in all her beauty, understand her meaning, remember her everlasting value, to forgive and be reconciled again.… [In Italy] one cannot lift a clod of earth without finding some trace of its past life. One cannot walk a yard without calling up the name of some world-famous Italian genius.’ At present, it was true, Italy's condition was parlous, but this was ‘not the first time that men have devastated and trampled underfoot what was, and always will be, dear to the gods’. Revival would come, especially through tourism. Before the war, ‘the organisation for the reception of tourists had reached a high degree of perfection even in the smaller centres, and will again reach the same level as soon as the damage caused by the war can be repaired’. In its tourist policy, as in everything else, fascism had made some calamitous mistakes, but the fascist regime had now fallen and Italy and tourism, in necessary and fruitful marriage, were certain to revive. See Mariotti, G., Here's Italy (Florence: Vallecchi, 1945), 810, 206–9.Google Scholar

25 See, e.g. Ogilivie, F.W., The Tourist Movement: an Economic Study (London: Staples Press [1933])Google Scholar, which gives the total number of visitors that year as 1,340,000.

26 Mariotti, Il turismo, 159, 163, 173.

27 ‘Ch’, ‘Verità sul turismo–, Rivista delle stazioni di cura, soggiomo e turismo, Vol. 17, no. 6–7 (1941).

28 Archivio Centrale dello Stato (thereafter ACS), Presidenza del Consiglio, Gabinetto (thereafter PCM) 1926 3/15/4339, which has copy of ENIT, Relazione sull'attività svolta nell'anno 1925 (Rome, 1926). The organisation claimed a profit of 1.8 million lira, though it also had received state subsidies of 1.9 million, 1.5 million from the Ministry of National Economy and 400,000 from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

29 Sommariva to Suardo, 20 Apr. 1927. ACS PCM 1928–1930 3.2.1/7408.

30 For the inauguration, see Il Popolo d'Italia, 19 March 1927. A brief English-language biography of Gray can be found in Cannistraro, P.V., ed., Historical Dictionary of Fascist Italy (Westport, Conn., Greenwood Press, 1982), 260–1.Google Scholar The Direttore Generale or manager of CIT was the career-bureaucrat, Michele Oro, transferred from ENIT, in which he had built up a fine reputation for efficiency and moderation. For some hints about his reluctance at the move, see ‘Redattore’, ‘Le grandi figure del turismo: Michele Oro’, Ospitalità italiana: rivista alberghiera e turistica, Vol. 2, no. 3 (1927), 40. Oro was said to have remarked that the order for his transfer had come from above and, in those circumstances, ‘we accept the fait accompli and look to the future’. His presence at CIT is of course a sign that the conflict with ENIT was not simply one between ‘real’ fascists and fiancheggiatori.

31 Poreta, L., ‘Che cos'è la CIT?’, Ospitalità italiano, Vol. 2, no. 2 (1927), 30–1.Google Scholar

32 For an official history, see Vota, G., ed., I sessant'anni del Touring Club Italiano 1894–1954 (Milan: TCI, 1954).Google Scholar

33 Gray minute of meeting with Mussolini, ACS PCM 1928–1930, 3.2.1/7408, 21 Nov. 1927.

34 Gray to Mussolini; Ibid., 21 Nov., 22 Dec. 1927; Porretta,‘Che cos'è la CIT?’, 30–1.

35 Gray, E.M., Il Belgio sotto la spada tedesca (Florence: Libreria internazionale, [1915]), 72.Google Scholar

36 Ibid., 85.

37 Gray, E.M., L'invasione tedesca in Italia (Florence: Bemporad, [1915]), 89, 244–8.Google Scholar Gray typically assumed that Swiss tourists, hoteliers and waiters were all Germans in disguise.

38 In 1911–12 Gray had also been a propagandist of the Nationalist cause in the Libyan war. Italy's victory, he stated, in rhetoric typical of the time, was owed to the nation's ‘gesture of audacious madness’, its ‘Garibaldinian impatience’. See, e.g. Gray, E.M., La bella guena (Florence: Bemporad, 1912), 3, 9.Google Scholar

39 Gray, E.M., Venezia in armi (Milan: Treves, 1917), 61, 70.Google Scholar

40 Ibid., 4–6, 150, 180–2.

41 See, Federzoni, Luigi, 1927: diario di un ministro del fascismo, ed. Macchi, A. (Florence: Passigli, 1993).Google Scholar

42 Gray, E.M., Crescendo di certezze (Rome: Casa Editrice Pinciana, 1930), 118–19.Google Scholar

43 Idem, Dopo venti anni: il fascismo e l'Europa (Rome: PNF, 1943), 27.

44 Ibid., 40.

45 See, e.g. E.M. Gray, Chi è Colonello Poletti? (n.p., 1944).

46 In his First World War attacks on the ‘cosmopolitanism’ of such Giolittian bankers as Otto Joel and others of the Banca Commerciale Italiana, there had been more than a hint of anti-Semitism. For further examples of his public speaking, see Gray's works, E.M., I problemi dell'italianità nel mondo (Rome: Palazzo di Firenze, 1932)Google Scholar; Credenti nella patria (Milan: Mondadori, 1935); L'Italia ha sempre ragione (Milan: Mondadori, 1938); Noi e Tunisi. Come costruimmo la Tunisia (Milan: Mondadori, 1939); La loro civiltà (Turin: Edizioni della Gazzetta del Popolo, 1941); Ramazza: cronache dette e non dette (Milan: Mondadori, 1942); Il filo di Arianna (Milan: Rizzoli, 1942). In 1931 he had also edited an edition of the patriotic orations of the Duke of Aosta, , Gray, E.M., ed., Il Duca d'Aosta: cittadino della riscossa Italica (Milan: Ente Autonomo Stampa, 1931).Google Scholar

47 b.i.m.’, ‘L'industria turistica in Italia’, L'Economia nazionale, Vol. 19, no. 2 (1927), 90.Google Scholar

48 c.o.s.’, ‘I problemi del turismo: l'attività del CIT e la propaganda turistica allxty'estero’, L'Economia nazionale, Vol. 19, no. 2 (1927), 44–5Google Scholar; cf. Il Popolo d'Italia, 15 July 1927.

49 Caesar, ’, ‘I problemi del turismo’, L'Economia nazionale, Vol. 20, no. 2 (1928), 158–9.Google Scholar

50 Gray, E.M., Il turismo aereo: relazione al IV congresso intemazionale di navigazione aerea (CIT, Rome, 1927).Google Scholar

51 ‘Caesar’, ‘I problemi del turismo’, L'Economia nazionale, Vol. 20, no. 2 (1928), 199200.Google Scholar

52 De Felice, R., Mussolini il duce: I Gli anni del consenso 1929–1936 (Turin: Einaudi, 1974), 175.Google Scholar The fullest narration of the creation of the fascist state is still Aquarone, L'organizzazione.

53 Belluzzo to Mussolini, ACS PCM 1928–1930 3.2.1/7408, 5 Jan. 1928.

54 Ibid., 9 Sept. 1928, Martelli to Mussolini. The TCI remained a sufficiently authoritative body to be given, in 1929, an automatic right to propose a candidate to the partially corporatised Chamber of Fasces and Corporations. Aquarone, L'organizzazione, 155.

55 Gray to Mussolini, ibid., 14 Mar. 1928.

56 Rava to Martelli, Ibid., 3.2.1/5785, 25 Jan. 1929; Mussolini to Rava, 2 Feb. 1929. For Rava, see Bosworth, R.J.B., Italy, the Least of the Great Powers (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1979), 42, 51, 60.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

57 Martelli to Mussolini, ACS PCM 1928–1930 3.2.1/950, 11 Feb. 1929.

58 Il Popolo d'Italia, 6 June, 12 June 1929.

59 Il Popolo d'Italia, 6 June, 4 July, 6 July 1929.

60 Il Popolo d'Italia, 11, 13, 20 Aug. 1929; earlier in the year Gray had had to ward off radical attacks on the whole industry. Futurists, it was then noted, had long decried the national reliance on tourism. Il Popolo d'Italia, 12 Jan. 1929. For Maioni's resignation, see ACS PCM 1928–1930 3.2.1/8501, 30 Sept. 1929. Maioni complained that ENIT was financially embarrassed in its accounts both with the Banca nazionale del lavoro and the Banca commerciale.

61 ACS Segretaria particolare del Duce, carteggio riservato (hereafter SPDCR), 95.1, 21 July 1928, secret file on Suvich, noting how his departure from government had ‘disoriented a little everyone’ in Trieste. Suvich, it was thus plain, was a politican with a local power base not to be gainsaid.

62 For a brief biography of Suvich, see Cannistraro, Dictionary, 522–3. A volume of memoirs of his diplomatic career has been published. Suvich, F., Memorie 1932–1936, ed. Bianchi, G., (Milan: Rizzoli, 1984)Google Scholar, and a few of his private papers are preserved at the ACS. Gray, in the First World War, had vituperatively attacked Volpi as an agent of Giolittian (and German) corruption. When, in July 1928, Volpi retired as Minister of Finance, Gray wrote to express his respect and his pleasure that past ‘rancour’ had been transmuted into ‘love’. It may be doubted if Volpi as easily saw himself as a friend of Gray. See ACS, Volpi papers, 2/20/3. Others, with a less tangled past relationship with Volpi, who now sent salutations, included A.M. Rebucci, B. Nogara and J.P. Morgan.

63 Il Popolo d'Italia, 29 Oct. 1929.

64 Girani, G., ‘La battaglia del turismo’, Ospitalità italiana, Vol. 4, no. 8 (1929), 77–8.Google Scholar

65 Suvich memorandum, 10 Nov. 1929, ACS PCM 1928–1930 3.2.1/8501.

66 Bonardi had been Under-Secretary of War in Mussolini's first government from 1922 to July 1924. He officially joined the Fascist Party in 1923.

67 V. Fresco to Suvich, Feb. 1930, ACS PCM 1928–1930 3.2.1/950.

68 Il Popolo d'Italia, 11 May 1930; cf. 9 Feb, 18 March, 6 Apr. on ENIT.

69 Suvich to Mussolini, 16 Jan. 1931, ACS PCM 1928–1930 3.2.1/8501.

70 Suvich had been exercised about this matter for more than a decade. See, e.g. Suvich memorandum, 26 May 1924, ACS SPDCR, 95.1 complaining about French superiority, Italian bureaucratism and the lack of a clear decision-making process for such tourism in Italy, given the number of competing agencies.

71 Suvich to Mussolini, 16 Jan. 1931, ACS PCM 1928–1930 3.2.1/8501; for the problem of over-zealous border guards, see also Suvich to Bocchini, 25 Sept. 1930. Complaints continued. Among those harassed, at least by her own account, was Leni Riefenstahl. Riefenstahl to Mussolini, 19 Aug. 1931, PCM 1931–33 9.3.2216. Later that year, Police Chief Bocchini was again saying that he would see what he could do, but not at the expense ‘of leaving undisturbed elements pernicious to the security of the state’. Bocchini to Mussolini, 27 Dec. 1931, PCM 1931–33 3.2.1/3804.

72 Memorandum (n.d.), ACS PCM 1934–1936 3.2.1/950.

73 Fassini to C. Ciano, 30 July 1931, ibid. Il Popolo d'Italia had announced Fassini's appointment on 24 May 1930.

74 See, e.g. Fiorentino, A.R., La corporazione del turismo (Rome: Grafia, 1932), 5, 19, 22.Google Scholar Fiorentino was one who had not forgotten ENIT's doubtful Liberal origins. See 14. Cf. also Castelli, A. and Fiorentino, A., Manuale dell' Albergatore (Rome: Tipografia F. Centenari, 1934)Google Scholar, setting out the corporatist rules in full.

75 II Popolo d'Italia, 24 Mar. 1931.

76 Fassini to C. Ciano, 30July 1931, ACS PCM 1934–36 3.2.1/950.

77 For an English-language introduction, see Stone, M., ‘Staging Fascism: The Exhibition of the Fascist Revolution’, Journal of Contemporary History, Vol. 2, no. 2 (1993), 215–43CrossRefGoogle Scholar, which also contains some examples of the lingering possibilities for ‘corruption’, even in a Fascist tourist industry.

78 Mariotti, A., Corso di economia turistica (Rome: De Agostini, 1933), 243.Google Scholar For further detail on the tourist statistics of the 1930s, see Carone, G., II turismo nell'economia intemazionale (Milan: Giuffrè, 1959).Google Scholar

79 Fassini to Rossoni, 21 Jan. 1933, ACS PCM 1934–36 3.2.1/950.

80 Suvich to Rossoni, 25 Jan. 1933, Ibid.

81 Anon. to Mussolini, 24 June 1933, ACS PCM 1931–33 3.2.1/11356.

82 Fassini to C. Ciano, 29 Sept. 1933, Ibid.

83 Fassini to C. Ciano, 29 Sept. 1933, Ibid.

84 Fassini to Rossoni, 31 July, 29 Aug. 1933, ACS PCM 1934–36 3.2.1/950.

85 Suvich to Rossoni, 7 Sept. 1933, Ibid.

86 Fassini note, 11 Dec. 1933, ACS PCM 1931–33 3.2.1/8539; C. Ciano to Mussolini, 12 Dec. 1933. A few months later, Mussolini, forgetful of such arrangements, was urging that it would be best if both foreigners coming into Italy and Italians going abroad used only Italian agencies. 8 May 1934, PCM 1934–36 3.2.1/950.

87 II Popolo d'Italia, 27 May 1934.

88 Imperatore, V.E., ‘Realizzazioni di politica turistica’, L'Economia nazionale, Vol. 25, no. 11 (1933), 2932;Google ScholarGajto, G., ‘La fiera del Levante e il turismo’, Turismo d'Italia, Vol. 8, no. 4 (1934).Google Scholar

89 Il Popolo d'Italia, 24 Nov. 1934.

90 Mariotti's position as a manager of ENIT was now suppressed to his at least later regret. He would also eventually lose his fascist party ticket (tessera) after quarrelling with Oreste Bonomi who had become Direttore Generale per il Turismo. See Mariotti, A., Raccolta di studi sul turismo (Rome: Arti Grafiche Scalia Editrice), 447, 469.Google Scholar

91 Fassini would soon find other fields to conquer. In 1936 it was announced that he was to head the Compagnia Immobiliare Alberghi Africa Orientale and Società Gestioni Alberghi Africa Orientale whose patriotic and imperial task was to be sweetened with a fifteen-year monopoly. See Statera, V., ‘Le grandi realizzazioni del regime nell' Africa Orientale Italiana: l'attrezzatura alberghiera e l'opera della C.I.A.A.O.’, Gli annali dell' Africa Italiana, Vol. 4 (1941), 1,150–5.Google Scholar

92 Il Popolo d'Italia, 9 Nov. 1934.

93 Once again, though, ambiguities are easy to locate and the difference between ‘real’ fascists and fellow-travellers grows complex. The name change having been agreed, the now CTI officials asked Mussolini what policy they should pursue. ‘Carry on as you have always done,’ he was alleged to have replied. Vota, Touring Club, 300–1. As for the TCI/CTI's enemies, one was Giotto Dainelli, the distinguished geographer who would eventually replace the assassinated Giovanni Gentile as head of the Fascist Academy. Dainelli thought the Touring inexpert and slow as map-makers, a strange charge given the apparent quality of the Club's work in this field. Dainelli memorandum, 25 June 1938, ACS Segretaria particolare del Duce, carteggio ordinario 1922–1943, 1046/509170.

94 Mariotti, A., Lezioni di economia turistica per gli studenti della Facoltà di economia e commercio (anno accademico 1940–41), (Rome: Società Editrice Nuovissima, 1941), 20.Google Scholar

95 Ospitalità italiana, Vol. 15, no. 4 (1940).

96 , G. M., ‘La costituzione della Camerata turistica italiana’, Turismo d'Italia, Vol. 16, no. 7 (1941).Google Scholar

97 Il Popolo d'Italia, 24, 26 Jan. 1936.

98 Guarneri, F., Battaglie economiche fra le due guerre, ed. Zani, L. (Bologna: Il Mulino, 1988), 504.Google Scholar

99 Ibid., 545, 624–7, 726–31.

100 Ibid., 847.

101 De Felice, R., Mussolini l'alleato. I: L'Italia in guerra 1940–1943 (Turin: Einaudi, 1990), 770–1.Google Scholar

102 Ministry of Popular Culture to Ministry of Finance, 21 Sept. 1940; Ministry of Finance to Ministry of Popular Culture, 10 Nov. 1942; Ministry of Popular Culture to Ministry of Finance, 7 Dec. 1942, ACS PCM 1940–3 3.2.1/2846/8.

103 For a rather naive narration of this history, see Trova, A., ‘Alle origine dell'Ente Nazionale Turistiche e Alberghiere (1939–1941)’, Il Risorgimento, Vol. 45, no. 2 (1993), 265–77.Google Scholar This whole issue is devoted to the history of tourism in Italy.

104 Probo Magrini (Direttore Generale per ill Turismo) memorandum, 5 Oct. 1939; ACS Atti e documenti dell'Ente Nazionale Industrie ed Alberghiere (ENITEA) 556/19; memorandum, ‘Dati informativi sull’ENITEA, (n.d.), ENITEA 556/2.

105 For a history, see Castronovob, V., Storia di una banca: la Banca Nazionale del Lavoro e lo sviluppo economico italiano 1913–1983 (Turin: Einaudi, 1983).Google Scholar

106 Mattioli to Magrini, 28 Nov. 1939, ENITEA 556/19. As for the Romagnole reference, a reader is tempted to ask whether Mattioli, when he was podestà of Rimini, stared out to sea with the young Federico Fellini as the Rex went by, its lights blazing.

107 Mattioli to Ministry of Popular Culture, 16 Jan. 1940, ENITEA 556/2.

108 Minutes of meeting of ENITEA board, 18 Sept. 1940, ibid.

109 Minutes of meeting, 31 May 1940, ibid. Later it was noted that the suggestion to buy the Palazzo had come directly from Alessandro Pavolini. Minutes, 18 Sept. 1940.

110 Ministry of Finance meeting with Mattioli, 12 May 1941, ibid.

111 Minutes of meeting, 23 April 1941; Ministry of Finance meeting with Mattioli, 12 May 1941; minutes, 26 June 1941; minutes, 16 Oct. 1941, ibid.

112 Mattioli to Pavolini, 22 Aug. 1941, Ibid.

113 Toffano to Pavolini, 4 March 1942; Toffano to Pavolini, 3 June 1942, ENITEA 556/19.

114 Direzione Generale per il Turismo to Ministry of Popular Culture, 23 April 1943, ibid.; Toffano to Ministry of Finance, 22 Nov. 1943; President of Council memorandum, 12 June 1956, 556/ 1; R. Schmid report, 30 Sept. 1956. As these last dates demonstrate, more than a decade after the war the Republican authorities had still not brought themselves to wind up ENITEA.

115 For one droll example, see the account of the Rotary conference being held in Venice just as the Ethiopian crisis reached its height. Rotary International, Terza conferenza regionale Europa-Africa-Asia Minore Venezia settembre 1935 (Venice: Stamperia Zanetti, 1936).Google Scholar