5th May 1938
Italian propaganda postcard celebrating the meeting between Adolf Hitler and Benito Mussolini and tour of Italy between 3rd - 9th May 1938. Ref: 05.05.1938
Hitler arrived in Rome on 3dr May, accompanied by Goebbels and Ribbentrop as well as some five hundred party officials, diplomats, security guards and journalists in three trains. A special station had been built for the Germans, who were greeted by Mussolini and King Victor Emmanuel.
Rome was adorned with decorations, including swastikas, and a new street, the Via Adolf Hitler, had been constructed, along which the German leader was driven to the Quirinal Palace, where he stayed as guest of the king.
Victor Emmanuel and Hitler found each other tiresome. Hitler was uncomfortable at the court and felt with reason that he was treated with disdain. The king is said to have asked the German leader how many nails there were in the German infantry boot, and when Hitler did not know, explained at some length that the Italian boot had fifty-two nails in the sole and twenty-two in the heel.
The next day was devoted to a tour of Rome and two private meetings between the Führer and the Duce, and in the evening they reviewed the Italian fleet in Naples.
The Vatican remained ostentatiously aloof, but there was a state banquet on 8th May at which the two leaders made speeches of German-Italian solidarity and Hitler announced that Germany regarded the Italian frontier ‘for ever as unchangeable’.
After visiting Florence on 9th May Hitler and his group returned to Berlin the following day. He had privately pressed for a military alliance between the two countries, which at this point Mussolini refused, though in the summer he copied the Germans by introducing anti-Jewish legislation. He had now decided that the Mussolini family was Nordic and related to the ‘purer’ Germans rather than the Latins, though he had earlier dismissed Nazi racial theories as ‘anti-scientific drivel’.
The relationship with Germany would dominate Italian foreign policy all the way to war; in May 1939 they signed a formal treaty, the so-called ‘pact of steel’.
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