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The Italian Dodecanese, formally known as Italian Aegean Islands (Italian: Isole italiane dell'Egeo, Greek: Ιταλικά νησιά του Αιγαίου), were a group of twelve major islands in the Aegean Sea, off the southwest coast of Turkey, which belonged to the Kingdom of Italy from 1912 to 1947.
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The Dodecanese was occupied by Italy during the Italo-Turkish War of 1912. Italy had agreed to return the islands to the Ottoman Empire according to the Treaty of Ouchy in 1912;[1] however the vagueness of the text allowed a provisional Italian administration of the islands, and Turkey eventually renounced all claims on the Dodecanese in the Article 15 of the Treaty of Lausanne in 1923.[2] Dodecanese was formally annexed by Fascist Italy, as the Possedimenti Italiani dell'Egeo.[3]
Italian interest in the Dodecanese was rooted in strategic purposes, and the islands were intended to further the Empire's long range imperial policy.[4] The islands of Leros and Patmos were used as bases for the Royal Italian Navy.[4]
From 1923, the Italians embarked on a gradual forced Italianization campaign of the islands. The first Governor General, Mario Lago, delegated land for Italian settlers and encouraged intermarriage with local Greeks.[3] In 1929, scholarships at the University of Pisa for Dodecanesian students were promoted to disseminate Italian culture and language among the local professional class.[5] The Orthodox rite was suppressed and only Catholic ceremonies were recognized.[3] The Italian authorities also tried to limit the power of the Greek church without success by trying to set up an autonomous Dodecanesian church.[5] Fascist youth organizations such as Opera Nazionale Balilla were introduced on the islands, and the Italianization of names was encouraged by the Italian authorities.[5] Local Greek islanders did not receive a full Italian citizenship and were not required to serve in the Italian armed forces.[3]
Under the governorship of Cesare Maria De Vecchi (1936 to 1940) the Italianization efforts intensified.[5] The Italian language became compulsory in education and the public life, with Greek being only an optional subject in schools.[3][5] The fascist municipality (comune) system was set up to the islands in 1937, with newly appointed podestas.[5] in 1938, Italian Racial Laws were introduced to the islands along with a series of decrees equalizing local legislation with Italian law.[5]
Efforts to bring Italian settlers to the islands were not notably successful. By 1936, Italians in the Dodecanese numbered 16,711, the most of whom living on Rhodes and Leros.[5] Italians of Rhodes and Kos were farmers involved in setting up new agricultural settlements, while Italians of Leros were generally employed by the army and lived at its facilities in the new Italian-built model town of Portolago (modern Lakki).[5]
Mussolini wanted to transform the islands into showcases of the Italian colonial empire, and undertook a series of massive public works in the archipelago.[6] New roads, monumental buildings in accordance with fascist architecture and waterworks were constructed, sometimes using forced Greek labor.[6]
Some examples of Italian architecture are still found on the islands:[7]
The Italians also surveyed the islands for the first time in history, and began to introduce mass-scale tourism to Rhodes and Kos.[6] However, the smaller islands were mostly neglected by the improvement efforts and were left underdeveloped.[6]
Mussolini stated that Rhodes had merely returned to its ancestral home after being annexed by Italy, as the Dodecanese had been an important part of the Roman Empire.[4] Major Italian archaeological efforts from the 1930s onward were intended to discover Roman antiquities and thus strengthen the Italian claim on the islands.[6][4]
Island (Italian name in parenthesis) | Area size | Population |
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Rhodes (Rodi) and dependent islets | 1,412 km2 (545 sq mi) | 60244 |
Patmos (Patmo) and dependent islets | 57.1 km2 (22.0 sq mi) | 3214 |
Leipsoi (Lisso) | 174 km2 (67 sq mi) | 993 |
Kalymnos (Calino) and dependent islets | 128.2 km2 (49.5 sq mi) | 15338 |
Kos (Coo) | 296 km2 (114 sq mi) | 20003 |
Astypalaia (Stampalia) and dependent islets | 113.6 km2 (43.9 sq mi) | 1767 |
Nisyros (Nisiro) and dependent islets | 48 km2 (19 sq mi) | 2375 |
Symi (Simi) and dependent islets | 63.6 km2 (24.6 sq mi) | 6176 |
Tilos (Piscopi) and dependent islets | 64.3 km2 (24.8 sq mi) | 1227 |
Halki (Calchi) and dependent islets | 30.3 km2 (11.7 sq mi) | 1476 |
Karpathos (Scarpanto) and dependent islets | 306 km2 (118 sq mi) | 7893 |
Kasos (Caso) and dependent islets | 69.4 km2 (26.8 sq mi) | 1913 |
Megisti (Castelrosso) and dependent islets | 11.5 km2 (4.4 sq mi) | 2267 |
Italian Aegean Islands | 2,668.3 km2 (1,030.2 sq mi) | 132289 |
After the Battle of Greece, Fascist authorities pushed for the incorporation of the Cyclades and Sporades into Italy's Aegean possession, but the Germans were opposed to any territorial reduction of the puppet Hellenic State.[8] As the Cyclades were already under Italian occupation, the preparation for outright annexation was continued despite of the German opposition.[8]
After the Italian capitulation of September 1943, the islands briefly became a battleground between the Germans, British and the Italians (the Dodecanese Campaign).[9] The Germans prevailed, and although they were driven out of mainland Greece in 1944, the Dodecanese remained occupied until the end of the war in 1945.[9] During the German occupation, the Dodecanese remained under the nominal sovereignty of the Italian Social Republic, but were de facto subject to the German military command.[10]
In the Treaty of Peace in 1947, the islands were ceded to Greece.[9]
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