during the Resistance, 12 September 1943 (27–30 September 1943) during the liberation of the city from German occupation , 1944 In the first major act of resistance following the German occupation, Italian partisans and local resistance fighters liberated the city of
Naples through a chaotic popular rebellion. Naples was the first of the major European cities to rise up against the German occupation, and successfully at that. The people of Naples revolted and held strong against Nazi occupiers in the last days of September 1943. The popular mass uprising and resistance in Naples against the occupying Nazi German forces, known as the
Four days of Naples, consisted of four days of continuous open warfare and guerrilla actions by locals against the Nazi Germans. The spontaneous uprising of Neopolitan and Italian Resistance against German occupying forces (despite limited armament, organization, or planning) nevertheless successfully disrupted German plans to deport Neopolitans en masse, destroy the city, and prevent Allied forces from gaining a strategic foothold. Elsewhere, the nascent movement began as independently operating groups were organized and led by previously outlawed political parties or by former officers of the
Royal Italian Army. Many partisan formations were initially founded by soldiers from disbanded units of the
Royal Italian Army that had evaded capture in
Operation Achse, and were led by junior Army officers who had decided to resist the German occupation; they were subsequently joined and re-organized by Anti-Fascists, and became thus increasingly politicized. Later the
Comitato di Liberazione Nazionale (Committee of National Liberation, or CLN), created by the
Italian Communist Party, the
Italian Socialist Party, the
Partito d'Azione (a
republican liberal socialist party),
Democrazia Cristiana and other minor parties, largely took control of the movement in accordance with King
Victor Emmanuel III's ministers and the
Allies. The CLN was set up by partisans behind German lines and had the support of most groups in the region. The main CLN formations included three politically varied groups: the communist
Brigate Garibaldi (Garibaldi Brigades), the
Giustizia e Libertà (Justice and Freedom) Brigades related to the Partito d'Azione, and the socialist
Brigate Matteotti (
Matteotti Brigades). Smaller groups included
Christian democrats and, outside the CLN,
monarchists such as the
Brigate Fiamme Verdi (Green Flame Brigades) and
Fronte Militare Clandestino (Clandestine Military Front) headed by Colonel Montezemolo. Another sizeable partisan group, particularly strong in Piedmont (where the
Fourth Army had disintegrated in September 1943), were the "autonomous" (
autonomi) partisans, largely composed of former soldiers with no substantial alignment to any anti-Fascist party; an example was the
1° Gruppo Divisioni Alpine led by
Enrico Martini. Relations among the groups varied. For example, in 1945, the Garibaldi partisans under
Yugoslav Partisan command
attacked and killed several partisans of the
Catholic and
azionista Osoppo groups in the
province of Udine. Tensions between the Catholics and the Communists in the movement led to the foundation of the
Fiamme Verdi as a separate formation. A further challenge to the 'national unity' embodied in the CLN came from
anarchists as well as dissident-communist Resistance formations, such as Turin's
Stella Rossa movement and the ''
Movimento Comunista d'Italia'' (Rome's largest single anti-fascist force under Occupation), which sought a revolutionary outcome to the conflict and were thus unwilling to collaborate with 'bourgeois parties'.
Partisan movement Rodolfo Graziani estimated the partisan strength at around 70,000–80,000 by May 1944. Some 41% in the Garibaldi Brigades and 29% were Actionists of the
Giustizia e Libertà Brigades. One of the strongest units, the 8th Garibaldi Brigade, had 8,050 men (450 without arms) and operated in the
Romagna area. Their ranks were gradually increased by the influx of young men escaping the Italian Social Republic's draft, as well as from deserters from the RSI armed forces. By August 1944, the number of partisans had grown to 100,000, and it escalated to more than 250,000 with the final insurrection in April 1945. The Italian resistance suffered 50,000 fighters killed throughout the conflict. Partisan unit sizes varied, depending on logistics (such as the ability to arm, clothe and feed members) and the amount of local support. The basic unit was the
squadra (squad), with three or more squads (usually five) forming a
distaccamento (detachment). Three or more detachments made a
brigata (brigade), of which two or more made a
divisione (division). In some places, several divisions formed a
gruppo divisione (divisional group). These divisional groups were responsible for a ''zona d'operazione'' (operational group). While the largest contingents operated in mountainous districts of the Alps and the
Apennine Mountains, other large formations fought in the
Po River flatland. In the large towns of northern Italy, such as
Piacenza, and the surrounding valleys near the
Gothic Line.
Montechino Castle housed a key partisan headquarters. The
Gruppi di Azione Patriottica (GAP; "Patriotic Action Groups") commanded by the Resistance's youngest officer, Giuseppe "Beppe" Ruffino, carried out acts of
sabotage and
guerrilla warfare, and the
Squadre di Azione Patriottica (SAP; "Patriotic Action Squads") arranged
strike actions and propaganda campaigns. As in the
French Resistance, women were often important members and couriers. Like their counterparts elsewhere in Europe, Italian partisans seized whatever arms they could find. The first weapons were brought by ex-soldiers fighting German occupiers from the
Regio Esercito inventory:
Carcano rifles,
Beretta M1934 and
M1935 pistols,
Bodeo M1889 revolvers,
SRCM and
OTO hand grenades, and
Fiat–Revelli Modello 1935,
Breda 30 and
Breda M37 machine guns. Later, captured
K98ks,
MG 34s,
MG 42s, the iconic
potato-masher grenades,
Lugers, and
Walther P38s were added to partisan kits. Submachine guns (such as the
MP 40) were initially scarce, and usually reserved for squad leaders. Automatic weapons became more common as they were captured in combat and as the Social Republic regime soldiers began defecting, bringing their own guns.
Beretta MABs began appearing in larger numbers in October 1943, when they were spirited away
en masse from the
Beretta factory which was producing them for the Wehrmacht. Additional weapons (chiefly of British origin) were airdropped by the Allies:
PIATs,
Lee–Enfield rifles,
Bren light machine guns and
Sten guns. U.S.-made weapons were provided on a smaller scale from the
Office of Strategic Services (OSS):
Thompson submachine guns (both M1928 and M1),
M3 submachine guns,
United Defense M42s, and folding-stock
M1 carbines. Other supplies included explosives, clothing, boots, food rations, and money (used to buy weapons or to compensate civilians for confiscations).
Countryside The worst conditions and fighting took place in mountainous regions. Resources were scarce and living conditions were terrible. Due to limited supplies, the resistance adopted
guerrilla warfare. This involved groups of 40–50 fighters ambushing and harassing the Nazis and their allies. The size of the brigades was reflective of the resources available to the partisans. Resource limits could not support large groups in one area. Mobility was key to their success. Their terrain knowledge enabled narrow escapes in small groups when nearly surrounded by the Germans. The partisans had no permanent headquarters or bases, making them difficult to destroy. The groups were formed collaboratively by women from diverse political backgrounds. Prominent participants included communists Giovanna Barcellona,
Lina Fibbi,
Marisa Diena, and Caterina Picolato; socialists
Laura Conti and
Lina Merlin; actionists Elena Dreher and
Ada Gobetti; as well as women associated with the
Giustizia e Libertà (Justice and Freedom) movement. Republican and Catholic women, along with those without prior political or ideological commitments, also joined. These groups predominantly operated in the northern midlands of Italy. Scholars attribute this geographic spread to the influence of local women's clothing, which fostered individual initiative and civic awareness. Initially, the women's groups aimed to support resistance efforts in auxiliary roles. However, they quickly assumed leadership responsibilities in areas such as information dissemination, propaganda, issuing orders, and handling ammunition. Some women even directly engaged in armed resistance as "gappistas".
Ada Gobetti was among the first to criticize the use of the term "assistance" in the group's name. In 1944, the organization's objectives were reformulated to prioritize activities that broadly promoted women's emancipation.
1944 uprising , August 1944 During the summer and early fall of 1944, with Allied forces nearby, partisans attacked behind German lines, led by CLNAI. This rebellion led to
provisional partisan governments throughout the mountainous regions.
Ossola was the most important of these, receiving recognition from Switzerland and Allied consulates there. An intelligence officer told Field Marshal
Albert Kesselring, Germany's commander of occupation forces in Italy, that he estimated German casualties fighting partisans in the summer of 1944 amounted to 30,000 to 35,000, including 5,000 confirmed killed. Kesselring considered the number to be exaggerated, and offered his own figure of 20,000: 5,000 killed, between 7,000 and 8,000 missing / "kidnapped" (including deserters), and a similar number seriously wounded. Both sources agreed that partisan losses were less. By the end of the year, German reinforcements and Mussolini's remaining forces crushed the uprising. In their attempts to suppress the resistance, German and Italian Fascist forces (especially the SS,
Gestapo, and paramilitary militias such as
Xª MAS and
Black Brigades) committed war crimes, including
summary executions and systematic reprisals against the civilian population. Resistance captives and suspects were often tortured and raped. Some of the most notorious mass atrocities included the
Ardeatine massacre (335 Jewish civilians and political prisoners executed without a trial in a reprisal operation after a resistance bomb
attack in Rome), the
Sant'Anna di Stazzema massacre (about 560 random villagers brutally killed in an anti-partisan operation in the central mountains), the
Marzabotto massacre (about 770 civilians killed in similar circumstances), the
Ossola massacre (24 partisans murdered during their retreat from
Croveo to Switzerland) and the
Salussola massacre (20 partisans murdered after being tortured, as a reprisal). In all, an estimated 15,000 Italian civilians were deliberately killed, including many women and children. File:Bundesarchiv Bild 101I-476-2051-39A, Italien, Rom, erhängte Frau, deutsche Soldaten.jpg|A woman executed by public hanging in a street of
Rome, early 1944 File:Bundesarchiv Bild 101I-477-2106-08, Bei Mailand, Soldat Zivilisten kontrollierend.jpg| German soldier examining the papers of an Italian civilian outside of
Milan (1944) File:Santanna tafel des kreuzweges.JPG|The
Sant'Anna di Stazzema massacre memorial relief File:Fidenza cippo alla memoria Amilcare Dallagherarda Fausto Fornaciari.jpg|Memorial stone in
Soragna for two Italian partisans – killed in 1944
Civil war Although other European countries such as
Norway, the
Netherlands, and
France also had partisan movements and
collaborationist governments with
Nazi Germany, armed confrontation between compatriots was more intense in Italy, making the Italian case unique. In 1965, the definition of "civil war" was used for the first time by fascist politician and historian
Giorgio Pisanò in his books, while
Claudio Pavone's book
Una guerra civile. Saggio storico sulla moralità della Resistenza (
A Civil War. Historical Essay On the Morality Of the Resistance), published in 1991, led to the term "
Italian Civil War" being used more frequently by Italian and international historiography.
Foreign contribution ) with Italian and Yugoslav names Not all resistance members were Italians; many foreigners had escaped
POW camps or joined guerrilla bands as so-called "military missions". Among them were Yugoslavs, Czechs (deserters from the
Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia army, in Italy for guard/patrol duty in 1944), Russians, Ukrainians, Dutch, Spaniards, Greeks, Poles, German defectors and deserters disillusioned with
Nazism and Britons and Americans (ex-prisoners or advisors deployed by the SAS,
SOE and
OSS). Some later became well-known, such as climber and explorer
Bill Tilman, reporter and historian
Peter Tompkins, former
RAF pilot
Count Manfred Beckett Czernin, and architect
Oliver Churchill.
George Dunning recorded his experiences of fighting with the partisans in his book "Where bleed the many".
Aid networks Another task carried out by the resistance was assisting escaping POWs (an estimated 80,000 were interned in Italy until 8 September 1943), to reach Allied lines or Switzerland on paths previously used by smugglers. Some fugitives and groups of fugitives hid in safe houses, usually arranged by women (less likely to arouse suspicion). After the war, Field Marshal
Harold Alexander issued a certificate to those who thereby risked their lives.
Italian Jews were aided by
DELASEM, a network extending throughout occupied Italy that included Jews and Gentiles,
Roman Catholic clergy, faithful/sympathetic police officers and even some German soldiers. DELASEM operated in Rome until the liberation under the leadership of the Jewish delegates Septimius Sorani, Giuseppe Levi, and the
Capuchin Father
Maria Benedetto. Since Jews were considered "enemy aliens" by the Social Republic regime, they were left with little or nothing to live on, and many were deported to Nazi concentration and extermination camps where about 7,000 died. DELASEM helped thousands of Jews by offering food, shelter and money. Some of its members would later be designated
Righteous Among the Nations. == Liberation ==