Last modified: 2008-07-05 by bruce berry
Keywords: somalia | italian somaliland |
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mirrors
In 1889 the Italians colonised the south of the territory which is now part of Somalia. This area became known as Italian Somaliland.
Italy, under Mussolini, invaded
Abyssinia (now Ethiopia) in 1935, in
an attempt to colonise it. This action was condemned by the League of
Nations, but little was done to prevent it or to liberate Italian occupied
Ethiopia.
On 03 August 1940 Italian troops invaded British Somaliland from Ethiopia and succeeded in occupying the territory until January 1942 when Britain launched a campaign from Kenya with the objectives to liberate British Somaliland, Italian-occupied Ethiopia and conquer Italian Somaliland. By February 1942, most of Italian Somaliland had been captured by the British and in March, British Somaliland was retaken liberated from the coast with the help of Somali patriotic forces.
After the cessation of hostilities at the end of World War II, the newly formed United Nations made the former Italian Somaliland a protectorate of Italy in 1949. The Ogaden province was given to the re-established government of Ethiopia by the British, which also maintained its control over British Somaliland until independence in 1960.
On 01 July 1960 Italian Somaliland gained independence and immediately united
the British Somaliland, which had gained independence five days earlier on 26
June 1960, to form the Somali Republic.
Bruce Berry, 27 June 2007
image by Garry M Borgacci, 05 May 2008
Italian East Africa (or Africa Orientale Italiana
in Italian) (AOI) was a short-lived Italian colony in the Horn of Africa between
1936 and 1941. The AOI consisted of Ethiopia (occupied after the Second Italo-Abyssinian War) and the colonies of Italian Somaliland and
Eritrea
and was held in the name of Victor Emmanuel III of the Kingdom of Italy. In August 1940 neighbouring British Somaliland
was invaded by
Italy and annexed to the AOI.
image by Garry M Borgacci, 05 May 2008
The AOI also had a distinctive coat of arms which are illustrated above.
Garry M Borgacci, 05 May 2008
image by Miles Li, 03 Jan 2004
Italian Somalia was a colony under Italian control from the late 1880s until 1942 in the north-east of what is today the nation of Somalia. Italian settlement in the colony was encouraged and it was from its territories in Eritrea and Somalia that Italy launched the First Italo-Abyssinian War against Ethiopia in 1895. In 1936, after the Second Italo-Abyssian War, Italian Somalia became part of Italian East Africa, which also included Ethiopia and Eritrea. Later, in 1940, Italy successfully conquered British Somaliland and annexed it to Italian Somalia. An Allied counter-offensive saw Italy loose all its East African colonies in 1942. Italian Somalia was under British administration until 1949 when it became a United Nations Trust Territory under Italian administration until it received independence in 1960.
image by Garry M Borgacci, 05 May 2008
Although there was a colonial coat of arms, there was
no distinctive flag for the colony and the flag of the
Kingdom of Italy was
used. Flags used by the Colonial Governors are illustrated and described
here.
Bruce Berry, 27 June 2008