Chelsea Football Club Monday confirmed Italy boss, Antonio Conte, as their new first-team head coach, starting from this summer.
The 46-year-old ex-Juventus boss will begin a three-year contract after his country takes part in Euro 2016.
His appointment has been the subject of intense media speculation since the West London club sacked Jose Mourinho in December.
“I am proud to be the coach of the national team of my country and only a role as attractive as manager of Chelsea could follow that,” he said.
“I am looking forward to meeting everyone at the club and the day-to-day challenge of competing in the Premier League.
“Chelsea and English football are watched wherever you go, the fans are passionate and my ambition is to have more success to follow the victories I enjoyed in Italy.
“I am happy we have made the announcement now so everything is clear and we can end the speculation. I will continue to focus on my job with the Italian national team and will reserve speaking about Chelsea again until after the Euros.”
Guus Hiddink, who replaced the sacked Mourinho, will remain in charge of the Blues until the end of the season.
The final of Euro 2016 takes place on 10 July.
Conte – who won the Serie A title in each of his three years as Juventus boss – is the fifth Italian to manage Chelsea, following Gianluca Vialli, Claudio Ranieri, Carlo Ancelotti and Roberto Di Matteo.
“We are very pleased to have recruited one of the most highly regarded managers in world football,” said Chelsea Director, Marina Granovskaia.
“We are equally pleased to do so before the end of the current season. This aids our future planning.”
Chelsea Chairman, Bruce Buck, added: “Antonio Conte has a record of consistent success in his career as a manager and as a player. We look forward to welcoming him to Stamford Bridge and are confident he will find all he needs to maintain that high standard of achievement.”
Conte has the task of rebuilding a side which won the Premier League title last season before imploding this term.
Mourinho’s second spell came to an end on December 17 after a miserable start to the season and “palpable discord” between him and his players, according to Chelsea technical director, Michael Emenalo.
Hiddink restored stability in his second interim spell as boss – the Blues are 10th with seven games to go – but Chelsea will fail to win a trophy and will miss out on Champions League football next season.
Conte is a former Italy midfielder who made more than 400 appearances for Juventus, winning five league titles and a Champions League.
He won 20 caps for his country and was part of the squad beaten by France in the final of Euro 2000.
After spells coaching Arezzo, Bari, Atalanta and Siena, Conte returned to Juve in 2011, guiding them to the Serie A title at the first attempt.
However, he was then charged with failing to report attempted match-fixing during his time as coach of Siena.
Conte pleaded his innocence but was banned for 10 months – a sentence that was reduced to a four-month touchline suspension.
Juventus retained their Serie A title despite Conte’s absence and won their third in succession the following season before his exit in 2014 to take over as Italy boss.