The participation of Italy in the
Second World War was characterized by a complex framework of ideology, politics and diplomacy, in which its military history took place often heavily influenced by external factors. The imperial ambitions of the Fascist regime, which aspired to restore a "Roman Empire" in the Mediterranean (their
Mare Nostrum), collapsed due to defeats in
Greece and
East and
North Africa. In 1943
Benito Mussolini was ousted and arrested by order of King
Victor Emmanuel III, provoking a
civil war. The northern half of the country was occupied by Germans and made a
collaborationist puppet state (with more than 600,000 soldiers), while the south was governed by monarchist and liberal forces, which fought for the Allied cause in the
Italian Co-Belligerent Army (at its height numbering more than 50,000 men), helped by circa 350,000
partisans of disparate political ideologies that operated all over occupied Italy.