fascism 3 (2014) 1-19
brill.com/fasc
Back to the Future
Italian Fascist Representations of the Roman Past
Jan Nelis
Université libre de Bruxelles-CIERL, Brussels, Belgium
jan_nelis@hotmail.com
Abstract
Among the many ‘founding myths’ of Italian Fascism such as those regarding its
relationship to the First World War, one element stood out as key to both its quest for
absolute dominion over the Italian peninsula and its historically based self-concept
and representation: the idea of present-day Italy as incarnating the spirit and virtuousness of Roman (late Republican and early Imperial) antiquity, creating the image
of a Terza Roma, of a ‘third’, Fascist Rome. This concept was omnipresent throughout
the entire period within which Mussolini dominated Italian politics. This very specific use of the historical past is discussed in this article, tracing its presence in various parts of the cultural and intellectual field, identifying the manifold ways in
which history can meet contemporary, and ‘futural’, prerequisites. In so doing, it is
inspired by recent scholarship underlining the futural, temporal thrust of Fascism
and romanità, rather than its traditionally reactionary, backward-looking dynamic.
As seems, at least to a certain extent, to have been the case in Nazi Germany, for the
Fascists, antiquity indeed was no faraway, dusty past, but a lively source of inspiration and energy revealing the regime’s modernist, revolutionary ambition to build
a ‘Third Rome’ which, literally and figuratively, made visible the earlier layers of
Roman heritage.
Keywords
Fascism – romanità – antiquity – modernism – reception – culturalism – Third
Rome – Pietro De Francisci
* This paper is dedicated to the memory of Jane Dunnett (1960–2013). The author would like to
express his gratitude to Roger Griffin for his inspiring comments on the present paper.
© jan nelis, 2014 | doi 10.1163/22116257-00301001
This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0
Unported (CC-BY-NC 3.0) License. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
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Since the 1970s, scholarship on Italian Fascism has witnessed a growing interest in the role played by culture under Mussolini’s regime.1 Simultaneously,
following the groundbreaking, and stimulating work of Renzo De Felice, a
certain degree of grassroots-level consensus has been increasingly identified
as crucial to Fascism’s intensifying grip on Italian society over the two decades
often referred to as the ventennio fascista (1922–1943).2 This relative ‘success’ of
Fascism appears to have come about via large-scale coercion, especially in the
earlier years, but also through the use of what could be termed as ‘soft power’,
i.e. of a process of ‘manufacturing consent’ through mainly cultural means.
This sustained focus on culture, now seen as vital to Fascism’s inner
functioning as an ideology, has identified it as a force aimed at ‘revitalising’
the nation, this especially in light of the chaotic and traumatising experience
of the First World War.3 One of the more interesting consequences of such
recent ‘culturalist’ approaches is the concept of Fascism as a ‘political religion’ sacralising private and public life through both discursive (‘mythical’)
and aesthetic (‘cultic’) means. Thus it has been identified as a culto del littorio, referring to one of the most striking symbols synonymous with Fascism,
the Roman lictor.4
1 Roger Griffin, ‘The Primacy of Culture: The Current Growth (or Manufacture) of Consensus
within Fascist Studies,’ Journal of Contemporary History 37, no. 1 (2002): 21–43, and Jan Nelis,
‘Italian Fascism and Culture: Some Notes on Investigation,’ Historia Actual Online 9 (2006):
141–151 (http://www.historia-actual.com).
2 Renzo De Felice, Mussolini il duce: I. Gli anni del consenso 1929–1936 (Torino: Einaudi, 1974).
On the controversy surrounding the notion of consensus, see, among others, Michael A.
Ledeen, ‘Renzo De Felice and the Controversy over Italian Fascism,’ Journal of Contemporary
History 11, no. 4 (1976): 269–283, and Emilio Gentile, Renzo De Felice: lo storico e il personaggio
(Roma, Bari: Laterza, 2003).
3 In this sense, a most interesting study is Simonetta Falasca-Zamponi, Fascist Spectacle: The
Aesthetics of Power in Mussolini’s Italy (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1997). See also
Emilio Gentile, Il mito dello stato nuovo dall’antigiolittismo al fascismo (Roma, Bari: Laterza,
1982), and, for another recent treatment of these and similar theses, Roger Griffin, Modernism
and Fascism: The Sense of a Beginning under Mussolini and Hitler (Basingstoke: Palgrave
Macmillan, 2007).
4 Emilio Gentile, Il culto del littorio (Roma, Bari: Laterza, 1993), as well as a preliminary study
published in the Journal of Contemporary History: Emilio Gentile, ‘Fascism as Political
Religion,’ Journal of Contemporary History 25, no. 2–3 (1990): 229–251. For up to date discussions on the concept of political religion, see Roger Griffin, ‘Cloister or Cluster? The
Implications of Emilio Gentile’s Ecumenical Theory of Political Religion for the Study of
Extremism,’ Totalitarian Movements and Political Religions 6, no. 1 (2005): 33–52; David
D. Roberts, ‘“Political Religion” and the Totalitarian Departures of Inter-war Europe: On the
Uses and Disadvantages of an Analytical Category,’ Contemporary European History 18, no. 4
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Along with its aesthetic constituents (mass gatherings, the visual arts, architecture, cinema etc.), a specific discourse gradually penetrated the most diverse
segments of cultural and societal life, conveying the image of a new, Fascist
Self, of a renewed sense of national pride and identity. This process of ‘fascistisation’ was a direct consequence of the regime’s ‘totalitarian’ nature, of its
attempts to occupy and dominate every aspect of Italian life, particularly
through its most pervasive social mechanism, the Partito Nazionale Fascista
[PNF; National Fascist Party].
Through the development of a vast network of leisure and youth organisations, and while also directing and supervising cultural life and the
media, Fascism maintained a strong grip on society through to the end of
the 1930s, when the introduction of racist laws sparked a certain degree of
popular dissent.5 This dual process of suppressing the most basic civic
liberties, supported by a ‘softer’ yet insidious approach to the exercise of
power, enabled Mussolini to sway large parts of the population towards his
cause, especially the youth, luring them with the promise of national
rebirth or palingenesis, of renewed greatness in the future. Within this
process ‘history’, mediated as a specific and detailed image of the Italian
past, played a major part.
Among the many ‘founding myths’ of Fascism such as those regarding its
relationship to the First World War, one element stood out as key to both
its quest for absolute dominion over the Italian peninsula and its historically based self-concept and representation: the idea of present-day Italy
as incarnating the spirit and virtuousness of Roman (late Republican and
early Imperial) antiquity, creating the image of a Terza Roma, of a ‘third’,
Fascist Rome. This concept was omnipresent throughout the entire period
within which Mussolini dominated Italian politics. This very specific use
of the historical past is discussed within the following pages, tracing its
presence in various parts of the cultural and intellectual field, identifying
the manifold ways in which history can meet contemporary, and ‘futural’,
prerequisites.
(2009): 381–414, and Jan Nelis, ‘The Clerical Response to a Totalitarian Political Religion:
La Civiltà Cattolica and Italian Fascism,’ Journal of Contemporary History 46, no. 2 (2011):
245–270.
5 In this context, the most complete and insightful treatment of Fascism as a form of totalitarianism, in the context of the phenomenon of a modernità totalitaria, is Emilio Gentile, La via
italiana al totalitarismo: Il Partito e lo Stato nel regime fascista. Nuova edizione (Roma:
Carocci, 2008). See also Emilio Gentile, ‘L’héritage fasciste entre mémoire et historiographie:
Les origines du refoulement du totalitarisme dans l’analyse du fascisme,’ Vingtième siècle:
Revue d’histoire 100, no. 4 (2008): 51–62.
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La Terza Roma: Fascist images of the ‘re-writing’ of history
From the very outset of his quest for domination, and more particularly after
the October 28, 1922 ‘March on Rome’, where thousands of Fascist squadristi
marched on the capital mounting a successful push to overthrow the government, Mussolini aspired to create the image of Italy as a nation inspired and
impelled by ancient Roman examples. Following the example of Julius Caesar
crossing the river Rubicon in 49 BC, Mussolini portrayed the Marcia su Roma as
having been his very own crossing of the Rubicon (although making the MilanRome trip by train).
This snapshot of the charismatic duce as a revolutionary ‘Caesarian’ condottiero and, some years later, as a modern-day dictator still in Caesar’s image,
became a primary theme of Fascist propaganda. This predominant image
influenced and shaped the weaving of a widespread and precise discursive
web, with constant reference to a purported, idealised ‘Roman’ spirit guiding
the nation. This led directly to the development of a highly ‘ideologised’ discourse on Roman antiquity.
Apart from the publicitary and academic means underpinning the propaganda surrounding antiquity (cf. infra), history, both ancient and contemporary, was also ‘written’ and mediated by various non-verbal means. These latter
mechanisms contributed significantly to the success of the myth or cult of
what came to be known as romanità.6 One of the most basic manifestations
of this gradual process of ‘Romanisation’ may seem at first glance to be rather
insignificant, but from a propagandistic point of view it was arguably one of
the most effective: the introduction of everyday ‘Roman’ habits such as, primarily, the Fascist ‘Roman salute’. Such tendencies were notably intensified
during the 1930s, when Achille Starace, segretario of the National Fascist Party
between 1931 and 1939, was responsible for an increasing stress on the cultic,
aesthetic means by which Fascism would be promoted and consolidated.7
Whereas the passo romano or ‘Roman step’, adopted by the army in
the 1930s, met with a great deal of scorn, this Roman salute, portrayed as a
direct reference to Roman antiquity, as well as being more hygienic than the
6 Romke Visser, ‘Fascist Doctrine and the Cult of the Romanità,’ Journal of Contemporary
History 27, no. 1 (1992): 5–22. Studies such as Visser’s are, among others, Marla Stone,
‘A Flexible Rome: Fascism and the Cult of Romanità,’ in Roman Presences: Receptions of Rome
in European Culture, 1789–1945, ed. Catharine Edwards (Cambridge, New York: Cambridge
University Press, 1999), 205–220.
7 On Starace, see, among others, Roberto Festorazzi, Starace: Il mastino della rivoluzione fascista (Milano: Mursia, 2002).
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Figure 1
Detail of a building at Piazza Augusto Imperatore, Rome.
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6
Inscription on a building at Piazza Augusto Imperatore, Rome.
Nelis
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Figure 2
Back To The Future
7
handshake, gradually substituted traditional social behaviour in this very
specific domain. The salute was swiftly and successfully adopted by many. This
substitution of one of the most basic and everyday gestures was a constant,
simultaneously implicit and explicit, reminder of the new Fascist reality.
This totalitarian determination to intervene in and structure everyday
life went further, redefining the notion of time itself, including various attempts
to fascisticise the calendar in a ‘Roman’ sense. Thus the ‘Caesarian’ March on
Rome became marked on the new calendar as the first day of the first year of
the ‘Fascist era’ or era fascista (E.F.), an indication which was to be added to
the traditional Gregorian calendar year. In addition, a score of official festivities were introduced or revived, including April 21st, the Natale di Roma, the
mythical founding date of the city of Rome: a fitting ‘Roman’ and Fascist substitute for the ideologically incompatible May 1st celebration. Furthermore, the
anniversary of the March on Rome became one of the major Italian holidays
for some twenty years.
An additional way in which the dual historical narrative Fascism-romanità
was translated in a somewhat less abstract manner than already mentioned
measures was the utilisation of the physical remnants of antiquity, which were
presented in expositions (see below), and which were also very tangibly present in various cities, first and foremost in the city of Rome itself. The archaeologists’ activities in the Italian capital proved remarkably useful in creating
Figure 3
Via dei Fori Imperiali, Rome.
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the illusion of an ideologically specific revived ‘greatness’ so longed for by the
regime, particularly through the excavation of some of the most evocative
ancient monuments.
Apart from various sites and monuments such as the Mausoleum of
Augustus or Augusteo, the Ara Pacis Augustae,8 the Theatre of Marcellus and
the Area Sacra Argentina, there is the most scenographic site which the Fascist
interest in ancient Rome produced: the zone divided by a large avenue stretching from what became the nerve centre of Fascist Italy, Palazzo Venezia with its
iconic ‘Mussolinian’ balcony, running alongside various imperial forums,
towards the quintessential symbol of ancient Rome, the Colosseum. The creation of the avenue, the Via dell’Impero – today known as the Via dei Fori
Imperiali –, exemplifies the selective manner in which the Fascists utilised
Roman antiquity: the excavations were undertaken in a hasty unscientific
manner, with the focus clearly on the site’s potential as a magnificent parade
ground, rather than its immeasurable historical value.9
Figure 4
Palazzo della Civiltà del Lavoro, Rome.
8 In this context, see Aristotle A. Kallis, ‘“Framing” Romanità: The Celebrations for the
Bimillenario Augusteo and the Augusteo-Ara Pacis Project,’ Journal of Contemporary History
46, no. 4 (2011): 809–831.
9 For archaeology under Fascism, see Antonio Cederna, Mussolini urbanista: Lo sventramento
di Roma negli anni del consenso (Roma, Bari: Laterza, 1979); Daniele Manacorda and Renato
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9
Among the more traditional and somewhat less obviously manipulative
ways in which the tangible remnants of ancient Rome were utilised were a
number of antiquarian expositions. One such event stands out as by far the
most notable: the bimillenary birthday exposition organised in honour of
Roman emperor Augustus in 1937–1938. On display were artefacts and casts
of ancient statues, along with other more modern didactic means such as
elaborate scale models of some of Rome’s more impressive engineering
achievements – including the bridge crossing the Rhine. The Mostra Augustea
della Romanità, a relatively ‘modern’ exposition, grew to become one of the
most visited of its kind.
The Mostra is, arguably, the quintessential example of the highly efficient
means by which Mussolini’s regime conveyed the idea of an ancient Roman
revival to all strata of society.10 Most significantly, it contained a final room in
which Fascism’s newly acquired imperial statute was evoked. Added to this,
the Mostra della Rivoluzione Fascista,11 an exposition celebrating ten years of
Fascist power first organised in 1932, was re-opened; combined with considerably reduced transport fares, this made the trip to Rome even more accessible
to the wider public.
As illustrated, Fascism’s intent was that antiquity and modernity be perceived, if not as one organic whole, then at least as distinctly interconnected.
Before showcasing some of the more formally discursive means by which this
nexus was reinforced, it is essential here to comment briefly on the importance
of romanità to Fascist architecture. Indeed, this discipline and practice was
highly responsive to the regime’s romance with antiquity, a sensitivity that
translated itself into the conception of a specific style of architectural classicism, generally referred to as stile littorio. This ‘stripped’ (neo-)classicism,12
10
11
12
Tamassia, Il piccone del regime (Roma: Curcio, 1985); Paul Baxa, Roads and Ruins: The
Symbolic Landscape of Fascist Rome (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2010); Aristotle
A. Kallis, ‘The “Third Rome” of Fascism: Demolitions and the Search for a New Urban
Syntax,’ Journal of Modern History 84 (2012): 40–79; Joshua Arthurs, Excavating Modernity:
The Roman Past in Fascist Italy (Ithaca, London: Cornell University Press, 2012).
On the Mostra Augustea, see the very well documented Friedemann Scriba, Augustus im
Schwarzhemd? Die Mostra Augustea della Romanità in Rom 1937/38 (Frankfurt am Main:
Peter Lang, 1993), and Friedemann Scriba, ‘The sacralization of the Roman past in
Mussolini’s Italy: Erudition, aesthetics, and religion in the exhibition of Augustus’ bimillenary in 1937–1938,’ Storia della Storiografia 30 (1996): 19–29.
On this exposition, see Marla Stone, ‘Staging Fascism: The Exhibition of the Fascist
Revolution,’ Journal of Contemporary History 28, no. 2 (1993): 215–243.
Jan Nelis, ‘Constructing Fascist Identity: Benito Mussolini and the Myth of Romanità,’
Classical World 100, no. 4 (2007): 408.
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Sapienza University, Rome.
Nelis
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Figure 5
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presenting a particular, highly recognizable blend of art deco, modern, functionalist and ancient Roman influences, could be observed in a host of (mostly
representative) buildings, first and foremost in the nation’s capital.
Apart from the Città Universitaria, the iconic campus of Rome’s Sapienza
University situated in the city centre, and the Stadio dei Marmi on the Foro
Italico to the north of the capital, the most renowned and, arguably, workable
product of Fascist architecture and town planning is the well preserved EUR
(Esposizione Universale di Roma) quarter, situated to the south. Originally conceived as the site of the universal exposition proposed to be staged in 1942,
this project was completed after the demise of Fascism. However, part of its
buildings date back to the 1930s. Among the parts of the complex constructed
under Fascism, dating back to the 1930s, is the iconic Palazzo della Civiltà del
Lavoro. This particular structure, popularly referred to as the Colosseo quadrato
[square Colosseum], incarnates the most vibrant architectural translation of
Fascism’s two decade long quest to represent and insert antiquity into its own,
ultimately disastrous, pursuit of renewed imperial splendour.
Examples such as the EUR serve to illustrate the importance of romanità to
those initiatives endorsed by those holding political power. However, the myth
of Rome was also cultivated, and disseminated, so to speak, from the bottom
upwards, especially when it came to its more academic or purely discursive
treatment.
The legacy of Rome and Fascist cultural organisations: the example
of the Istituto di Studi Romani
As has been illustrated, the topos of the Fascist Third Rome became manifest
in various ways, penetrating much of the cultural spectrum, inculcating a new
Italian identity and self-consciousness by constant reference to an idealised
image of the Roman past. Apart from these aesthetic manifestations, the major
academic disciplines that dealt with the matter of antichistica – classicists,
archaeologists, historians – often supported the top down ideological message,
providing research based evidence presented in a number of scientific publications, along with the organisation of expositions, and participating in public-oriented initiatives such as those organised by the highly prolific Istituto di
Studi Romani.
The express intent of this institution was the development and diffusion of
knowledge about Rome. One of the first issues of Roma, the official journal,
contained a handwritten note from Mussolini which evoked the Natale di
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Roma,13 clearly setting out the interpretive lines from the very beginning: the
total alignment of the Roman past with present ideological prerogatives. As
Carlo Galassi Paluzzi, founder and main catalyst of the Istituto’s activities,
observed, those working for the Istituto were to be conceived as an ‘army on
the march’, obeying to the orders of the duce and the king, and heading towards
the common goal: the ‘victorious rebirth of the idea of Rome’.14
Such a discourse fitted in neatly with the regime’s activist outlook and, as
becomes clear from a reading of many of the documents preserved in Rome’s
Central State Archive, as well as in the Istituto’s archivio storico, it greatly
influenced the means the government then put at its disposal.15 In addition,
Galassi Paluzzi’s speech mentioned above also contains another central idea
that was evoked regularly throughout the Istituto’s existence, the concept of
a close interrelatedness between the ‘three Romes’: ancient, Christian, and
Fascist.
The institution’s discourse, as well as conceptualising its own activities as
somewhat ‘messianic’, also orbited around this variant of the century old concept of pagan antiquity as the predecessor, as a form of praeparatio, of
Christianity. In this context, its network extended to not only academics and
politicians,16 but also to various members of the clergy, this to a point in which
at times, mainly due to Galassi Paluzzi’s fervent religiosity, the Istituto’s catholic orientation and its inclination towards Fascism seem to have been almost
equally influential on its activities.17
Concerning the specific (and, statistically, largely predominant) input of
academics however, the Fascist viewpoint remained the essential focus;
the work of diverse authors such as Pietro De Francisci (see below), Giuseppe
13
14
15
16
17
Roma: rivista di studi e di vita Romana: organo ufficiale del Reale Istituto di Studi Romani 1,
no. 4 (1923) [no page numbers].
Galassi Paluzzi in 1941, speech conserved in the archivio storico of the Istituto di Studi
Romani, Affari generali section, map 11, submap 25.
In this context, see for example Albertina Vittoria, ‘L’Istituto di Studi Romani e il suo fondatore Carlo Galassi Paluzzi dal 1925 al 1944,’ in Atti del Convegno “Il classico nella Roma
contemporanea: Mito, modelli, memoria” (Roma, 18–20 ottobre 2000), ed. Fernanda Roscetti
(Roma: Istituto Nazionale di Studi Romani, 2002), 507–537.
The most important of these seems to have been Giuseppe Bottai. Jan Nelis, ‘La “fede di
Roma” nella modernità totalitaria fascista: Il mito della romanità e l’Istituto di Studi
Romani tra Carlo Galassi Paluzzi e Giuseppe Bottai,’ Studi Romani 58, no. 1–4 (2010):
359–381.
For more information on this aspect, see Jan Nelis, ‘Quand paganisme et catholicisme se
rencontrent: quelques observations concernant la nature du mythe de la romanité dans
l’Istituto di Studi Romani,’ Latomus: Revue d’Études Latines 71, no. 1 (2012): 176–192.
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Ceccarelli, Roberto Paribeni, Carlo Cecchelli, Massimo Pallottino and
Giuseppe Lugli – to name but a few –, shared one common element: whether
by referencing the regime, selecting specific subject matter about which to
write, or expressing a positive appreciation of the Roman past, they contributed, directly or indirectly, to the Fascist appropriation of history that was
romanità.
This modus operandi can be precisely identified by a reading of the
Istituto’s vast list of published titles, and particularly within the pages of
Roma,18 but also in various scientific and popularising book projects.
In addition, a manifold series of activities were organised during the
institute’s time, such as conferences, visits to archaeological sites, public
courses and radio broadcasts, all conceived around some variant of the
pivotal concept of Fascism: the ‘Romanness’ of contemporary, and ideally
also future, Italy.
The input of antichisti under Fascism: Pietro De Francisci vs. Ettore
Ciccotti
Finally, we will illustrate the way in which the more strictly academic discourse
on Roman antiquity translated the regime’s heightened interest in, and appreciation of, this period. As numerous book length studies would be needed to
cover the entire category of scholarly writings that contributed to the ‘fascistisation’ of Roman antiquity,19 we will focus this part of our study on the work of
Pietro De Francisci, considered as one of the most eminent Fascist antichisti.
We will finish by taking into account one of the rare and, in the context of the
contemporary relevance of ancient history most noteworthy and evocative,
episodes of opposition against the then prevailing ideological climate.
At various moments rector magnificus of Rome’s Sapienza University
(1930–1932 and 1935–1943), and a specialist of the Roman judiciary and state
system, De Francisci’s scholarly output covered the broad area of the culture
18
19
Antonio La Penna, ‘Il culto della romanità nel periodo fascista: La rivista “Roma” e l’Istituto
di Studi Romani,’ Italia contemporanea 217 (1999): 606–630.
A preliminary attempt can be found in Jan Nelis, From Ancient to Modern: The Myth of
Romanità during the Ventennio Fascista: The Written Imprint of Mussolini’s Cult of the
‘Third Rome’ (Turnhout: Brepols, 2011). An interesting study is also Mariella Cagnetta,
Antichisti e impero fascista (Bari: Dedalo, 1979). For an overview of scholarship on
romanità in its many varieties (and until 2006), see Jan Nelis, ‘La romanité (romanità)
fasciste: Bilan des recherches et propositions pour le futur,’ Latomus: Revue d’Études
Latines 66, no. 4 (2007): 987–1006.
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and history of ancient Rome, duly illustrating the degree of ideologisation
to which history could be exposed under Fascism. In contrast to some of
his contemporaries such as Ettore Pais,20 the depth of De Francisci’s contribution to the development of the myth of Rome remains to be fully
documented.21 However, a provisional look at a number of his publications
provides valuable hints as to the extent and development of his discourse on
romanità.
Generally, De Francisci presented an idealised Rome, the prototype of a
near perfect state system that, by means of its legal system, united ancient
Romans with contemporary Italians. This was most notably the case in Per una
storia italiana dell’impero romano,22 in which he hinted at the true nature of
romanità, which he saw as inspired by a superior, and Roman, spirito, whose
essence led to the refinement of his concept of the state. This idea is predominant throughout much of De Francisci’s work. Although essentially not markedly different from that of many of his contemporaries, his scholarship was
carried out according to the highest of scientific standards, of a quality that
allowed him both to conceal, where necessary, the highly politicised nature of
his thought, and to thoroughly underpin those political statements which he
openly acknowledged.
Inspired by his interpretation of the principles of Roman law, the Roman
State and notions of Roman ‘discipline’, De Francisci’s concept of romanità
aligned perfectly with the image of the strong, totalitarian, disciplined state
promoted by Fascism. Whereas generally, such a message was embedded in
an otherwise neutral academic discourse,23 De Francisci occasionally lapsed
into somewhat stereotypical lip service to the regime’s mounting interest in
Roman antiquity, as evidenced in the foreword to his Sotto il segno di Clio,
which states that
20
21
22
23
In this context, see Romke Visser, ‘The Correspondence of Ettore Pais in the “Segreteria
particolare del Duce, Carteggio ordinario” (ACS, Roma),’ in Aspetti della storiografia di
Ettore Pais, ed. Leandro Polverini (Napoli: Edizioni Scientifiche Italiane, 2002), 159–170;
Jan Nelis, ‘Tra Pais e fascismo: Carolina Lanzani, la rivista Historia e il mito della romanità.
Con fonti inedite,’ Rivista Storica dell’Antichità 36 (2006): 277–295.
The only attempt to do so can be found in Romke Visser, ‘Pietro De Francisci’s idee van de
romanità als cryptofascistische filosofie van de geschiedenis,’ Theoretische Geschiedenis
22, no. 4 (1995): 472–497.
Pietro De Francisci, ‘Per una storia italiana dell’impero romano,’ in Sotto il segno di Clio:
Con una lettera di Mussolini, Pietro De Francisci (Roma: Edizioni di Novissima, 1935),
143–153.
See for example Pietro De Francisci, ‘Le basi giuridiche del principato,’ in Augusto,
Roberto Paribeni et al. (Padova: CEDAM, 1939), 21–37.
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today, as never before, we have seen in front of the mussolinian creation,
square, solid, powerful in its structures and clear, balanced, luminous in
its ideal contents, the rejuvenation of the intimate consciousness of the
timeless virtue of many deeply rooted spiritual values which the Leader,
victorious creator, has transformed into revolutionary actions, into a
new harmony, a new political construction, affecting every aspect of
national life.24
Another instance in which he further perpetrates the fascistisation of antiquity is in his treatment of a theme with which, due to his interest in the Roman
state system, he was rather familiar, i.e. that of empire. As evidenced elsewhere,
no transparent definition of this concept was ever formulated under Italian
Fascism.25 Even De Francisci, who, in Civiltà Romana, spoke of imperium,
which he saw as essential not only to antiquity but also to the present, never
settled upon a clear definition. Indeed, after emphasising the crucial importance of empire to ancient Rome, he somewhat disappointingly, and without
adding further substance to his line of thought, had to admit that it is a ‘problem difficult to resolve’.26
As noted, De Francisci’s work dealt with a variety of topics relevant to the
idea of romanità. This included Julius Caesar, that most iconic historical example, and one whose continued presence played constantly on Mussolini’s
mind.27 The subject of scholarly erudition, and protagonist both on the theatrical stage28 and in popularising writings, the figure of Julius Caesar was perfect subject matter for developing a hybrid discourse that combined a
traditional historical approach with an at times almost cinematic, or in any
case highly evocative, writing style. Thus in De Francisci’s Cesare we encounter,
in an evocation of Caesar’s March on Rome, a clear amalgamation between
past and present undertakings: ‘From that moment begins the new era: the war
is no longer a conflict between two competitors or a conservative Senate and a
24
25
26
27
28
Pietro De Francisci, Sotto il segno di Clio : Con una lettera di Mussolini (Roma: Edizioni di
Novissima, 1935), 9–10.
Jan Nelis, ‘Imperialismo e mito della romanità nella Terza Roma Mussoliniana,’ Forum
Romanum Belgicum 2010 (http://kadoc.kuleuven.be/bhir-ihbr/fr/3_pub_foru.php, article 4).
Pietro De Francisci, Civiltà Romana (Roma: Istituto Nazionale di Cultura Fascista, 1939),
39.
On Mussolini’s use of Caesar, see Jan Nelis, ‘Constructing Fascist Identity,’ 405–407.
Jane Dunnett, ‘The Rhetoric of Romanità: Representations of Caesar in Fascist Theatre,’ in
Julius Caesar in Western Culture, ed. Maria Wyke (Malden, Oxford, Victoria: Blackwell,
2006), 244–265.
fascism 3 (2014) 1-19
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Nelis
general with the ambition to rule, but a fight in which the earth participates, a
fire burning on every bank of the Mediterranean’.29
A few years later, he repeated this rhetorical exercise. Because Fascist Italy
had conquered its very own ‘empire’ by means of colonial conquest, Caesar’s
adoptive son, who, as noted above, was lavishly celebrated in 1937–1938, was
now seen to have been
resurrected in all his glory. And in this return, while the chant of the poet of
empire resounds even more loudly, that chant which at the very offset of
the rebirth showed Italians the sacred destiny of immortal Rome, the
simple legend seems to us to also announce a necessary event; because, to
conclude by citing Dante, the Titan was born so as to confuse those who
love injustice, to bring peace and renewed justice: and we ask only to work
with Him, under his command, in pure faith and constant obedience.30
The (Augustan) past had by now become the main source of inspiration for the
present, a part of Italian inner self or identity, or, as De Francisci stated, Rome
‘in its essence could be reduced to a most intimate realisation of our existence,
to an understanding which comes from inside.’31 For De Francisci, Rome was
an ethical, political ideal at the service of present day action and ideology, an
exemplum for the present. As noted, it was a powerful tool to use when justifying and adding cachet to such notions as imperialism, and state power.
In addition, it could be applied directly to some of the more sensitive issues
that persisted during Fascism’s drive towards total power, such as its dependency on repression and violence. Here De Francisci again drew a distinct parallel with Augustus, notorious for the use of bloodshed and the curbing of
personal freedom as a means of gaining power. In La costituzione Augustea,32
De Francisci paralleled Augustan Rome with the Fascist present:
And for that matter regarding this theme there has been too much debate
concerning legality and constitutionalism, whereby the conditions of
29
30
31
32
Pietro De Francisci, ‘Cesare,’ in Sotto il segno di Clio: Con una lettera di Mussolini, Pietro De
Francisci (Roma: Edizioni di Novissima, 1935), 61–62.
Pietro De Francisci, Celebrazione del bimillenario di Augusto (Milano: Bestetti, 1938), 30.
Ibid., 9.
Pietro De Francisci, ‘La costituzione Augustea,’ in Augustus: Studi in occasione del bimillenario augusteo, V. Arangio-Ruiz et al. (Roma: Reale Accademia Nazionale dei Lincei, 1938),
61–100.
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Back To The Future
17
the Roman State have been forgotten, as well as the fact that judicial
formulae are subordinate to a principle of immanent justice, i.e. the
necessity of safeguarding that same State in which the judicial formulae
find their origin.33
Finally, he attended to another issue crucial to Fascism’s reliance on Roman
antiquity, i.e. the somewhat paradoxical tension between romanità’s forward
looking, ‘futural’ thrust and the identification with a nostalgic longing for a
faraway past.34 Here he attempted to redefine the concept of revolution,
which he viewed as a constructive superamento of the past, of which only the
essence was retained. Construction, not destruction, was required; a process
that leaves room for past, present and future. No other contemporary author
implicitly offered such a lucid characterisation of the value of romanità to
Fascism as the following, while also alluding to its ‘modernistic’ side: ‘Rome
has never known a revolution which necessitated the violent destruction of
the entire past in the name of abstract ideologies or purely intellectualistic
visions. The sense of State, of sovereignty, of discipline are deeply rooted in
the Roman conscience . . . transformations always finish in a surpassing,
never in an annihilation, of the past.’35
De Francisci’s case can count as exemplary of, if not all antichisti, at least
a large number of those academics studying Roman antiquity under Fascism.
Be that as it may, a small section of the academic world remained immune
to Fascism. Their modus operandi: covering ‘harmless’ subject matter, i.e.
themes less susceptible to being linked with the propaganda surrounding
the myth of Rome. To some extent, and with varying degrees of success,
this allowed them to carry on performing essential scientific research throughout all of the ventennio, even if their thematic choice often meant that funding
was more limited than to those investigating more ideologically appealing
topics.
For most, any ‘non-conformism’ came to a halt at this point. However, there
were some rare exceptions. The most well-known of these is Gaetano De
Sanctis, one of a very small number who refused to pledge the obligatory oath
33
34
35
De Francisci, ‘La costituzione Augustea,’ 100. One year later, the author would express a
similar idea, this time in the context of the mentioned publication on the ‘juridical foundations of the principate’: De Francisci, ‘Le basi giuridiche del principato,’ 37.
Pietro De Francisci, ‘Tradizione e rivoluzione nella Storia di Roma,’ Nuova Antologia 1556
(1937): 208–218.
Ibid., 218.
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of allegiance to the regime which became law in 1931.36 An example more
significant in the specific context of the theme of romanità is Ettore Ciccotti,
an esteemed academic and a senator, who at first, like De Sanctis, refused to
pledge the oath, although finally giving in to pressure and signing, mainly, it
seems, so as to retain his academic position.
Apart from that initial refusal, the peculiarity of Ciccotti’s academic opposition to Fascism lies in the fact that he used precisely the same tools to criticise
the regime as those the regime itself used to boost its own image: Roman history, and more particularly, the figure of Augustus. Thus in his Profilo di
Augusto,37 published at a time in which propaganda involving the great, peaceful and virtuous Augustus was virtually omnipresent, Ciccotti painted a picture
of Augustan Rome which was critical of the things that Italians had witnessed
since the arrival of Fascism on the political scene: the increasing ‘sterilisation’
of political institutions, primarily the Senate, accompanied by the development of a dictatorial and repressive regime.
Just as had Julius Caesar, his adoptive father and an historical agent who
under Fascism came to incarnate the prototype of the forceful leader, to
Ciccotti, Augustus was an opportunist, someone who used the masses for mere
personal benefit. As a demagogue and a traitor to his allies, in Ciccotti’s perception, Augustus served as a complete counter-example, whose story was bound
to end in catastrophe. Indeed, adding an observation that clearly took aim
at Mussolini’s by then effectively imperialist politics, Ciccotti stated that it
was a near fact that ‘the [Roman] Empire contained the germs of its own
dissolution.’38
Hardly representative of scholarship on ancient Rome produced under
Italian Fascism, this rare manifestation of opposition against the Fascist instrumentalisation of academia – which we have treated more extensively elsewhere39 – stands out as a rare and highly specific instance in which the myth
of romanità was openly questioned and criticised. Ciccotti passed away one
year after the Profilo had been published, and thus, unlike many of his Fascist
contemporaries, never witnessed the realisation of the cause on which he concentrated his scholarly activities.
36
37
38
39
On the oath, see Helmut Goetz, Der freie Geist und seine Widersacher (Frankfurt am Main:
Haag + Herchen, 1993), and Giorgio Boatti, Preferirei di no: Le storie dei dodici professori
che si opposero a Mussolini (Torino: Einaudi, 2001).
Ettore Ciccotti, Profilo di Augusto (con un appendice sulle leggi matrimoniali di Augusto)
(Torino: Einaudi, 1938).
Ibid., 132.
Jan Nelis, ‘Ettore Ciccotti’s Profilo di Augusto and the Giuramento of 1931,’ Mediterraneo
Antico: Economie, Società, Culture 12, no. 1–2 (2009): 283–295.
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Back To The Future
19
Conclusion
As Roger Griffin most convincingly indicated in his 2007 opus Modernism and
Fascism, Italian Fascism radically headed towards the future.40 At first sight, an
essentially antiquarian topic such as romanità might seem less compatible
with this thesis. However, both in its aesthetic and its scholarly manifestations,
romanità, a historically rooted but at the same time contemporary myth
intended at underpinning present-day ideological imperatives, was nothing
less than an integral part of Fascism’s ‘futural’ thrust, of its intended project of
the creation of a new Italy, of new Italians, surrounded and inspired by the
remainders of antiquity, and their contemporary emulations.
Apart from academic discourse, architecture and archaeology played a central role here, as a de- and consequently re-constructed narrative on present,
and future Italy. Recent scholarship such as Griffin’s has indeed underlined the
futural, temporal thrust of Fascism and romanità, rather than its traditionally
reactionary, backward-looking dynamic. As seems, at least to a certain extent,
to have been the case in Nazi Germany,41 for the Fascists, antiquity indeed was
no faraway, dusty past, but a lively source of inspiration and energy revealing
the regime’s modernist, revolutionary ambition to build a ‘Third Rome’ which,
literally and figuratively, made visible the earlier layers of Roman heritage.
It is to be hoped that such consciousness, present in the work of scholars
such as Gentile and Kallis,42 will further solidify the so-called ‘new consensus’
in fascist studies, and help to further open up a field of research which has still
to be fully explored and understood. The present article hopes to be read as an
incentive towards such an initiative.
40
41
42
Roger Griffin, Modernism and Fascism: The Sense of a Beginning under Mussolini and
Hitler (Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2007).
Jan Nelis, ‘Modernist Neo-classicism and Antiquity in the Political Religion of Nazism:
Adolf Hitler as Poietes of the Third Reich,’ Totalitarian Movements and Political Religions 9,
no. 4 (2008): 475–490.
Emilio Gentile, Fascismo di pietra (Roma-Bari: Laterza, 2007). See also a forthcoming
and very promising monograph by Aristotle Kallis The ‘Third Rome’, 1922–1943: The Making
of the Fascist Capital (Basingstoke: Palgrave, 2014).
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