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No, Italy did not switch to the Central Powers. Italy switched from the Central Powers to the Allied Powers.
Italy left the Central powers before they were known as the central powers.
In the beginning of the war, Italy was on the Central Powers, but later sided with the Allies.
There were three central powers that divided Europe were Germany,Austria/Hungary,Italy
Italy was part of the Central Powers.
Germany, Italy, Austria-Hungary
Italy joined the Allied powers because they promised better rewards from the spoils of the war in terms of being granted conquered territories. Italy initially had an agreement with the Central Powers.
In world war 1 the central powers (which you called the axis powers) were Germany, Austria-Hungary and the Ottoman empire. The allies where The British empire, France, Russia and later the United states. Later, though, Italy switched from the Central Powers do the Ally Powers.
Germany, Italy and Austria-Hungary.
The Central Powers were Germany, Austria-Hungary, the Ottoman Empire and Bulgaria. The Allied Powers were Britain (with its empire), France, Russia, Italy, the US and Japan.
The Central Powers during World War I were:GermanyAustria-HungaryThe Ottoman EmpireBulgaria (joined 1915 after the start of World War I)*Originally Germany and Austria-Hungary formed the Triple Alliance with Italy, but Italy did not join them in the war and later fought against the Central Powers.Another answerIn World War 1 the Central Powers were Germany, Austria-Hungary and the Ottoman Empire. Italy was part of that alliance but, because it switched sides before the name changed from the Triple Alliance to the Central Powers, it is generally not considered to have been a Central Powers member.
Italy was a member of the Tripl Alliance, which formed into the main nations of the Central Powers when war broke out. It joined the war on the Allied Side.