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Why Are We Not Reading More Histories on Italian Imperialism and Museum Collections?

Published: 9 March 2023 - Fleur Martin

Back in September 2020, I was nervously anticipating my next few years as a History PhD researcher, delving into the archives and shadowy histories of semi-forgotten imperialist museum collections around Europe. Two and a half years later, although I can tell you about the death marches and emotional affairs of Hungarian traveller Count Teleki, not to mention exactly how many pigeons were shot on 31 October 1887 in Sudan by English hunter Frank James, I am barely closer to understanding what happened when Captain Vittorio Bottego travelled through Eritrea, Somalia and Ethiopia on behalf of the Italian state during the 1890s.

Collectors and Italian Imperialism

Vittorio Bottego (1860–97) sits 鈥榓mongst the giants of Italian exploration epics鈥.[1] Italy invaded and was then defeated by Ethiopia in 1887,[2] and the national humiliation inspired Bottego to join the Special Africa Corps. In Massawa, Eritrea he commanded a battery of askari, and began collecting for Parma鈥檚 Museo di Storia Naturale.[3] In 1890 he joined the expeditionary force to avenge Italy鈥檚 defeat at Dogali,[4] then led an expedition of askari through Danakil country.[5] In 1892 his ambitions grew as he undertook a strategically important expedition of 124 askari[6] to the source of the Juba River. For his sexual gratification, Bottego brought along a young Somalian woman named Cad铆gia.[7] Like other 鈥榚xploration鈥 journeys it exacted a heavy death toll both on locals and workers; in one encounter alone the caravan fired 3,500 rounds on local Oromo, and at least 15 caravan members died.[8] The Oromo had not only been undergoing continual attacks from Bottego, but also from Prince Ruspoli鈥檚 caravan.[9]

Statue in Parma

Figure 1. Statue of Vittorio Bottego, Piazza Dalla Chiesa, Parma, Italy. Wikimedia.

In Ugo Ferrandi鈥檚 company, Bottego set out in 1895 to discover whether Ethiopia鈥檚 River Omo joined Lake Turkana or the Nile[10] (an important political and economic issue for Italy). They took 250 men, 鈥榓 large quantity of ammunition,鈥[11] and for Bottego, an enslaved young Oromo woman named Batula, who also provided translations.[12] Following months of fighting, collecting and ivory trading, in March 1897 the Ethiopian highlands Emperor Menelik鈥檚 forces caught up with Bottego, killing him and taking most of the remaining 88 men prisoner.[13] Bottego鈥檚 death under fire contributed to his valorisation as a tragic, masculine, patriotic and Christian hero.[14] He was commemorated through processions, stamps and statues, even becoming a children鈥檚 comic book hero.[15] From his Juba expedition Rome鈥檚 Museo Etnografico received 189 objects.[16] Museo delle Civilt脿 meanwhile record they received 156 objects from Bottego in 1894, with 57 arriving later through the Italian Geographical Society, though what these objects are remains inaccessible.[17] Museo delle Civilt脿 did not exist until 2016, when it took over collections from the Museo Coloniale di Roma, (inaugurated by Mussolini in 1923) which in turn had taken over collections from Museo Etnografico. There are also a handful of 鈥榚thnographic鈥 objects collected by Bottego in Parma鈥檚 Museo di Storia Naturale. Ferrandi's 1901 photographs of the collection from Bottego鈥檚 final journey reveal he collected intimate and domestic objects beyond the war spoils Parma houses.[18] Confusion and disparities over even how many objects he collected, let alone what and where they are, have contributed to the lack of studies on Bottego as a collector. A historical investigation and critique of his violence, particularly sexual violence towards women, likewise remains unwritten.

Silences and Disappearances

There are a few possible explanations for this, and why my attempts are also failing. It could be an indication of the increasingly woeful underfunding of humanities research in the UK, or that there is not only a palpable lack of appetite to discuss Italy鈥檚 imperial past resulting from lack of knowledge, but a politically fuelled and deliberately imposed bureaucratic wall which serves to obscure Italy鈥檚 history in eastern Africa, enabling the continued myth of Italians as either barely colonists at all, or as the 鈥榞ood colonists.鈥 The first option is definitely valid, but it didn鈥檛 stop me visiting Hungary and Austria to study the collections of similarly egregious imperialists in summer 2022. Victor Oban鈥檚 far-right government has not yet shut down research into the less savoury aspects of Hungary鈥檚 global past, although I suspect this is more a result of Austro-Hungarian imperialism in eastern Africa being relatively unknown. Having never gained an African colony, it is easy to pretend there was no eastern European involvement in the scramble for Africa, let alone a brutally violent one. Researchers can study Austro-Hungarian imperial violence because of ignorance, not liberality.

So that leaves the second option. Researching Italian imperialism requires funds and access. To provide the necessary money, funding bodies need to understand the urgency of studying this history, its magnitude and brutality. Facilitating one project every decade or so barely even pays lip service. If they are apparently unaware of the untapped scale of this history, why? Back in 2007, Mia Fuller observed that Italian historiography has long been 鈥榤ired in justifications of Italy鈥檚 conquests.鈥[19] Angelo Delbocco, Giorgio Rochat, Nicola Labanca, Silvana Palma, Ruths Ben-Ghiat, Patrizia Palumbo and Ruth Iyob, as well as recent attempts to remove the statue Monatelli (a paedophile, enslaver and imperial apologist)[20] have all greatly increased the critical profile of Italian imperial violence both at home and abroad, but this does not mean the climate or appetite for such research is established. Much of this research began in the 1970s with Rochat and Delbocco, followed by a few English language texts in the 2000s,[21] but little has been translated into English, and critical appraisals of eastern African museum collections in Italy remain far between.[22] By 1960, Italy had been intermittently purchasing, invading and colonising land in Libya, Somalia, Ethiopia, Eritrea and China for 91 years. Although it barely approaches the scale of the British Empire, it is still nearly a century in which countless people were exploited, murdered, raped, brutalised, and denied agency on behalf of the Italian state. They were also robbed of material cultural heritage. From Naples to Venice, how collectors fuelled Italy鈥檚 contribution to the European museum boom is manifest in today鈥檚 heaving storerooms and display cases.

This is the logical fallacy: because there is scant writing about this subject it remains little understood or known, attracting little funding. But because it attracts so little funding, it remains obscure. This is compounded by the access problem. Researching Italy鈥檚 colonial and imperial past is not as simple as ordering materials to a British Library reading room. The Italian colonial police archives open only on the last Thursday of the month, making researching them more of a perennial lifestyle choice than a subject for concentrated research. Meanwhile the Italian Royal Geographical archives, where Bottego鈥檚 archives are housed, won鈥檛 give researcher鈥檚 access for more than one day a week, two at most if you ask very nicely. I had planned to persuade my way into gaining further access once in situ, but with my pitiful spoken Italian this was always going to be a tall order. A free Italian state programme for British children who could 鈥榩rove鈥 their Italian heritage meant I had acquired some of the language as a child, which on my PhD I have attempted to revive mostly through self-study after receiving lessons for six months. The UK鈥檚 woeful secondary education in languages, and the lack of PhD support and time allocated for further language training are essential reasons for the lack of UK studies on Italian imperialism. Global history projects invariably require language skills, which are costly to acquire without already having the chance of heritage or an expensive schooling. Material conditions of time, access and money are also essential for conducting historical research on a global scale. This is particularly true for those researching objects, which cannot be copied and transcribed (and still require language skills for understanding accompanying documentation). If 鈥榞lobal history鈥 is rightly open to critique as exclusionary to all those outside of the global north鈥檚 universities with generous pockets, the same criticism can be levelled at material culture studies.

鈥楧ecolonising鈥 Italian Collections?

2021 was supposed to see the opening of the Museo Italiano Ilaria Alpi, a new museum housing colonial collections in Mussolini鈥檚 EUR complex, originally built to display the 鈥榳onders鈥 of fascism. The museum was billed as a 鈥榬ilettura critica鈥[23] (critical reinterpretation) though many voiced concerns at the misguided attempt to 鈥榙ecolonise鈥 within such a context.[24] However this project seems to have been quietly altered since, with the old collections from Museo Coloniale now being moved into the Museo delle Civilt脿, which is already in the EUR complex, rather than a new museum.[25] Continuing to shroud these collections in confusion and obscurity is hardly conducive to access. Coinciding with this change, Georgia Meloni of the far-right party Fratelli d鈥橧talia (Brothers of Italy) became Italy鈥檚 new prime minister in October 2022. Meloni and the party already have form in threatening to intervene in Italy鈥檚 museum sector for any 鈥榠deological and anti-Italian鈥 activity.[26] What do these developments mean for the future of research into Italy鈥檚 imperial past? In particular research into the tens if not hundreds of thousands of objects taken under conditions of imperial duress?

In the Italian context, fascism was always entwined with imperialism. So far museum 鈥榙ecolonising鈥 and restitution debates have focused on northern Europe, but southern and eastern European museum collections also require critique. Bottego was not unique: his collection is indicative of a common historical trend throughout Italy. The material and ideological challenges hindering current research not only show no signs of abating but are exacerbating. Economic decline, far right governments, culture wars and the UK鈥檚 exit from the European Research Council don鈥檛 exactly spell good news for humanities funding, let alone into imperial pasts. Considering the rate at which objects and archives vanish through negligence or greed from accessible collections, opportunities to understand these histories and progress the conversations around them are disappearing as well. It鈥檚 a truism, but there is no guarantee the future will be more equitable or knowledgeable than the present, unless the realities of these disappearing histories are addressed.

Fleur Martin is a PhD student working in the Department of History at the University of 糖心TV. Her thesis, "Looting, Trade & The Gift: Imperial Collecting in Eastern Africa 1860-1914", examines the history of why and how imperial travellers collected in Eastern Africa between 1860-1914.

Bibliography

Anon. 鈥楨x Museo Coloniale鈥, Museo delle Civilt脿 <> [accessed 28 February 2023].

Anon. 鈥業l Museo Italo Africano 鈥淚laria Alpi鈥濃, Ministero per i Beni e le Attivit脿 culturali e per il Turismo, 2020 <>

Anon. 鈥楥os鈥櫭 questa storia del Museo Egizio e Giorgia Meloni鈥, Il Post, 2018 <> [accessed 28 February 2023]

Ben-Ghiat, Ruth, and Mia Fuller, eds., Italian Colonialism (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2005).

Bianchedi, Luca, Un Destino Africano. L'Avventura di Vittorio Bottego. (Rome: Pagine, 2010).

Bonati, Manlio, Vittorio Bottego: Un Ambizioso Eroe in Africa. (Parma: Silva Editore, 1997).

Bonati, Manlio, 鈥楤ottego a Fumetti, L鈥橢sporatore Ucciso Come Custer鈥, Giornale Pop, 2018 <>

Bottego, Vittorio, Il Giuba Esplorato. (Rome: Ermanno Loescher & Co., 1895).

Brown, Monty, Where Giants Trod. The Saga of Kenya鈥檚 Desert Lake. (London: Quiller Press, 1989).

Caulk, Richard Alan, 鈥楤etween the Jaws of Hyenas鈥: A Diplomatic History of Ethiopia (1876-1896). (Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz Verlag, 2002).

Collini, G.A. 鈥楢ppendice鈥 in Il Giuba Esplorato by Vittorio Bottego (Rome: Ermanno Loescher & Co., 1895).

Cormack, Zoe, 鈥榁iolence, Globalization and the Trade in 鈥淓thnographic鈥 Artefacts in Nineteenth-Century Sudan鈥, Journal for Art Market Studies, 4.1 (2020).

Ferrandi, Ugo, 鈥楤raccialetti Tisba鈥, Societ脿 Geografica Italiana, 1901 <>

Fuller, Mia, 鈥楴icola Labanca, L鈥橭ltremare: Storia Dell鈥檈spansione Coloniale Italiana鈥, The Journal of Modern History, 79.2 (2007), 449–50.

Ghiglione, Giorgio, 鈥業taly Still Won鈥檛 Confront Its Colonial Past鈥, Foreign Policy, 2020 <>

Imam, James, 鈥楻acist or Responsive? Italy to Exhume Mussolini鈥檚 Colonial Museum Collection in 鈥渃ritical鈥 New Display鈥, The Art Newspaper, 2020 <>

Imperato, Quest for the Jade Sea: Colonial Competition Around an East African Lake. (Oxford: Westview Press, 1998).

Meens, Floris, 'The Horror of Adwa and the Glory of Adua. Monuments of the Young Italian Nation-State in the Scramble for Africa', in: Marjet Derks, Martijn Eickhoff, Remco Ensel and Floris Meens (eds.), What's Left Behind. The Lieux de M茅moire of Europe beyond Europe (Nijmegen: Vantilt, 2015), 40-48.

Palumbo, Patrizia, ed., A Place in the Sun: Africa in Italian Colonial Culture from Post-Unification to the Present (Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press, 2003).

Polezzi, Loredana, 'Description, Appropriation, Transformation: Fascist Rhetoric and Colonial Nature', Modern Italy, special issue on 鈥楩ascism and Nature鈥, 19.3 (2014), 287-303.

Ravenstein, E.G., 鈥業talian Explorations in the Upper Basin of the Jub鈥, Geographical Journal 3 (1894): 134-138.

Torelli, Giorgio 鈥楽e non fossero scomparsi giovani quale sorte li avrebbe attesi?鈥, Elzeviri, 2014 <>


[1] Brown, Where Giants Trod, 180.
[2] Meens, 'The Horror of Adwa and the Glory of Adua鈥, 42.
[3] Brown, Where Giants Trod, 167.
[4] Caulk, 鈥楤etween the Jaws of Hyenas鈥, 583.
[5] Imperato, Quest for the Jade Sea鈥, 146.
[6] Ibid.
[7] Bottego, Il Giuba Esplorato, 70.
[8] Imperato, Quest for the Jade Sea鈥, 146.
[9] Ravenstein, 鈥業talian Explorations in the Upper Basin of the Jub鈥, 134.
[10] Brown, M. Where Giants Trod, 169.
[11] Imperato, Quest for the Jade Sea, 149.
[12] Brown, Where Giants Trod, 173 & 174.
[13] Imperato, Quest for the Jade Sea, 154.
[14] See Bonati (1997), Bianchedi (2010), Torelli (2014).
[15] Polezzi, 'Description, Appropriation, Transformation鈥, 12.
[16] Collini, 鈥楢ppendice鈥, 537.
[17] Personal communication.
[18] See Ferrandi, 鈥楤raccialetti Tisba鈥.
[19] Fuller, 鈥楴icola Labanca, L鈥橭ltremare鈥, 449–50.
[20] Ghiglione, 鈥業taly Still Won鈥檛 Confront Its Colonial Past鈥.
[21] See Patrizia (2003) and Ben-Ghiat and Fuller (2005).
[22] See Cormack (2020).
[23] Anon. 鈥業l Museo Italo Africano 鈥淚laria Alpi鈥濃.
[24] Imam, 鈥楻acist or Responsive?鈥.
[25] Anon. 鈥楨x Museo Coloniale鈥.
[26] Anon. 鈥楥os鈥櫭 questa storia del Museo Egizio e Giorgia Meloni鈥.

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