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Mare Nostrum

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The Mediterranean Sea, or "Mare nostrum", shown as surrounded by Roman territory in AD 117.

Mare Nostrum (Latin for Our Sea) was a Roman name for the Mediterranean Sea. In the years following the unification of Italy in 1861, the term was revived by Italian nationalists who believed that Italy was the successor state to the Roman Empire,[1] and should seek to control ex-Roman territories in the Mediterranean. The term was again used by Benito Mussolini for use in fascist propaganda, in a similar manner to Adolf Hitler's lebensraum.

Contents

[edit] Roman usage

The term mare nostrum originally was used by Romans to refer to the Tyrrhenian Sea, following its conquest of Sicily, Sardinia and Corsica during the Punic Wars with Carthage. By 30 BC, Roman domination extended from Spain to Egypt, and mare nostrum began to be used in the context of the whole Mediterranean Sea.[2]

[edit] Italian nationalist usage

The rise of Italian nationalism during the "Scramble for Africa" of the 1880s led to calls for the establishment of an Italian colonial empire. The phrase was first revived by the Italian poet Gabriele d'Annunzio.[citation needed]

Even if the coast of Tripoli were a desert, even if it would not support one peasant or one Italian business firm, we still need to take it to avoid being suffocated in mare nostrum.

[edit] Fascist usage

Mussolini wanted to re-establish the greatness of the Roman Empire and believed that Italy was the most powerful of the Mediterranean countries after World War I. He declared that "the twentieth century will be a century of Italian power" and created one of the most powerful navies of the world in order to control the Mediterranean Sea.[3] [4]

When Italy entered the war she was already a major Mediterranean power, controlling the north and south shores of the central basin. The fall of France removed the main threat from the west, while the invasion of Albania, and later Greece and Egypt, sought to extend Axis control to the east.

Mussolini dreamed to create a Greater Italia in his "Mare Nostrum" and promoted the fascist project -to be realized in a future peace conference after the expected Axis victory- of an enlarged Italian Empire, stretching from the Mediterranean shores of Egypt to the Indian Ocean shores of Somalia and eastern Kenya. He referred to making the Mediterranean Sea "an Italian lake."

But this aim was challenged throughout the campaign by the Allied navies at sea and the Allied armies and resistance movements on land, but despite periods of Axis ascendancy during the Battle of the Mediterranean it was never realized, and all these projects disappeared with the final Italian defeat of September 1943.

[edit] References

[edit] Bibliography

  • Lowe, C.J. (2002). Italian Foreign Policy 1870-1940. Routledge. ISBN 0415273722. 
  • Tellegen-Couperus, Olga (1993). Short History of Roman Law. Routledge. ISBN 0415072514. 

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ a b Lowe (2002), p.34
  2. ^ Couperus (1993), p.32
  3. ^ Fleming, Thomas. The New Dealers' War. Perseus Books,2001
  4. ^ Italian naval operations in the Mediteranian, such as the Battle of Cape Matapan, are included in the Battle of the Mediterranean

[edit] See also

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