Antonio Salandra (Italian: [anˈtɔːnjo saˈlandra]; 13 August 1853 – 9 December 1931) was a conservative Italian politician, journalist, and writer who served as the 21st prime minister of Italy between 1914 and 1916. He ensured the entry of Italy in World War I on the side of the Triple Entente (the United Kingdom, France, and the Russian Empire) to fulfil Italy's irredentist claims.

Early life and political career

Born in Troia (Province of Foggia, Apulia), he graduated from the University of Naples in 1875 and then became instructor and later professor of administrative law at the University of Rome.

He was Minister of Agriculture (1899–1900) in the conservative government of Luigi Pelloux and subsequently Minister of the Treasury (1906) and Italian Minister of Finance (1909–1910) in the governments of Sidney Sonnino.[1]

Prime minister

In March 1914, the conservative Salandra was brought into the national cabinet upon the fall of the government of Giovanni Giolitti, as the choice of Giolitti himself, who still commanded the support of most Italian parliamentarians. Salandra's government was the most conservative one that Italy had seen for a long time.[2] Salandra soon fell out with Giolitti over the question of Italian participation in World War I.

At the outbreak of World War I in August 1914, Salandra declared that Italy would not commit its troops, maintaining that the Triple Alliance had only a defensive stance and Austria-Hungary had been the aggressor. In reality, both Salandra and his ministers of Foreign Affairs, Antonino Paternò Castello, who was succeeded by Sidney Sonnino in November 1914, began to probe which side would grant the best reward for Italy's entrance in the war and to fulfil Italy's irredentist claims.[3]

Entering World War I

Salandra and ambassador Tommaso Tittoni at a conference of the Allied Powers on 27–28 March 1916 in Paris

Salandra used the term "sacred egoism" (sacro egoismo) to define Italy's outlook on which side Italy would enter the war. Expecting the war would be short – over by the late summer of 1915 – there was some pressure on the decision to make.[4]

Negotiations had been started between Sonnino, the British Foreign Secretary Edward Grey and the French Foreign Minister Jules Cambon.

Works

He is the author of a considerable number of works on economics, finance, history, law, and politics (New International Encyclopedia). These include:

  • Tratto della giustizia amministrativo (1904)
  • La politica nazionale e il partito liberale (1912)
  • Lezioni di diritto amministrativo (two volumes, 1912)
  • Politica e legislazione : saggi, raccolti da Giustino Fortunato (1915)
  • Il discorso contro la malafede tedesca (1915)
  • Italy and the Great War: From Neutrality to Intervention (London: Edward Arnold, 1932),

See also

References

  1. (in Italian) Salandra, Antonio, Enciclopedia Treccani
  2. Clark, Modern Italy: 1871 to the present, p. 217
  3. 1 2 Baker, Ray Stannard (1923). Woodrow Wilson and World Settlement, Volume I, Doubleday, Page and Company, pp. 52–55
  4. Clark, Modern Italy: 1871 to the present, p. 219
  5. Mack Smith, Modern Italy: A Political History, p. 262
  6. Clark, Modern Italy: 1871 to the present, p. 221-22
  7. Francesco Soddu, "The Role of the Italian Parliament during the First World War." Studia Universitatis Cibiniensis. Series Historica XII (2015): 11-20.
  8. Acović, Dragomir (2012). Slava i čast: Odlikovanja među Srbima, Srbi među odlikovanjima. Belgrade: Službeni Glasnik. p. 369.

Further reading