Abstract
By means of a detailed and specific case-study, this article contributes to the history of the relationship between catholicism and fascism in Italy. After noting the profound ambiguity that was characteristic of relations between the church and the regime — not least because of the tendency for fascism to present itself in religious terms, especially in relation to the memorialization of its dead — the article takes up a recent suggestion that the cooperation between catholicism and fascism in Siena in the mid 1930s constituted a textbook example of the wider consensus between church and regime in Italy in this period. It does so by analysing the origins and official inauguration of the Sienese
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