{"version":"1.0","type":"rich","provider_name":"Acast","provider_url":"https://acast.com","height":250,"width":700,"html":"<iframe src=\"https://embed.acast.com/$/55836c0e-56ef-4a51-a7cc-9055cd2a39c7/6a32daf0883f9289e92caa8b?\" frameBorder=\"0\" width=\"700\" height=\"250\"></iframe>","title":"Italy from the fascism to post war republic","description":"<h2>The Toscanini Conspiracy – Arturo Toscanini, Fascism, and the Italian Resistance with Filippo Iannarone</h2><p>In this episode of the Explaining History Podcast, we are joined by Italian author Filippo Iannarone to discuss his acclaimed crime novel, <em>The Toscanini Conspiracy</em> – a story that weaves together a real‑life cold case, the anti‑fascist resistance of conductor Arturo Toscanini, and the author's own family history of heroic opposition to Mussolini and Hitler.</p><p>The novel began with a chance encounter. While travelling in Val d'Orcia, Filippo discovered a small inn called Locanda Toscanini and asked the host why it bore the name of the legendary conductor. The answer opened a door to a forgotten story: the murder of Dr. Rinaldi, a physician and friend of Toscanini, in 1935 – the same year Mussolini invaded Ethiopia. The case was never solved. But as Filippo dug through newspaper archives and court documents, he found that it exposed a hidden world of anti‑fascist activity in a small Tuscan village.</p><p>That village became a gathering place for intellectuals, artists, and dissidents – including the explorer Umberto Nobile, fashion designer Salvatore Ferragamo, and Anita Garibaldi – all resisting the tightening grip of Mussolini's regime. At the centre of it all was Arturo Toscanini, the most famous conductor in the world, who had already been beaten by fascist thugs for refusing to play the regime's anthem. Later, he would reject a personal invitation from Adolf Hitler to conduct at Bayreuth – a decision that carried immense symbolic weight.</p><p>But Filippo's story is also deeply personal. His uncle, Major General Michele Iannarone, was a hero of the Italian Resistance. A monarchist officer who served on the Eastern Front and developed contacts with German officers opposed to Hitler, he became one of the commanders of Rome's clandestine military resistance after the fall of Mussolini in July 1943. When Rome was occupied by the Nazis, his network of thousands of partisans coordinated with the Allies, saved Jewish families, and kept the German army occupied until the Americans arrived.</p><p>We discuss the brutal civil war that raged in Italy from 1943 until well after the war's end, the forgotten role of monarchist partisans, the trauma of the \"years of lead\" in the 1970s, and the uncomfortable continuities between fascism and today's far‑right movements across Europe and America. Filippo also reflects on what Toscanini would make of our current moment – and why telling these stories matters more than ever.</p><p>Topics covered:</p><ul><li>The real‑life cold case that inspired the novel</li><li>Arturo Toscanini's anti‑fascist activism</li><li>The 1935 Italian invasion of Ethiopia and its domestic consequences</li><li>The alternative community of dissidents in Spiazza, Tuscany</li><li>Major General Michele Iannarone and the monarchist partisans</li><li>The military clandestine front in occupied Rome</li><li>The Via Rasella bombing and the Ardeatine massacre</li><li>Italy's post‑war civil war and the \"years of lead\"</li><li>The erasure of monarchist partisans from official history</li><li>Parallels between 1930s Italy and today's far‑right movements</li></ul><p><em>Filippo Iannarone's The Toscanini Conspiracy is available now in English. Please consider buying from an independent bookshop or directly from the publisher.</em></p><p><em>If you enjoy the podcast, please consider supporting us – we are migrating from Patreon to Substack. Details in the show notes.</em></p><p><br></p><p><br></p>","author_name":"Nick Shepley"}