Pure Italian
Posted in General, On This Day on July 23rd, 2016 by Eugene Finerman – Be the first to commentOn this day in 1929, Fascist Italy made a stand for linguistic purity and banned the use of foreign words.
However, if Il Duce wanted to be consistent he would have had to change his name to Guido Mussolini. Benito is embarrassingly Spanish. Worse, he could not have his rebaptism at St. Peter’s Church–at least until the Church changed its name. Peter is a Greek word, you know. In fact, so are Catholic, Jesus and Christ. (Fortunately, the word Pope would be acceptably kosher in Italian.) The Church might have agreed to being Mondo instead of Cattolico, but it likely would have objected to renaming the focus of its worship. Divo Carpentiere?
There also would need be new nomenclature throughout Italy. Sicily and Naples are Greek names. Tuscany is Etruscan. Lombardy is named for the long beards on the German barbarians who seized the region. In fact, even the name Italia might not have passed the purity test. Those big mouth Greeks were the first to use that term, applying it to the southern part of the peninsula which they colonized. If Italy were named after the legendary Sicilian ruler Italos, then the derivation would have been unpatriotically Greek. However, some etymologists believe that the Greeks took (and mispronounced) the indigenous people’s word for their major occupation–raising cattle.
So, going back to the word’s pure roots, Mussolini should have changed the country’s name to Vitalia–land of veal.