Maurizio Rava
Maurizio Rava | |
---|---|
Rava during World War I | |
Governor of Italian Somaliland | |
In office 1 July 1931 – 6 March 1935 | |
Monarch | Victor Emmanuel III |
Prime Minister | Benito Mussolini |
Preceded by | Guido Corni |
Succeeded by | Rodolfo Graziani |
Personal details | |
Born | (1878-01-31)31 January 1878 Milan |
Died | 22 January 1941(1941-01-22) (aged 62) Rome |
Nationality | Italian-Jewish |
Political party | National Fascist Party |
Other political affiliations | Italian Nationalist Association |
Children | Carlo Enrico Rava [it] |
Alma mater | Accademia di Belle Arti di Roma |
Occupation |
|
Awards | |
Military service | |
Allegiance | Kingdom of Italy |
Branch/service | Royal Italian Army Blackshirts |
Rank | Brigadier general |
Battles/wars |
|
Maurizio Rava (31 January 1878 – 22 January 1941) was an Italian-Jewish painter, journalist, writer, soldier and politician. He was a general in the Royal Italian Army, and served as the governor of Italian Somaliland from 1 July 1931 to 6 March 1935.
Biography
Rava's political career began in 1919, when he was co-founder of the Fasci Italiani di Combattimento (predecessor of the National Fascist Party) in Rome.[1] Previously he was a lieutenant during World War I (where he was wounded in combat), and received the Medal of Military Valor three times (one Silver and two Bronze). After 1920 he began a military career in the fascist militias.
In the Italian colonies he became secretary general of the governor's office of Italian Tripolitania with Emilio De Bono in March 1927. He then assumed the governorship of Italian Somaliland from 1931 to 1935.[2] In those years he gave dynamic impetus to agriculture, roads and railways with emphasis on all types of construction in Somalia. In 1933 he promoted the urban remodeling of Mogadishu, which since then began to be called "the white pearl of the Indian Ocean" and became populated with a large minority (40% of the total inhabitants) of Italian settlers.
He was appointed as Senator of the Kingdom upon his return to Italy in 1936.
He became politically marginalized in 1938, after Fascist Italy's alliance with Nazi Germany, due to his Jewish background.[2]
He was also a Blackshirt brigadier general of the Royal Italian Army[3] and died in Rome on 22 January 1941, as a result of wounds received in the Battle of Bardia (in Italian Libya) during Operation Compass, the British offensive of the Western Desert campaign.
Works
Maurizio Rava wrote several books, including:
- Al lago Tsana (il mar profondo d'Etiopia) (published in 1913).
- l'Eritrea; la nostra colonia primogenita (published in 1923).
- Somalia; Parole ai Coloniali (published in 1935).
- Other minor works are: "Ingiustizia delle sanzioni: l’Italia stato aggredito", Rome 1936; "Il problema della mano d’opera in Somalia", Rome 1937; "Ovest etiopico: nei paesi del platino e dell’oro", Rome 1938; "Politica sociale verso gli indigeni e modi di collaborazione con essi", Rome 1938; "Diario di un secondo viaggio nell’ovest etiopico", Rome 1939.
See also
References
Government offices | ||
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Preceded by | Governor of Italian Somaliland 1931–1935 | Succeeded by |
- v
- t
- e
(1890–1941)
- Baldassarre Orerocm
- Antonio Gandolficm
- Oreste Baratiericm
- Antonio Baldissera
- Ferdinando Martini
- Giuseppe Salvago Raggi
- Giovanni Cerrina Feroni
- Giacomo De Martino
- Camillo de Camillis
- Lodovico Pollera
- Giovanni Cerrina Feroni
- Jacopo Gasparini
- Corrado Zoli
- Riccardo Di Lucchesi
- Otone Gabelliv
- Emilio De Bono
- Pietro Badoglio
- Alfredo Guzzonip
- Vincenzo de Feop
- Giuseppe Daodicep
- Luigi Fruscip
(1889–1941)
- Vincenzo Filonardi
- Vacant (1893–1896)
- Vincenzo Filonardic
- Emilio Dulioc
- Giorgio Sorrentinoc
- Emilio Dulio
- Luigi Mercatellicg
- Giuseppe Salvago Raggicg
- Tommaso Carletticg
- Tommaso Carletti
- Giacomo De Martino
- Giovanni Cerrina Feroni
- Carlo Ricci Riveri
- Cesare Maria De Vecchi
- Guido Corni
- Maurizio Rava
- Rodolfo Graziani
- Angelo De Rubenp
- Ruggiero Santinip
- Francesco Carosellip
- Gustavo Pesentip
- Carlo De Simonep