Pietro Dodi (4 September 1880 – 4 June 1944) was an Italian general and Resistance member during World War II.
A career officer, Dodi had participated in the First World War as a cavalry captain in the "Cavalleggeri di Lucca" Regiment.
Starting from 1921, he taught at the Cavalry Application School in Pinerolo; he later rose to the rank of brigadier general in the Army reserve.
[4] Following the German occupation of Italy in the wake of the Armistice of Cassibile, Dodi became a member of the "Rosi" Resistance network in occupied Rome.
On 5 May 1944 he was arrested by the SS and imprisoned in the Via Tasso prison, where he was tortured in the unsuccessful attempt to force him to reveal information about other members of the network.