Brigades and
MAB38 submachine guns Despite the direct link with PCI, the Garibaldi Brigades had notable leaders who were not communist militants, like the Catholic and apolitical
Aldo Gastaldi (with the battle name "Bisagno", after the
homonymous torrent stream), one of the most important partisan commanders in
Genoa, the apolitical
Mario Musolesi (battle name "Lupo"), leader of the
Brigata Partigiana Stella Rossa killed by Germans during the roundup of
Marzabotto, the anarchic
Emilio Canzi, the sole commander of the 13th operative zone of Tuscan Emilian Apennines. Moreover,
Aldo Aniasi remained at the command of the in Ossola despite he had left the PCI in order to join the PSI, while
Luigi Pierobon, one of the leaders of the
Italian Catholic Federation of University Students of
Veneto, had an important part in the creation of the . Some monarchical officers also joined the BGs and obtained the command of detachments, battalions or even entire brigades, for their military preparation, like captain
Ugo Ricci (among the first promoters of the resistance in the
province of Como, killed in action during the battle of
Lenno) and lieutenant count
Luchino Dal Verme, who commanded as "Maino" the
88ª Brigata "Casotti" and later the entire "
Antonio Gramsci" division in the
Oltrepò Pavese. Those situations led sometimes to diatribes and contrasts that did not reduced the common will of antifascist struggle and the related application in fight. The most famous groups of Garibaldi Brigades were those of
Vincenzo Moscatelli "Cino" and
Eraldo Gastone "Ciro" in the
Partisan Republic of Valsesia,
Pompeo Colajanni "Barbato",
Vincenzo Modica "Petralia" and
Giovanni Latilla "Nanni" in
Valle Po and
Langhe,
Francesco Moranino "Gemisto" in
Biella,
Mario Ricci "Armando" in
Modena and
Arrigo Boldrini "Bulow" in
Romagna. Together with BGs, there were the
Gruppi di azione patriottica (GAP, "Groups of Patriotic Action"), specialised in sabotages and attempts against Nazi-fascist occupants. GAPs and BGs represented almost 50% of the forces of the partisan Resistance. At the final insurrection of April 1945, the active combatants were about 51,000 divided in 23 "divisions" on a total of about 100,000 partisans. On 15 April 1945, the general command of Garibaldi Brigades was formed by nine divisions in Piedmont (15,000 members), three in Lombardy (4,000 members), four in Veneto (10,000), three in Emilia (12,000) and four divisions (10,000) in Liguria. The distinguished by their political symbols of their uniforms: red handkerchiefs around the neck, red stars on hats, emblems with
hammer and sickle. Despite the directives of CVL command aimed to unite all the combatant formations and to promote the use of national badges and the military salute, militants of the brigades continued to be indifferent towards those directives, remaining faithful to their traditions, and most of them continued to salute with the
raised fist.
General command Generally, Garibaldi Brigades received orders from the PCI representative among the
Corpo Volontari della Libertà, who was
Luigi Longo (battle name "Italo"), and from the
National Liberation Committee. However, all the BGs depended directly on the general command, formed by general commander Longo,
Pietro Secchia (battle name "Botte" or "Vineis"), who was also the political commissar of the brigades,
Giancarlo Pajetta ("Luca", deputy commander);
Giorgio Amendola ("Palmieri"),
Antonio Carini ("Orsi", killed in March 1944), Francesco Leone, Umberto Massola, Antonio Roasio, Francesco Scotti and
Eugenio Curiel (killed on 24 February 1945). Those leaders developed the Garibaldi resistance movements and spread the communist influence in northern Italy. Along with Longo, Secchia and the other members of the general command, other important figures were active in the regional coordination like
Antonio Roasio ("Paolo"), who controlled the brigades in Veneto and Emilia, Francesco Scotti ("Fausto" or "Grossi"), who led the formations in Piedmont and Liguria, and
Pietro Vergani ("Fabio"), responsible in Lombardy. The Italian Communist Party had a decisive role in the strengthening and the organization; since the beginning, structures of the party had decided that at least the 10% of the cadres and the 15% of the subscribers had to be sent to the mountains in order to create the fundamental nucleus of aggregation and cohesion around which the units had to be developed. Moreover,
Brigate Garibaldi had their representatives in the regional commands of CVL, who were
Giordano Pratolongo and then Francesco Scotti (Piedmont); Pietro Vergani (Lombardy), Liguria
Luigi Pieragostini and Carlo Farini (Liguria) after his arrest on 27 December 1944,
Ilio Barontini (Emilia-Romagna), Pratolongo and then
Aldo Lampredi (Veneto), Luigi Gaiami and then
Francesco Leone and Antonio Roasio (Tuscany), Alessandro Vaia (Marche) and
Celso Ghini (Umbria). In
Trieste there were
Luigi Frausin and
Vincenzo Gigante who, in connection with the general command, had relations with the
Yugoslav partisans supporting the need to postpone the territorial revendications until the end of the war, in order to fight together against the common enemy. Frausin and Gigante were captured by the German on 28 August and 15 November 1944 respectively, interned and killed in the camp of
Risiera di San Sabba. A typical characteristic of the Garibaldi Brigades was the contrast attempt to transform the partisan formations into an avant-garde and constitutive element of the process of involving the populations in the active anti-fascism, with a continuous effort of integration between the armed fight and the civil mobilisation through their representatives. With a further organizational effort, communist leaders of
Milan created in June 1944 the so-called "insurrection triumvirates" () at regional level, in order to coordinate the political struggle of the party among the occupied cities and in the workplaces through the concrete action of partisan mountain groups in view of a general insurrection. == Insurrection and end of the war ==