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March of the Iron Will

The March of the Iron Will (Italian: marcia della ferrea volontà) was an Italian Fascist propaganda event staged from 26 April to 5 May 1936, during the final days of the Second Italo-Ethiopian War. Its goal was to capture the Ethiopian capital, Addis Ababa in a show of force. An Italian mechanized column under the command of Pietro Badoglio, Marshal of Italy, advanced from the town of Dessie to take Addis Ababa.[1] The march covered a distance of approximately 200 miles (320 km).

March of the Iron Will
Part of the Second Italo-Ethiopian War

Italian colonial troops advance on Addis Ababa
Date26 April – 5 May 1936 (1936-04-26 – 1936-05-05)
Location
Result Italian victory
Belligerents
 Kingdom of Italy  Ethiopian Empire
Commanders and leaders
Pietro Badoglio
Strength
  • 12,500 Italians
  • 4,000 Eritreans
Unknown
Casualties and losses
  • 170 Eritreans killed
  • 4 Italians captured
Unknown

Background Edit

During the 3rd of October 1935, elements of the Royal Italian Army (Regio Esercito) under General Emilio De Bono (the Commander-in-Chief of all Italian armed forces in East Africa) invaded the Ethiopian Empire from staging areas in the Italian colony of Eritrea on what was known as the "northern front."[2] Forces based in Italian Somaliland under General Rodolfo Graziani invaded Ethiopia on what was known as the "southern front." Ground forces on both fronts were amply supported by the Italian Royal Air Force (Regia Aeronautica).[citation needed]

Badoglio replaced De Bono in late 1935 and was immediately faced with the Ethiopian "Christmas Offensive." On 26 December, Badoglio asked for and was permitted to use mustard gas and phosgene. The Italians delivered the poison gas by special artillery canisters and with bombers of the Italian Royal Air Force. While the poorly equipped Ethiopians experienced some success against the more modern weaponry of the Italians, they were not equipped to handle, or experience in dealing with the "terrible rain that burned and killed."[3]

From early 1936, events on the field of battle did not go well for the Imperial Ethiopian Army. On the southern front, Graziani eliminated a large Ethiopian army commanded by Duke (Ras) Desta Damtew during the Battle of Ganale Doria using poison gas. Badoglio used poison gas to eliminate many of the Ethiopian northern armies. He destroyed Ras Mulugeta Yeggazu's army in the Battle of Amba Aradam. He destroyed Ras Kassa Haile Darge's army in the Second Battle of Tembien. Finally, he destroyed Ras Imru Haile Sellassie's army in the Battle of Shire.[4]

By 31 March, the last Ethiopian army on the northern front was commanded in battle by the Emperor himself, Haile Selassie. His army included six battalions of Ethiopia's best troops, the Imperial Guard (Kebur Zabangna). The Emperor led an ill-fated counterattack during the Battle of Maychew of which he had little to no chance of victory. The Emperor's army suffered heavy losses during costly frontal assaults on prepared Italian fortifications, but the bulk of his army was destroyed during the days following the battle, when poison gas was again used to decimate the withdrawing columns.[5]

On 20 April, Marshal Badoglio flew to the town of Dessie in Wollo Province and made his headquarters there. He decided to advance from Dessie and take the Ethiopian capital of Addis Ababa. Dessie is only two-hundred miles (320 km)[6] from Addis Ababa. Except for a procession of refugees, the road to the capital was clear. The Italian Commander-in-Chief faced no substantial Ethiopian resistance.[7]

Mechanized column Edit

Because of the lack of resistance between Dessie and Addis Ababa, Badoglio risked a spectacular advance with a "mechanized column" for propaganda purposes. In 1936, "mechanized" meant infantry transported in a variety of commercial cars and trucks. "Motorized infantry" is a more appropriate term for Badoglio's column.[7]

Thanks to the organizational genius of a Quartermaster-General Fidenzio Dall'Ora, Badoglio's "mechanized column" came together in Dessie between 21 and 25 April. Dall'Ora was able to organize the most powerful "mechanized" column to appear on an African road up to that time. In addition to 12,500 Italian troops, the column included 1,785 cars and trucks of all makes (Fiats, Lancias, Alfa-Romeos, Fords, Chevrolets, Bedfords, and Studebakers), a squadron of light tanks (L3s), eleven batteries of artillery,[7] and aircraft.[6] Special vehicles carried 193 horses so that when the column arrived at the gates of Addis Ababa, the Marshal and his staff could leave their cars and ride in triumph on horseback.[7]

March Edit

 
The Horn of Africa and southwest Arabia – Mid-1930s. The March of the Iron Will was between Dessie and Addis Ababa. At the same time, General Rodolfo Graziani was advancing from the south toward Harar. Emperor Haile Selassie travelled from Addis Ababa, to Harar to Djibouti in French Somaliland to go into exile.

On 24 April, Badoglio sent two columns of 4,000 Eritreans ahead by force march to protect his mechanized force as a precautionary measure. But the adversity the Eritreans and the march itself encountered was mainly caused by rain and mud. Badoglio's precautionary measure proved to be superfluous.[7]

Imperial highway Edit

Badoglio's mechanized force advanced along the Imperial Highway between Dessie and Addis Ababa. The Italian Commander-in-Chief was to uncharitably refer to this road as "a bad cart track".[8]

Badoglio expected some show of resistance at Termaber Pass, and the mechanized column did halt there for two days but all was quiet. The column stopped because a section of the road had been demolished and had to be repaired.[7] On 4 May the Italian formation was ambushed in Chacha, near Debre Berhan, by Ethiopian forces under Haile Mariam Mammo. In the ensuing battle, Haile Mariam's men killed approximately 170 Italian colonial troops and captured four Italians, two of whom were doctors. They were later released.[9]

Addis Ababa Edit

In Addis Ababa, Emperor Haile Selassie visited the French Legation. After explaining to French Minister Paul Bodard that further defense of the capital was impossible, he explained that it was best for Empress Menen Asfaw and their two sons, Crown Prince Asfaw Wossen, 19, and Prince Makonnen, 13, to leave the country. Ultimately they would go to the Coptic monastery in the British Mandate of Palestine, but he asked the French Minister whether the Imperial Family could temporarily find refuge in French Somaliland and was assured by Bodard that they could.[10]

Haile Selassie then returned to his Palace and crowds gathered at the Palace steps. To the gathering throng, he said, "Ethiopia, will fight until the last soldier and the last inch! Let every man who is not wounded or sick take arms and enough food to last five days and march north to fight the invader!" The crowd roared back to their Emperor: "We will go!"[10][nb 1]

Forgetting the raw gas burns on his arm, Haile Selassie retired into his Palace for a final conference with his chieftains. He knew that the Government of the Ethiopian Empire would have to move from Addis Ababa. One possibility was for the government to relocate to Gore in the southwest and he sought comment on this plan. Initially, his chiefs said nothing at all. But, when the chiefs did talk, they explained that the one effective Ethiopian army left was fighting for its life under Ras Nasibu Emmanual in the Ogaden. This army was pitted against General Rodolfo Graziani's relentless advance on Harar. One after another, the chiefs rose to tell how hopeless the situation was and to say that there was nothing for the Emperor to do but rather flee the country to avoid his execution.[10]

After his meeting with his chieftains, Haile Selassie visited Sir Sidney Barton at the British Legation. He spoke softly to Sir Sidney but to the point. Britain had encouraged him with fine words and had made many promises. However, Britain had provided Ethiopia with few guns for which the Ethiopians had paid cash. Haile Selassie stressed that he had risked his own life for Ethiopia but also for the League of Nations. He asked Sir Sidney whether Britain would now come to his aid. They declined.[10]

Before he departed, Haile Selassie ordered that the government of Ethiopia be moved to Gore, he ordered that the mayor of Addis Ababa maintain order in the city until the Italian arrival, and he appointed Ras Imru Haile Selassie as his Prince Regent during his absence.[11]

Late on 2 May, after the Emperor left the city to go into exile, there was a breakdown in civil order. Only the dregs of Ethiopia's soldiery were left behind in the doomed capital. They went wild, looted shops, screamed curses at foreigners, and fired rifles into the air. The new Palace, pride of Haile Selassie, was thrown open to the people. Most foreigners found safety within the British compound. In twenty-four hours, the Ethiopian Empire fell apart and native law and order disappeared. Rioting in Addis Ababa grew worse by the hour. An attack was made on the Treasury's "gold house." A few loyal employees tried to save the remnant of Emperor's gold with machine guns, but sword-swinging looters rushed them and cut off their hands as they clung to their guns.[10]

The Arrival of the Italians Edit

During the evening of 4 May, elements of the I Eritrean Brigade reached the outskirts of Addis Ababa. They reached the city before Badoglio's mechanized column and they managed to accomplish this feat on foot.[12] Meanwhile, Badoglio's motorized column, pushing on as fast as possible, drew closer and closer. Italian aircraft reconnoitered over the city.[citation needed]

The main column reached the capital at 4:00 pm on 5 May.

Heavy rain fell as Badoglio's forces entered the city and restored order. The rioting that started after Haile Selassie left lasted until order was restored with the arrival of the Italians. White flags were displayed everywhere as Badoglio made his triumphal entry into the city of the "King of Kings."[13] Many city residents fled south or tried to take refuge in the foreign compounds which they had been attacking.[citation needed]

A detachment of Ethiopian customs guards presented arms as Badoglio's car drove past them. Further on, an Italian guard of honor, which accompanied the advance guard for this very purpose, paid Badoglio the same courtesy. There was no question now of stopping to allow Badoglio to use the horses brought for this occasion. The car and truck bound procession continued.[13][nb 2]

When Badoglio's entourage pulled up in front of the Italian legation at 5:45 pm, the Tricolour of the Kingdom of Italy was hoisted. Then followed three cheers for Italy's King Victor Emmanuel and three cheers for Italy's Fascist dictator Benito Mussolini. After the cheering, Badoglio turned to a senior member of the Italian Royal Air Force and said:

"We've done it! We've won!"[13]

The fall of Addis Ababa had been expected in Italy. When the news reached Rome during the evening of 5 May, there were scenes of wild excitement. Mussolini was called back ten times by the jubilant crowds at the Palazzo Venezia.[7]

Significantly, the march was completed in only ten days across difficult terrain and in bad weather. It was an achievement that demonstrated the offensive potential of motorized forces in securing bold advances.[6] However, the Italian "March of the Iron Will" turned out to be little more than a logistics exercise. An anonymous journalist at the time said this:

"Far more of a sports event than a page in military history."[7]

Aftermath Edit

During the week following Marshal Badoglio's entry into Addis Ababa, Dr. Johann Hans Kirchholtes, the German Minister to Ethiopia, visited what had been the Italian Legation in the Ethiopian capital city. Badoglio was now Viceroy and Governor-General of Italian East Africa and the former Italian Legation was now his headquarters. Kirchholtes provided the first recognition by any foreign government that the conquest of Ethiopia was an accomplished fact.[15]

Meanwhile, one of Marshal Badoglio's staff officers, Captain Adolfo Alessandri, visited every foreign legation in Addis Ababa. Alessandri politely explained to each envoy that they would enjoy "every diplomatic privilege until the time of your departure." This was Italy's official notification to the world that occupied Ethiopia would not be considered to be on the same footing as the Japanese Empire's puppet state of Manchukuo. Instead, the former Ethiopian Empire was to be a colony of the Kingdom of Italy. Giuseppe Bottai was named as the first Governor of Addis Ababa and Haile Selassie's former Palace became his residence.[15]

See also Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ Time did not indicate what happened to the five-thousand men who marched north from Addis Ababa.
  2. ^ Time indicates that Badoglio did stop to mount up and did enter Addis Ababa on horseback: "After much sweating and shouting, the procession was reformed. First came a patrol of Blackshirt motorcyclists, young and exuberant, followed by ten tankettes, each one hastily named after a battle of the past seven months. Marshal Badoglio entered on horseback."[14]

References Edit

Citations Edit

  1. ^ Barker 1971, p. 108.
  2. ^ Barker 1971, p. 33.
  3. ^ Barker 1971, p. 56.
  4. ^ Barker 1971, p. 87.
  5. ^ Barker 1971, p. 96.
  6. ^ a b c Walker 2003, p. 36.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h Barker 1971, p. 109.
  8. ^ Mockler 2002, p. 127.
  9. ^ Akyeampong & Gates 2012, p. 543.
  10. ^ a b c d e Time magazine, 11 May 1936[better source needed]
  11. ^ Mockler 2002, p. 136.
  12. ^ Mockler 2002, p. 141.
  13. ^ a b c Barker 1971, p. 128.
  14. ^ Time magazine, 18 May 1936
  15. ^ a b Time magazine, 13 May 1936

Sources Edit

  • Akyeampong, Emmanuel Kwaku; Gates, Henry Louis, eds. (2012). Dictionary of African Biography. Vol. 2. Oxford University Press USA. ISBN 9780195382075.
  • Barker, A. J. (1968). The Civilizing Mission: A History of the Italo-Ethiopian War of 1935–1936. New York: Dial Press. OCLC 413879.
  • Barker, A. J. (1971). Rape of Ethiopia, 1936. New York: Ballantine Books. ISBN 978-0-345-02462-6.
  • Mockler, Anthony (2002). Haile Selassie's War. New York: Olive Branch Press. ISBN 978-1-56656-473-1.
  • Nicolle, David (1997). The Italian Invasion of Abyssinia 1935–1936. Westminster, MD: Osprey. ISBN 978-1-85532-692-7.
  • Walker, Ian W. (2003). Iron Hulls, Iron Hearts: Mussolini's Elite Armoured Divisions in North Africa. Marlborough: Crowood. ISBN 978-1-86126-646-0.

External links Edit

  • . Time. 13 April 1936. Archived from the original on 31 May 2008. Retrieved 3 August 2009.
  • . Time. 11 May 1936. Archived from the original on 1 December 2007. Retrieved 3 August 2009.
  • . Time. 18 May 1936. Archived from the original on 15 December 2008. Retrieved 3 August 2009.

march, iron, will, this, article, tone, style, reflect, encyclopedic, tone, used, wikipedia, relevant, discussion, found, talk, page, wikipedia, guide, writing, better, articles, suggestions, 2021, learn, when, remove, this, template, message, italian, marcia,. This article s tone or style may not reflect the encyclopedic tone used on Wikipedia Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page See Wikipedia s guide to writing better articles for suggestions May 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message The March of the Iron Will Italian marcia della ferrea volonta was an Italian Fascist propaganda event staged from 26 April to 5 May 1936 during the final days of the Second Italo Ethiopian War Its goal was to capture the Ethiopian capital Addis Ababa in a show of force An Italian mechanized column under the command of Pietro Badoglio Marshal of Italy advanced from the town of Dessie to take Addis Ababa 1 The march covered a distance of approximately 200 miles 320 km March of the Iron WillPart of the Second Italo Ethiopian WarItalian colonial troops advance on Addis AbabaDate26 April 5 May 1936 1936 04 26 1936 05 05 LocationDessie Addis Ababa Ethiopian EmpireResultItalian victoryBelligerents Kingdom of Italy Ethiopian EmpireCommanders and leadersPietro BadoglioAbebe AregaiHaile Mariam MammoStrength12 500 Italians4 000 EritreansUnknownCasualties and losses170 Eritreans killed4 Italians capturedUnknown Contents 1 Background 2 Mechanized column 3 March 3 1 Imperial highway 3 2 Addis Ababa 3 3 The Arrival of the Italians 4 Aftermath 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 7 1 Citations 7 2 Sources 8 External linksBackground EditDuring the 3rd of October 1935 elements of the Royal Italian Army Regio Esercito under General Emilio De Bono the Commander in Chief of all Italian armed forces in East Africa invaded the Ethiopian Empire from staging areas in the Italian colony of Eritrea on what was known as the northern front 2 Forces based in Italian Somaliland under General Rodolfo Graziani invaded Ethiopia on what was known as the southern front Ground forces on both fronts were amply supported by the Italian Royal Air Force Regia Aeronautica citation needed Badoglio replaced De Bono in late 1935 and was immediately faced with the Ethiopian Christmas Offensive On 26 December Badoglio asked for and was permitted to use mustard gas and phosgene The Italians delivered the poison gas by special artillery canisters and with bombers of the Italian Royal Air Force While the poorly equipped Ethiopians experienced some success against the more modern weaponry of the Italians they were not equipped to handle or experience in dealing with the terrible rain that burned and killed 3 From early 1936 events on the field of battle did not go well for the Imperial Ethiopian Army On the southern front Graziani eliminated a large Ethiopian army commanded by Duke Ras Desta Damtew during the Battle of Ganale Doria using poison gas Badoglio used poison gas to eliminate many of the Ethiopian northern armies He destroyed Ras Mulugeta Yeggazu s army in the Battle of Amba Aradam He destroyed Ras Kassa Haile Darge s army in the Second Battle of Tembien Finally he destroyed Ras Imru Haile Sellassie s army in the Battle of Shire 4 By 31 March the last Ethiopian army on the northern front was commanded in battle by the Emperor himself Haile Selassie His army included six battalions of Ethiopia s best troops the Imperial Guard Kebur Zabangna The Emperor led an ill fated counterattack during the Battle of Maychew of which he had little to no chance of victory The Emperor s army suffered heavy losses during costly frontal assaults on prepared Italian fortifications but the bulk of his army was destroyed during the days following the battle when poison gas was again used to decimate the withdrawing columns 5 On 20 April Marshal Badoglio flew to the town of Dessie in Wollo Province and made his headquarters there He decided to advance from Dessie and take the Ethiopian capital of Addis Ababa Dessie is only two hundred miles 320 km 6 from Addis Ababa Except for a procession of refugees the road to the capital was clear The Italian Commander in Chief faced no substantial Ethiopian resistance 7 Mechanized column EditBecause of the lack of resistance between Dessie and Addis Ababa Badoglio risked a spectacular advance with a mechanized column for propaganda purposes In 1936 mechanized meant infantry transported in a variety of commercial cars and trucks Motorized infantry is a more appropriate term for Badoglio s column 7 Thanks to the organizational genius of a Quartermaster General Fidenzio Dall Ora Badoglio s mechanized column came together in Dessie between 21 and 25 April Dall Ora was able to organize the most powerful mechanized column to appear on an African road up to that time In addition to 12 500 Italian troops the column included 1 785 cars and trucks of all makes Fiats Lancias Alfa Romeos Fords Chevrolets Bedfords and Studebakers a squadron of light tanks L3s eleven batteries of artillery 7 and aircraft 6 Special vehicles carried 193 horses so that when the column arrived at the gates of Addis Ababa the Marshal and his staff could leave their cars and ride in triumph on horseback 7 March Edit nbsp The Horn of Africa and southwest Arabia Mid 1930s The March of the Iron Will was between Dessie and Addis Ababa At the same time General Rodolfo Graziani was advancing from the south toward Harar Emperor Haile Selassie travelled from Addis Ababa to Harar to Djibouti in French Somaliland to go into exile On 24 April Badoglio sent two columns of 4 000 Eritreans ahead by force march to protect his mechanized force as a precautionary measure But the adversity the Eritreans and the march itself encountered was mainly caused by rain and mud Badoglio s precautionary measure proved to be superfluous 7 Imperial highway Edit Badoglio s mechanized force advanced along the Imperial Highway between Dessie and Addis Ababa The Italian Commander in Chief was to uncharitably refer to this road as a bad cart track 8 Badoglio expected some show of resistance at Termaber Pass and the mechanized column did halt there for two days but all was quiet The column stopped because a section of the road had been demolished and had to be repaired 7 On 4 May the Italian formation was ambushed in Chacha near Debre Berhan by Ethiopian forces under Haile Mariam Mammo In the ensuing battle Haile Mariam s men killed approximately 170 Italian colonial troops and captured four Italians two of whom were doctors They were later released 9 Addis Ababa Edit In Addis Ababa Emperor Haile Selassie visited the French Legation After explaining to French Minister Paul Bodard that further defense of the capital was impossible he explained that it was best for Empress Menen Asfaw and their two sons Crown Prince Asfaw Wossen 19 and Prince Makonnen 13 to leave the country Ultimately they would go to the Coptic monastery in the British Mandate of Palestine but he asked the French Minister whether the Imperial Family could temporarily find refuge in French Somaliland and was assured by Bodard that they could 10 Haile Selassie then returned to his Palace and crowds gathered at the Palace steps To the gathering throng he said Ethiopia will fight until the last soldier and the last inch Let every man who is not wounded or sick take arms and enough food to last five days and march north to fight the invader The crowd roared back to their Emperor We will go 10 nb 1 Forgetting the raw gas burns on his arm Haile Selassie retired into his Palace for a final conference with his chieftains He knew that the Government of the Ethiopian Empire would have to move from Addis Ababa One possibility was for the government to relocate to Gore in the southwest and he sought comment on this plan Initially his chiefs said nothing at all But when the chiefs did talk they explained that the one effective Ethiopian army left was fighting for its life under Ras Nasibu Emmanual in the Ogaden This army was pitted against General Rodolfo Graziani s relentless advance on Harar One after another the chiefs rose to tell how hopeless the situation was and to say that there was nothing for the Emperor to do but rather flee the country to avoid his execution 10 After his meeting with his chieftains Haile Selassie visited Sir Sidney Barton at the British Legation He spoke softly to Sir Sidney but to the point Britain had encouraged him with fine words and had made many promises However Britain had provided Ethiopia with few guns for which the Ethiopians had paid cash Haile Selassie stressed that he had risked his own life for Ethiopia but also for the League of Nations He asked Sir Sidney whether Britain would now come to his aid They declined 10 Before he departed Haile Selassie ordered that the government of Ethiopia be moved to Gore he ordered that the mayor of Addis Ababa maintain order in the city until the Italian arrival and he appointed Ras Imru Haile Selassie as his Prince Regent during his absence 11 Late on 2 May after the Emperor left the city to go into exile there was a breakdown in civil order Only the dregs of Ethiopia s soldiery were left behind in the doomed capital They went wild looted shops screamed curses at foreigners and fired rifles into the air The new Palace pride of Haile Selassie was thrown open to the people Most foreigners found safety within the British compound In twenty four hours the Ethiopian Empire fell apart and native law and order disappeared Rioting in Addis Ababa grew worse by the hour An attack was made on the Treasury s gold house A few loyal employees tried to save the remnant of Emperor s gold with machine guns but sword swinging looters rushed them and cut off their hands as they clung to their guns 10 The Arrival of the Italians Edit During the evening of 4 May elements of the I Eritrean Brigade reached the outskirts of Addis Ababa They reached the city before Badoglio s mechanized column and they managed to accomplish this feat on foot 12 Meanwhile Badoglio s motorized column pushing on as fast as possible drew closer and closer Italian aircraft reconnoitered over the city citation needed The main column reached the capital at 4 00 pm on 5 May Heavy rain fell as Badoglio s forces entered the city and restored order The rioting that started after Haile Selassie left lasted until order was restored with the arrival of the Italians White flags were displayed everywhere as Badoglio made his triumphal entry into the city of the King of Kings 13 Many city residents fled south or tried to take refuge in the foreign compounds which they had been attacking citation needed A detachment of Ethiopian customs guards presented arms as Badoglio s car drove past them Further on an Italian guard of honor which accompanied the advance guard for this very purpose paid Badoglio the same courtesy There was no question now of stopping to allow Badoglio to use the horses brought for this occasion The car and truck bound procession continued 13 nb 2 When Badoglio s entourage pulled up in front of the Italian legation at 5 45 pm the Tricolour of the Kingdom of Italy was hoisted Then followed three cheers for Italy s King Victor Emmanuel and three cheers for Italy s Fascist dictator Benito Mussolini After the cheering Badoglio turned to a senior member of the Italian Royal Air Force and said We ve done it We ve won 13 The fall of Addis Ababa had been expected in Italy When the news reached Rome during the evening of 5 May there were scenes of wild excitement Mussolini was called back ten times by the jubilant crowds at the Palazzo Venezia 7 Significantly the march was completed in only ten days across difficult terrain and in bad weather It was an achievement that demonstrated the offensive potential of motorized forces in securing bold advances 6 However the Italian March of the Iron Will turned out to be little more than a logistics exercise An anonymous journalist at the time said this Far more of a sports event than a page in military history 7 Aftermath EditDuring the week following Marshal Badoglio s entry into Addis Ababa Dr Johann Hans Kirchholtes the German Minister to Ethiopia visited what had been the Italian Legation in the Ethiopian capital city Badoglio was now Viceroy and Governor General of Italian East Africa and the former Italian Legation was now his headquarters Kirchholtes provided the first recognition by any foreign government that the conquest of Ethiopia was an accomplished fact 15 Meanwhile one of Marshal Badoglio s staff officers Captain Adolfo Alessandri visited every foreign legation in Addis Ababa Alessandri politely explained to each envoy that they would enjoy every diplomatic privilege until the time of your departure This was Italy s official notification to the world that occupied Ethiopia would not be considered to be on the same footing as the Japanese Empire s puppet state of Manchukuo Instead the former Ethiopian Empire was to be a colony of the Kingdom of Italy Giuseppe Bottai was named as the first Governor of Addis Ababa and Haile Selassie s former Palace became his residence 15 See also EditEast African Campaign World War II Red Terror Ethiopia Second Italo Abyssinian War Timeline of the Second Italo Abyssinian War Achille StaraceNotes Edit Time did not indicate what happened to the five thousand men who marched north from Addis Ababa Time indicates that Badoglio did stop to mount up and did enter Addis Ababa on horseback After much sweating and shouting the procession was reformed First came a patrol of Blackshirt motorcyclists young and exuberant followed by ten tankettes each one hastily named after a battle of the past seven months Marshal Badoglio entered on horseback 14 References EditCitations Edit Barker 1971 p 108 Barker 1971 p 33 Barker 1971 p 56 Barker 1971 p 87 Barker 1971 p 96 a b c Walker 2003 p 36 a b c d e f g h Barker 1971 p 109 Mockler 2002 p 127 Akyeampong amp Gates 2012 p 543 a b c d e Time magazine 11 May 1936 better source needed Mockler 2002 p 136 Mockler 2002 p 141 a b c Barker 1971 p 128 Time magazine 18 May 1936 a b Time magazine 13 May 1936 Sources Edit Akyeampong Emmanuel Kwaku Gates Henry Louis eds 2012 Dictionary of African Biography Vol 2 Oxford University Press USA ISBN 9780195382075 Barker A J 1968 The Civilizing Mission A History of the Italo Ethiopian War of 1935 1936 New York Dial Press OCLC 413879 Barker A J 1971 Rape of Ethiopia 1936 New York Ballantine Books ISBN 978 0 345 02462 6 Mockler Anthony 2002 Haile Selassie s War New York Olive Branch Press ISBN 978 1 56656 473 1 Nicolle David 1997 The Italian Invasion of Abyssinia 1935 1936 Westminster MD Osprey ISBN 978 1 85532 692 7 Walker Ian W 2003 Iron Hulls Iron Hearts Mussolini s Elite Armoured Divisions in North Africa Marlborough Crowood ISBN 978 1 86126 646 0 External links Edit Hit amp Run Time 13 April 1936 Archived from the original on 31 May 2008 Retrieved 3 August 2009 Empire s End Time 11 May 1936 Archived from the original on 1 December 2007 Retrieved 3 August 2009 Occupation Time 18 May 1936 Archived from the original on 15 December 2008 Retrieved 3 August 2009 The eyewitness account of Fedor Eugenovich Konovalov during the last days of Addis Ababa Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title March of the Iron Will amp oldid 1168593619, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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