Paolo de Blangis was an Italian aristocrat and fascist dignitary. He was the Duke of Blangis and the brother of Bishop Giorgio de Blangis, and the two of them were extremely wealthy supporters of the National Fascist Party. In 1944, the two of them partook in the "120 Days of Sodom" in Marzabotto, Italy during World War II, kidnapping fourteen youths and torturing and abusing them before having most of them massacred.
The four dignitaries attempted to flee Italy when the Italian Social Republic collapsed, but were captured by Italian partisans, recognizing them as leaders in the National Fascist Party, and executed by hanging. The bodies of Blangis and his compatriots were shot over 50 times by a firing squad posthumously and left to hang in the streets of Rome.