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Class Formation and Political Mobilization in Turn-of-the-Century Milan

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 January 2016

Extract

In the late nineteenth century, as today, Milan stood at the center of Italy's most advanced economic developments, and served in effect as the financial capital of the country. Well before industrialization had taken hold in most of the Italian peninsula, Milan's industry—tied to developments further north in Europe—was sprouting. Moreover, as the three articles that follow clearly show, Milan—rather than the Italian capital, Rome—was at the heart of many modern political developments in Italy.

Type
Special Section: Class Formation and Political Mobilization in Turn-of-the-Century Milan
Copyright
Copyright © Social Science History Association 1995 

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References

Notes

1 Though the predominance of Milan in the origin of left-wing and workers’ organizations would in some respects give way to Turin in the post-World War I period.