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The Roman Question Before and After Fascism1

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 August 2009

Extract

By 1910 I had been for five years Mayor of Caltagirone, Provincial Councilor of Catania, and National Councilor of the Association of Communes of Italy, as well as one of the leaders of the “Municipalist” movement against State centralization, so that I was never missing from the Congresses of Communes.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © University of Notre Dame 1943

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References

2 Cf. Binchy, pp. 51–54.

3 During his life Conlardo Ferrini, who is about to be beatified, was suspected as “cold Catholic” or even a “Liberal” because he was not temporalist.

4 Cf. Cf. Discorso Funebre per i morli di Vienna—Introjuzione e Prolesta dell' Aulore. (Vol. I, Milano-Turati, 1860.)Google Scholar

5 For example: The King of Spain acted as Apostolic Delegate in the Tribunal of Inquisition and the “Ecclesiastical Monarchia” of Sicily, suppressed by Pius IX, had power as Apostolic Delegate for some centuries.

6 The Ethics of Political Collaboration (London: Bu us, Oates and Wcchbou.na, 1938Google Scholar). Cf. Chap. V.

7 October, 1938.

8 Under the Nazi occupation Fascists have again renewed their malevolent policy towards the Church.

9 The occupation of Rome by Nazi and “Republican Fascists” is one of the historical recurrences for the papal Rome. They will go away; Rome will be free again.

* Translated by Angeline Helen Lograsso.