Giacomo De Martino | |
Order1: | Italian Governor of Somaliland |
Term Start1: | 1910 |
Term End1: | 1916 |
Predecessor1: | Tommaso Carletti |
Successor1: | Giovanni Cerrina Feroni |
Order2: | Italian Governor of Eritrea |
Term Start2: | 16 September 1916 |
Term End2: | 20 July 1919 |
Predecessor2: | Giovanni Cerrina Feroni |
Successor2: | Camillo De Camillis |
Order3: | Italian Governor of Cyrenaica |
Term Start3: | 5 August 1919 |
Term End3: | 23 November 1921 |
Predecessor3: | Vincenzo Garioni |
Successor3: | Luigi Pintor |
Birth Date: | 21 September 1849 |
Birth Place: | London |
Death Place: | Benghazi |
Giacomo De Martino (21 September 1849 – 23 November 1921) was an Italian politician, who was governor in the Italian colonies.[1]
Born in London in 1849 from a rich Italian family. He was one of the main supporters of the Italian colonialism since he was young. Initially he was a diplomat, but soon started to do a political career. In 1905 he was elected at the Italian Senate. In 1906 De Martino created the Istituto coloniale italiano, in order to promote the development of the Italian colonies and their management.[2]
Appointed senator (March 4, 1905), De Martino made long journeys to the Indies and to eastern and northern Africa and continued his propaganda with speeches and publications including the book Cyrene and Carthage (Bologna 1908). Appointed governor of Somalia (January 11, 1910), he began a policy of economic strengthening of that colony and of affirmation and expansion of Italian dominion, starting studies for the construction of a port, a road network and a railway towards the interior, making the first attempts at white colonization, establishing the regime of agricultural concessions on the Giuba and initiating the first contacts with the populations of the Oltre-Giuba. The dams of the Scebeli, the Genale dam and the relative state experimental company, and the purchase of Mahaddei-Uen on the Scebeli, Bur Acaba and Baidoa date back to him. As governor of the Colony of Eritrea (1916-1919), De Martino gave great impetus to public works, such as the construction of the customs sheds of Massawa, the building development of Asmara, the extension of the railway line in Cheren and beyond, towards the Gasc, the plants of the first mountain hydroelectric basin with the Belesa dam, and the industrial agricultural setting of Tessenei. On 1 July 1919, De Martino was sent to govern Cyrenaica. Treccani E.[3]
He had held several colonial posts as he had been a governor of the Italian colonies of Somaliland (1910–1916),[4] Eritrea (1916–1919), and finally Cyrenaica (1919–1921), where he had died at office of heart attack.