1902 in Italy


Events from the year 1902 in Italy.

Kingdom of Italy

Events

Socialist trade unionism enjoys rapid growth in 1901–02. In 1902 nearly 250,000 industrial workers were organized in the Socialist national federations. The main labour organizations, the Camera del Lavoro also expanded rapidly: from 14 in 1900 to 76 in 1902.

March

May

June

July

[Image:Ruins of St Mark's Campanile.jpg|thumb|Ruins of the Campanile]
  • July 14 – St Mark's Campanile, the bell tower of St Mark's Basilica in Venice, one of the most recognizable symbols of the city, collapses.
  • July 19 – Adoption of Law No. 242 of 19 July 1902 . The law aimed at protecting women and children in the workplace. The law set the minimum working age at 12 years; banned dangerous or unhealthy jobs for minors under 15, as determined by a state commission; limited women's working hours to 12 hours per day with a 2-hour break; prohibited night work for underage women; and introduced maternity leave for the first time: 4 weeks of compulsory rest after childbirth, but no leave before birth. The actual implementation is slow and arduous.

August

September

  • September 6–9 – Seventh Congress of the Italian Socialist Party in Imola. The progressive wing, led by Filippo Turati, prevails over the revolutionary wing, led by Arturo Labriola and Enrico Ferri. Turati supported the moderate liberal government led by Zanardelli and then that of Giovanni Giolitti, who in 1904 approved social legislation measures.
  • September 8 – Five persons are killed and 10 wounded in Candela during a strike of 400 peasants over a dispute with landowners over wages. The strikers blocked all the roads in the area and the military was called out resulting in violent clashes that ended in troops firing at the strikers.
  • September 14–30 – Prime Minister Zanardelli undertakes a journey through Basilicata – one of the poorest regions in Italy – to see for himself the problems in the Mezzogiorno.
  • September 26 – A violent cyclone hits the east coast of Sicily. The town of Catania is flooded; 300 lives are lost in Modica. The Cathedral of Belpasso was partly destroyed burying worshippers in the ruins. 600 people were reported dead.

October

  • October 13 – Two dead and fifty wounded in Giarratana, Sicily, during a confrontation between striking agricultural workers and the Carabinieri. That summer about 300 landless or low-paid agricultural workers had founded a Camera del Lavoro, demanding higher wages.

November

  • November 10 – Bocconi University is founded by Ferdinando Bocconi in Milan.
  • November 15 – Prime Minister Zanardelli presents social reforms, including a reduction of the tax on salt, partial abolition of the land tax for small holdings and exemption of income tax for workmen's wages, as well as a Divorce Bill.
  • November 26 – In response the social reforms presented by the government, conservative opposition leader Sidney Sonnino introduces a reform bill to alleviate poverty in southern Italy. The bill provides for a reduction of the land tax in Sicily, Calabria and Sardinia, the facilitation of agricultural credit, the re-establishment of the system of perpetual lease for small holdings dissemination and enhancement of agrarian contracts in order to combine the interests of farmers with those of the land-owners.

December

  • December 9 – Start of the Venezuelan crisis, in which Britain, Germany and Italy sustain a naval blockade on Venezuela in order to enforce collection of outstanding financial claims and President Cipriano Castro's refusal to pay foreign debts and damages suffered by European citizens in the 1892 Venezuelan civil war.
  • December 17 – A transmission from the wireless transmitting station of the Italian inventor Guglielmo Marconi in Glace Bay, Nova Scotia, Canada, became the world's first radio message to cross the Atlantic from North America.

Births

Deaths