aimnova.
DashboardMy LearningPaper MasteryStudy Plan

Stay in the loop

Study tips, product updates, and early access to new features.

aimnova.

AI-powered IB study platform with personalised plans, instant feedback, and examiner-style marking.

IB Subjects
  • All IB Subjects
  • IB Diploma
  • IB ESS
  • IB Economics
  • IB Business Management
  • IB Math AI
  • IB Math AA
  • IB Physics
  • IB Biology
  • IB Chemistry
  • IB History
  • IB Geography
  • IB Spanish B
  • IB German B
  • IB Italian B
  • IB French B
  • IB English B
Question Banks
  • ESS Question Bank
  • Economics Question Bank
  • Business Management Question Bank
  • Math AI Question Bank
  • Math AA Question Bank
  • Physics Question Bank
  • Biology Question Bank
  • Chemistry Question Bank
  • History Question Bank
  • Geography Question Bank
  • Spanish B Question Bank
  • German B Question Bank
  • Italian B Question Bank
  • French B Question Bank
  • English B Question Bank
Predicted Topics 2026
  • ESS Predictions 2026
  • Economics Predictions 2026
  • Business Management Predictions 2026
  • Math AI Predictions 2026
  • Math AA Predictions 2026
  • Physics Predictions 2026
  • Biology Predictions 2026
  • Chemistry Predictions 2026
  • History Predictions 2026
  • Geography Predictions 2026
  • Spanish B Predictions 2026
  • German B Predictions 2026
  • Italian B Predictions 2026
  • French B Predictions 2026
  • English B Predictions 2026

Study Resources

  • Free Study Notes
  • Mock Exams
  • Revision Guide
  • Flashcards
  • Exam Skills
  • Command Terms
  • Past Paper Feedback
  • Grade Calculator
  • Exam Timetable 2026

Company

  • Features
  • Pricing
  • About Us
  • Blog
  • Contact
  • Terms
  • Privacy
  • Cookies

© 2026 Aimnova. All rights reserved.

Made with 💜 for IB students worldwide

v0.1.1485
NotesHistoryTopic 3.2Italian expansion (1935–1940)
Back to History Topics
3.2.33 min read

Italian expansion (1935–1940)

IB History • Unit 3

7-day free trial

Know exactly what to write for full marks

Practice with exam questions and get AI feedback that shows you the perfect answer — what examiners want to see.

Start Free Trial

Contents

  • The big idea: Mussolini's hunt for empire and prestige
  • The events: from Abyssinia to war
  • Exam skills: judging significance

Free preview

This is the free notes preview

You're reading the free notes. In My Learning the same topic also comes with:

Start free
  • FlashcardsLock in vocabulary and key terms with spaced repetition.
  • Practice questionsAnswer exam-style questions and get instant AI marking.
  • Mock exams & past-paper vaultSit full mocks and see exactly how examiners award marks.
  • Personalised study planA daily plan built around your exam date and weak areas.
One sentence to remember: Mussolini's hunger for empire and glory drove Italy's aggression, and his conquest of Abyssinia was the turning point that wrecked the League of Nations and pushed him toward Hitler.

To understand Italy in the 1930s, start with the man in charge. Benito Mussolini had ruled Italy as a Fascist dictator since 1922, and he loved being seen as strong.

Mussolini's whole idea of Italy was built around greatness. Fascism worshipped war and empire, so he dreamed of making Italy powerful again, like the ancient Roman Empire once had been.

He had a favourite slogan for this: mare nostrum, Latin for "our sea". By this he meant that the Mediterranean should belong to Italy, the way it had belonged to Rome centuries earlier.

There was a practical side too. A war and a new empire would give Italians something to feel proud of, and it would distract them from poverty and problems at home.

The event that changed everything was Italy's invasion of Abyssinia, the old name for Ethiopia, in 1935. When the League of Nations failed to stop it, the whole world saw that a bully could attack a weaker country and get away with it.

After that, Mussolini slowly turned his back on Britain and France. Instead he moved closer and closer to Nazi Germany, until Italy joined Hitler's side and entered the Second World War in June 1940.

Memory hook: "A SAP": Remember Mussolini's road to war in order: Abyssinia (1935) → Spain (1936) → Albania (1939) → Pact of Steel (1939). Then Italy enters WWII in June 1940.

Now walk through Mussolini's moves in the order they happened. The first one, Abyssinia, matters most, because everything after it grows out of the diplomatic damage it caused.

1

1. Invasion of Abyssinia (1935–36)

Italy invaded Abyssinia in October 1935 and had conquered it by May 1936. The League of Nations imposed only weak sanctions, refusing to cut off oil or close the Suez Canal, so Italy easily won. This destroyed the League's credibility and pushed Britain and France away from Mussolini.

2

2. Helping Franco in Spain (1936–39)

When civil war broke out in Spain, Mussolini sent troops, planes and supplies to help General Franco's Nationalists. Because Hitler was helping the same side, Italian and German forces ended up fighting together, which drew the two dictators closer.

3

3. Albania, then the Pact of Steel (1939)

In April 1939 Italy invaded and annexed Albania, giving Mussolini a foothold in the Balkans. Then in May 1939 he signed the Pact of Steel, a binding military alliance that tied Italy firmly to Nazi Germany.

4

4. Italy enters WWII (June 1940)

At first Mussolini stayed out of the war, calling it "non-belligerence", because Italy simply was not ready to fight. He only declared war on Britain and France in June 1940, once France was already collapsing, hoping to grab easy rewards from a war he thought was nearly won.

Abyssinia, Spain, Albania, Pact of Steel, then war.

Long-term aims (the drive)

  • An empire in Africa to rival Britain and France, so Italy could look like a real great power.
  • Mare nostrum: turning the Mediterranean into an Italian-controlled sea.
  • National pride and the dream of reviving ancient "Roman" greatness.
  • A Fascist belief that war and conquest were glorious and made a nation strong.

Short-term triggers (the timing)

  • The League's weakness, exposed by its feeble response to Abyssinia in 1935–36.
  • A shared Fascist cause with Hitler, tested and proven in the Spanish Civil War.
  • The falling-out with Britain and France over the Abyssinia sanctions.
  • France's sudden collapse in 1940, which made joining the war look cheap and safe.
DateEventWhy it mattered
Oct 1935Invasion of Abyssinia beginsA direct challenge to the League of Nations
May 1936Abyssinia conqueredLeague discredited; aggression rewarded
1936–39Intervention in the Spanish Civil WarItaly and Germany fight on the same side
Oct 1936Rome–Berlin Axis announcedFormal friendship with Hitler begins
Apr 1939Annexation of AlbaniaItalian expansion into the Balkans
May 1939Pact of Steel signedFull military alliance with Germany
Jun 1940Italy enters WWIIMussolini joins Hitler's war
Mini-case: why the sanctions failed: The League banned weapons and some goods to Italy, but it left the two things that really mattered untouched. It did not ban oil, and it kept the Suez Canal open, so Italian troops and fuel still flowed to East Africa.

This half-hearted response let Mussolini win, and it proved to the world that collective security had no real teeth.

Never wonder what to study next

Get a personalized daily plan based on your exam date, progress, and weak areas. We'll tell you exactly what to review each day.

Try Free Study Plan7-day free trial • No card required
How this is tested (Paper 1): Paper 1 is the source paper on "The move to global war". Italy questions usually ask you to judge the significance of the Abyssinian crisis, or to explain why Italy lined up with Germany. The classic trap is to just retell the story instead of arguing significance, so always aim for a clear judgement backed by sources and your own knowledge.
IB-style questionEvaluate[9 marks]

To what extent was the Abyssinian crisis (1935–36) a turning point in Italy's relations with Germany?

Model answer plan

See the mark-by-mark plan — for / against / judgement, with marking guidance — in study mode.

Unlock free for 7 days
Common mistakes: 1. Narrating the invasion blow-by-blow instead of arguing its significance. 2. Forgetting Spain and the Pact of Steel as the steps that built the alliance. 3. Muddling the dates: Abyssinia is 1935–36, Albania and the Pact of Steel are both 1939, and Italy enters WWII in 1940.

IB Exam Questions on Italian expansion (1935–1940)

Practice with IB-style questions filtered to Topic 3.2.3. Get instant AI feedback on every answer.

Practice Topic 3.2.3 QuestionsBrowse All History Topics

How Italian expansion (1935–1940) Appears in IB Exams

Examiners use specific command terms when asking about this topic. Here's what to expect:

Define

Give the precise meaning of key terms related to Italian expansion (1935–1940).

AO1
Describe

Give a detailed account of processes or features in Italian expansion (1935–1940).

AO2
Explain

Give reasons WHY — cause and effect within Italian expansion (1935–1940).

AO3
Evaluate

Weigh strengths AND limitations of approaches in Italian expansion (1935–1940).

AO3
Discuss

Present arguments FOR and AGAINST with a balanced conclusion.

AO3

See the full IB Command Terms guide →

Related History Topics

Continue learning with these related topics from the same unit:

3.1.1Causes of Japanese expansion
3.1.2Japanese expansion: Manchuria to Pearl Harbor
3.1.3Responses to Japanese expansion
3.2.1Causes of German and Italian expansion
View all History topics

Improve your exam technique

Command terms, paper structure, and mark-scheme tips for History

Previous
3.2.2German challenges to the postwar settlement (1933–1938)
Next
German expansion and the outbreak of war (1938–1939)3.2.4

15 practice questions on Italian expansion (1935–1940)

Students who practiced this topic on Aimnova scored 82% on average. Try free practice questions and get instant AI feedback.

Try 3 Free QuestionsView All History Topics