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Victor Emmanuel III

Victor Emmanuel III (11 November 1869 – 28 December 1947), born Vittorio Emanuele Ferdinando Maria Gennaro di Savoia, was King of Italy from 29 July 1900 until his abdication on 9 May 1946. A member of the House of Savoy, he also reigned as Emperor of Ethiopia (1936–1941) and King of the Albanians (1939–1943). During his reign of nearly 46 years, which began after the assassination of his father Umberto I, the Kingdom of Italy became involved in two world wars. His reign also encompassed the birth, rise, and fall of the Fascist regime in Italy.

Victor Emmanuel III
Victor Emmanuel III in 1919
King of Italy
Reign29 July 1900 – 9 May 1946
PredecessorUmberto I
SuccessorUmberto II
Prime ministersFull list
Emperor of Ethiopia
Reign9 May 1936 – 5 May 1941
PredecessorHaile Selassie I
SuccessorHaile Selassie I
King of the Albanians
Reign16 April 1939 – 8 September 1943
PredecessorZog I
SuccessorZog I (formally)
Prime ministersFull list
Born(1869-11-11)11 November 1869
Naples, Kingdom of Italy
Died28 December 1947(1947-12-28) (aged 78)
Alexandria, Kingdom of Egypt
Burial
Sanctuary of Vicoforte, Vicoforte, Italy
Spouse
(m. 1896)
Issue
Names
Vittorio Emanuele Ferdinando Maria Gennaro di Savoia-Carignano
HouseSavoy
FatherUmberto I of Italy
MotherMargherita of Savoy
Signature

The first fourteen years of Victor Emmanuel's reign were dominated by prime minister Giovanni Giolitti, who focused on industrialization and passed several democratic reforms, such as the introduction of universal male suffrage. In foreign policy, Giolitti's Italy distanced itself from the fellow members of the Triple Alliance (the German Empire and Austria-Hungary) and colonized Libya following the Italo-Turkish War. Giolitti was succeeded by Antonio Salandra, Paolo Boselli, and Vittorio Emanuele Orlando. The First World War brought about Italian victory over the Habsburg Empire and the annexation of the Italian-speaking provinces of Trento and Trieste. For this reason, Victor Emmanuel was labelled the "King of Victory". In practice, the peace treaties failed to give Italy all the territories promised in the 1915 Treaty of London. Italian nationalists protested against what they defined as a "mutilated victory", demanded the annexation of Croatian-speaking territories in Dalmatia, and temporarily occupied the town of Fiume without royal assent.

During the early 1920s, several short-serving prime ministers, including the well-respected Giolitti, serving an unprecedented fifth term as prime minister, could not unify the country in the face of the growing Italian fascist movement. Strengthened by the economic downturn facing the country, the National Fascist Party led the March on Rome, and he appointed Benito Mussolini as prime minister. Victor Emmanuel remained silent on the domestic political abuses of Fascist Italy, and he accepted the additional crowns of the Emperor of Ethiopia in 1936 and the King of Albania in 1939 as a result of Italian imperialism under fascism. When World War II broke out in 1939, Victor Emmanuel advised Mussolini against entering the war. In June 1940, he relented and granted Mussolini sweeping powers to enter and conduct the war.

Amidst the Allied invasion of Italy in 1943, Victor Emmanuel deposed Mussolini and signed the armistice of Cassibile with the Allies in September 1943. In the face of the coming German reprisal (Operation Achse), he and the government fled to Brindisi while the Germans established the Italian Social Republic as a puppet state in Northern Italy. He switched sides and declared war on Germany in October. He battled constantly with Allied command. Under pressure from the Allies, Victor Emmanuel transferred most of his powers to his son in June 1944, effectively ending his involvement in the war and in the government of Italy. Victor Emmanuel officially abdicated his throne in 1946 in favour of his son, who became King Umberto II. Victor Emmanuel hoped to strengthen support for the monarchy against an ultimately successful referendum to abolish it.

After the 1946 Italian institutional referendum established the Republic, Victor Emmanuel went into exile to Alexandria, where he died and was buried the following year in St. Catherine's Cathedral, Alexandria. In 2017, his remains were returned to rest in Italy following an agreement between presidents Sergio Mattarella and Abdel Fattah el-Sisi. Victor Emmanuel was of notably short stature on which account he was called Sciaboletta ("little saber") by some Italians.[1]

Early years edit

 
Victor Emmanuel as a teenager, 1886
 
Victor Emmanuel by photographer Carlo Brogi (son of Giacomo Brogi), 1895
 
Victor Emmanuel, caricature by Liborio Prosperi in Vanity Fair, 1902

Victor Emmanuel III was born in Naples in the Kingdom of Italy to King Umberto I and his wife and first cousin Margherita of Savoy, the Queen consort. He was named after his grandfather, Victor Emmanuel II, King of Sardinia and later King of Italy. Unlike his paternal first cousin's son, the 1.98 m (6 ft 6 in) tall Amedeo, 3rd Duke of Aosta, Victor Emmanuel was short of stature even by 19th-century standards, to the point that today he would appear diminutive. He was just 1.53 m (5 ft 0 in) tall.[2] From birth until his accession, Victor Emmanuel was known as "The Prince of Naples". On 24 October 1896, he married Princess Elena of Montenegro.

 
Portrait of Vittorio Emanuele III di Savoia, Elena di Savoia, sovereign, 1896.

Reign edit

Accession to the throne edit

On 29 July 1900, at the age of 30, Victor Emmanuel acceded to the throne upon his father's assassination. The only advice that his father Umberto ever gave his heir was "Remember: to be a king, all you need to know is how to sign your name, read a newspaper, and mount a horse."[citation needed] His early years showed evidence that, by the standards of the Savoy monarchy, he was a man committed to constitutional government. Even though his father was killed by an anarchist, the new king showed a commitment to constitutional freedoms.

Although parliamentary rule had been firmly established in Italy, the Statuto Albertino, or constitution, granted the king considerable residual powers. For instance, he had the right to appoint the prime minister even if the individual in question did not command majority support in the Chamber of Deputies. A shy and somewhat withdrawn individual, the King hated the day-to-day stresses of Italian politics, though the country's chronic political instability forced him to intervene on no fewer than ten occasions between 1900 and 1922 to solve parliamentary crises.

World War I edit

When the First World War began, Italy at first remained neutral, despite being part of the Triple Alliance (albeit it was signed on defensive terms and Italy objected that the Sarajevo assassination did not qualify as aggression). In April 1915, Italy signed the secret Treaty of London committing itself to enter the war on the side of the Triple Entente. Most of the politicians opposed the war, and Italy's Chamber of Deputies forced Prime Minister Antonio Salandra to resign. At this juncture, Victor Emmanuel declined Salandra's resignation and personally made the decision for Italy to enter the war. The king possessed the right to do so under the Statuto, which stipulated that ultimate authority for declaring war rested with the crown.

Demonstrations in favour of the war were staged in Rome, with 200,000 gathering on 16 May 1915,[3] in the Piazza del Popolo. The corrupt and disorganised war effort, the stunning loss of life suffered by the Royal Italian Army, especially at the great defeat of Caporetto, and the post–World War I recession turned the King against what he perceived as an inefficient political bourgeoisie. Nevertheless, the King visited the various areas of Northern Italy suffering repeated strikes and mortar hits from elements of the fighting there, and demonstrated considerable courage and concern in personally visiting many people, while his wife, the queen, took turns with nurses in caring for Italy's wounded. It was at this time, the period of World War I, that the King enjoyed the genuine affection of the majority of his people.[citation needed] Still, during the war he received about 400 threatening letters from people of every social background, mostly members of the working class.[4] On 8 November 1917, he met with the prime ministers of Britain (Lloyd George) and France (Paul Painlevé) at the Peschiera conference, where he defended Italy's strategic decisions.[5]

Support for Mussolini edit

The economic depression which followed World War I gave rise to much extremism among Italy's sorely tried working classes. This caused the country as a whole to become politically unstable. Benito Mussolini, soon to be Italy's Fascist dictator, took advantage of this instability for his rise to power.

March on Rome edit

 
King Victor Emmanuel III (right) with King Albert I of the Belgians (left). This photograph shows Victor Emmanuel's small physical stature.

In 1922, Mussolini led a force of his Fascist supporters on a March on Rome. Prime Minister Luigi Facta and his cabinet drafted a decree of martial law. After some hesitation the King refused to sign it, citing doubts about the ability of the army to contain the uprising without setting off a civil war.

Fascist violence had been growing in intensity throughout the summer and autumn of 1922, climaxing in rumours of a possible coup. On 24 October 1922, during the Fascist Congress in Naples, Mussolini announced that the Fascists would march on Rome to "take by the throat our miserable ruling class".[6] General Pietro Badoglio told the King that the military would be able without difficulty to rout the rebels, who numbered no more than 10,000 men armed mostly with knives and clubs whereas the Regio Esercito had 30,000 soldiers in the Rome area armed with heavy weapons, armoured cars, and machine guns.[7] During the "March on Rome", the Fascist squadristi were halted by 400 lightly armed policemen, as the squadristi had no desire to take on the Italian state.[8]

The troops were loyal to the King; even Cesare Maria De Vecchi, commander of the Blackshirts, and one of the organisers of the March on Rome, told Mussolini that he would not act against the wishes of the monarch. De Vecchi went to the Quirinal Palace to meet the king and assured him that the Fascists would never fight against the king.[9] It was at this point that the Fascist leader considered leaving Italy altogether. But then, minutes before midnight, he received a telegram from the King inviting him to Rome. Facta had the decree for martial law prepared after the cabinet had unanimously endorsed it, and was very surprised when he learned about 9 am on 28 October that the king had refused to sign it.[6] When Facta protested that the king was overruling the entire cabinet, he was told that this was the royal prerogative and the king did not wish to use force against the Fascists.[7] The only politician Victor Emmanuel consulted during the crisis was Antonio Salandra, who advised him to appoint Mussolini prime minister and stated he was willing to serve in a cabinet headed by Mussolini.[10]

By midday on 30 October, Mussolini had been appointed President of the Council of Ministers (Prime Minister), at the age of 39, with no previous experience of office, and with only 32 Fascist deputies in the Chamber.[11] Though the King claimed in his memoirs that it was the fear of a civil war that motivated his actions, it would seem that he received some 'alternative' advice, possibly from the arch-conservative Antonio Salandra as well as General Armando Diaz, that it would be better to do a deal with Mussolini.[9]

On 1 November 1922, the king reviewed the squadristi as they marched past the Quirinal Palace giving the fascist salute.[12] Victor Emmanuel took no responsibility for appointing Mussolini prime minister, saying he learned from studying history that events were "much more automatic than a result of individual action and influence".[13] Victor Emmanuel was tired of the recurring crises of parliamentary government and welcomed Mussolini as a "strong man" who imposed "order" on Italy.[14] Mussolini was always very respectful and deferential when he met him in private, which was exactly the behaviour which the king expected of his prime ministers.[15] Many Fascist gerarchi, most notably Italo Balbo, regarded as the number two-man in Fascism, remained republicans, and the king greatly appreciated Mussolini's conversion to monarchism.[16] In private, Mussolini detested Victor Emmanuel as a tedious and tiresomely boring man, whose only interests were military history and his collections of stamps and coins, a man whom Mussolini sneered was "too diminutive for an Italy destined to greatness" (a reference to the king's height).[16] However, Mussolini told the other gerarchi that he needed the king's support and that one day, another fascist revolution would take place "without contraceptives".[16]

 
Victor Emmanuel in Darfo Boario Terme after the Gleno Dam disaster, 1923

Building the fascist dictatorship edit

The King failed to move against the Mussolini regime's abuses of power (including, as early as 1924, the assassination of Giacomo Matteotti and other opposition MPs). During the Matteotti affair of 1924, Sir Ronald Graham, the British ambassador, reported: "His Majesty once told me that he had never had a premier with whom he found it so satisfactory to deal as with Signor Mussolini, and I know from private sources that recent events have not changed his opinion".[17] The Matteotti affair did much to turn Italian public opinion against Fascism, and Graham reported to London that "Fascism is more unpopular by the day" while quoting a high Vatican official as saying to him that Fascism was a "spent force".[18] The fact that Matteotti had been tortured by his killers for several hours before he was killed especially shocked Italian public opinion, who were much offended by the gratuitous cruelty of the squadristi killers.[18] Given the widespread public revulsion against Mussolini generated by the murder of Matteotti, the king could have dismissed Mussolini in 1924 with a minimum of trouble and broad public support.[18] Orlando told the king that the majority of the Italian people were tired of the abuses of the squadristi, of which the murder of Matteotti was only the most notorious example, and were hoping that he would dismiss Mussolini, saying that one word from the king would be enough to bring down his unpopular prime minister.[19] The newspaper Corriere della Sera in an editorial stated the abuses of the Fascist government such as the murder of Matteotti had now reached such a point that the king had both a legal and moral duty to dismiss Mussolini at once and restore the rule of law.[19] During the Matteotti affair, even pro-Fascist politicians like Salandra started to express some doubts about Mussolini after he took responsibility for all the Fascist violence, saying he did not order Matteotti's murder, but he did authorise the violence of the squadristi, making him responsible for the murder of Matteotti.[18] The king affirmed that "the Chamber and the Senate were his eyes and ears",[20] desiring a parliamentary initiative, according to the Statuto Albertino. The knowledge that the king and the Parliament would not dismiss the prime minister led to the Mussolini government winning a vote of no confidence in November 1924 in the chamber of deputies by 314 votes to 6 and in the Senate by 206 votes to 54.[18] The deputies and the senators were unwilling to risk their lives by voting for a no-confidence motion as the king had made it clear that he would not dismiss Mussolini even if the motion did carry the votes of the majority.[18]

Victor Emmanuel remained silent during the winter of 1925–26 when Mussolini dropped all pretence of democracy. During this time, the king signed without protest laws that eliminated freedom of speech and assembly, abolished freedom of the press, and declared the Fascist Party to be the only legal party in Italy.[21] In December 1925, Mussolini passed a law declaring that he was responsible to the King, not Parliament. Under the Statuto Albertino Italian governments were legally answerable to Parliament, but politically answerable to the monarch. However, it had been a strong constitutional convention since at least the 1860s that they were legally and politically answerable to Parliament. In January 1926, the squadristi used violence to prevent opposition MPs from entering Parliament and in November 1926, Mussolini arbitrarily declared that all of the opposition MPs had forfeited their seats, which he handed out to Fascists.[22] Despite this blatant violation of the Statuto Albertino, the king remained passive and silent as usual.[23] In 1926, Mussolini violated the Statuto Albertino by creating a special judicial tribunal to try political crimes with no possibility of a royal pardon. Even though the right of pardon was part of the royal prerogative, the king gave his assent to the law.[23] However, the king did veto an attempt by Mussolini to change the Italian flag by adding the fasces symbol to stand beside the coat of arms of the House of Savoy on the Italian tricolour. The king considered this proposal to be disrespectful to his family, and refused to sign the law when Mussolini submitted it to him.[23] By 1928, practically the only check on Mussolini's power was the King's prerogative of dismissing him from office. Even then, this prerogative could only be exercised on the advice of the Fascist Grand Council, a body that only Mussolini could convene.[23]

Whatever the circumstances, Victor Emmanuel showed weakness from a position of strength, with dire future consequences for Italy and fatal consequences for the monarchy itself. Fascism was a force of opposition to left-wing radicalism. This appealed to many people in Italy at the time, and certainly to the King. In many ways, the events from 1922 to 1943 demonstrated that the monarchy and the moneyed class, for different reasons, felt Mussolini and his regime offered an option that, after years of political chaos, was more appealing than what they perceived as the alternative: socialism and anarchism. Both the spectre of the Russian Revolution and the tragedies of World War I played a large part in these political decisions. Victor Emmanuel always saw the Italian Socialists and Communists as his principal enemies and felt that Mussolini's dictatorship had saved the existing status quo in Italy.[24] Victor Emmanuel always returned the fascist salute when the Blackshirts marched past the Quirinal Palace and he lit votive lamps at public ceremonies to honour the Fascist martyrs killed fighting against the Socialists and Communists.[24] At the same time, the Crown became so closely identified with Fascism that by the time Victor Emmanuel was able to shake himself loose from it, it was too late to save the monarchy. In what proved to be a prescient speech, Senator Luigi Albertini called the king a "traitor" to Italy for supporting the Fascist regime and warned that the king would one day regret what he had done.[25]

Victor Emmanuel was disgusted by what he regarded as the superficiality and frivolity of what he called the "so-called elegant society" of Rome and preferred to spend his time in the countryside where he went hunting, fishing and reading military history books outdoors.[26] A taciturn man who felt deeply uncomfortable expressing himself in conversation, Victor Emmanuel was content to let Mussolini rule Italy as he regarded Il Duce as a "strong man" who saved him the trouble of meeting various politicians as he had done before 1922.[27]

Lateran Treaty edit

Victor Emmanuel was anti-clerical, being greatly embittered by the refusal of the Catholic Church to recognize Rome as the capital of Italy, but he realized that as long as the Catholic Church remained opposed to the Italian state, that many Italians would continue to regard the Italian state as illegitimate and that a treaty with the Vatican was necessary.[28] However, when Orlando attempted to open negotiations with the Vatican in 1919, he was blocked by the king who was furious at the way in which the Catholic Church had maintained pro-Austrian neutrality during World War I.[28] Aside from championing the authenticity of the Shroud of Turin, which belonged to the House of Savoy, the king had little interest in religion.[28] In private Victor Emmanuel regarded the Catholic Church with a jaundiced eye, making remarks about senior clerics as being greedy, cynical and oversexed hypocrites who took advantage of the devout faith of ordinary Italians.[28]

In 1926, the king allowed Mussolini to do what he prevented Orlando from doing in 1919, giving permission to open negotiations with the Vatican to end the "Roman Question".[28] In 1929, Mussolini, on behalf of the King, signed the Lateran Treaty. The treaty was one of the three agreements made that year between the Kingdom of Italy and the Holy See. On 7 June 1929, the Lateran Treaty was ratified and the "Roman Question" was settled.

Popular support edit

 
Victor Emmanuel, 1913 portrait

The Italian monarchy enjoyed popular support for decades.[citation needed] Foreigners noted how even as late as the 1930s newsreel images of King Victor Emmanuel and Queen Elena evoked applause, sometimes cheering, when played in cinemas, in contrast to the hostile silence shown toward images of Fascist leaders.[29]

On 30 March 1938, the Italian Parliament established the rank of First Marshal of the Empire for Victor Emmanuel and Mussolini. This new rank was the highest rank in the Italian military. His equivalence with Mussolini was seen by the king as offensive and a clear sign that the ultimate goal of the fascist leader was to get rid of him.

As popular[citation needed] as Victor Emmanuel was, several of his decisions proved fatal to the monarchy. Among these decisions was his assumption of the crowns of Ethiopia and Albania and his public silence when Mussolini's Fascist government issued German-style racial purity laws.

Colonial expansion edit

Emperor of Ethiopia edit

 
Victor Emmanuel III visiting Hungary in 1937
 
King Victor Emmanuel III in his uniform as Marshal of Italy in 1936

Prior to his government's invasion of Ethiopia, Victor Emmanuel travelled in 1934 to Italian Somaliland, where he celebrated his 65th birthday on 11 November.[30][31] In 1936, Victor Emmanuel assumed the crown as Emperor of Ethiopia. His decision to do this was not universally accepted. Victor Emmanuel was only able to assume the crown after the Italian Army invaded Ethiopia (Abyssinia) and overthrew Emperor Haile Selassie during the Second Italo-Abyssinian War.

Ethiopia was annexed to the Italian Empire. The League of Nations condemned Italy's participation in this war and the Italian claim by right of conquest to Ethiopia was rejected by some major powers, such as the United States and the Soviet Union, but was accepted by Great Britain and France in 1938. In 1943, Italy's possession of Ethiopia came to an end.

The term of the last acting Viceroy of Italian East Africa, including Eritrea and Italian Somaliland, ended on 27 November 1941 with surrender to the allies. In November 1943 Victor Emmanuel renounced his claims to the titles of Emperor of Ethiopia and King of Albania,[32] recognizing the previous holders of those titles as legitimate.

King of the Albanians edit

The crown of the King of the Albanians had been assumed by Victor Emmanuel in 1939 when Italian forces invaded the nearly defenceless monarchy across the Adriatic Sea and caused King Zog I to flee.

In 1941, while in Tirana, the King escaped an assassination attempt by the 18-year-old Albanian patriot Vasil Laçi.[33] Later, this attempt was cited by Communist Albania as a sign of the general discontent among the oppressed Albanian population. A second attempt by Dimitri Mikhaliov in Albania gave the Italians an excuse to affirm a possible connection with Greece as a result of the monarch's assent to the Greco-Italian War.

 
Victor Emmanuel III depicted on a 1 lira coin (1940)

World War II edit

Pact with Germany edit

Under the terms of the Pact of Steel signed on 22 May 1939, which was an offensive and defensive alliance with Germany, Italy would have been obliged to follow Germany into war in 1939.[34] As the Pact of Steel was signed, the German Foreign Minister, Joachim von Ribbentrop, told Mussolini that there would be no war until 1942 or 1943, but the Italian ambassador in Berlin, Baron Bernardo Attolico, warned Rome that the information he was hearing from sources in the German government suggested that Hitler was intent on seeing the Danzig crisis escalate into war that year.[34] Between 11 and 13 August 1939, the Italian Foreign Minister, Count Galeazzo Ciano, visited Hitler at the Berghof, and learned for the first time that Germany was definitely going to invade Poland later that same summer.[35] Mussolini at first was prepared to follow Germany into war in 1939, but was blocked by Victor Emmanuel.[35] At a meeting with Count Ciano on 24 August 1939, the king stated that "we are absolutely in no condition to wage war"; the state of the Regio Esercito was "pitiful"; and since Italy was not ready for war, it should stay out of the coming conflict, at least until it was clear who was winning.[35] More importantly, Victor Emmanuel stated that as the king of Italy he was the supreme commander-in-chief, and he wanted to be involved in any "supreme decisions", which in effect was claiming a right to veto any decision Mussolini might make about going to war.[35] On 25 August, Ciano wrote in his diary that he informed a "furiously warlike" Mussolini that the king was against Italy going to war in 1939, forcing Il Duce to concede that Italy would have to declare neutrality.[35] Unlike in Germany where officers from 1934 onward took an oath of personal loyalty to Hitler, officers of the Regio Esercito, Regina Marina and the Regia Aeronautica all took their oaths of loyalty to the king, not Mussolini.[36] The vast majority of the Italian officers in all three services saw Victor Emmanuel as opposed to Mussolini as the principal locus of their loyalty, allowing the king to check decisions by Mussolini that he disapproved of.[36]

Italy declared neutrality in September 1939, but Mussolini always made it clear that he wanted to intervene on the side of Germany provided that this would not strain Italy's resources too much (the costs of the wars in Ethiopia and Spain had pushed Italy to the verge of bankruptcy by 1939).[37] On 18 March 1940, Mussolini met Hitler at a summit at the Brenner Pass and promised him that Italy would soon enter the war.[38] Victor Emmanuel had powerful doubts about the wisdom of going to war, and at one point in March 1940 hinted to Ciano that he was considering dismissing Mussolini as Ciano wrote in his diary: "the King feels that it may become necessary for him to intervene at any moment to give things a different direction; he is prepared to do this and to do it quickly".[39] Victor Emmanuel hoped that a vote against Italy entering the war would be registered in the Fascist Grand Council, as he knew that the gerarchi Cesare Maria De Vecchi, Italo Balbo and Emilio De Bono were all anti-war, but he refused to insist upon calling the Grand Council as a precondition for giving his consent to declaring war.[40] On 31 March 1940, Mussolini submitted to Victor Emmanuel a long memorandum arguing that Italy to achieve its long-sought spazio vitale had to enter the war on the Axis side sometime that year.[41] However, the king remained resolutely opposed to Italy entering the war until late May 1940, much to Mussolini's intense frustration.[42] At one point, Mussolini complained to Ciano that there were two men, namely Victor Emmanuel and Pope Pius XII, who were preventing him from doing the things that he wanted to do, leading to state he wanted to "blow" the Crown and Catholic Church "up to the skies".[43]

Joining the Axis edit

Victor Emmanuel was a cautious man, and he always consulted all of the available advisors before making a decision, in this case, the senior officers of the armed forces who informed him of Italy's military deficiencies.[44] On 10 May 1940, Germany launched a major offensive into the Low Countries and France, and as the Wehrmacht continued to advance into France, the king's opposition to Italy entering the war started to weaken by the second half of May 1940.[43] Mussolini argued all through May 1940 that since it was evident that Germany was going to win the war that here was an unparalleled chance for Italy to make major gains at the expense of France and Britain that would allow Italy to become the dominant power in the Mediterranean.[45] On 1 June 1940, Victor Emmanuel finally gave Mussolini his permission for Italy to enter the war, though the king retained the supreme command while only giving Mussolini power over political and military questions.[43] The delay between the king's permission to enter the war and the declaration of war was caused by Mussolini's demand that he have the powers of supreme command, an attempt to take away a royal prerogative that Victor Emmanuel rejected, and was finally settled by the compromise of giving Mussolini operational command powers.[46]

On 10 June 1940, ignoring advice that the country was unprepared, Mussolini made the fatal decision to have Italy enter World War II on the side of Nazi Germany. Almost from the beginning, disaster followed disaster. The first Italian offensive, an invasion of France launched on 17 June 1940, ended in complete failure, and only the fact that France signed an armistice with Germany on 22 June, followed by another armistice with Italy on 24 June allowed Mussolini to present it as a victory.[47] Victor Emmanuel sharply criticized the terms of the Franco-Italian Armistice, saying he wanted Italy to occupy Tunisia, Corsica, and Nice, though the fact the armistice allowed him to proclaim a victory over France was a source of much pleasure to him.[48] In 1940 and 1941, Italian armies in North Africa and in Greece suffered humiliating defeats. Unlike his opposition over going to war with major powers like France and Britain (who might actually defeat Italy), Victor Emmanuel blessed Mussolini's plans to invade Greece in the fall of 1940, saying he expected the Greeks to collapse as soon as Italy invaded.[49] Through the carabinieri (para-military police), Victor Emmanuel was kept well informed of the state of public opinion and from the autumn of 1940 onward received reports that the war together with the Fascist regime were becoming extremely unpopular with the Italian people.[50] When Mussolini made Marshal Pietro Badoglio the scapegoat for the failure of the invasion of Greece and sacked him as Chief of the General Staff in December 1940, Badoglio appealed to the king for help.[51] Victor Emmanuel refused to help Badoglio, saying that Mussolini would manage the situation just always as he had in the past.[51] In January 1941, the king admitted to his aide-de-camp, General Paolo Puntoni, that war was not going well and the Fascist regime was becoming very unpopular, but he had decided to keep Mussolini on as a prime minister because there was no replacement for him.[51] Because the king had supported Fascism, he feared that to overthrow the Fascist system would mean the end of the monarchy as the anti-Fascist parties were all republican.[51]

During the invasion of Yugoslavia in April 1941, Victor Emmanuel moved to a villa owned by the Pirzio Biroli family at Brazzacco in order to be close to the front.[52] In May 1941, Victor Emmanuel gave permission to his unpopular cousin, Prince Aimone, to become King of Croatia under the title Tomislav II, in an attempt to get him out of Rome, but Aimone frustrated this ambition by never going to Croatia to receive his crown.[51] During a tour of the new provinces that were annexed to Italy from Yugoslavia, Victor Emmanuel commented that Fascist policies towards the Croats and Slovenes were driving them towards rebellion, but chose not to intervene to change the said policies.[51] On 22 June 1941, Germany launched Operation Barbarossa, the invasion of the Soviet Union. Mussolini had the king issue a declaration of war, and sent an Italian expeditionary force to the Eastern Front, through Victor Emmanuel was later to claim that he wanted only a "token" force to go to the Soviet Union, rather than the 10 divisions that Mussolini actually sent.[53]

In late 1941, Italian East Africa was lost. The loss of Italian East Africa together with the defeats in North Africa and the Balkans caused an immense loss of confidence in Mussolini's ability to lead, and many Fascist gerarchi such as Emilio De Bono and Dino Grandi were hoping by the spring of 1941 that the king might sack him in order to save the Fascist regime.[54] In the summer of 1941, the carabinieri generals told the king that they were prepared to have the carabinieri serve as a strike force for a coup against Mussolini, saying if the war continued, it was bound to cause a revolution that would sweep away both the Fascist regime and the monarchy.[53] Victor Emmanuel rejected this offer, and in September 1941, when Count Ciano told him the war was lost, blasted him for his "defeatism", saying he still believed in Mussolini.[53] On 11 December 1941, Victor Emmanuel rather glibly agreed to Mussolini's request to declare war on the United States.[53] Failing to anticipate the American "Europe First" strategy, the king believed that the Americans would follow an "Asia First" strategy of focusing all their efforts against Japan in revenge for Pearl Harbor, and that declaring war on the United States was a harmless move.[53] The king was pleased by the news of Japan entering the war, believing that with Britain's Asian colonies in danger that this would force the British to redeploy their forces to Asia and might finally allow for the Axis conquest of Egypt.[53] Marshal Enrico Caviglia wrote in his diary that it was "criminal" the way that Victor Emmanuel refused to act against Mussolini despite the fact that he was clearly mismanaging the war.[53] One Italian journalist remembered that by the fall of 1941 he did not know anyone who felt anything other than "contempt" for the king who was unwilling to disassociate himself from Fascism.[53]

The British historian Denis Mack Smith wrote that Victor Emmanuel tended to procrastinate when faced with very difficult choices, and his unwillingness to dismiss Mussolini despite mounting pressure from within the Italian elite was his way of trying to avoid making a decision.[55] Moreover, Victor Emmanuel had considerable respect for Mussolini, who he saw as his most able prime minister, and appeared to dread taking on a man whose intelligence was greater than his own.[56] In a conversation with the papal nuncio, the king explained that he could not sign an armistice because he hated the United States as a democracy whose leaders were accountable to the American people; because Britain was "rotten to the core" and would soon cease to be a great power; and because everything he kept hearing about the massive losses sustained by the Red Army convinced him that Germany would win on the Eastern Front at least.[57] Another excuse used by Victor Emmanuel was that Mussolini was allegedly still popular with the Italian people and that it would offend public opinion if he dismissed Mussolini.[58] The Vatican favoured Italy exiting the war by 1943, but papal diplomats told their American counterparts that the king was "weak, indecisive and excessively devoted to Mussolini".[59]

Disillusionment with Mussolini edit

In the summer of 1942, Grandi had a private audience with Victor Emmanuel, where he asked him to dismiss Mussolini and sign an armistice with the Allies before the Fascist regime was destroyed only to be told to "trust your king" and "stop speaking like a mere journalist".[53] Grandi told Ciano that the king must be either "crazy" and/or "senile" as he was utterly passive, refusing to act against Mussolini.[53] In late 1942, Italian Libya was lost. During Operation Anton on 9 November 1942, the unoccupied part of France was occupied by the Axis forces, which allowed Victor Emmanuel to proclaim in a speech at long last Corsica and Nice had been "liberated".[60] Early in 1943, the ten divisions of the "Italian Army in Russia" (Armata Italiana in Russia, or ARMIR) were crushed in a side-action in the Battle of Stalingrad. By the middle of 1943, the last Italian forces in Tunisia had surrendered and Sicily had been taken by the Allies. Hampered by lack of fuel as well as several serious defeats, the Italian Navy spent most of the war confined to port. As a result, the Mediterranean Sea was not in any real sense Italy's Mare Nostrum. While the Air Force generally did better than the Army or the Navy, it was chronically short of modern aircraft.

Efforts to save the monarchy edit

As Italy's fortunes worsened, the popularity of the King suffered. One coffee-house ditty went as follows:


Quando Vittorio era soltanto re
Si bevea del buon caffè.
Poi divenne Imperatore
Se ne sentì solo l'odore.
Oggi che è anche Re d'Albania
Anche l'odore l' han portato via.
E se avremo un'altra vittoria
Ci mancherà anche la cicoria.

When our Victor was plain King,
Coffee was a common thing.
When an Emperor he was made,
Coffee's odour it did fade.
Since he got Albania's throne,
Even the odour has flown.
And if we have another victory
We're also going to lose our chicory.[61]

By early 1943, Mussolini was so psychologically shattered by the successive Italian defeats that he was so depressed and drugged out as to be almost catatonic at times, staring blankly into space for hours while high on various drugs[citation needed] and mumbling incoherently that the war would soon turn around for the Axis powers because it had to.[56] Even Victor Emmanuel was forced to concede that Mussolini had taken a turn "for the worse", which he blamed on "that woman" as he called Mussolini's mistress, Clara Petacci.[56] On 15 May 1943, the king sent Mussolini a letter saying Italy should sign an armistice and exit the war.[56] On 4 June 1943, Grandi saw the king and told him that he had to dismiss Mussolini before the Fascist system was destroyed; when the king rejected that course under the grounds that the Fascist Grand Council would never vote against Mussolini, Grandi assured him that it would, saying the majority of the gerarchi were now against Mussolini.[56] Using the Vatican as an intermediary, Victor Emmanuel contacted the British and American governments in June 1943 to ask if they, the Allies, were willing to see the House of Savoy continue after the war.[59]

On 19 July 1943, Rome was bombed for the first time in the war, further cementing the Italian people's disillusionment with their once-popular[citation needed] King. When the King visited the bombed areas of Rome, he was loudly booed by his subjects who blamed him for the war, which caused Victor Emmanuel to become worried about the possibility of a revolution which might bring in a republic.[62] By this time, plans were being discussed within the Italian elite for replacing Mussolini. Victor Emmanuel stated that he wanted to keep the Fascist system going after dismissing Mussolini, and he was seeking to correct merely some of "its deleterious aspects".[62] The two replacements that were being mooted for Mussolini were Marshal Pietro Badoglio and his rival, Marshal Enrico Caviglia.[62] As Marshal Caviglia was one of the few officers of the Regio Esercito who kept his distance from the Fascist regime, he was unacceptable to Victor Emmanuel who wanted an officer who was committed to upholding Fascism, which led him to choose Badoglio who had loyally served Mussolini and committed all sorts of atrocities in Ethiopia, but who had a grudge against Il Duce for making him the scapegoat for the failed invasion of Greece in 1940.[62] In addition, Badoglio was an opportunist who was well known for his sycophancy towards those in power, which led the king to choose him as Mussolini's successor as he knew that Badoglio would do anything to have power whereas Caviglia had a reputation as a man of principle and honour.[62] The king felt that Badoglio as prime minister would obey any royal orders whereas he was not so certain that Caviglia would do the same.[62] On 15 July 1943, in a secret meeting Victor Emmanuel told Badoglio that he would soon be sworn in as Italy's new prime minister and the king wanted no "ghosts" (i.e. liberal politicians from the pre-fascist era) in his cabinet.[62]

Coup d'état against Mussolini edit

On the night of 25 July 1943, the Grand Council of Fascism voted to adopt an Ordine del Giorno (order of the day) proposed by Count Dino Grandi to ask Victor Emmanuel to resume his full constitutional powers under Article 5 of the Statuto. In effect, this was a motion of no confidence in Mussolini.

The following afternoon, Mussolini asked for an audience with the king at Villa Savoia. When Mussolini tried to tell Victor Emmanuel about the Grand Council's vote, Victor Emmanuel abruptly cut him off and dismissed him in favour of Badoglio. He then ordered Mussolini's arrest.

Publicly, Victor Emmanuel and Badoglio claimed that Italy would continue the war as a member of the Axis. Privately, they both began negotiating with the Allies for an armistice. The king was advised by his generals to sign an immediate armistice, since German troops in Italy were still outnumbered by Italian troops.[63] But Victor Emmanuel was unwilling to accept the Allied demand for unconditional surrender, and as a result, the secret armistice talks in Lisbon were dragged out over the summer of 1943.[64] Besides rejecting unconditional surrender as "truly monstrous", Victor Emmanuel wanted from the Allies a guarantee that he would keep his throne; a promise that Italian colonial empire in Libya and the Horn of Africa would be restored; that Italy would keep the part of Yugoslavia that had been annexed by Mussolini; and finally the Allies should promise not to invade the Italian mainland, and instead invade France and the Balkans.[65] Mack Smith wrote that these demands were "unrealistic" and caused much time to be wasted in the Lisbon peace talks as the Allies were willing to concede that Victor Emmanuel could keep his throne and rejected all of his other demands.[65] In the meantime, German forces continued to be rushed into Italy.

Armistice with the Allies edit

On 8 September 1943, Victor Emmanuel publicly announced an armistice with the Allies. Confusion reigned as Italian forces were left without orders, and the Germans, who had been expecting this move for some time, quickly disarmed and interned Italian troops and took control in the occupied Balkans, France and the Dodecanese, as well as in Italy itself. Many of the units that did not surrender joined forces with the Allies against the Germans.

Fearing a German advance on Rome, Victor Emmanuel and his government fled south to Brindisi. This choice may have been necessary to protect his safety; indeed, Hitler had planned to arrest him shortly after Mussolini's overthrow. Nonetheless, it still came as a surprise to many observers inside and outside Italy. Unfavourable comparisons were drawn with King George VI and Queen Elizabeth, who refused to leave London during the Blitz, and of Pope Pius XII, who mixed with Rome's crowds and prayed with them after Rome's working-class neighbourhood of Quartiere San Lorenzo had been destroyed by bombing.

Despite the German occupation, Victor Emmanuel kept refusing to declare war on Germany, saying he needed a vote by Parliament first, though that had not stopped him from signing declarations of war on Ethiopia, Albania, Great Britain, France, Greece, Yugoslavia, the Soviet Union and the United States, none of which had been sanctioned by Parliament.[66] Under strong pressure from the Allied Control Commission, the king finally declared war on Germany on 8 October 1943.[66] Ultimately, the Badoglio government in Southern Italy raised the Italian Co-Belligerent Army (Esercito Cobelligerante del Sud), the Italian Co-Belligerent Air Force (Aviazione Cobelligerante Italiana), and the Italian Co-Belligerent Navy (Marina Cobelligerante del Sud). All three forces were loyal to the King. Relations with the Allied Control Commission were very strained as the king remained obsessed with protocol, screaming with fury when General Noel Mason-Macfarlane met him wearing shirt sleeves and shorts, a choice of attire he considered very disrespectful.[67] Victor Emmanuel was ultra-critical of the slow progress made by the American 5th Army and the British 8th Army as the Allies fought their way up the Italian peninsula, saying he wanted to return to Rome as soon as possible, and felt that all of the Allied soldiers fighting to liberate Italy were cowards.[66] Likewise, Victor Emmanuel refused to renounce the usurped Ethiopian and Albanian crowns in favour of the legitimate monarchs of those states, claiming that the Fascist-dominated Parliament had given him these titles and he could only renounce them if parliament voted on the matter.[67]

On 12 September, the Germans launched Operation Eiche and rescued Mussolini from captivity. In a short time, he established a new Fascist state in northern Italy, the Italian Social Republic (Repubblica Sociale Italiana). This was never more than a German-dominated puppet state, but it did compete for the allegiance of the Italian people with Badoglio's government in the south.

By this time, it was apparent that Victor Emmanuel was irrevocably tainted by his earlier support of the Fascist regime. At a 10 April meeting, under pressure from ACC officials Robert Murphy and Harold Macmillan, Victor Emmanuel transferred most of his constitutional powers to his son, Crown Prince Umberto.[68] Privately, Victor Emmanuel told General Noel Mason-MacFarlane that by forcing him to give power to Umberto, the Allies were effectively giving power to the Communists.[69]

By this time, however, events had moved beyond Victor Emmanuel's ability to control. After Rome was liberated on 4 June, he turned over his remaining powers to Umberto and named him Lieutenant General of the Realm, while nominally retaining the title of king.

Post war and fall of the monarchy edit

Abdication edit

Within a year of the war's end, public opinion forced a referendum on whether to retain the monarchy or become a republic. In hopes of helping the monarchist cause, Victor Emmanuel formally abdicated in favor of his son, who ascended to the throne as Umberto II on 9 May 1946.

Abolition of the monarchy edit

This move failed. In the referendum held a month later, 54 per cent of voters favoured a republic, and the Kingdom of Italy was no more. Some historians such as Sir Charles Petrie, have speculated that the result might have been different if Victor Emmanuel had abdicated in favour of Umberto shortly after the Allied invasion of Sicily in 1943, or at the latest had abdicated outright in 1944 rather than simply transferring his powers to his son. Umberto had been widely praised for his performance as de facto head of state beginning in 1944, and his relative popularity might have saved the monarchy. The Italian conductor Arturo Toscanini declared that he would not come back to Italy as a subject of the "degenerate king" and more generally as long as the house of Savoy was ruling;[70] Benedetto Croce had previously stated in 1944 that "as long as the present king remains head of state, we feel that Fascism has not ended, ... that it will be reborn, more or less disguised."[71]

Exile and death edit

In any event, once the referendum's result was certified, Victor Emmanuel and all other male members of the House of Savoy were required to leave the country. Taking refuge in Egypt, where he was welcomed with great honour by King Farouk, Victor Emmanuel died in Alexandria a year later, of pulmonary congestion.[72] He was interred behind the altar of St Catherine's Cathedral. He was the last surviving grandchild of Victor Emmanuel II of Italy. In 1948, Time magazine included an article about "The Little King".[61]

2017 repatriation edit

 
Tomb of Victor Emmanuel III at the sanctuary of Vicoforte. The wreath is arranged as the cross of the House of Savoy.

On 17 December 2017, an Italian air force military plane officially repatriated the remains of Victor Emmanuel III, which were transferred from Alexandria to the sanctuary of Vicoforte, near Turin, and interred alongside those of Elena, which had been transferred two days earlier from Montpellier, France.[73]

Legacy edit

 
Busts of King Victor Emmanuel III and Queen Elena; forecourt of the Russian Orthodox Church of Christ the Saviour, St. Catherine and St. Seraph, Sanremo, Italy

The abdication prior to the referendum probably brought back to the minds of undecided voters the monarchy's role during the Fascist period and the King's own actions (or lack of them), at the very moment monarchists hoped voters would focus on the positive impression created by Umberto and his wife, Maria José, over the previous two years. The "May" King and Queen, Umberto and Maria José, in Umberto's brief, month-long reign, were unable to shift the burden of recent history and opinion.

Victor Emmanuel III was one of the most prolific coin collectors of all time, having amassed approximately 100,000 specimens dating from the fall of the Roman Empire up to the Unification of Italy and in 1897 becoming honorary president of the new Italian Numismatic Society, of which he was a founding member. On his abdication, the collection was donated to the Italian people, except for the coins of the House of Savoy which he took with him to Egypt. On the death of Umberto II in 1983, the Savoy coins joined the rest of the collection in the National Museum of Rome. Between 1910 and 1943, Victor Emmanuel wrote the 20-volume Corpus Nummorum Italicorum, which catalogued each specimen in his collection.[74] He was awarded the medal of the Royal Numismatic Society in 1904.

After World War I, Avenue Victor-Emmanuel III in Paris was named after him in honour of Italy's alliance in that war, but the king's support of the Axis Powers led the road to be renamed Franklin D. Roosevelt Avenue in 1946 following the end of World War II.[75]

In Florestano Vancini's film The Assassination of Matteotti (1973), Victor Emmanuel is played by Giulio Girola.

Honours edit

Styles of
King Victor Emmanuel III
 
Reference styleHis Majesty
Spoken styleYour Majesty

National orders and decorations edit

Foreign orders and decorations edit

Family edit

 
Giovanna of Italy, Tsaritsa of Bulgaria, 1937

In 1896 he married princess Elena of Montenegro (1873–1952), daughter of Nicholas I, King of Montenegro. Their issue included:

  1. Yolanda Margherita Milena Elisabetta Romana Maria (1901–1986), married to Giorgio Carlo Calvi, Count of Bergolo, (1887–1977). Their son Count Pier Francesco Calvi di Bergolo married actress Marisa Allasio;
  2. Mafalda Maria Elisabetta Anna Romana (1902–1944), married to Prince Philipp of Hesse (1896–1980) with issue; she died in the Nazi concentration camp at Buchenwald;
  3. Umberto Nicola Tommaso Giovanni Maria, later Umberto II, King of Italy (1904–1983) married to Princess Marie José of Belgium (1906–2001), with issue.
  4. Giovanna Elisabetta Antonia Romana Maria (1907–2000), married to King Boris III of Bulgaria (1894–1943), and mother of Simeon II, King and later Prime Minister of Bulgaria.
  5. Maria Francesca Anna Romana (1914–2001), who married Prince Luigi of Bourbon–Parma (1899–1967), with issue.

Ancestry edit

See also edit

References edit

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Reference 4: James Rennell Rodd [British Ambassador to Italy before and during the Great War]. Social and Diplomatic Memories. Third Series. 1902–1919. London, 1925.

External links edit

  • Genealogy of recent members of the House of Savoy
  • King Vittorio Emanuele III
  • Newspaper clippings about Victor Emmanuel III in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW
Victor Emmanuel III
Born: 11 November 1869 Died: 28 December 1947
Regnal titles
Preceded by King of Italy
29 July 1900 – 9 May 1946
Succeeded by
Preceded by Emperor of Ethiopia
(Partially internationally recognised)
9 May 1936 – 5 May 1941
Succeeded by
Preceded by King of the Albanians
(Partially internationally recognised)
16 April 1939 – 8 September 1943
Succeeded by
Loss of Title (Zog I as claimant)
Awards and achievements
Preceded by Cover of Time Magazine
15 June 1925
Succeeded by

victor, emmanuel, november, 1869, december, 1947, born, vittorio, emanuele, ferdinando, maria, gennaro, savoia, king, italy, from, july, 1900, until, abdication, 1946, member, house, savoy, also, reigned, emperor, ethiopia, 1936, 1941, king, albanians, 1939, 1. Victor Emmanuel III 11 November 1869 28 December 1947 born Vittorio Emanuele Ferdinando Maria Gennaro di Savoia was King of Italy from 29 July 1900 until his abdication on 9 May 1946 A member of the House of Savoy he also reigned as Emperor of Ethiopia 1936 1941 and King of the Albanians 1939 1943 During his reign of nearly 46 years which began after the assassination of his father Umberto I the Kingdom of Italy became involved in two world wars His reign also encompassed the birth rise and fall of the Fascist regime in Italy Victor Emmanuel IIIVictor Emmanuel III in 1919King of ItalyReign29 July 1900 9 May 1946PredecessorUmberto ISuccessorUmberto IIPrime ministersFull listEmperor of EthiopiaReign9 May 1936 5 May 1941PredecessorHaile Selassie ISuccessorHaile Selassie IKing of the AlbaniansReign16 April 1939 8 September 1943PredecessorZog ISuccessorZog I formally Prime ministersFull listBorn 1869 11 11 11 November 1869Naples Kingdom of ItalyDied28 December 1947 1947 12 28 aged 78 Alexandria Kingdom of EgyptBurialSanctuary of Vicoforte Vicoforte ItalySpouseElena of Montenegro wbr m 1896 wbr IssuePrincess Yolanda Countess of Bergolo Princess Mafalda Landgravine of Hesse Umberto II of Italy Giovanna Tsaritsa of Bulgaria Princess Maria FrancescaNamesVittorio Emanuele Ferdinando Maria Gennaro di Savoia CarignanoHouseSavoyFatherUmberto I of ItalyMotherMargherita of SavoySignatureThe first fourteen years of Victor Emmanuel s reign were dominated by prime minister Giovanni Giolitti who focused on industrialization and passed several democratic reforms such as the introduction of universal male suffrage In foreign policy Giolitti s Italy distanced itself from the fellow members of the Triple Alliance the German Empire and Austria Hungary and colonized Libya following the Italo Turkish War Giolitti was succeeded by Antonio Salandra Paolo Boselli and Vittorio Emanuele Orlando The First World War brought about Italian victory over the Habsburg Empire and the annexation of the Italian speaking provinces of Trento and Trieste For this reason Victor Emmanuel was labelled the King of Victory In practice the peace treaties failed to give Italy all the territories promised in the 1915 Treaty of London Italian nationalists protested against what they defined as a mutilated victory demanded the annexation of Croatian speaking territories in Dalmatia and temporarily occupied the town of Fiume without royal assent During the early 1920s several short serving prime ministers including the well respected Giolitti serving an unprecedented fifth term as prime minister could not unify the country in the face of the growing Italian fascist movement Strengthened by the economic downturn facing the country the National Fascist Party led the March on Rome and he appointed Benito Mussolini as prime minister Victor Emmanuel remained silent on the domestic political abuses of Fascist Italy and he accepted the additional crowns of the Emperor of Ethiopia in 1936 and the King of Albania in 1939 as a result of Italian imperialism under fascism When World War II broke out in 1939 Victor Emmanuel advised Mussolini against entering the war In June 1940 he relented and granted Mussolini sweeping powers to enter and conduct the war Amidst the Allied invasion of Italy in 1943 Victor Emmanuel deposed Mussolini and signed the armistice of Cassibile with the Allies in September 1943 In the face of the coming German reprisal Operation Achse he and the government fled to Brindisi while the Germans established the Italian Social Republic as a puppet state in Northern Italy He switched sides and declared war on Germany in October He battled constantly with Allied command Under pressure from the Allies Victor Emmanuel transferred most of his powers to his son in June 1944 effectively ending his involvement in the war and in the government of Italy Victor Emmanuel officially abdicated his throne in 1946 in favour of his son who became King Umberto II Victor Emmanuel hoped to strengthen support for the monarchy against an ultimately successful referendum to abolish it After the 1946 Italian institutional referendum established the Republic Victor Emmanuel went into exile to Alexandria where he died and was buried the following year in St Catherine s Cathedral Alexandria In 2017 his remains were returned to rest in Italy following an agreement between presidents Sergio Mattarella and Abdel Fattah el Sisi Victor Emmanuel was of notably short stature on which account he was called Sciaboletta little saber by some Italians 1 Contents 1 Early years 2 Reign 2 1 Accession to the throne 2 2 World War I 2 3 Support for Mussolini 2 3 1 March on Rome 2 4 Building the fascist dictatorship 2 5 Lateran Treaty 2 6 Popular support 2 7 Colonial expansion 2 7 1 Emperor of Ethiopia 2 7 2 King of the Albanians 2 8 World War II 2 8 1 Pact with Germany 2 8 2 Joining the Axis 2 8 3 Disillusionment with Mussolini 2 9 Efforts to save the monarchy 2 9 1 Coup d etat against Mussolini 2 9 2 Armistice with the Allies 3 Post war and fall of the monarchy 3 1 Abdication 3 2 Abolition of the monarchy 3 3 Exile and death 3 3 1 2017 repatriation 4 Legacy 5 Honours 5 1 National orders and decorations 5 2 Foreign orders and decorations 6 Family 6 1 Ancestry 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksEarly years edit nbsp Victor Emmanuel as a teenager 1886 nbsp Victor Emmanuel by photographer Carlo Brogi son of Giacomo Brogi 1895 nbsp Victor Emmanuel caricature by Liborio Prosperi in Vanity Fair 1902Victor Emmanuel III was born in Naples in the Kingdom of Italy to King Umberto I and his wife and first cousin Margherita of Savoy the Queen consort He was named after his grandfather Victor Emmanuel II King of Sardinia and later King of Italy Unlike his paternal first cousin s son the 1 98 m 6 ft 6 in tall Amedeo 3rd Duke of Aosta Victor Emmanuel was short of stature even by 19th century standards to the point that today he would appear diminutive He was just 1 53 m 5 ft 0 in tall 2 From birth until his accession Victor Emmanuel was known as The Prince of Naples On 24 October 1896 he married Princess Elena of Montenegro nbsp Portrait of Vittorio Emanuele III di Savoia Elena di Savoia sovereign 1896 Reign editAccession to the throne edit On 29 July 1900 at the age of 30 Victor Emmanuel acceded to the throne upon his father s assassination The only advice that his father Umberto ever gave his heir was Remember to be a king all you need to know is how to sign your name read a newspaper and mount a horse citation needed His early years showed evidence that by the standards of the Savoy monarchy he was a man committed to constitutional government Even though his father was killed by an anarchist the new king showed a commitment to constitutional freedoms Although parliamentary rule had been firmly established in Italy the Statuto Albertino or constitution granted the king considerable residual powers For instance he had the right to appoint the prime minister even if the individual in question did not command majority support in the Chamber of Deputies A shy and somewhat withdrawn individual the King hated the day to day stresses of Italian politics though the country s chronic political instability forced him to intervene on no fewer than ten occasions between 1900 and 1922 to solve parliamentary crises World War I edit This section contains weasel words vague phrasing that often accompanies biased or unverifiable information Such statements should be clarified or removed July 2023 Main article Italian entry into World War I When the First World War began Italy at first remained neutral despite being part of the Triple Alliance albeit it was signed on defensive terms and Italy objected that the Sarajevo assassination did not qualify as aggression In April 1915 Italy signed the secret Treaty of London committing itself to enter the war on the side of the Triple Entente Most of the politicians opposed the war and Italy s Chamber of Deputies forced Prime Minister Antonio Salandra to resign At this juncture Victor Emmanuel declined Salandra s resignation and personally made the decision for Italy to enter the war The king possessed the right to do so under the Statuto which stipulated that ultimate authority for declaring war rested with the crown Demonstrations in favour of the war were staged in Rome with 200 000 gathering on 16 May 1915 3 in the Piazza del Popolo The corrupt and disorganised war effort the stunning loss of life suffered by the Royal Italian Army especially at the great defeat of Caporetto and the post World War I recession turned the King against what he perceived as an inefficient political bourgeoisie Nevertheless the King visited the various areas of Northern Italy suffering repeated strikes and mortar hits from elements of the fighting there and demonstrated considerable courage and concern in personally visiting many people while his wife the queen took turns with nurses in caring for Italy s wounded It was at this time the period of World War I that the King enjoyed the genuine affection of the majority of his people citation needed Still during the war he received about 400 threatening letters from people of every social background mostly members of the working class 4 On 8 November 1917 he met with the prime ministers of Britain Lloyd George and France Paul Painleve at the Peschiera conference where he defended Italy s strategic decisions 5 Support for Mussolini edit The economic depression which followed World War I gave rise to much extremism among Italy s sorely tried working classes This caused the country as a whole to become politically unstable Benito Mussolini soon to be Italy s Fascist dictator took advantage of this instability for his rise to power March on Rome edit nbsp King Victor Emmanuel III right with King Albert I of the Belgians left This photograph shows Victor Emmanuel s small physical stature In 1922 Mussolini led a force of his Fascist supporters on a March on Rome Prime Minister Luigi Facta and his cabinet drafted a decree of martial law After some hesitation the King refused to sign it citing doubts about the ability of the army to contain the uprising without setting off a civil war Fascist violence had been growing in intensity throughout the summer and autumn of 1922 climaxing in rumours of a possible coup On 24 October 1922 during the Fascist Congress in Naples Mussolini announced that the Fascists would march on Rome to take by the throat our miserable ruling class 6 General Pietro Badoglio told the King that the military would be able without difficulty to rout the rebels who numbered no more than 10 000 men armed mostly with knives and clubs whereas the Regio Esercito had 30 000 soldiers in the Rome area armed with heavy weapons armoured cars and machine guns 7 During the March on Rome the Fascist squadristi were halted by 400 lightly armed policemen as the squadristi had no desire to take on the Italian state 8 The troops were loyal to the King even Cesare Maria De Vecchi commander of the Blackshirts and one of the organisers of the March on Rome told Mussolini that he would not act against the wishes of the monarch De Vecchi went to the Quirinal Palace to meet the king and assured him that the Fascists would never fight against the king 9 It was at this point that the Fascist leader considered leaving Italy altogether But then minutes before midnight he received a telegram from the King inviting him to Rome Facta had the decree for martial law prepared after the cabinet had unanimously endorsed it and was very surprised when he learned about 9 am on 28 October that the king had refused to sign it 6 When Facta protested that the king was overruling the entire cabinet he was told that this was the royal prerogative and the king did not wish to use force against the Fascists 7 The only politician Victor Emmanuel consulted during the crisis was Antonio Salandra who advised him to appoint Mussolini prime minister and stated he was willing to serve in a cabinet headed by Mussolini 10 By midday on 30 October Mussolini had been appointed President of the Council of Ministers Prime Minister at the age of 39 with no previous experience of office and with only 32 Fascist deputies in the Chamber 11 Though the King claimed in his memoirs that it was the fear of a civil war that motivated his actions it would seem that he received some alternative advice possibly from the arch conservative Antonio Salandra as well as General Armando Diaz that it would be better to do a deal with Mussolini 9 On 1 November 1922 the king reviewed the squadristi as they marched past the Quirinal Palace giving the fascist salute 12 Victor Emmanuel took no responsibility for appointing Mussolini prime minister saying he learned from studying history that events were much more automatic than a result of individual action and influence 13 Victor Emmanuel was tired of the recurring crises of parliamentary government and welcomed Mussolini as a strong man who imposed order on Italy 14 Mussolini was always very respectful and deferential when he met him in private which was exactly the behaviour which the king expected of his prime ministers 15 Many Fascist gerarchi most notably Italo Balbo regarded as the number two man in Fascism remained republicans and the king greatly appreciated Mussolini s conversion to monarchism 16 In private Mussolini detested Victor Emmanuel as a tedious and tiresomely boring man whose only interests were military history and his collections of stamps and coins a man whom Mussolini sneered was too diminutive for an Italy destined to greatness a reference to the king s height 16 However Mussolini told the other gerarchi that he needed the king s support and that one day another fascist revolution would take place without contraceptives 16 nbsp Victor Emmanuel in Darfo Boario Terme after the Gleno Dam disaster 1923Building the fascist dictatorship edit The King failed to move against the Mussolini regime s abuses of power including as early as 1924 the assassination of Giacomo Matteotti and other opposition MPs During the Matteotti affair of 1924 Sir Ronald Graham the British ambassador reported His Majesty once told me that he had never had a premier with whom he found it so satisfactory to deal as with Signor Mussolini and I know from private sources that recent events have not changed his opinion 17 The Matteotti affair did much to turn Italian public opinion against Fascism and Graham reported to London that Fascism is more unpopular by the day while quoting a high Vatican official as saying to him that Fascism was a spent force 18 The fact that Matteotti had been tortured by his killers for several hours before he was killed especially shocked Italian public opinion who were much offended by the gratuitous cruelty of the squadristi killers 18 Given the widespread public revulsion against Mussolini generated by the murder of Matteotti the king could have dismissed Mussolini in 1924 with a minimum of trouble and broad public support 18 Orlando told the king that the majority of the Italian people were tired of the abuses of the squadristi of which the murder of Matteotti was only the most notorious example and were hoping that he would dismiss Mussolini saying that one word from the king would be enough to bring down his unpopular prime minister 19 The newspaper Corriere della Sera in an editorial stated the abuses of the Fascist government such as the murder of Matteotti had now reached such a point that the king had both a legal and moral duty to dismiss Mussolini at once and restore the rule of law 19 During the Matteotti affair even pro Fascist politicians like Salandra started to express some doubts about Mussolini after he took responsibility for all the Fascist violence saying he did not order Matteotti s murder but he did authorise the violence of the squadristi making him responsible for the murder of Matteotti 18 The king affirmed that the Chamber and the Senate were his eyes and ears 20 desiring a parliamentary initiative according to the Statuto Albertino The knowledge that the king and the Parliament would not dismiss the prime minister led to the Mussolini government winning a vote of no confidence in November 1924 in the chamber of deputies by 314 votes to 6 and in the Senate by 206 votes to 54 18 The deputies and the senators were unwilling to risk their lives by voting for a no confidence motion as the king had made it clear that he would not dismiss Mussolini even if the motion did carry the votes of the majority 18 Victor Emmanuel remained silent during the winter of 1925 26 when Mussolini dropped all pretence of democracy During this time the king signed without protest laws that eliminated freedom of speech and assembly abolished freedom of the press and declared the Fascist Party to be the only legal party in Italy 21 In December 1925 Mussolini passed a law declaring that he was responsible to the King not Parliament Under the Statuto Albertino Italian governments were legally answerable to Parliament but politically answerable to the monarch However it had been a strong constitutional convention since at least the 1860s that they were legally and politically answerable to Parliament In January 1926 the squadristi used violence to prevent opposition MPs from entering Parliament and in November 1926 Mussolini arbitrarily declared that all of the opposition MPs had forfeited their seats which he handed out to Fascists 22 Despite this blatant violation of the Statuto Albertino the king remained passive and silent as usual 23 In 1926 Mussolini violated the Statuto Albertino by creating a special judicial tribunal to try political crimes with no possibility of a royal pardon Even though the right of pardon was part of the royal prerogative the king gave his assent to the law 23 However the king did veto an attempt by Mussolini to change the Italian flag by adding the fasces symbol to stand beside the coat of arms of the House of Savoy on the Italian tricolour The king considered this proposal to be disrespectful to his family and refused to sign the law when Mussolini submitted it to him 23 By 1928 practically the only check on Mussolini s power was the King s prerogative of dismissing him from office Even then this prerogative could only be exercised on the advice of the Fascist Grand Council a body that only Mussolini could convene 23 Whatever the circumstances Victor Emmanuel showed weakness from a position of strength with dire future consequences for Italy and fatal consequences for the monarchy itself Fascism was a force of opposition to left wing radicalism This appealed to many people in Italy at the time and certainly to the King In many ways the events from 1922 to 1943 demonstrated that the monarchy and the moneyed class for different reasons felt Mussolini and his regime offered an option that after years of political chaos was more appealing than what they perceived as the alternative socialism and anarchism Both the spectre of the Russian Revolution and the tragedies of World War I played a large part in these political decisions Victor Emmanuel always saw the Italian Socialists and Communists as his principal enemies and felt that Mussolini s dictatorship had saved the existing status quo in Italy 24 Victor Emmanuel always returned the fascist salute when the Blackshirts marched past the Quirinal Palace and he lit votive lamps at public ceremonies to honour the Fascist martyrs killed fighting against the Socialists and Communists 24 At the same time the Crown became so closely identified with Fascism that by the time Victor Emmanuel was able to shake himself loose from it it was too late to save the monarchy In what proved to be a prescient speech Senator Luigi Albertini called the king a traitor to Italy for supporting the Fascist regime and warned that the king would one day regret what he had done 25 Victor Emmanuel was disgusted by what he regarded as the superficiality and frivolity of what he called the so called elegant society of Rome and preferred to spend his time in the countryside where he went hunting fishing and reading military history books outdoors 26 A taciturn man who felt deeply uncomfortable expressing himself in conversation Victor Emmanuel was content to let Mussolini rule Italy as he regarded Il Duce as a strong man who saved him the trouble of meeting various politicians as he had done before 1922 27 Lateran Treaty edit Victor Emmanuel was anti clerical being greatly embittered by the refusal of the Catholic Church to recognize Rome as the capital of Italy but he realized that as long as the Catholic Church remained opposed to the Italian state that many Italians would continue to regard the Italian state as illegitimate and that a treaty with the Vatican was necessary 28 However when Orlando attempted to open negotiations with the Vatican in 1919 he was blocked by the king who was furious at the way in which the Catholic Church had maintained pro Austrian neutrality during World War I 28 Aside from championing the authenticity of the Shroud of Turin which belonged to the House of Savoy the king had little interest in religion 28 In private Victor Emmanuel regarded the Catholic Church with a jaundiced eye making remarks about senior clerics as being greedy cynical and oversexed hypocrites who took advantage of the devout faith of ordinary Italians 28 In 1926 the king allowed Mussolini to do what he prevented Orlando from doing in 1919 giving permission to open negotiations with the Vatican to end the Roman Question 28 In 1929 Mussolini on behalf of the King signed the Lateran Treaty The treaty was one of the three agreements made that year between the Kingdom of Italy and the Holy See On 7 June 1929 the Lateran Treaty was ratified and the Roman Question was settled Popular support edit nbsp Victor Emmanuel 1913 portraitThe Italian monarchy enjoyed popular support for decades citation needed Foreigners noted how even as late as the 1930s newsreel images of King Victor Emmanuel and Queen Elena evoked applause sometimes cheering when played in cinemas in contrast to the hostile silence shown toward images of Fascist leaders 29 On 30 March 1938 the Italian Parliament established the rank of First Marshal of the Empire for Victor Emmanuel and Mussolini This new rank was the highest rank in the Italian military His equivalence with Mussolini was seen by the king as offensive and a clear sign that the ultimate goal of the fascist leader was to get rid of him As popular citation needed as Victor Emmanuel was several of his decisions proved fatal to the monarchy Among these decisions was his assumption of the crowns of Ethiopia and Albania and his public silence when Mussolini s Fascist government issued German style racial purity laws Colonial expansion edit Emperor of Ethiopia edit nbsp Victor Emmanuel III visiting Hungary in 1937 nbsp King Victor Emmanuel III in his uniform as Marshal of Italy in 1936Prior to his government s invasion of Ethiopia Victor Emmanuel travelled in 1934 to Italian Somaliland where he celebrated his 65th birthday on 11 November 30 31 In 1936 Victor Emmanuel assumed the crown as Emperor of Ethiopia His decision to do this was not universally accepted Victor Emmanuel was only able to assume the crown after the Italian Army invaded Ethiopia Abyssinia and overthrew Emperor Haile Selassie during the Second Italo Abyssinian War Ethiopia was annexed to the Italian Empire The League of Nations condemned Italy s participation in this war and the Italian claim by right of conquest to Ethiopia was rejected by some major powers such as the United States and the Soviet Union but was accepted by Great Britain and France in 1938 In 1943 Italy s possession of Ethiopia came to an end The term of the last acting Viceroy of Italian East Africa including Eritrea and Italian Somaliland ended on 27 November 1941 with surrender to the allies In November 1943 Victor Emmanuel renounced his claims to the titles of Emperor of Ethiopia and King of Albania 32 recognizing the previous holders of those titles as legitimate King of the Albanians edit The crown of the King of the Albanians had been assumed by Victor Emmanuel in 1939 when Italian forces invaded the nearly defenceless monarchy across the Adriatic Sea and caused King Zog I to flee In 1941 while in Tirana the King escaped an assassination attempt by the 18 year old Albanian patriot Vasil Laci 33 Later this attempt was cited by Communist Albania as a sign of the general discontent among the oppressed Albanian population A second attempt by Dimitri Mikhaliov in Albania gave the Italians an excuse to affirm a possible connection with Greece as a result of the monarch s assent to the Greco Italian War nbsp Victor Emmanuel III depicted on a 1 lira coin 1940 World War II edit Pact with Germany edit Under the terms of the Pact of Steel signed on 22 May 1939 which was an offensive and defensive alliance with Germany Italy would have been obliged to follow Germany into war in 1939 34 As the Pact of Steel was signed the German Foreign Minister Joachim von Ribbentrop told Mussolini that there would be no war until 1942 or 1943 but the Italian ambassador in Berlin Baron Bernardo Attolico warned Rome that the information he was hearing from sources in the German government suggested that Hitler was intent on seeing the Danzig crisis escalate into war that year 34 Between 11 and 13 August 1939 the Italian Foreign Minister Count Galeazzo Ciano visited Hitler at the Berghof and learned for the first time that Germany was definitely going to invade Poland later that same summer 35 Mussolini at first was prepared to follow Germany into war in 1939 but was blocked by Victor Emmanuel 35 At a meeting with Count Ciano on 24 August 1939 the king stated that we are absolutely in no condition to wage war the state of the Regio Esercito was pitiful and since Italy was not ready for war it should stay out of the coming conflict at least until it was clear who was winning 35 More importantly Victor Emmanuel stated that as the king of Italy he was the supreme commander in chief and he wanted to be involved in any supreme decisions which in effect was claiming a right to veto any decision Mussolini might make about going to war 35 On 25 August Ciano wrote in his diary that he informed a furiously warlike Mussolini that the king was against Italy going to war in 1939 forcing Il Duce to concede that Italy would have to declare neutrality 35 Unlike in Germany where officers from 1934 onward took an oath of personal loyalty to Hitler officers of the Regio Esercito Regina Marina and the Regia Aeronautica all took their oaths of loyalty to the king not Mussolini 36 The vast majority of the Italian officers in all three services saw Victor Emmanuel as opposed to Mussolini as the principal locus of their loyalty allowing the king to check decisions by Mussolini that he disapproved of 36 Italy declared neutrality in September 1939 but Mussolini always made it clear that he wanted to intervene on the side of Germany provided that this would not strain Italy s resources too much the costs of the wars in Ethiopia and Spain had pushed Italy to the verge of bankruptcy by 1939 37 On 18 March 1940 Mussolini met Hitler at a summit at the Brenner Pass and promised him that Italy would soon enter the war 38 Victor Emmanuel had powerful doubts about the wisdom of going to war and at one point in March 1940 hinted to Ciano that he was considering dismissing Mussolini as Ciano wrote in his diary the King feels that it may become necessary for him to intervene at any moment to give things a different direction he is prepared to do this and to do it quickly 39 Victor Emmanuel hoped that a vote against Italy entering the war would be registered in the Fascist Grand Council as he knew that the gerarchi Cesare Maria De Vecchi Italo Balbo and Emilio De Bono were all anti war but he refused to insist upon calling the Grand Council as a precondition for giving his consent to declaring war 40 On 31 March 1940 Mussolini submitted to Victor Emmanuel a long memorandum arguing that Italy to achieve its long sought spazio vitale had to enter the war on the Axis side sometime that year 41 However the king remained resolutely opposed to Italy entering the war until late May 1940 much to Mussolini s intense frustration 42 At one point Mussolini complained to Ciano that there were two men namely Victor Emmanuel and Pope Pius XII who were preventing him from doing the things that he wanted to do leading to state he wanted to blow the Crown and Catholic Church up to the skies 43 Joining the Axis edit Victor Emmanuel was a cautious man and he always consulted all of the available advisors before making a decision in this case the senior officers of the armed forces who informed him of Italy s military deficiencies 44 On 10 May 1940 Germany launched a major offensive into the Low Countries and France and as the Wehrmacht continued to advance into France the king s opposition to Italy entering the war started to weaken by the second half of May 1940 43 Mussolini argued all through May 1940 that since it was evident that Germany was going to win the war that here was an unparalleled chance for Italy to make major gains at the expense of France and Britain that would allow Italy to become the dominant power in the Mediterranean 45 On 1 June 1940 Victor Emmanuel finally gave Mussolini his permission for Italy to enter the war though the king retained the supreme command while only giving Mussolini power over political and military questions 43 The delay between the king s permission to enter the war and the declaration of war was caused by Mussolini s demand that he have the powers of supreme command an attempt to take away a royal prerogative that Victor Emmanuel rejected and was finally settled by the compromise of giving Mussolini operational command powers 46 On 10 June 1940 ignoring advice that the country was unprepared Mussolini made the fatal decision to have Italy enter World War II on the side of Nazi Germany Almost from the beginning disaster followed disaster The first Italian offensive an invasion of France launched on 17 June 1940 ended in complete failure and only the fact that France signed an armistice with Germany on 22 June followed by another armistice with Italy on 24 June allowed Mussolini to present it as a victory 47 Victor Emmanuel sharply criticized the terms of the Franco Italian Armistice saying he wanted Italy to occupy Tunisia Corsica and Nice though the fact the armistice allowed him to proclaim a victory over France was a source of much pleasure to him 48 In 1940 and 1941 Italian armies in North Africa and in Greece suffered humiliating defeats Unlike his opposition over going to war with major powers like France and Britain who might actually defeat Italy Victor Emmanuel blessed Mussolini s plans to invade Greece in the fall of 1940 saying he expected the Greeks to collapse as soon as Italy invaded 49 Through the carabinieri para military police Victor Emmanuel was kept well informed of the state of public opinion and from the autumn of 1940 onward received reports that the war together with the Fascist regime were becoming extremely unpopular with the Italian people 50 When Mussolini made Marshal Pietro Badoglio the scapegoat for the failure of the invasion of Greece and sacked him as Chief of the General Staff in December 1940 Badoglio appealed to the king for help 51 Victor Emmanuel refused to help Badoglio saying that Mussolini would manage the situation just always as he had in the past 51 In January 1941 the king admitted to his aide de camp General Paolo Puntoni that war was not going well and the Fascist regime was becoming very unpopular but he had decided to keep Mussolini on as a prime minister because there was no replacement for him 51 Because the king had supported Fascism he feared that to overthrow the Fascist system would mean the end of the monarchy as the anti Fascist parties were all republican 51 During the invasion of Yugoslavia in April 1941 Victor Emmanuel moved to a villa owned by the Pirzio Biroli family at Brazzacco in order to be close to the front 52 In May 1941 Victor Emmanuel gave permission to his unpopular cousin Prince Aimone to become King of Croatia under the title Tomislav II in an attempt to get him out of Rome but Aimone frustrated this ambition by never going to Croatia to receive his crown 51 During a tour of the new provinces that were annexed to Italy from Yugoslavia Victor Emmanuel commented that Fascist policies towards the Croats and Slovenes were driving them towards rebellion but chose not to intervene to change the said policies 51 On 22 June 1941 Germany launched Operation Barbarossa the invasion of the Soviet Union Mussolini had the king issue a declaration of war and sent an Italian expeditionary force to the Eastern Front through Victor Emmanuel was later to claim that he wanted only a token force to go to the Soviet Union rather than the 10 divisions that Mussolini actually sent 53 In late 1941 Italian East Africa was lost The loss of Italian East Africa together with the defeats in North Africa and the Balkans caused an immense loss of confidence in Mussolini s ability to lead and many Fascist gerarchi such as Emilio De Bono and Dino Grandi were hoping by the spring of 1941 that the king might sack him in order to save the Fascist regime 54 In the summer of 1941 the carabinieri generals told the king that they were prepared to have the carabinieri serve as a strike force for a coup against Mussolini saying if the war continued it was bound to cause a revolution that would sweep away both the Fascist regime and the monarchy 53 Victor Emmanuel rejected this offer and in September 1941 when Count Ciano told him the war was lost blasted him for his defeatism saying he still believed in Mussolini 53 On 11 December 1941 Victor Emmanuel rather glibly agreed to Mussolini s request to declare war on the United States 53 Failing to anticipate the American Europe First strategy the king believed that the Americans would follow an Asia First strategy of focusing all their efforts against Japan in revenge for Pearl Harbor and that declaring war on the United States was a harmless move 53 The king was pleased by the news of Japan entering the war believing that with Britain s Asian colonies in danger that this would force the British to redeploy their forces to Asia and might finally allow for the Axis conquest of Egypt 53 Marshal Enrico Caviglia wrote in his diary that it was criminal the way that Victor Emmanuel refused to act against Mussolini despite the fact that he was clearly mismanaging the war 53 One Italian journalist remembered that by the fall of 1941 he did not know anyone who felt anything other than contempt for the king who was unwilling to disassociate himself from Fascism 53 The British historian Denis Mack Smith wrote that Victor Emmanuel tended to procrastinate when faced with very difficult choices and his unwillingness to dismiss Mussolini despite mounting pressure from within the Italian elite was his way of trying to avoid making a decision 55 Moreover Victor Emmanuel had considerable respect for Mussolini who he saw as his most able prime minister and appeared to dread taking on a man whose intelligence was greater than his own 56 In a conversation with the papal nuncio the king explained that he could not sign an armistice because he hated the United States as a democracy whose leaders were accountable to the American people because Britain was rotten to the core and would soon cease to be a great power and because everything he kept hearing about the massive losses sustained by the Red Army convinced him that Germany would win on the Eastern Front at least 57 Another excuse used by Victor Emmanuel was that Mussolini was allegedly still popular with the Italian people and that it would offend public opinion if he dismissed Mussolini 58 The Vatican favoured Italy exiting the war by 1943 but papal diplomats told their American counterparts that the king was weak indecisive and excessively devoted to Mussolini 59 Disillusionment with Mussolini edit In the summer of 1942 Grandi had a private audience with Victor Emmanuel where he asked him to dismiss Mussolini and sign an armistice with the Allies before the Fascist regime was destroyed only to be told to trust your king and stop speaking like a mere journalist 53 Grandi told Ciano that the king must be either crazy and or senile as he was utterly passive refusing to act against Mussolini 53 In late 1942 Italian Libya was lost During Operation Anton on 9 November 1942 the unoccupied part of France was occupied by the Axis forces which allowed Victor Emmanuel to proclaim in a speech at long last Corsica and Nice had been liberated 60 Early in 1943 the ten divisions of the Italian Army in Russia Armata Italiana in Russia or ARMIR were crushed in a side action in the Battle of Stalingrad By the middle of 1943 the last Italian forces in Tunisia had surrendered and Sicily had been taken by the Allies Hampered by lack of fuel as well as several serious defeats the Italian Navy spent most of the war confined to port As a result the Mediterranean Sea was not in any real sense Italy s Mare Nostrum While the Air Force generally did better than the Army or the Navy it was chronically short of modern aircraft Efforts to save the monarchy edit As Italy s fortunes worsened the popularity of the King suffered One coffee house ditty went as follows Quando Vittorio era soltanto reSi bevea del buon caffe Poi divenne ImperatoreSe ne senti solo l odore Oggi che e anche Re d AlbaniaAnche l odore l han portato via E se avremo un altra vittoriaCi manchera anche la cicoria When our Victor was plain King Coffee was a common thing When an Emperor he was made Coffee s odour it did fade Since he got Albania s throne Even the odour has flown And if we have another victory We re also going to lose our chicory 61 By early 1943 Mussolini was so psychologically shattered by the successive Italian defeats that he was so depressed and drugged out as to be almost catatonic at times staring blankly into space for hours while high on various drugs citation needed and mumbling incoherently that the war would soon turn around for the Axis powers because it had to 56 Even Victor Emmanuel was forced to concede that Mussolini had taken a turn for the worse which he blamed on that woman as he called Mussolini s mistress Clara Petacci 56 On 15 May 1943 the king sent Mussolini a letter saying Italy should sign an armistice and exit the war 56 On 4 June 1943 Grandi saw the king and told him that he had to dismiss Mussolini before the Fascist system was destroyed when the king rejected that course under the grounds that the Fascist Grand Council would never vote against Mussolini Grandi assured him that it would saying the majority of the gerarchi were now against Mussolini 56 Using the Vatican as an intermediary Victor Emmanuel contacted the British and American governments in June 1943 to ask if they the Allies were willing to see the House of Savoy continue after the war 59 On 19 July 1943 Rome was bombed for the first time in the war further cementing the Italian people s disillusionment with their once popular citation needed King When the King visited the bombed areas of Rome he was loudly booed by his subjects who blamed him for the war which caused Victor Emmanuel to become worried about the possibility of a revolution which might bring in a republic 62 By this time plans were being discussed within the Italian elite for replacing Mussolini Victor Emmanuel stated that he wanted to keep the Fascist system going after dismissing Mussolini and he was seeking to correct merely some of its deleterious aspects 62 The two replacements that were being mooted for Mussolini were Marshal Pietro Badoglio and his rival Marshal Enrico Caviglia 62 As Marshal Caviglia was one of the few officers of the Regio Esercito who kept his distance from the Fascist regime he was unacceptable to Victor Emmanuel who wanted an officer who was committed to upholding Fascism which led him to choose Badoglio who had loyally served Mussolini and committed all sorts of atrocities in Ethiopia but who had a grudge against Il Duce for making him the scapegoat for the failed invasion of Greece in 1940 62 In addition Badoglio was an opportunist who was well known for his sycophancy towards those in power which led the king to choose him as Mussolini s successor as he knew that Badoglio would do anything to have power whereas Caviglia had a reputation as a man of principle and honour 62 The king felt that Badoglio as prime minister would obey any royal orders whereas he was not so certain that Caviglia would do the same 62 On 15 July 1943 in a secret meeting Victor Emmanuel told Badoglio that he would soon be sworn in as Italy s new prime minister and the king wanted no ghosts i e liberal politicians from the pre fascist era in his cabinet 62 Coup d etat against Mussolini edit Main article Fall of the Fascist regime in Italy On the night of 25 July 1943 the Grand Council of Fascism voted to adopt an Ordine del Giorno order of the day proposed by Count Dino Grandi to ask Victor Emmanuel to resume his full constitutional powers under Article 5 of the Statuto In effect this was a motion of no confidence in Mussolini The following afternoon Mussolini asked for an audience with the king at Villa Savoia When Mussolini tried to tell Victor Emmanuel about the Grand Council s vote Victor Emmanuel abruptly cut him off and dismissed him in favour of Badoglio He then ordered Mussolini s arrest Publicly Victor Emmanuel and Badoglio claimed that Italy would continue the war as a member of the Axis Privately they both began negotiating with the Allies for an armistice The king was advised by his generals to sign an immediate armistice since German troops in Italy were still outnumbered by Italian troops 63 But Victor Emmanuel was unwilling to accept the Allied demand for unconditional surrender and as a result the secret armistice talks in Lisbon were dragged out over the summer of 1943 64 Besides rejecting unconditional surrender as truly monstrous Victor Emmanuel wanted from the Allies a guarantee that he would keep his throne a promise that Italian colonial empire in Libya and the Horn of Africa would be restored that Italy would keep the part of Yugoslavia that had been annexed by Mussolini and finally the Allies should promise not to invade the Italian mainland and instead invade France and the Balkans 65 Mack Smith wrote that these demands were unrealistic and caused much time to be wasted in the Lisbon peace talks as the Allies were willing to concede that Victor Emmanuel could keep his throne and rejected all of his other demands 65 In the meantime German forces continued to be rushed into Italy Armistice with the Allies edit On 8 September 1943 Victor Emmanuel publicly announced an armistice with the Allies Confusion reigned as Italian forces were left without orders and the Germans who had been expecting this move for some time quickly disarmed and interned Italian troops and took control in the occupied Balkans France and the Dodecanese as well as in Italy itself Many of the units that did not surrender joined forces with the Allies against the Germans Fearing a German advance on Rome Victor Emmanuel and his government fled south to Brindisi This choice may have been necessary to protect his safety indeed Hitler had planned to arrest him shortly after Mussolini s overthrow Nonetheless it still came as a surprise to many observers inside and outside Italy Unfavourable comparisons were drawn with King George VI and Queen Elizabeth who refused to leave London during the Blitz and of Pope Pius XII who mixed with Rome s crowds and prayed with them after Rome s working class neighbourhood of Quartiere San Lorenzo had been destroyed by bombing Despite the German occupation Victor Emmanuel kept refusing to declare war on Germany saying he needed a vote by Parliament first though that had not stopped him from signing declarations of war on Ethiopia Albania Great Britain France Greece Yugoslavia the Soviet Union and the United States none of which had been sanctioned by Parliament 66 Under strong pressure from the Allied Control Commission the king finally declared war on Germany on 8 October 1943 66 Ultimately the Badoglio government in Southern Italy raised the Italian Co Belligerent Army Esercito Cobelligerante del Sud the Italian Co Belligerent Air Force Aviazione Cobelligerante Italiana and the Italian Co Belligerent Navy Marina Cobelligerante del Sud All three forces were loyal to the King Relations with the Allied Control Commission were very strained as the king remained obsessed with protocol screaming with fury when General Noel Mason Macfarlane met him wearing shirt sleeves and shorts a choice of attire he considered very disrespectful 67 Victor Emmanuel was ultra critical of the slow progress made by the American 5th Army and the British 8th Army as the Allies fought their way up the Italian peninsula saying he wanted to return to Rome as soon as possible and felt that all of the Allied soldiers fighting to liberate Italy were cowards 66 Likewise Victor Emmanuel refused to renounce the usurped Ethiopian and Albanian crowns in favour of the legitimate monarchs of those states claiming that the Fascist dominated Parliament had given him these titles and he could only renounce them if parliament voted on the matter 67 On 12 September the Germans launched Operation Eiche and rescued Mussolini from captivity In a short time he established a new Fascist state in northern Italy the Italian Social Republic Repubblica Sociale Italiana This was never more than a German dominated puppet state but it did compete for the allegiance of the Italian people with Badoglio s government in the south By this time it was apparent that Victor Emmanuel was irrevocably tainted by his earlier support of the Fascist regime At a 10 April meeting under pressure from ACC officials Robert Murphy and Harold Macmillan Victor Emmanuel transferred most of his constitutional powers to his son Crown Prince Umberto 68 Privately Victor Emmanuel told General Noel Mason MacFarlane that by forcing him to give power to Umberto the Allies were effectively giving power to the Communists 69 By this time however events had moved beyond Victor Emmanuel s ability to control After Rome was liberated on 4 June he turned over his remaining powers to Umberto and named him Lieutenant General of the Realm while nominally retaining the title of king Post war and fall of the monarchy editAbdication edit See also 1946 Italian institutional referendum Within a year of the war s end public opinion forced a referendum on whether to retain the monarchy or become a republic In hopes of helping the monarchist cause Victor Emmanuel formally abdicated in favor of his son who ascended to the throne as Umberto II on 9 May 1946 Abolition of the monarchy edit This move failed In the referendum held a month later 54 per cent of voters favoured a republic and the Kingdom of Italy was no more Some historians such as Sir Charles Petrie have speculated that the result might have been different if Victor Emmanuel had abdicated in favour of Umberto shortly after the Allied invasion of Sicily in 1943 or at the latest had abdicated outright in 1944 rather than simply transferring his powers to his son Umberto had been widely praised for his performance as de facto head of state beginning in 1944 and his relative popularity might have saved the monarchy The Italian conductor Arturo Toscanini declared that he would not come back to Italy as a subject of the degenerate king and more generally as long as the house of Savoy was ruling 70 Benedetto Croce had previously stated in 1944 that as long as the present king remains head of state we feel that Fascism has not ended that it will be reborn more or less disguised 71 Exile and death edit In any event once the referendum s result was certified Victor Emmanuel and all other male members of the House of Savoy were required to leave the country Taking refuge in Egypt where he was welcomed with great honour by King Farouk Victor Emmanuel died in Alexandria a year later of pulmonary congestion 72 He was interred behind the altar of St Catherine s Cathedral He was the last surviving grandchild of Victor Emmanuel II of Italy In 1948 Time magazine included an article about The Little King 61 2017 repatriation edit nbsp Tomb of Victor Emmanuel III at the sanctuary of Vicoforte The wreath is arranged as the cross of the House of Savoy On 17 December 2017 an Italian air force military plane officially repatriated the remains of Victor Emmanuel III which were transferred from Alexandria to the sanctuary of Vicoforte near Turin and interred alongside those of Elena which had been transferred two days earlier from Montpellier France 73 Legacy edit nbsp Busts of King Victor Emmanuel III and Queen Elena forecourt of the Russian Orthodox Church of Christ the Saviour St Catherine and St Seraph Sanremo ItalyThe abdication prior to the referendum probably brought back to the minds of undecided voters the monarchy s role during the Fascist period and the King s own actions or lack of them at the very moment monarchists hoped voters would focus on the positive impression created by Umberto and his wife Maria Jose over the previous two years The May King and Queen Umberto and Maria Jose in Umberto s brief month long reign were unable to shift the burden of recent history and opinion Victor Emmanuel III was one of the most prolific coin collectors of all time having amassed approximately 100 000 specimens dating from the fall of the Roman Empire up to the Unification of Italy and in 1897 becoming honorary president of the new Italian Numismatic Society of which he was a founding member On his abdication the collection was donated to the Italian people except for the coins of the House of Savoy which he took with him to Egypt On the death of Umberto II in 1983 the Savoy coins joined the rest of the collection in the National Museum of Rome Between 1910 and 1943 Victor Emmanuel wrote the 20 volume Corpus Nummorum Italicorum which catalogued each specimen in his collection 74 He was awarded the medal of the Royal Numismatic Society in 1904 After World War I Avenue Victor Emmanuel III in Paris was named after him in honour of Italy s alliance in that war but the king s support of the Axis Powers led the road to be renamed Franklin D Roosevelt Avenue in 1946 following the end of World War II 75 In Florestano Vancini s film The Assassination of Matteotti 1973 Victor Emmanuel is played by Giulio Girola Honours editStyles of King Victor Emmanuel III nbsp Reference styleHis MajestySpoken styleYour MajestyNational orders and decorations edit Kingdom of Italy Knight of the Annunciation 1 January 1887 76 Sovereign 29 July 1900 77 Grand Cross of Saints Maurice and Lazarus 1 January 1887 76 Sovereign 29 July 1900 Grand Cross of the Crown of Italy 1 January 1887 76 Sovereign 29 July 1900 Sovereign of the Military Order of Savoy Sovereign of the Civil Order of Savoy Sovereign of the Colonial Order of the Star of Italy Founder and Sovereign of the Order of the Roman Eagle 14 March 1942 78 Mauritian Medal for Military Merit of 10 Lustrums War Merit Cross Commemorative Medal for the Italo Austrian War 1915 1918 Commemorative Medal of Campaigns of Independence Wars Commemorative Medal of the Unity of Italy Italian Albania Sovereign of the Order of Besa 1939 1943 Sovereign of the Order of Skanderbeg 1939 1943 Sovereign Military Order of Malta Bailiff Grand Cross of Honour and Devotion 10 February 1891 77 Foreign orders and decorations edit Austria Hungary Grand Cross of the Royal Hungarian Order of St Stephen 1887 79 Kingdom of Bulgaria Knight of Saints Cyril and Methodius with Collar 80 Czechoslovakia Collar of the White Lion 1925 81 Denmark Knight of the Elephant 23 September 1891 82 Estonia Cross of Liberty Grade III Class I 29 April 1925 83 Finland Collar of the White Rose 1920 84 German Empire Grand Commander s Cross of the Royal House Order of Hohenzollern 10 June 1890 85 Knight of the Black Eagle with Collar 77 Baden 86 Knight of the House Order of Fidelity 1893 Knight of the Order of Berthold the First 1893 Kingdom of Bavaria Knight of St Hubert 1883 87 Saxe Weimar Eisenach Grand Cross of the White Falcon 1888 88 Kingdom of Saxony Knight of the Rue Crown 1893 89 Wurttemberg Grand Cross of the Wurttemberg Crown 1882 90 Empire of Japan Collar of the Order of the Chrysanthemum 16 April 1902 91 Latvia Grand Cross of the Order of Lacplesis 92 Kingdom of Montenegro Knight of St Peter of Cetinje Monaco Grand Cross of St Charles 30 December 1890 93 Persian Empire Order of the Lion and the Sun 1st Class 1902 94 Poland Knight of the White Eagle Grand Cross of the Virtuti Militari 12 December 1923 95 Portugal Kingdom of Portugal Grand Cross of the Tower and Sword 96 Portuguese Republic Grand Cross of the Sash of the Three Orders 19 July 1919 97 Kingdom of Romania Grand Cross of the Order of Carol I with Collar 1906 98 Russian Empire Knight of St Andrew 77 San Marino Grand Cross of the Order of San Marino 11 April 1889 99 Siam Knight of the Order of the Royal House of Chakri 1 June 1897 100 Spain Kingdom of Spain Knight of the Golden Fleece 2 December 1878 101 Grand Cross of the Order of Charles III with Collar 10 December 1900 102 Francoist Spain Collar of the Imperial Order of the Yoke and Arrows 1 October 1937 103 Sweden Norway Knight of the Seraphim with Collar 15 April 1888 104 Grand Cross of St Olav 19 September 1891 105 United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland Stranger Knight Companion of the Garter 3 August 1891 106 expelled in 1941 Recipient of the Royal Victorian Chain 18 November 1903 107 expelled in 1941 Honorary Grand Cross of the Bath military 1916 expelled in 1941 Vatican City Holy See Knight of the Supreme Order of Christ 2 January 1932 108 Family edit nbsp Giovanna of Italy Tsaritsa of Bulgaria 1937In 1896 he married princess Elena of Montenegro 1873 1952 daughter of Nicholas I King of Montenegro Their issue included Yolanda Margherita Milena Elisabetta Romana Maria 1901 1986 married to Giorgio Carlo Calvi Count of Bergolo 1887 1977 Their son Count Pier Francesco Calvi di Bergolo married actress Marisa Allasio Mafalda Maria Elisabetta Anna Romana 1902 1944 married to Prince Philipp of Hesse 1896 1980 with issue she died in the Nazi concentration camp at Buchenwald Umberto Nicola Tommaso Giovanni Maria later Umberto II King of Italy 1904 1983 married to Princess Marie Jose of Belgium 1906 2001 with issue Giovanna Elisabetta Antonia Romana Maria 1907 2000 married to King Boris III of Bulgaria 1894 1943 and mother of Simeon II King and later Prime Minister of Bulgaria Maria Francesca Anna Romana 1914 2001 who married Prince Luigi of Bourbon Parma 1899 1967 with issue Ancestry edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed May 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Ancestors of Victor Emmanuel III8 Charles Albert of Sardinia4 Victor Emmanuel II of Italy9 Archduchess Maria Theresa of Austria2 Umberto I of Italy10 Archduke Rainer of Austria5 Archduchess Adelaide of Austria11 Princess Elisabeth of Savoy1 Victor Emmanuel III of Italy12 Charles Albert of Sardinia 8 6 Prince Ferdinand Duke of Genoa13 Archduchess Maria Theresa of Austria 9 3 Princess Margherita of Savoy Genoa14 John of Saxony7 Princess Elisabeth of Saxony15 Princess Amalie Auguste of BavariaSee also editKingdom of Italy Italian Empire Amedeo 3rd Duke of Aosta Viceroy and Governor General of Italian East Africa Aimone 4th Duke of Aosta titular king Tomislav II of CroatiaPortals nbsp Biography nbsp Italy nbsp Africa nbsp History nbsp MonarchyReferences edit D Orsi Angelo 18 December 2017 Vittorio Emanuele III se questo e un re vittorioso Il Manifesto Retrieved 31 January 2018 Biography for King Victor Emmanuel III IMDb com Retrieved 16 September 2013 unreliable source 10 Lettere al re 1914 1918 Archived from the original on 12 March 2016 Retrieved 1 January 2016 Stefano Marcuzzi Britain and Italy in the Era of the Great War Defending and Forging Empires Cambridge University Press 2020 pp 217 220 a b Mack Smith Denis Italy and Its Monarchy New Haven Yale University Press 1989 p 249 a b Mack Smith Denis Italy and Its Monarchy New Haven Yale University Press 1989 p 249 250 Mack Smith Denis Italy and Its Monarchy New Haven Yale University Press 1989 p 250 a b Mack Smith Denis Italy and Its Monarchy New Haven Yale University Press 1989 p 250 251 Mack Smith Denis Italy and Its Monarchy New Haven Yale University Press 1989 p 251 Mack Smith Denis Italy and Its Monarchy New Haven Yale University Press 1989 p 252 Mack Smith Denis Italy and Its Monarchy New Haven Yale University Press 1989 p 253 Mack Smith Denis Italy and Its Monarchy New Haven Yale University Press 1989 p 254 Mack Smith Denis Italy and Its Monarchy New Haven Yale University Press 1989 p 254 Mack Smith Denis Italy and Its Monarchy New Haven Yale University Press 1989 p 254 255 a b c Mack Smith Denis Italy and Its Monarchy New Haven Yale University Press 1989 p 255 Mack Smith Denis Italy and Its Monarchy New Haven Yale University Press 1989 p 259 a b c d e f Mack Smith Denis Italy and Its Monarchy New Haven Yale University Press 1989 p 260 a b Mack Smith Denis Italy and Its Monarchy New Haven Yale University Press 1989 p 261 P Ortoleva M Revelli Storia dell eta contemporanea Milano 1998 p 123 Mack Smith Denis Italy and Its Monarchy New Haven Yale University Press 1989 p 263 Mack Smith Denis Italy and Its Monarchy New Haven Yale University Press 1989 p 264 265 a b c d Mack Smith Denis Italy and Its Monarchy New Haven Yale University Press 1989 p 265 a b Mack Smith Denis Italy and Its Monarchy New Haven Yale University Press 1989 p 269 Mack Smith Denis Italy and Its Monarchy New Haven Yale University Press 1989 p 266 Mack Smith Denis Italy and Its Monarchy New Haven Yale University Press 1989 p 268 Mack Smith Denis Italy and Its Monarchy New Haven Yale University Press 1989 p 268 269 a b c d e Mack Smith Denis Italy and Its Monarchy New Haven Yale University Press 1989 p 267 Mack Smith Denis Italy and Its Monarchy New Haven Yale University Press 1989 p 299 American Philatelic Association 1996 The American Philatelist Volume 110 Issues 7 12 p 618 Oba Gufu 11 July 2013 Nomads in the Shadows of Empires Contests Conflicts and Legacies on the Southern Ethiopian Northern Kenyan Frontier BRILL p 160 ISBN 978 90 04 25522 7 Indro Montanelli Mario Cervi Storia d italia L Italia della guerra civile RCS 2003 Owen Pearson Albania in Occupation and War From Fascism to Communism 1940 1945 2006 p 153 ISBN 1 84511 104 4 a b Kershaw Ian Fateful Choices London Allan Lane 2007 p 136 a b c d e Kershaw Ian Fateful Choices London Allan Lane 2007 p 137 a b Kershaw Ian Fateful Choices London Allan Lane 2007 p 139 Kershaw Ian Fateful Choices London Allan Lane 2007 p 146 148 Kershaw Ian Fateful Choices London Allan Lane 2007 p 148 Kershaw Ian Fateful Choices London Allan Lane 2007 p 151 Mack Smith Denis Italy and Its Monarchy New Haven 1989 p 287 Kershaw Ian Fateful Choices London Allan Lane 2007 p 149 150 Kershaw Ian Fateful Choices London Allan Lane 2007 p 150 151 a b c Kershaw Ian Fateful Choices London Allan Lane 2007 p 153 Mack Smith Denis Italy and Its Monarchy New Haven 1989 p 288 289 Kershaw Ian Fateful Choices London Allan Lane 2007 p 152 153 Mack Smith Denis Italy and Its Monarchy New Haven Yale University Press 1989 p 291 Kershaw Ian Fateful Choices London Allan Lane 2007 p 160 Mack Smith Denis Italy and Its Monarchy New Haven 1989 p 292 Kershaw Ian Fateful Choices London Allan Lane 2007 p 175 Mack Smith Denis Italy and Its Monarchy New Haven 1989 p 295 a b c d e f Mack Smith Denis Italy and Its Monarchy New Haven 1989 p 294 Cervi Mario 1972 The Hollow Legions Mussolini s Blunder in Greece 1940 1941 Storia della guerra di Grecia ottobre 1940 aprile 1941 trans Eric Mosbacher London Chatto and Windus p 279 ISBN 0 7011 1351 0 a b c d e f g h i j Mack Smith Denis Italy and Its Monarchy New Haven 1989 p 296 Mack Smith Denis Italy and Its Monarchy New Haven 1989 p 294 295 Mack Smith Denis Italy and Its Monarchy New Haven Yale University Press 1989 p 299 a b c d e Mack Smith Denis Italy and Its Monarchy New Haven Yale University Press 1989 p 302 Mack Smith Denis Italy and Its Monarchy New Haven Yale University Press 1989 p 302 303 Mack Smith Denis Italy and Its Monarchy New Haven Yale University Press 1989 p 301 a b Mack Smith Denis Italy and Its Monarchy New Haven Yale University Press 1989 p 303 Mack Smith Denis Italy and Its Monarchy New Haven 1989 p 297 a b The Little King TIME Magazine 5 January 1948 a b c d e f g Mack Smith Denis Italy and Its Monarchy New Haven Yale University Press 1989 p 304 Mack Smith Denis Italy and Its Monarchy New Haven Yale University Press 1989 p 307 Mack Smith Denis Italy and Its Monarchy New Haven Yale University Press 1989 p 308 a b Mack Smith Denis Italy and Its Monarchy New Haven Yale University Press 1989 p 309 a b c Mack Smith Denis Italy and Its Monarchy New Haven Yale University Press 1989 p 321 a b Mack Smith Denis Italy and Its Monarchy New Haven Yale University Press 1989 p 320 Holland James Italy s Year of Sorrow 1944 1945 New York St Martin s Press 2008 p 249 Mack Smith Denis Italy and Its Monarchy New Haven Yale University Press 1989 p 326 Corte Andrea Della 14 June 1981 Arturo Toscanini Edizioni Mediterranee via Google Books Spinosa Antonio 17 February 2015 Vittorio Emanuele III Mondadori ISBN 9788852061165 via Google Books Griseri Paolo Il fascismo le leggi razziali la fuga La Repubblica Retrieved 18 December 2017 Winfield Nicole Remains of Exiled Italian King to be Returned after 70 years ABC News Retrieved 17 December 2017 Great Collections King Victor Emmanuel III of Italy PDF Muenzgeschicte ch Archived from the original PDF on 29 October 2013 Retrieved 16 September 2013 Roland Pozzo di Borgo Les Champs Elysees trois siecles d histoire 1997 a b c Italia Ministero dell interno 1898 Calendario generale del Regno d Italia Unione tipografico editrice pp 53 55 68 a b c d Justus Perthes Almanach de Gotha 1922 pp 49 50 REGIO DECRETO 14 MARZO 1942 N 172 che istituisce l Ordine Civile e Militare dell Aquila Romana Archived from the original on 15 February 2008 A Szent Istvan Rend tagjai Archived from the original on 22 December 2010 Knights of the Order of Saints Cyril and Methodius Official Site of King Simeon II in Bulgarian Sofia Retrieved 17 October 2019 Kolana Radu Bileho lva aneb hlavy statu v retezech in Czech Czech Medals and Orders Society Retrieved 9 August 2018 Pedersen Jorgen 2009 Riddere af Elefantordenen 1559 2009 in Danish Syddansk Universitetsforlag p 466 ISBN 978 87 7674 434 2 Cross of Liberty Victor Emmanuel III of Italy Estonian State Decorations in Estonian Retrieved 4 June 2020 Suomen Valkoisen Ruusun Suurristi Ketjuineen ritarikunnat fi in Finnish Retrieved 7 May 2020 Koniglicher Haus orden von Hohenzollern Koniglich Preussische Ordensliste supp 1890 1891 in German vol 1 Berlin 1886 p 108 via hathitrust org a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Hof und Staats Handbuch des Grossherzogtum Baden 1896 Grossherzogliche Orden pp 63 77 Hof und Staats Handbuch des Konigreich Bayern 1906 Konigliche Orden p 7 Staatshandbuch fur das Grossherzogtum Sachsen Sachsen Weimar Eisenach Archived 6 September 2020 at the Wayback Machine 1900 Grossherzogliche Hausorden p 16 Sachsen 1901 Koniglich Orden Staatshandbuch fur den Konigreich Sachsen 1901 Dresden Heinrich p 4 via hathitrust org Hof und Staats Handbuch des Konigreich Wurttemberg 1907 Konigliche Orden p 28 刑部芳則 2017 明治時代の勲章外交儀礼 PDF in Japanese 明治聖徳記念学会紀要 p 149 Ducmane Kristine 1993 Apbalvojumi Latvijas Republika 1918 1940 Decorations of the Republic of Latvia 1918 1940 in Latvian Riga Latvijas vestures muzejs p 12 ISBN 5 89960 040 3 Journal de Monaco Court Circular The Times No 36775 London 23 May 1902 p 7 Stanislaw Loza 1935 Virtuti Militari Bron i Barwa in Polish Warsaw Stowarzyszenie Przyjaciol Muzeum Wojska p 148 Grand Crosses of the Order of the Tower and Sword geneall net Retrieved 9 August 2018 Banda da Gra Cruz das Tres Ordens Vitor Manuel III Rei da Italia in Portuguese Arquivo Historico da Presidencia da Republica Retrieved 28 November 2019 Ordinul Carol I Order of Carol I Familia Regală a Romaniei in Romanian Bucharest Retrieved 17 October 2019 The Equestrian Order of San Marino Consulate of the Republic of San Marino to the UK Retrieved 21 February 2021 phrarachthanekhruxngrachxisriyaphrnthipraethsyuorp PDF Royal Thai Government Gazette in Thai 19 September 1897 Archived from the original PDF on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 8 May 2019 Caballeros de la insigne orden del toison de oro Guoa Oficial de Espana in Spanish 1930 p 217 retrieved 21 March 2019 Real y distinguida orden de Carlos III Guoa Oficial de Espana in Spanish 1930 p 221 retrieved 21 March 2019 Decreto Numero 373 in Spanish Boletin Oficial del Estado 349 4 October 1937 Sveriges statskalender in Swedish 1925 p 807 retrieved 6 January 2018 via runeberg org Den kongelige norske Sanct Olavs Orden Norges Statskalender in Norwegian 1906 pp 791 792 retrieved 17 September 2021 via www nb no Shaw Wm A 1906 The Knights of England I London p 68 Shaw p 416 Cardinale Hyginus Eugene 1983 Orders of Knighthood Awards and The Holy See A historical juridical and practical Compendium London Van Duren p 33 Mack Smith Denis 1989 Italy and its Monarchy Yale University Press ISBN 0 300 05132 8 Reference 4 James Rennell Rodd British Ambassador to Italy before and during the Great War Social and Diplomatic Memories Third Series 1902 1919 London 1925 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Victor Emmanuel III of Italy nbsp Wikisource has the text of the 1922 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Victor Emmanuel III Genealogy of recent members of the House of Savoy King Vittorio Emanuele III Newspaper clippings about Victor Emmanuel III in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBWVictor Emmanuel IIIHouse of SavoyBorn 11 November 1869 Died 28 December 1947Regnal titlesPreceded byUmberto I King of Italy29 July 1900 9 May 1946 Succeeded byUmberto IIPreceded byHaile Selassie I Emperor of Ethiopia Partially internationally recognised 9 May 1936 5 May 1941 Succeeded byHaile Selassie IPreceded byZog I King of the Albanians Partially internationally recognised 16 April 1939 8 September 1943 Succeeded byLoss of Title Zog I as claimant Awards and achievementsPreceded byMiguel Primo de Rivera Cover of Time Magazine15 June 1925 Succeeded byCharles Horace Mayo Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Victor Emmanuel III amp oldid 1214604586, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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