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Dino Grandi

Italian politician (1895–1988)

Dino Grandi

Summary

Italian politician (1895–1988)

FieldValue
honorific-prefixCount
nameDino Grandi
imageConte Dino Grandi (cropped).png
officePresident of the Chamber of Fasces and Corporations
term_start30 November 1939
term_end5 August 1943
predecessorCostanzo Ciano
successorOffice abolished
office1Minister of Grace and Justice
primeminister1Benito Mussolini
term_start112 July 1939
term_end15 February 1943
predecessor1Arrigo Solmi
successor1Alfredo De Marsico
office2Ambassador of Italy to the United Kingdom
primeminister2Benito Mussolini
term_start23 August 1932
term_end213 October 1939
predecessor2Antonio Chiaramonte Bordonaro
successor2Giuseppe Bastianini
office3Minister of Foreign Affairs
primeminister3Benito Mussolini
term_start312 September 1929
term_end320 July 1932
predecessor3Benito Mussolini
successor3Benito Mussolini
birth_date4 June 1895
birth_placeMordano, Italy
death_date
death_placeBologna, Italy
nationalityItalian
alma_materUniversity of Bologna
professionLawyer
politician
partyFIC (1920–1921)
PNF (1921–1943)

| honorific-prefix = Count politician PNF (1921–1943)

Dino Grandi, 1st Conte di Mordano (4 June 1895 – 21 May 1988), was an Italian Fascist politician and ambassador.

Early life

Born at Mordano, province of Bologna, Grandi was a graduate in law and economics at the University of Bologna in 1919 (after serving in World War I). Grandi started a career as a lawyer in Imola. Attracted to the political left, he nonetheless became impressed with Benito Mussolini after the two met in 1914, and became a staunch advocate of Italy's entry into the World War.

He joined the Blackshirts at age 25, and was one of 35 Fascist delegates elected, along with Mussolini, in May 1921 to the Chamber of Deputies. Grandi survived an ambush carried out by leftist militants in 1920, and had his studio devastated on one occasion.

Fascist statesman

John Simon]] in 1932

After the March on Rome on 28 October 1922, in which the Fascists took power in Italy, Grandi became part of the new government; first as the undersecretary of the interior (1923), then as the Italian Minister of Foreign Affairs (1929) and then as Italy's ambassador to the United Kingdom (1932 to 1939). Grandi was an ally to the most radical and violent groups of fascists, always surrounding himself with members of the Blackshirts. He used his power base to voice criticism of Mussolini's attempt to reach an armistice with left-wingers and was at one point under suspicion for having attempted to replace the latter with the skeptical alleged Mussolini forerunner Gabriele D'Annunzio.

In 1939, he was recalled to Italy after attempting a pact between his country and Britain to prevent Italy from entering World War II. Under pressure from Hitler, Mussolini removed him from the post of ambassador and appointed him Minister of Justice. As a diplomat, Grandi created a net of connections that were rivaled only by Mussolini's son-in-law, Galeazzo Ciano, and he attempted to use it for his own gains. Thus, he persuaded King Victor Emmanuel III to grant him a title in 1937, and he managed to retain a comfortable position until he was sent by Mussolini to the Greek Front with the other Gerarchi in 1941. As Mussolini's ambassador to London, he had affairs with some of the most influential noblewomen of the time, including Lady Alexandra Curzon, daughter of the Viceroy of India, George Curzon.

Grandi opposed the antisemitic Italian racial laws of 1938, and the country's entry into World War II. He was dropped from the Cabinet in February 1943 for his increasing criticism of the war effort.

Fall of Mussolini and aftermath

Main article: Fall of the Fascist regime in Italy

As the war began to have its devastating effect on Italy after the Allied invasion of Sicily, Grandi and other members of the Fascist Grand Council met on 24 July 1943. When Mussolini said that the Germans were thinking of evacuating the south, Grandi launched a blistering attack on his former comrade-in-arms. He then made a motion (Ordine del giorno Grandi) asking King Victor Emmanuel III to resume his full constitutional authority. The resolution, voted at 2:00 on 25 July, passed by a vote of 19 to 8, with one abstention, effectively removing Mussolini from office. Those leading government figures who had voted for the resolution included Giuseppe Bottai and Emilio De Bono as well as Grandi. The King had Mussolini arrested the same day. Grandi also negotiated a truce with the left-wing movements, notably with the trade unions (grouped in the Confederazione Generale Italiana del Lavoro), which gave way to the Italian resistance movement against Nazi Germany.

While the Allies occupied the south, an alternate Fascist government was established in Northern Italy as the Italian Social Republic. It sentenced Grandi to death in absentia for treason in the Verona trial that took place from 8 to 10 January 1944. Grandi, however, had made sure to flee to Francisco Franco's Spain in August 1943. He lived there, then in Portugal (1943–1948), Argentina, and then São Paulo, Brazil, until he returned to Italy in the 1960s.

In May 1988 he died in Bologna aged 92, mostly forgotten by the general population.

References

References

  1. (1944). "Current Biography: Who's News and Why, 1943". H. W. Wilson.
  2. Carter, Miranda. (2 June 2002). "Poor Little Rich Girls". The New York Times.
  3. Gunther, John. (1940). "Inside Europe". Harper & Brothers.
  4. "Former Mussolini Aide Lands in Argentina," ''The Modesto Bee'', 16 March 1949, p. 6.
  5. "Obituaries Dino Grandi, 92; rival of Mussolini's," ''Syracuse Post-Standard'', 24 May 1988, p. 48.
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