The '
Italian resistance movement' was a
partisan force during
World War II.
Origins of the movement
After Italy's
capitulation on
8 September 1943, the Italian resistance movement became massive. The Italian partisans, as military formations of the Italian resistance movement, fought
German occupying forces in Italy and
Greece. The Italian partisans also fought the formations of the
Fascist Italian Social Republic (RSI). More than 300,000 armed fighters (among them 35,000 women) fought as partisans for the Italian resistance movement.
In a broad sense, all opposition to Nazi-Fascism in Italy during the final period of
World War II, is called the '''Resistenza'''. The Italian resistance movement included opposition both inside the country and opposition among the Italian armed forces abroad. Thus, participants in the
1944-
1945 strike movement in the factories of
Turin,
Milan, and other industrial cities are considered to be a part of the Italian resistance movement. After all, many of the strikers were later deported to German
concentration camps as a result of their "sabotage" of the war effort. In addition, Italian soldiers who refused to cooperate with the ''
Wehrmacht'' after the Armistice are considered as Italian resistance heroes. For example, Italian soldiers in
Cefalonia refused to join the Germans and sufferred accordingly. The
1948 democratic Constitution of the Italian Republic declares itself to be ''"based on the Resistance"''.
Initially, the movement was composed of independent troops, spontaneously formed by members of
political parties previously outlawed by the Fascist regime or by former officers of the disbanded Royal Army loyal to the
monarchy. Later, the
Comitato di Liberazione Nazionale (CNL; Committee of National Liberation) created by the
Italian Communist Party, the
Italian Socialist Party, the
Partito d'Azione (a
republican liberal party),
Democrazia Cristiana and other minor parties took control of the movement, in accordance with
King Victor Emmanuel III's ministers and the
Allies.
In the end, the bands were divided between the communist
Garibaldi's
Brigades, ''
Giustizia e Libertà'' Brigades (related to Partito d'Azione), socialist
Matteotti's Brigades, and several
Catholic and autonomous groups; the greater part of fighters were in the former two. Between the autonomous formations there were the ''Green Flames'', ''Di Dio'' and ''Mauri'', that were composed of
monarchists or former soldiers, and some
anarchist formations. Relations between the different groups were not always fraternal. For example, in 1945 in
Porzus (in the
province of Udine), Garibaldi Brigade partisans under
Yugoslav command attacked and killed partisans of the Catholic and ''azionista''
Osoppo band. The Garibaldi Brigade partisans claimed that the Catholic and ''azionista''
Osoppo band partisans had refused to accept the authority of
Josip Broz Tito, the Yugoslavian partisan leader. They were also accused of sharing intelligence with the fascist enemy.
While the largest troops operated in mountainous districts of the
Alps and the
Apennine Mountains, there were also big formations in the
Po plain; in the principal towns, the ''
Gruppi di azione patriottica'' (G.A.P., Patriotic Action Groups) carried out many acts of
sabotage and
guerrilla warfare, and the ''
Squadre di azione patriottica'' (S.A.P., Patriotic Action Squads) arranged massive
strike actions and campaigns of
propaganda. Not unlike the
French Resistance, women were important leaders and couriers both in the armed groups, as well as in the industrial areas.
[1]
New territorial structures
In
1944, with the Allied forces nearby, the
partisan resistance in Italy staged an uprising behind German lines, led by the Committee of National Liberation of Upper Italy (CLNAI). This rebellion led to the establishment of a number of
provisional partisan governments throughout the mountainous regions of northern Italy, of which
Ossola was the most important and received recognition from
Switzerland and from Allied consulates in Switzerland. By the end of 1944, German reinforcements and
Benito Mussolini's remaining forces had crushed the uprising, and the area's liberation had to wait until the final offensives of 1945.
List of partisan governments
★
Alto Monferrato (Sep-2 Dec)
★
Alto Tortonese (Sep-Dec)
★
Bobbio (7 Jul - 27 Aug)
★
Cansiglio (Jul-Sep)
★
Carnia (Jul-Oct)
★
Friuli Orientale (30 Jun - Sep)
★
Imperia (Aug-Oct)
★
Langhe (Sep-Nov)
★
Montefiorino (17 Jun - 1 Aug)
★
Ossola (10 Sep - 23 Oct)
★
Val Ceno (10 Jun - 11 Jul)
★
Val d'Enza e Val Parma (Jun-Jul)
★
Val Maira e Val Varaita (Jun - 21 Aug)
★
Val Taro (15 Jun - 24 Jul)
★
Valli di Lanzo (25 Jun - Sep)
★
Valsesia (11 Jun - 10 Jul)
★
Varzi (19/24 Sep - 29 Nov)

Italian partisan hung by Fascists of the
Decima Flottiglia MAS. The sign says "''He attempted to shoot the Decima''".
April 25
After a few months of reorganization, another massive uprising was planned. On
April 25,
1945, concurrent with the renewal of the Allied offensive, the CLNAI called out a general insurrection. This insurrection ended with the surrender of German forces in Italy and the liberation of most Italian cities.
The toll of Nazi and Fascist retaliation
The April uprising showed to the world that not all Italians agreed with the Fascist rule. Furthermore, it proved that Italians were even prepared to fight against Fascist rule at great cost to themselves. Casualties from the uprising amounted to:
★ Approximately 44,700 Italian partisans killed
★ Approximately 21,200 Italian partisans wounded or disabled
★ Approximately 15,000 Italian civilians killed in retaliations
★ Approximately 40,000 former Italian soldiers died in
concentration camps
During the war, German and Italian Fascist soldiers committed a number of other
war crimes including:
★ Summary
Executions
★ Ransacking
★ Retaliations against civilians
Most of these were common practices.
Some of the most notorious events were the
Ardeatine massacre, the
Marzabotto massacre, and the
Sant'Anna di Stazzema massacre. Captured partisans or civilians were often
tortured. The
Decima Flottiglia MAS, an Italian unit under German command, is now remembered as one of the most ruthless military corps of the war.
The Germans profited greatly from the weakness of the Fascist
puppet state in
Northern Italy. The Germans determined that they would "annex" Italian territories into the
Third Reich. Two new German regions were to be established. One was the ''Alpenvorland'' and it was to comprise the region of
Trentino-Alto Adige/Südtirol and the
Province of Belluno. The other was ''Adriatisches Kustenland'' and it was to comprise
Istria,
Quarnero, and most of today's region of
Friuli-Venezia Giulia. In the valley of
Carnia, anti-Communist forces from the
Soviet Union under the command of
ataman Timofey Ivanovich Domanov were used; they were promised the establishment of a
Cossack republic in Northeastern Italy, to be called ''Kosakenland''.
[2]
Capture and execution of Mussolini
Around
27 April 1945, Mussolini and his mistress
Clara Petacci were captured by partisans while trying to escape to Switzerland. Upon the arrival of Communist partisans under "Lieutenant-Colonel Valerio" (Walter Audisio), Mussolini, Petacci, several high-ranking Fascist officials, and some other Fascist hanger-ons were taken to
Dongo. On
April 28 they were summarily executed. Many of the corpses, including those of Mussolini and Petacci, were later taken to Milan and hung up-side down in a square in the centre of the city. A total of fifteen Fascists were thus exhibited.
The Fascists executed in Dongo included:
Benito Mussolini (Il Duce), Francesco Barracu (Undersecretary in cabinet office),
Fernando Mezzasoma (Ministry of Popular Culture - Propaganda), Nicola Bombacci (A personal friend of Mussolini), Luigi Gatti (Mussolini's private secretary), Pisenti Liverani (Minister of Communications),
Alessandro Pavolini (ex-Ministry of Popular Culture), Paolo Zerbino (Minister of Interior), Ruggero Romano (Minister Public Works), Paolo Porta (Head of Fascist Party in Lombardy), Alfredo Coppolo (Rector of the Bologna University), Ernesto Daquanno (Director of Stefani agency), Mario Nudi (President of Fascist Agriculture Association), Colonel Vito Casalinuovo (Mussolini's adjutant), Pietro Calistri (Air Force pilot), Idreno Utimperghe (possibly a journalist or Black Shirt leader), and
Clara Petacci (Mussolini's mistress).
Achille Starace (Secretary of Fascist Party 1931-1939) was arrested and executed earlier in Milan. He was one of the fifteen Fascists exhibited in the square.
Marcello Petacci (Clara Petacci's brother) was captured with the others. But, rather than being executed in Dongo, he was shot trying to escape.
See also
★
Arditi del Popolo
External links
★
Associazione Nazionale Partigiani d'Italia
★
★
''La mappa delle Repubbliche partigiane'' provides a source for the List of partisan governments
★
Il portale della guerra di Liberazione
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1943-1945: Anarchist partisans in the Italian Resistance
★
The photographies of the resistance
★
European Resistance Archive
★
Book: War In Italy: By Richard Lamb