He was born in
Comiso,
province of Ragusa, on 22 May 1891, and attended the Royal Military Academy of Artillery and Engineers of
Turin, graduating in 1912 with the rank of artillery
second lieutenant. He participated in the
First World War, during which he was promoted to the rank of
captain, distinguishing himself during his service with the 3rd Field Artillery Regiment, and earning a
War Cross for Military Valor during the fighting on the
Montello during the
Second Battle of the Piave River. On 1 July 1937 he was promoted to the rank of
colonel. In 1940 he was Commander of the
Central Artillery School of
Civitavecchia. On 1 January 1942 he was promoted to
brigadier general, and on 21 February of the same year he was appointed commander of the artillery of General
Umberto Spigo's
XVIII Army Corps, stationed in
Dalmatia. At the proclamation of the
Armistice of Cassibile, on 8 September 1943, Pelligra was in
Split, then garrisoned by the
15th Infantry Division Bergamo, under the command of General
Emilio Becuzzi, senior to him and the highest ranking officer in the area. Becuzzi initially decided to resist the Germans by joining forces with the
Yugoslav partisans, but at the same time informed them he would not fight against the former allies. On 11 September Becuzzi held a
war council with his officers, suggesting to hand over all weapons to the Yugoslav partisans, abstain from fighting the Germans, and dissolve all Italian units in the area. Both Pelligra and General
Alfonso Cigala Fulgosi, commander of the Split Fortress Area, firmly refused to give up their arms, expressing their desire to fight the Germans. The
High Command was asked for reinforcements, but instead it sent ships to pick up some 3,000 soldiers on 23 September. General Becuzzi left with them, leaving Pelligra, who had refused to leave as long as any of his soldiers were stranded in Split, in command. On the following day the
7th SS Volunteer Mountain Division Prinz Eugen, supported by some squadrons of
Junkers Ju 87 dive bombers, captured Split.
Obergruppenführer Karl Reichsritter von Oberkamp, commander of the "Prinz Eugen" Division, ordered that all Italian officers who had made common cause with the Yugoslav partisans were to be executed. Pelligra was
sentenced to death by a
drumhead court-martial presided by Ritter von Oberkamp, and executed by
firing squad near
Sinj on 1 October 1943, along with General Cigala Fulgosi and Brigadier General
Angelo Policardi, commander of the Engineers of the XVIII Army Corps. On the following day, another forty-six officers (five colonels, one lieutenant colonel, two majors, twenty-three captains, ten lieutenants and five second lieutenants) were shot near
Trilj. Pelligra was posthumously awarded the
Gold Medal of Military Valor. ==References==