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Oro alla Patria ("Gold to the Homeland") was a 1935 Italian fascist campaign that asked Italians to donate their gold assets to fundraise for their homeland. Faced with League of Nations sanctions for its Second Italo-Ethiopian War, the Fascist government collected 250,000 wedding rings from Rome and 180,000 from Milan, amid other personal gold jewelry and objects totaling 33,600 kilograms of gold and 93,400 of silver. In acts of sacrifice for the state, prominent figures donated items of great symbolic value: the Queen's wedding ring, the Prince's collar of the Annunciation, the dramatist Luigi Pirandello's Nobel Prize, Guglielmo Marconi's senator medal, and Mussolini's Rocca delle Caminate castle statue busts.[2]
References
edit- ^ "New steel bands replace rings donated to Duce". The Patriot. Indiana, Pennsylvania. June 6, 1936. p. 8. Archived from the original on December 21, 2022. Retrieved December 21, 2022.
- ^ Innocenti, Marco (December 14, 2007). "Storie dalla storia / L'oro alla Patria". Il Sole 24 Ore (in Italian). Archived from the original on December 21, 2022. Retrieved December 21, 2022.
Further reading
edit- Terhoeven, Petra (2006). Oro alla patria: donne, guerra e propaganda nella giornata della fede fascista. Biblioteca storica / Il mulino (in Italian). Bologna: Il mulino. ISBN 978-88-15-11416-7. OCLC 799492207.
- Quirico, Domenico (2002). Squadrone bianco: storia delle truppe coloniali italiane. Le scie. Milano: Mondadori. ISBN 978-88-04-50691-1
- Petacco, Arrigo (2005). Faccetta nera: storia della conquista dell'impero (in Italian). Mondadori. ISBN 978-88-04-54761-7