Republic of Alto Monferrato

The Republic of Alto Monferrato was a short lived partisan state existing from September to December 2, 1944. The state came to exist following the political union of two Italian resistance movements based in Nizza Monferrato and Costigliole d'Asti of the southern Montferrat region.[1] Its main territory comprised the towns of Moasca, San Marzano Oliveto, Calamandrana, Mombercelli, Bruno, Bergamasco, and Castelnuovo Belbo. There were four subdivisions of Alto Monferrato's troops; the VIII and IX division led by the Gribaldi Brigades, and the II and V division led autonomously. [2]

Republic of Alto Monferrato
Repubblica dell'Alto Monferrato
1944
Flag of Alto Monferrato
Flag
StatusUnrecognized state
CapitalNizza Monferrato
Common languagesItalian, Piedmontese
GovernmentItalian partisan republic
Historical eraWorld War II
 Established
September 1944
 Captured during Operation Koblenz-Süd
December 2, 1944
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Italian Social Republic
Italian Social Republic

Operation Koblenz-Süd

The republic was left to a swift and violent end in Operation Koblenz-Süd, a roundup led by Nazi German troops and supported by Fascist Italy. When the enemy troops arrived, the resistance troops (often new recruits with limited military experience) fled into the mountains. The Nazis quickly occupied Nizza Monferrato in December 2, de facto beheading the republic and rounding civilians suspected of supporting partisan forces. The operation ended only three weeks after, in December 21, with around 400 partisans captured and shot.[3] Surviving prisoners, one including a member of the Alto Monferrato council, were sent to Nazi concentration camps. Captured civilians, nearing one thousands, were also sent to forced labor in Germany.[2]

References

  1. "PERCORSO LA REPUBBLICA PARTIGIANA DELL'ALTO MONFERRATO" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on 2016-03-05.
  2. Renosio, Mario. La Repubblica partigiana dell'Alto Monferrato (PDF). p. 12.
  3. Renosio, Mario. Episodio di Mombaldone, 05.12.1944 (PDF). straginazifasciste.it.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.