Giovanni Amendola Explained

Giovanni Amendola
Office:Minister of the Colonies
Primeminister:Luigi Facta
Term Start:26 February 1922
Term End:30 October 1922
Predecessor:Giuseppe Girardini
Successor:Luigi Federzoni
Office1:Member of the Chamber of Deputies
Term Start1:1 December 1919
Term End1:7 April 1926
Constituency1:Salerno
Birth Date:1882 4, df=y
Birth Place:Naples, Italy
Death Place:Cannes, France
Nationality:Italian
Party:Italian Socialist Party
(1897–1899)
Italian Radical Party
(1900–1919)
Democratic Liberal Party
(1919–1926)
Spouse:
his death
Children:Giorgio (1907–1980)
Adelaide (1910–1980)
Antonio (1916–1953)
Pietro (1918–2007)
Alma Mater:University of Florence
Profession:Journalist, philosopher

Giovanni Amendola (15 April 1882 – 7 April 1926) was an Italian journalist, professor, and politician. He is noted as an opponent of Italian fascism.[1]

Biography

Early life and education

Amendola was born in Naples on 15 April 1882.[2] He moved to Rome, where he obtained the middle school diploma. At fifteen he joined the socialist youth. The following year he was an apprentice to the newspaper of the Italian Radical Party "La Capitale." He graduated with a degree in philosophy, he collaborated with such publications as Leonardo of Giovanni Papini and La Voce of Giuseppe Prezzolini.[3] After that, he obtained the chair of theoretical philosophy at the University of Pisa. Between 1912 and 1914 Amendola was the editor of the Bologna-based daily Il Resto del Carlino.[2] He worked for Corriere della Sera from 1914 to 1920.[2]

Political career

Attracted by politics, he was elected three times to the Italian Chamber of Deputies for Salerno. In the 1910s, Amendola supported the Italian liberal movement, but he was completely against the ideology of Giovanni Giolitti. During World War I, he adopted a position of democratic irredentism and, at the end of the war, was nominated minister by Prime Minister Francesco Saverio Nitti.

His critical positions while confronting the right-wing extremism cost him a series of attacks by hired Fascist hitmen. In 1924 Amendola refused to adhere to the "Listone Mussolini", and attempted to become Prime Minister, at the head of a liberal coalition which ran in the elections. He was defeated, but continued the democratic battle by writing columns for the Il Mondo, a new daily newspaper which he founded together with other intellectuals in 1922.[2]

During the height of the Matteotti Crisis, Amendola published the Rossi Testimony in one of his newspapers, on 27 December 1924. The document directly implicated Prime Minister Mussolini in the murder of Giacomo Matteotti, the leader of the Socialist PSU party, on the 10 June 1924. In the same document, Amendola also declared that Mussolini was behind the reign of terror which led up to the April 6th, 1924 general elections.

Resented by Mussolini for his prominent activism, Amendola was, together with the Unitary Socialist Party deputy Giacomo Matteotti and the popular priest Don Giovanni Minzoni, one of the régime's earliest victims, as he was beaten by 15 Blackshirts with clubs in July, 1925.

Amendola formulated the notion of totalitarianism as total political power which is exercised by the state in 1923, describing Italian Fascism as a system which was fundamentally different from conventional dictatorships.[4] The term was later assigned a positive meaning in the writings of Giovanni Gentile, Italy's most prominent philosopher and leading theorist of fascism. He used the term totalitario to refer to the structure and goals of the new state which was to provide the "total representation of the nation and total guidance of national goals."[5]

Death

Amendola died on 7 April 1926 at Cannes, France, in agony from violence inflicted when he was beaten by 15 Blackshirts with clubs.[2]

Personal life

Amendola married Eva Kuhn in 1906, and they remained together until Amendola's death in 1926. Together, they had four children: Giorgio Amendola (1907–1980), who became an important communist writer and politician, Adelaide (1910–1980), Antonio (1916–1953), and Pietro (1918–2007), who also became a journalist and politician.

In popular culture

In the Florestano Vancini's film The Assassination of Matteotti (1973), Amendola is played by Damiano Damiani.

Bibliography

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Bosworth, R. J. B.. 13 January 2023. Politics, Murder and Love in an Italian Family: The Amendolas in the Age of Totalitarianisms. Cambridge. Cambridge University Press. 978-1-0092-8016-7. 5 July 2023. Google Books.
  2. Book: Mark F. Gilbert. K. Robert Nilsson. Historical Dictionary of Modern Italy. 2007. The Scarecrow Press, Inc . Lanham, Maryland; Toronto; Plymouth, UK. 978-1-5381-0254-1. 37–38. 2nd.
  3. Book: 2018. Enrico Riccardo Orlando. Harald Hendrix. Philiep Bossier. Claudio Di Felice. The Idea of Beauty in Italian Literature and Language. Brill. Leiden. 9789004388956. 208. 10.1163/9789004388956_013. https://doi.org/10.1163/9789004388956_013. “The Profound Beauty is Greatness”: Itinerary in Giovanni Boine’s Aesthetics.
  4. Book: Pipes, Richard. Russia Under the Bolshevik Regime. Vintage Books, Random House. 1995. 0394502426. New York. 243. Richard Pipes. registration.
  5. Book: Payne, Stanley G.. Fascism: Comparison and Definition. 1980. University of Washington Press. 9780299080600. 73. Stanley G. Payne.