Fascist fighting squads (Fasci di Combattimento) were paramilitary groups Mussolini founded in Milan in 1919 to attack socialists and labor organizers with street violence, helping fascism rise by exploiting postwar bitterness and Italy's weak democracy (AP Euro Topic 8.6, KC-4.2.II.B).
Fascist fighting squads were the paramilitary muscle behind Mussolini's rise. He announced their formation in a speech in Milan in 1919, recruiting heavily from angry World War I veterans who felt Italy had been cheated by the postwar peace settlement. The squads (squadristi, later nicknamed Blackshirts for their uniforms) beat up socialists, broke strikes, burned union halls, and intimidated voters. Wealthy landowners and industrialists often looked the other way, or even funded them, because they feared a communist revolution more than fascist thugs.
This is exactly what the CED means when it says Mussolini rose to power by "using terror" and "manipulating the fledgling and unpopular democracies" (KC-4.2.II.B). The squads didn't seize power through a real military coup. Their violence made Italy's liberal government look helpless, so when Mussolini staged the March on Rome in 1922, the king handed him the prime ministership rather than risk a civil war. The lesson the AP exam wants you to take away is that fascism gained power through a mix of street violence and legal-looking maneuvering, not pure battlefield conquest.
This term lives in Topic 8.6 (Fascism and Totalitarianism) in Unit 8: 20th-Century Global Conflicts. It directly supports learning objective AP Euro 8.6.A, which asks you to explain the factors behind fascist and totalitarian regimes after World War I. The fighting squads are the concrete example tying together every factor the CED lists in KC-4.2.II: postwar bitterness (veteran recruits), fear of communism (their main targets were socialists), uncertain transitions to democracy (the Italian government couldn't stop them), and the glorification of war and nationalism (violence itself was part of fascist ideology, not a bug). If an essay prompt asks you HOW fascists actually got power, the squads are your evidence for the "terror" half of the answer.
Keep studying AP® Euro Unit 8
Benito Mussolini (Unit 8)
The squads were Mussolini's invention and his ladder to power. His 1919 Milan speech founding them is a released DBQ document, so knowing the squads helps you read Mussolini sources in context. He used their violence to make himself look like the only man who could restore order, then took credit for restoring the order his own followers had destroyed.
Blackshirts (Unit 8)
Blackshirts is the nickname for the men in the fighting squads, named for their black uniforms. Same movement, two labels. The exam may use either term, so treat them as interchangeable when you see them in stimulus sources.
Adolf Hitler (Unit 8)
Hitler copied the playbook. His SA (Brownshirts) did in Germany what the squads did in Italy, using street violence against communists and socialists to destabilize a fragile democracy. The CED pairs Mussolini and Hitler in KC-4.2.II.B for exactly this reason, and comparing their paramilitary tactics is a classic AP move.
Extreme Nationalism (Unit 8)
Squad violence wasn't random thuggery in fascist eyes. Fascism glorified war and national strength (KC-4.2.II.A), so beating up "internal enemies" like socialists was framed as patriotic action that would restore Italy's greatness after a disappointing peace settlement.
The 2024 AP Euro DBQ asked whether Italian fascism was a revolutionary or a traditional movement, and Document 1 was Mussolini's 1919 speech announcing the formation of the Fascist fighting squads in Milan. That's the model for how this term shows up. You probably won't get "define the fighting squads" as a question. Instead, you'll get a Mussolini speech or a description of squad violence as a stimulus, and you'll need to connect it to the bigger picture, meaning postwar instability, fear of communism, and the failure of liberal democracy in Italy (LO 8.6.A). In MCQs, expect stems asking why fascism attracted veterans or how Mussolini undermined democratic institutions. In essays, the squads are high-value specific evidence for any prompt about how interwar dictators rose to power through terror rather than elections alone.
Both were paramilitary squads that used street violence against socialists and communists to help a fascist leader take power, so it's easy to blur them. Keep them straight by country and color. The Fascist fighting squads (Blackshirts) were Mussolini's, founded in Italy in 1919, and powered the March on Rome in 1922. The SA (Brownshirts) were Hitler's German equivalent in the 1920s and early 1930s. If an exam answer about Italy cites Brownshirts, that's a factual error that costs you.
Mussolini founded the Fascist fighting squads in Milan in 1919, recruiting bitter World War I veterans to attack socialists and labor organizers.
The squads show the "using terror" half of KC-4.2.II.B, which says Mussolini and Hitler rose to power by exploiting postwar bitterness, using terror, and manipulating weak democracies.
Squad violence made Italy's liberal government look powerless, which is why the king handed Mussolini power after the March on Rome in 1922 instead of fighting him.
Wealthy landowners and industrialists tolerated or funded the squads because they feared a communist revolution more than fascist violence.
Squad members were nicknamed Blackshirts, and Hitler's SA Brownshirts were the German copy of the same tactic.
Mussolini's 1919 speech founding the squads appeared as Document 1 on the 2024 DBQ about whether Italian fascism was revolutionary or traditional.
They were paramilitary groups Mussolini founded in Milan in 1919 that used street violence against socialists, strikers, and union organizers. Their terror destabilized Italy's young democracy and paved Mussolini's path to power in 1922.
No. Their violence created chaos, but Mussolini came to power semi-legally when King Victor Emmanuel III appointed him prime minister after the March on Rome in 1922 rather than risk a civil war. That mix of terror plus legal appointment is exactly what KC-4.2.II.B means by manipulating a fledgling democracy.
Essentially yes. Blackshirts is the nickname for squad members, taken from their black uniforms. AP sources may use either term for the same paramilitary movement.
Country and timing. The fighting squads (Blackshirts) were Italian, founded by Mussolini in 1919. The Brownshirts (SA) were Hitler's German paramilitary that copied the same anti-socialist street-violence tactic in the 1920s and early 1930s.
Postwar bitterness. Many Italian veterans felt the peace settlement cheated Italy out of promised territory, faced unemployment in an unstable economy, and feared a communist revolution like Russia's. Fascism offered them purpose, an enemy, and the glorification of the violence they already knew.
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