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This Isn’t Even the First Time Alfa Ditched the Milano Name for a Car

This Isn’t Even the First Time Alfa Ditched the Milano Name for a Car photo
This Isn’t Even the First Time Alfa Ditched the Milano Name for a Car photo

The unusual tale of Alfa Romeo caving to political pressure over the name of a small SUV has captivated the world over the last week. Apparently, the automaker's website crashed as a consequence of the headlines and, if you run PR for the Italian marque, you really can't be too disappointed about the publicity that the formerly Milano, now Junior has received. Thing is, this isn't the first time Alfa Romeo has had to walk back a name change of a new model at the last minute. Even more amusingly, this isn't even the first time it's happened to a car that was going to be called "Milano."

Students of automotive history will know the Giulietta hatchback that shared bones with our ill-fated Dodge Dart and lasted from 2011 to 2020 was originally intended to be named after the city in which Alfa Romeo was founded. However, the company wasn't forced to swap in a new moniker for the same reason it has for the Junior, because the Giulietta was built in Italy, and therefore didn't break any laws about products with Italian names not actually manufactured there.

Rather, back in 2009, Alfa Romeo was in the process of shuttering facilities in Milan and moving house to Turin, where it's located today. Press was referring to the yet-unnamed hatch as the Milano, as a Top Gear article from the period proves. In fact, when Alfa began reaching out to media, it sent photos of the compact we now know as the Giulietta wearing a badge that read "Milano." I'll have you know I've searched all over the internet for these images and I have nothing to show for my trouble—yet.