Italian council purchases Mussolini’s villa to keep it away from ‘fascist nostalgics’

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Italian council purchases Mussolini’s villa to keep it away from ‘fascist nostalgics’
Italian council purchases Mussolini’s villa to keep it away from ‘fascist nostalgics’

An Italian council has purchased a villa where Benito Mussolini spent his summer vacations, partly to prevent the property from falling into the hands of "fascist nostalgics".

Daniela Angelini, the left-wing mayor of Riccione, a town near Rimini along Italy’s Adriatic coast, stated that the acquisition of Villa Mussolini through an auction was "an act of love and vision" and that bringing it back into public ownership was a victory for the entire town.

Riccione’s council overcame competition from a private buyer who was a former member of the Italian Social Movement, the neo-fascist party founded in 1946 by Mussolini’s remaining supporters.

The villa has a long and, unsurprisingly, controversial history. Built just steps from the sea in 1893, it was purchased by Mussolini’s second wife, Rachele, in 1934. The fascist dictator, born in Predappio, another town in the Emilia-Romagna region, would arrive by seaplane and often used the villa for government business during his visits. The Mussolini family expanded the property to include a third floor, 20 rooms, and a tennis court.

After World War II and the fall of the fascist regime in Italy, the property came under public ownership. During Riccione’s economic boom in the 1950s and 60s, it was used for various commercial purposes, including a veterinary clinic for dogs and a restaurant. A communist mayor of Riccione attempted to have it demolished in the late 1970s.

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The villa was abandoned for years before being purchased in the late 1990s by Rimini’s Cassa di Risparmio savings bank, which restored and opened it in 2005 as a venue for art exhibitions and other public events, including civil weddings.

The presence of the villa and its associations with Mussolini have long divided Riccione, with debate resurfacing last year when the Cassa di Risparmio foundation decided to auction it. Councillors from Brothers of Italy, the far-right party of the prime minister, Giorgia Meloni, argued that whoever bought the property must not change its name from Villa Mussolini.

Angelini said the name would be retained, despite pressure from some of her allies to change it.

She said history needed to be nurtured and not "canceled" and that changing the name might have had the "dangerous effect" of turning the villa into a site for "fascist nostalgics... Something this administration will never accept".

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Angelini stated the plan was to continue using Villa Mussolini as a community space, including for exhibitions recounting the "good, the bad and the ugly" of 20th-century history, and for other social and cultural events. "Yes, the name evokes an ugly story, and that we will tell. You can’t erase it, you must tell it in the right way, ensuring our democratic values emerge."

Since World War II, Riccione, like the broader Emilia Romagna region, has been predominantly left-wing. But it was only in 2025 that the town council formally revoked Mussolini’s honorary citizenship, which almost all Italian towns and cities were forced to bestow during the fascist regime. "This is a man stained with crimes, who did not deserve that honor," said Angelini. "But the villa is another story – it will be used as an expression of the values of our community and our democracy."

Editorial Team

James Smith

Editor-in-Chief

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