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Massacre of the Acqui Division

The Massacre of the Acqui Division, also known as the Cephalonia massacre, was a war crime by German soldiers against POWs of the Italian 33rd Infantry Division "Acqui" on the island of Cephalonia, Greece, in September 1943, following the Italian armistice during the Second World War.[1][2][3] About 5,000 soldiers were executed, and around 3,000 more drowned.

Massacre of the Acqui Division
The island of Cephalonia
LocationCephalonia, Ionian Islands, Kingdom of Greece
Coordinates38°15′N 20°35′E / 38.25°N 20.59°E / 38.25; 20.59
Date21–26 September 1943
Attack type
Deaths6,470 killed
  • 1,315 killed in action against German forces (300 German soldiers were killed in action prior to the surrender of the Italians)
  • 5,155 prisoners of war executed
    (including General Antonio Gandin)
Approximately another 3,000 POWs drowned after their transport ships were sunk by Allied aircraft and sea mines, amounting to 9,500 Italian soldiers being killed, of the 12,000 strong division
Victims Royal Italian Army
Perpetrators German Army Gen. Hubert Lanz
Lt. Col. Johannes Barge
Maj. Harald von Hirschfeld

Following the decision of the Italian government to negotiate a surrender to the Allies in 1943, the German Army tried to disarm the Italians during Operation Achse. On 13 September the Italians of the Acqui resisted, and fought the Germans on the island of Cephalonia. By 22 September the last of the Italian resistance surrendered after running out of ammunition. A total of 1,315 Italians were killed in the battle, 5,155 were executed by 26 September, and 3,000 drowned when the German ships taking the survivors to concentration camps were sunk by the Allies. It was one of the largest prisoner of war massacres of the war, along with the Katyn massacre,[4][5] and it was one of many atrocities committed by the 1st Mountain Division (German: 1. Gebirgs Division).[6]

History edit

Background edit

 
General Antonio Gandin, commander of the Acqui Division

Since the fall of Greece in April–May 1941, the country had been divided in occupation zones, with the Italians getting the bulk of the mainland and most islands. The Acqui Division had been the Italian garrison of Cephalonia since May 1943,[7] and consisted of 11,500 soldiers and 525 officers. It was composed of two infantry regiments (the 17th and the 317th), the 33rd artillery regiment, the 27th Blackshirt Legion with the XIX Blackshirt Battalion and support units. Furthermore, its 18th Regiment was detached to garrison duties in Corfu. The Acqui also had naval coastal batteries, torpedo boats and two aircraft.[7] From 18 June 1943, it was commanded by the 52-year-old General Antonio Gandin, a decorated veteran of the Russian Front where he earned the German Iron Cross.[4]

The Germans decided to reinforce their presence throughout the Balkans, following Allied successes and the possibility that Italy might seek accommodation with the Allies. On 5–6 July Lt Colonel Johannes Barge arrived with 2,000 men of the 966th Fortress Grenadier Regiment, including Fortress-Battalions 810 and 909 and a battery of self-propelled guns and nine tanks.[7]

After Italy's armistice with the Allies in September 1943, General Gandin found himself in a dilemma: one option was surrendering to the Germans – who were already prepared for the eventuality and had begun disarming Italian garrisons elsewhere – or trying to resist.[8] Initially, Gandin requested instructions from his superiors and began negotiations with Barge.[9]

On 8 September 1943, the day the armistice was made public, General Carlo Vecchiarelli, commander of the 170,000-strong Italian army occupying Greece, telegrammed Gandin his order, essentially a copy of General Ambrosio's promemoria 2 from Headquarters. Vecchiarelli's order instructed that if the Germans did not attack the Italians, the Italians should not attack the Germans. Ambrosio's order stated that the Italians should not "make common cause" with the Greek partisans or even the Allies, should they arrive in Cephalonia.[10]

In the case of a German attack, Vecchiarelli's order was not very specific because it was based on General Pietro Badoglio's directive which stated that the Italians should respond with "maximum decision" to any threat from any side.[7] The order implied that the Italians should defend themselves but did not explicitly state so. At 22:30 hours of the same day Gandin received an order directly from General Ambrosio to send most of his naval and merchant vessels to Brindisi immediately, as demanded by the terms of the armistice. Gandin complied, thus losing a possible means of escape.[10]

To make matters even more complicated Badoglio had agreed, after the overthrow of Mussolini, to the unification of the two armies under German command, in order to appease the Germans. Therefore, technically, both Vecchiarelli and Gandin were under German command, even though Italy had implemented an armistice agreement with the Allies.[10] That gave the Germans a sense of justification in treating any Italians disobeying their orders as mutineers or francs-tireurs,[7] which, at that time, the laws of war considered unlawful combatants subject to execution on capture.

At 9:00 hours on 9 September, Barge met with Gandin and misled him by stating that he had received no orders from the German command. The two men liked each other and they had things in common as Gandin was pro-German and liked Goethe. Indeed, Gandin's pro-German attitude was the reason he had been sent by General Ambrosio to command the Acqui Division: fearing he might side with the Germans against the evolving plot to depose Mussolini, Ambrosio wanted Gandin out of Italy. Both men ended their meeting on good terms, agreeing to wait for orders and also that the situation should be resolved peacefully.[10]

 
 
The two orders (1027/CS and 1029/CS) received by Gandin from the Italian Comando Supremo, ordering him to resist the German forces.

On 11 September, the Italian High Command sent two explicit instructions to Gandin, to the effect that "German troops have to be viewed as hostile" and that "disarmament attempts by German forces must be resisted with weapons". That same day Barge handed Gandin an ultimatum, demanding a decision given the following three options:[10]

  1. Continue fighting on the German side
  2. Fight against the Germans
  3. Hand over arms peacefully

Gandin brought Barge's ultimatum to his senior officers and the seven chaplains of the Acqui for discussion. Six of the chaplains and all of his senior officers advised him to comply with the German demands while one of the chaplains suggested immediate surrender. However, Gandin could not agree to join the Germans because that would be against the King's orders as relayed by Badoglio. He also did not want to fight them because, as he said, "they had fought with us and for us, side by side". On the other hand, surrendering the weapons would violate the spirit of the armistice.[10] Despite the orders from the Italian GHQ, Gandin chose to continue negotiating with Barge.[9][10]

 
Barge's telegram to his superiors, reporting Gandin's decision to hand over only heavy weaponry, and the German troops' readiness to attack

Gandin finally agreed to withdraw his soldiers from their strategic location on Mount Kardakata, the island's "nerve centre",[10] in return for a German promise not to bring reinforcements from the Greek mainland and on 12 September, he informed Barge that he was prepared to surrender the Acqui's weapons,[9][10] as Lt Colonel Barge reported to his superiors in the XXII Mountain Corps. However, Gandin was under pressure not to come to an agreement with the Germans from his junior officers who were threatening mutiny.[10] The Acqui's detached regiment on Corfu, not commanded by Gandin, also informed him at around midnight 12–13 September, by radio communication, that they had rejected an agreement with the Germans. Gandin also heard from credible sources that soldiers who had surrendered were being deported and not repatriated.[10]

On 13 September, a German convoy of five ships approached the island's capital, Argostoli.[10] Italian artillery officers, on their own initiative, ordered the remaining batteries to open fire, sinking two German landing craft and killing five Germans.[7][10]

Under these circumstances, that same night, Gandin presented his troops with a poll, essentially containing the three options presented to him by Barge:[10][11]

  1. Join the Germans
  2. Surrender and be repatriated
  3. Resist the German forces

The response from the Italian troops was in favour of the third option by a large majority but there is no available information as to the exact size of the majority,[10] and therefore on 14 September Gandin reneged on the agreement, refusing to surrender anything but the division's heavy artillery and telling the Germans to leave the island, demanding a reply by 9:00 the next day.[9]

Battle with the Germans edit

As the negotiations stalled, the Germans prepared to resolve the crisis by force and presented the Italians with an ultimatum which expired at 14:00 hours on 15 September.[12]

On the morning of 15 September, the German Luftwaffe began bombarding the Italian positions with Stuka dive-bombers.[4] On the ground, the Italians initially enjoyed superiority, and took about 400 Germans prisoner.[7] On 17 September however, the Germans landed the "Battle Group Hirschfeld", composed of the III./98 and the 54th Mountain Battalions of the German Army's elite 1st Mountain Division, together with I./724 Battalion of the 104th Jäger Division, under the command of Major Harald von Hirschfeld.[4] The 98th Gebirgsjäger Regiment, in particular, had been involved in several atrocities against civilians in Epirus in the months preceding the Acqui massacre.[13]

At the same time, the Germans started dropping propaganda leaflets calling upon the Italians to surrender. The leaflets stated:

"Italian comrades, soldiers and officers, why fight against the Germans? You have been betrayed by your leaders!... LAY DOWN YOUR ARMS!! THE ROAD BACK TO YOUR HOMELAND WILL BE OPENED UP FOR YOU BY YOUR GERMAN COMRADES".[10]

Gandin repeatedly requested help from the Ministry of War in Brindisi, but he did not get any reply.[10] He even went so far as sending a Red Cross emissary to the Ministry, but the mission broke down off the coast of Apulia and when it arrived three days later at the Italian High Command in Brindisi, it was already too late.[10] In addition, 300 planes loyal to Badoglio were located at Lecce, near the southernmost point of Italy, well within range of Cephalonia, and were ready to intervene. But the Allies would not let them go because they feared they could have defected to the German side. Furthermore, two Italian torpedo boats, already on their way to Cephalonia, were ordered back to port by the Allies for the same reasons.[10]

Despite help for the Italians from the local population, including the island's small ELAS partisan detachments,[14] the Germans enjoyed complete air superiority and their troops had extensive combat experience, in contrast with the conscripts of Acqui, who were no match for the Germans. In addition, Gandin had withdrawn the Acqui from the elevated position on Mount Kardakata and that gave the Germans an additional strategic advantage.[10] After several days of fighting, at 11:00 hours on 22 September, following Gandin's orders, the last Italians surrendered, having run out of ammunition and having lost 1,315 men.[8] According to German sources, the losses were 300 Germans and 1,200 Italians.[10] 15 Greek partisans were also killed fighting alongside the Acqui.[15]

Massacre edit

 
Major Harald von Hirschfeld, commander of the Gebirgsjäger troops on Cephalonia.

The massacre started on 21 September, and lasted for one week.[16] After the Italian surrender, Hitler had issued an order allowing the Germans to summarily execute any Italian officer who resisted "for treason", and on 18 September, the German High Command issued an order stating that "because of the perfidious and treacherous behaviour [of the Italians] on Cephalonia, no prisoners are to be taken."[17][10][18] The Gebirgsjäger soldiers began executing their Italian prisoners in groups of four to ten.[4] The Germans first killed the surrendering Italians, where they stood, using machine-guns. When a group of Bavarian soldiers objected to this practice they were threatened with summary execution themselves.[citation needed] After this stage was over, the Germans marched the remaining soldiers to the San Teodoro town hall and had the prisoners executed by eight member detachments.[7] General Gandin and 137 of his senior officers were summarily court-martialled on 24 September and executed, their bodies discarded at sea.[18] The divisional infantry commander, General Luigi Gherzi, had already been executed on 22 September, immediately after his capture, while the fighting was still ongoing.

 
Padre Romualdo Formato, one of the seven chaplains of the Acqui Division.

Romualdo Formato, one of Acqui's seven chaplains and one of the few survivors, wrote that during the massacre, the Italian officers started to cry, pray and sing. Many were shouting the names of their mothers, wives and children.[8] According to Formato's account, three officers hugged and stated that they were comrades while alive and now in death they would go together to paradise, while others were digging through the grass as if trying to escape. In one place, Formato recalled, "the Germans went around loudly offering medical help to those wounded. When about 20 men crawled forward, a machine-gun salvo finished them off."[18] Officers gave Formato their belongings to take with him and give to their families back in Italy. The Germans, however, confiscated the items and Formato could no longer account for the exact number of the officers killed.[10]

The executions of the Italian officers were continuing when a German officer came and reprieved Italians who could prove they were from South Tyrol as that region had been annexed by Hitler as a German province after 8 September. Seeing an opportunity, Formato begged the officer to stop the killings and save the few officers remaining. The German officer responded and told Formato that he would consult with his commanding officer.[19] When the officer returned, after half an hour, he informed Formato that the killings of the officers would stop. The number of Italian surviving officers, including Formato, totaled 37. After the reprieve the Germans congratulated the remaining Italians and offered them cigarettes.[10] The situation remained unstable, however. Following the reprieve, the Germans forced twenty Italian sailors to load the bodies of the dead officers on rafts and take them out to sea. The Germans then blew up the rafts with the Italian sailors on board.[7][10][20]

Alfred Richter, an Austrian and one of the participants in the massacre, recounted how a soldier who sang arias for the Germans in the local taverns was forced to sing while his comrades were being executed. The singing soldier's fate remains unknown.[10] Richter stated that he and his regiment comrades felt "a delirium of omnipotence" during the events. Most of the soldiers of the German regiment were Austrians.[10]

According to Richter the Italian soldiers were killed after surrendering to the soldiers of the 98th Regiment. He described that the bodies were then thrown into heaps, all shot in the head. Soldiers of the 98th Regiment started removing the boots from the corpses for their own use. Richter mentioned that groups of Italians were taken into quarries and walled gardens near the village of Frangata and executed by machine gun fire. The killing lasted for two hours, during which time the sound of the shooting and the screams of the victims could be heard inside the homes of the village.[21]

The bodies of the ca. 5,000 men who were executed were disposed of in a variety of ways. Bodies were cremated in massive wood pyres, which made the air of the island thick with the smell of burning flesh,[10] or moved to ships where they were buried at sea.[8][10][22][23] Others, according to Amos Pampaloni, one of the survivors, were executed in full sight of the Greek population in Argostoli harbour on 23 September 1943 and their bodies were left to rot where they fell, while in smaller streets corpses were decomposing and the stench was insufferable to the point that he could not remain there long enough to take a picture of the carnage.[24] Bodies were thrown into the sea, with rocks tied around them. In addition, the Germans had refused to allow the Acqui soldiers to bury their dead.[10] A chaplain set out to find bodies, discovering bones scattered all over.[10]

The few soldiers who were saved were assisted by locals and the ELAS organisation.[16] One of the survivors was taken heavily wounded to a Cephalonian lady's home by a taxi driver and survived the war to live in Lake Como.[8] An additional three thousand of the survivors in German custody drowned, when the ships Sinfra, Mario Roselli and Ardena, transporting them to concentration camps, were sunk by Allied air raids and sea mines in the Adriatic.[22][25] These losses and similar ones from the Italian Dodecanese garrisons were also the result of German policy, as Hitler had instructed the local German commanders to forgo "all safety precautions" during the transport of prisoners, "regardless of losses".[25] In a book review published by Corriere della Sera, other estimates of the Italian soldiers massacred at Cephalonia range between 1,650–3,800.[26]

Aftermath edit

 
Italian soldiers taken prisoner by the Germans in Corfu, September 1943.

The events in Cephalonia were repeated, to a lesser extent, elsewhere. In Corfu, the 8,000-strong Italian garrison comprised elements of three divisions, including the Acqui's 18th Regiment. On 24 September, the Germans landed a force on the island (characteristically codenamed "Operation Treason"), and by the next day they were able to induce the Italians to capitulate.[27]

All 280 Italian officers on the island were executed during the next two days on the orders of General Lanz, in accordance with Hitler's directives. The bodies were loaded onto a ship and disposed of in the sea.[27] Similar executions of officers also occurred in the aftermath of the Battle of Kos, where between 96 and 103 Italian officers were shot along with their commander.[28]

In October 1943, after Mussolini had been freed and established his new Fascist Republic in Northern Italy, the Germans gave the remaining Italian prisoners three choices:

  1. Continue fighting on the German side
  2. Forced labour on the island
  3. Concentration camps in Germany

Most Italians opted for the second choice.[10]

In January 1944, a chaplain's account reached Benito Mussolini after Aurelio Garobbio, a Swiss Fascist from the Italian-speaking Canton of Ticino, informed him about the events. Mussolini became incensed that the Germans would do such a thing, although he considered the Acqui division's officers, more so than its soldiers, traitors. Nevertheless, in one of his exchanges with Garobbio, after Garobbio complained that the Germans showed no mercy, he said: "But our men defended themselves, you know. They hit several German landing craft sinking them. They fought how Italians know how to fight".[10]

Prosecution edit

 
General Lanz, commander of the XXII Mountain Corps, at the Nuremberg Trials. To date he is the only person to have served a prison sentence for the events in Cephalonia.[29]

Major Harald von Hirschfeld was never tried for his role in the massacre since he did not survive the war: in December 1944, he became the Wehrmacht's youngest general officer, and was killed while fighting at the Dukla Pass in Poland in 1945.[4] Only Hirschfeld's superior commander, General Hubert Lanz, was sentenced to 12 years imprisonment at the so-called "Southeast Case" of the Nuremberg Trials for the Cephalonia massacre, as well as the participation of his men in other atrocities in Greece like the massacre of Kommeno on 16 August 1943.[6] He was released in 1951[4] and died in 1982. Lt Colonel Barge was not on the island when the massacre was taking place. He was subsequently decorated with the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross for his service in Crete. He died in 2000.[9]

The reason for Lanz's light sentence was that the court at Nuremberg was deceived by false evidence and did not believe that the massacre took place, despite a book about the massacre by padre Formato published in 1946, a year before the trial.[10][30] Because there was doubt as to who issued what order, Lanz was only charged with the deaths of Gandin and the officers.[10] Lanz lied in court by stating he had refused to obey Hitler's orders to shoot the prisoners because he was revolted by them. He claimed that the report to Army Group E, claiming 5,000 soldiers were shot, was a ruse employed to deceive the army command in order to hide the fact that he had disobeyed the Führer's orders. He added that fewer than a dozen officers were shot and the rest of the Acqui Division was transported to Piraeus through Patras.[30]

In his testimony, Lanz was assisted by affidavits from other Germans such as General von Butlar from Hitler's personal staff, who was involved in the Ardeatine massacre. The Germans were with Lanz in September 1943 and swore that the massacre had never taken place. In addition, for reasons unknown, the Italian side never presented any evidence for the massacre at the Nuremberg trials. It is speculated that the Italians, reeling from armistice terms highly unfavourable for their country, refused to cooperate with the trial process. Given the circumstances the court accepted Lanz's position that he prevented the massacre and that the event never happened. Consequently, Lanz received a lighter sentence[30] than General Rendulic for his misdeed in Yugoslavia, who was released in late 1951 nevertheless, after only three years of imprisonment.[31]

Lanz's defence emphasised that the prosecution had not presented any Italian evidence for the massacre and claimed that there was no evidence the Italian headquarters in Brindisi had ever instructed Gandin and his Division to fight. Therefore, according to the logic of the defence, Gandin and his men were either mutineers or franc-tireurs and did not qualify for POW status under the Geneva conventions.[30]

The Germans justified their behaviour by claiming the Italians were negotiating the surrender of the island to the British.[16] The German claim was not entirely unfounded: in the Greek mainland, an entire division went over to the Greek guerrillas, and in the Dodecanese, the Italians had joined forces with the British, resulting in a two-month German campaign to evict them.[32]

An attempt to revisit the case by the Dortmund state prosecutor Johannes Obluda in 1964 came to naught, as the political climate in Germany at the time was in favour of "putting the war behind".[18] In 2002 Dortmund prosecutor Ultrich Maaßs reopened a case against certain persons responsible for the massacre.[4][16] In his office, along with a map of the world, Maaßs displayed a map of Cephalonia with the dates and locations of the executions as well as the names of the victims.[16] No indictments or arrests resulted from Maaßs' investigation.[23] Ten ex-members of the 1st Gebirgs Division have been investigated, out of 300 still alive.[4]

In 2013, Alfred Stork (1923 - 28 October 2018), a 90-year-old German ex-corporal, was sentenced in absentia to life imprisonment for his role in the massacre by a military court in Rome.[33]

Interpretations and perspectives on the Cephalonia Massacre: the historical debate in Italy edit

In Italy, the traditional interpretation of the Cephalonia Massacre places the event in the context of the Resistance against Nazi-fascism. Within this framework, there are readings that view the soldiers of the Acqui Division as genuine anti-fascists. There are also interpretations that see them as patriots who decided not to surrender their weapons and decided to fight and die for their country. In both cases, the resistance nature of the event lies in the awareness of choice, which transforms those soldiers from mere executors of orders into "volunteer" fighters. Despite the Acqui Division having fought the Germans following an order from the Supreme Command, in fact, the majority of its troops expressed the desire to oppose the Germans before such order arrived on the island.

According to this interpretation, the choice to resist the Germans, voluntary and conscious, was also majority, if not plebiscitary: therefore, the Division faced the clash as a compact force. From this point of view, the well-established disputes that emerged before the battle between the "rebel" officers and the "hesitator" Gandin are interpreted as the opposition between the impetuosity of young men eager to fight and the wise family man negotiating with the Germans, who would like to save the honor of the arms and the lives of his soldiers: a simple generational contrast that does not question the unity of intentions between the commander and his subordinates.

These are the pillars upon which the idea of Cephalonia as the "first act of the Resistance"[34] is based, often mentioned in memoirs and present in the work of authoritative historians.

From the very beginning, polemical readings of the facts have opposed the canonical interpretation: on the one hand, some survivors expressed very critical judgments against the actions of General Gandin, considered too weak or even intending to betray to bring the Division into the German field; on the other hand, others accused some young officers, predominantly reserves, identifying in their rebellion against Gandin the main cause of a useless clash and the fierce reprisal that followed.

The fracture among the survivors corresponds to two historiographical interpretations of the facts that, although diametrically opposed, can both be traced within the realm of revisionism, understood as criticism of the dominant thought.

The historical researcher Massimo Filippini[35] accuses the young 'rebel' officers. The main culprit, among the many who immediately sided with the clash against the Germans, is identified in the person of Captain Renzo Apollonio, to whom Filippini also attributes the disgrace of having collaborated with the Germans after the battle. According to Filippini, Apollonio and the others were guilty of insubordination, conspiracy, and rebellion, hindering Gandin's work, who, far from wanting to betray, was only seeking a peaceful and, above all, honorable solution to the complicated situation in which the Division found itself. Note that the hypothesis of incitement, together with a critical judgment on the action of Apollonio, has recently been taken up by a historian of undisputed value such as Elena Aga Rossi.[36]

But Filippini's revisionism goes further; he is indeed one of the supporters of the legitimacy of the execution of Italian prisoners, basing his affirmation on the well-known argument that, in the absence of a declaration of war, these were to be considered franc-tireurs, an argument devoid of legal basis, as detailed by Marco De Paolis.[37]

Opposed to those of Filippini and Aga Rossi are the theses of the historian Paolo Paoletti,[38] the main accuser of Gandin, according to whom the general acted with the intention of leading the Division into the German field after the armistice. Paoletti goes beyond the accusations of ineptitude and weakness commonly directed at the general by his detractors: Gandin, from the outset, intended to hand over the armed division to the Germans to continue fighting alongside them and, to this end, negotiated with them. Reversing Filippini's view, according to Paoletti, the young "rebel" officers and, in particular, Captain Renzo Apollonio were heroes, whose initiative thwarted the plan of the "traitor" Gandin. Therefore, Gandin betrayed his own country, trying to bring the Division over to the enemy's side, but he also betrayed the Germans when, forced by his subordinates, he ordered the Acqui to fight against the Wehrmacht; for this reason, according to Paoletti, Gandin was not shot alongside the other officers.

More recently, interpretations have been added to the canonical and revisionist readings of the affair, shifting the choice of the soldiers of the Acqui from the ideological sphere to the moral one. According to Gian Enrico Rusconi,[39] the first desire of those men was to return home, but not at all costs: keeping their weapons, safely and honorably, as befits a soldier who has done his duty. This is a significant downsizing of the epic of Cephalonia, which, however, does not deprive the soldiers of the Acqui of a 'heroic' aspect: not the heroism of the political martyr or the soldier faithful to the extreme sacrifice, but that of the good family man who tries to make his way back home, refusing to yield to dishonorable compromises.

Even Patrizia Gabrielli[40] proposes an unconventional reading of the facts, according with her the distance from home, the loss of the role of head of the family, now fully covered by the women at home, the apathy and frustration due to the long inactivity may have pushed those men to fight to reclaim, against the humiliating conditions imposed by the Germans, their dignity, which actually never failed during that apparent holiday that, unlike what is described in the film 'Mediterraneo', did not make them lose their sense of responsibility.

Finally, Silvio Olivero[41] tries to mediate between the different interpretations. Olivero, noting the diversity of views that characterized the soldiers of the Acqui in the approach to the clash and the multiplicity of possible motivations that led them to fight, all plausible and worthy of being remembered, identifies the main merit of those men precisely in their capacity to smooth over differences. According to Olivero: "Moved by such different motivations (loyalty to the Crown, military obedience, anti-fascism, the desire for redemption, the desire to return home honorably), the soldiers of the Acqui were therefore the first Italians to leave behind the fierce divisions that in Italy would have caused countless deaths";[42] in Cephalonia "the divisions that in Italy would have led to civil war were revealed, but the soldiers of the Acqui knew how to overcome them: they were the first fighters of the Resistance, but also - and above all - the first Italians who regained unity by overcoming the differences that opposed them".[43]

Commemoration edit

 
The Italian President Giorgio Napolitano in Cephalonia during remembrance ceremonies in honour of the soldiers of the 33rd Infantry Division "Acqui"

In the 1950s, the remains of about 3,000 soldiers, including 189 officers, were exhumed and transported back to Italy for burial in the Italian War Cemetery in Bari. The remains of General Gandin were never identified.[4]

The subject of the massacre was largely ignored in Italy by the press and the educational system until 1980, when the Italian President Sandro Pertini, a former partisan, unveiled the memorial in Cephalonia. The massacre provided the historical background to the 1994 novel Captain Corelli's Mandolin.[44][17] Despite the recognition of the event by Pertini, it was not until March 2001 that another Italian President, Carlo Azeglio Ciampi, visited the memorial again, and even then he was most likely influenced by the publicity generated by the impending release of the Hollywood film Captain Corelli's Mandolin, based on the novel with the same name.[10] Thanks to these actions today a large number of streets in Italy are named after "Divisione Acqui".

During the ceremony Ciampi, referring to the men of the Acqui Division, declared that their "conscious decision was the first act of resistance by an Italy freed from fascism" and that "they preferred to fight and die for their fatherland".[21] The massacre of the Acqui Division is emerging as a subject of ongoing research,[45] and is regarded as a leading example of the Italian Resistance during World War II.[46]

In 2002 the Italian post issued the commemorative stamp Eccidio della Divisione Aqui.[47]

The Presidents of Greece and Italy periodically commemorate the event during ceremonies taking place in Cephalonia at the monument of the Acqui Division.[48][49] An academic conference about the massacre was held on 2–3 March 2007 in Parma, Italy.[50]

Cephalonia's Greco-Italian Society maintains an exhibition called "The Mediterraneo Exhibition", next to the Catholic church in Argostoli, where pictures, newspaper articles and documents showcasing the story of the massacre are displayed.[51][52]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ (in German). Archived from the original on 16 February 2012. Retrieved 3 September 2008.
  2. ^ O'Reilly, Charles T. (2001). Forgotten Battles: Italy's War of Liberation, 1943–1945. Lexington Books. ISBN 978-0-7391-0195-7.
  3. ^ . Greek Embassy in Washington, D.C. Archived from the original on 10 February 2012.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j "Massacres and atrocities of WWII". Almost unknown outside of Italy, this event ranks with Katyn as one of the darkest episodes of the war." "The German 11th Battalion of Jäger-Regiment 98 of the 1st Gebirgs (Mountain) Division, commanded by Major Harald von Hirschfeld, arrived on the island and soon Stukas were bombing the Italian positions.
  5. ^ "Rizospastis" (in Greek). 3 September 2000. Πρέπει να σημειωθεί πως τα βιβλία για τη σφαγή των Ιταλών στρατιωτών της Κεφαλονιάς (η μεγαλύτερη σφαγή αιχμαλώτων του Β' Παγκοσμίου Πολέμου), εκτός αυτού του Μπερνιέρ, είναι το ένα καλύτερο από το άλλο. Translation: It must be noted that the books about the massacre of the Italian soldiers in Cephalonia (the biggest massacre of prisoners of war in WWII), except the one by Bernier, are one better than the other.
  6. ^ a b "Mörder unterm Edelweiß – noch immer unter uns ("Murderers under the Edelweiss – still among us")" (in German).
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i Tucker, Spencer (2005). Encyclopedia of World War II: A Political, Social, and Military History. ABC-CLIO. pp. 313–314. ISBN 1-57607-999-6.
  8. ^ a b c d e "To Vima: The massacre of the Acqui Division" (in Greek). 25 November 2008. Ο διοικητής της ιταλικής φρουράς, στρατηγός Γκαντίν, βρέθηκε τότε σε δίλημμα: να παραδοθεί στους Γερμανούς ή να τους χτυπήσει. Από το δίλημμα τον έβγαλαν οι φαντάροι του που αποφάσισαν να αντισταθούν στους Γερμανούς, οι οποίοι στη σύντομη μάχη που ακολούθησε είχαν βαριές απώλειες. Ομως, στις 22 Σεπτεμβρίου τα πυρομαχικά των Ιταλών σώθηκαν και στις 11 το μεσημέρι ύψωσαν λευκή σημαία.
  9. ^ a b c d e "Ein Offizier im falschen Licht" (in German). Lippische Landes-Zeitung. Translation by Google
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj Farrell, Nicholas (2004). Mussolini: A New Life. Sterling Publishing Company, Inc. pp. 423–428. ISBN 1-84212-123-5. Comments:
    ("common cause", Ambrosio's tactics and Badoglio's paradox on page 423)
    (Corfu info and poll on bottom of page 424) (no match reference, Hitler's orders, "delirium of omnipotence" and Austrian origin on page 425)
    (Refusal to bury dead on page 427)
  11. ^ (in Italian). Archived from the original on 12 April 2001. Retrieved 6 December 2014.
  12. ^ Schreiber, Gerhard (1990). Die italienischen Militärinternierten im deutschen Machtbereich 1943 bis 1945: Verraten, verachtet, vergessen (in German). Oldenburg Wissenschaftsverlag. pp. 157–159. ISBN 978-3-486-55391-8.
  13. ^ Meyer, Hermann Frank: Die 1. Gebirgs-Division in Epirus im Sommer 1943, hfmeyer.com; accessed 6 December 2014.
  14. ^ "Interview with the 'real' Corelli" (in Greek). Rizospastis.
  15. ^ Milne, Seumas (28 July 2000). "Greek myth". The Guardian. Retrieved 14 January 2017.
  16. ^ a b c d e (PDF) (in Greek). Holocaust.gr. Archived from the original (PDF) on 10 February 2012. Retrieved 6 September 2008. Η δικαιολογία της γερμανικής Διοίκησης για τη σφαγή που έγινε είναι ότι οι Ιταλοί είχαν έρθει σε επαφή με τους ΄Αγγλους και έκαναν διαπραγματεύσεις μαζί τους για την παράδοση του νησιού στους Συμμάχους. Τους Καλοκαιρινούς μήνες, κατά τη διάρκεια της ναζιστικής Κατοχής. Translation : The German justification for the massacre that happened was that the Italians came in contact with the British and were negotiating the surrender of the island to the allies during the German occupation of Cephalonia in the summer of 1943. and "Ο Εισαγγελέας της γερμανικής πόλης Ντόρτμουντ εισάγει σε δίκη τους υπεύθυνους για τα εγκλήματα που διεπράχθησαν στην Κεφαλλωνιά σε βάρος της ιταλικής Μεραρχίας ΄Ακουι στη διάρκεια του Β΄ Παγκοσμίου Πολέμου. Στον τοίχο του γραφείου, του Ultrich Maaos, είναι αναρτημένοι δυο χάρτες. Ο ένας δείχνει την υφήλιο και ο άλλος απεικονίζει τη νήσο Κεφαλληνία, πάνω στον οποίο αναγράφονται οι ημερομηνίες σφαγής της Μεραρχίας ΄Ακουι από την Βέρμαχτ (Μεραρχία "Εντελβάις"), καθώς και ονόματα Ιταλών στρατιωτικών που εκτελέστηκαν όπως και οι τοποθεσίες που 4 πηγή: holocaust.gr σφαγιάσθηκαν. (Μια εβδομάδα διήρκεσαν οι εκτελέσεις. Ελάχιστοι Ιταλοί διεσώθησαν κι αυτό χάρη στην ανθρωπιά των κατοίκων του νησιού και στη δραστηριότητα του Ε.Λ.Α.Σ.).
  17. ^ a b "Corelli's comrades". That same day, military records show, the German Gen. Hubert Lanz reported from Cephalonia to Berlin: 'Final mopping up... is under way. General Gandin and his staff were captured. Special treatment in compliance with Fuhrer Order.'
  18. ^ a b c d Bönisch, Georg (June 2003). "Bäche von Blut". Der Spiegel (in German). Google translation
  19. ^ Recount of the Acqui massacre, spiegel.de; accessed 6 September 2014. (in German)
  20. ^ Mosley, Ray (2004). Mussolini: The Last 600 Days of Il Duce. Taylor Trade Publications. p. 22. ISBN 1-58979-095-2.
  21. ^ a b "Nazi massacre on island idyll", BBC.co.uk, 26 March 2001; accessed 6 December 2014.
  22. ^ a b "Hollywood goes to Italy". Historical Context: Italy invaded Greece on 28 October 1940 with 7 divisions of the 9th and 11th Armies. By 22 November, the Italians were pushed back into Albania. The Germans had to come to their aid. But when the Italian government decided to negotiate a surrender to the Allies, the German Army tried to disarm the Italians in what they called Operation ACHSE. On 29 September 1943, on the island of Cephalonia, the Germans fought the Italians of the Aqui. A total of 1315 were killed in battle, 3,000 were drowned when the German ships taking them to concentration camps were sunk by mines, and 5,325 were executed. In general, the Germans did not battle or massacre the Italians in other areas.
  23. ^ a b Venturi, Marcello. (in Greek). Archived from the original on 21 July 2011. (Mentions the fires)Google translation.
  24. ^ Willan, Philip (11 April 2001). "The real Captain Corelli". The Guardian. London, UK. Retrieved 12 May 2010. The Guardian UK Quote: "In an entry dated 23 September 1943, Corporal Richter registers the execution of Italian soldiers in Argostoli harbour, in full sight of Greek civilians and with the bodies left to rot in the autumn heat. 'In one of the small streets the smell is so bad that I can't even take a picture', he reports."
  25. ^ a b "Verletzung der Menschenrechte im Seekrieg 1939–1945: Transporte von Kriegsgefangenen Internierten oder Flüchtlingen".
  26. ^ Carioti, Antonio. "Caduti di Cefalonia, il conteggio infinito". Corriere della Sera.
  27. ^ a b "Kriegsverbrechenm der1". Retrieved 14 January 2017.
  28. ^ Massacres and Atrocities of WWII, members.iinet.net.au; accessed 6 December 2014.
  29. ^ "Lanz". Retrieved 14 January 2017.
  30. ^ a b c d Lamb, Richard (1996). War in Italy, 1943–1945: A Brutal Story. Da Capo Press. pp. 134–35. ISBN 0-306-80688-6.
  31. ^ Achleitner, Josef (13 April 2015). "Lothar Rendulic: Der Mann, der für Hitler die "Ostmark" halten sollte". nachrichten.at - Damals/Vor 100 Jahren (in German). OÖNachrichten. Retrieved 4 May 2015.
  32. ^ Levi, Aldo; Fioravanzo, Giuseppe (1972). Avvenimenti in Egeo dopo l'armistizio (Rodi, Lero e isole minori) (in Italian). Rome: Ufficio Storico della Marina Militare (Historical Department of the Italian Navy).
  33. ^ 90-year-old former Nazi soldier handed life sentence for role in Greek massacre
  34. ^ "Speech by the President of the Republic Carlo Azeglio Ciampi at the commemoration of the Italian Fallen of the "Acqui" Division in Cephalonia. Cephalonia, March 1st, 2001".
  35. ^ Filippini, Massimo (2004). La tragedia di Cefalonia. Una verità scomoda. Roma: IBN. ISBN 978-88-7565-015-5.
  36. ^ Aga Rossi, Elena (2016). Cefalonia. La resistenza, l'eccidio, il mito. Bologna: Il Mulino. ISBN 978-88-15-26515-9.
  37. ^ De Paolis, Marco; Insolvibile, Isabella (2017). Cefalonia. Il processo, la storia, i documenti. Roma: Viella. ISBN 8867289195.
  38. ^ Paoletti, Paolo (2007). Cefalonia 1943 una verità inimmaginabile. Franco Angeli. ISBN 8846482921.
  39. ^ Rusconi, Gian Enrico (2004). Cefalonia. Quando gli italiani si battono. Einaudi. ISBN 8806169289.
  40. ^ Gabrielli, Patrizia (2020). Prima della tragedia. Militari italiani a Cefalonia e Corfù. Bologna: Il Mulino. ISBN 8815275576.
  41. ^ Olivero, Silvio (2021). Vieni che ne vedrai delle belle. Lucca: Tralerighe Libri. ISBN 883287198X.
  42. ^ Olivero, Silvio (2021). Vieni che ne vedrai delle belle. Lucca: Tralerighe Libri. p. 105. ISBN 883287198X.
  43. ^ Olivero, Silvio (2021). Vieni che ne vedrai delle belle. Lucca: Tralerighe Libri. p. 106. ISBN 883287198X.
  44. ^ Holmes, Professor Richard. "The 'D-Day Dodgers'". BBC. ...the massacre of the Acqui division on the island of Cephalonia, the background to Louis de Bernières' Captain Corelli's Mandolin, was a cruel fact
  45. ^ . Archived from the original on 15 February 2012. Retrieved 8 September 2008. ...in about 30 pages, touching mainly upon several of the better known episodes, such as the massacre of the Acqui division in Cefalonia and Corfu, as well as the fate of several other military units
  46. ^ Rossi, Elena Aga and Agarossi, Elena.A Nation Collapses: The Italian Surrender of September 1943. Cambridge University Press. 2000. p. 6. ISBN 0-521-59199-6.
  47. ^ S.p.A., Poste Italiane. . e-filatelia.poste.it. Archived from the original on 13 May 2019. Retrieved 25 July 2017.
  48. ^ "Greek, Italian presidents to attend events on Cephallonia Wednesday". Athens New Agency. 25 April 2007. President of the Republic Karolos Papoulias will travel to the Ionian island of Cephallonia on Wednesday, where together with Italian President Giorgio Napolitano he will attend events commemorating the sacrifice of Italian soldiers of the 'Acqui' Division and Greek resistance fighters against the German occupation. Thousands of Italian soldiers of the brigade 'Acqui' who had surrendered to German occupation forces on the island in September 1943 after Italy's capitulation, were massacred by the Nazis. Two hundred Greek resistance fighters were also killed by the Germans. The two presidents will hold talks after the various ceremonies. Similar events were held in March 2001 in the presence of then presidents of the two countries Kostis Stephanopoulos and Carlo Azeglio Ciampi.
  49. ^ . Archived from the original on 10 February 2012. Retrieved 6 December 2014.
  50. ^ . MyKefalonia.com. Archived from the original on 5 October 2011. Retrieved 6 December 2014.
  51. ^ Gill, John and Edwards, Nick. The Rough Guide to the Ionian Islands: Kefallonia-Corfu-Ithaca-Lefkas-Paxos-Zakynthos. Rough Guides. 2003. p. 196. ISBN 1-84353-067-8.
  52. ^ (in Greek) Monument to the Acqui Division 21 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine, kefalonianet.gr; accessed 6 December 2014.

External links edit

  Media related to Massacre of the Acqui Division at Wikimedia Commons

  • (in Italian) L'eccidio della Divisione Acqui

massacre, acqui, division, also, known, cephalonia, massacre, crime, german, soldiers, against, pows, italian, 33rd, infantry, division, acqui, island, cephalonia, greece, september, 1943, following, italian, armistice, during, second, world, about, soldiers, . The Massacre of the Acqui Division also known as the Cephalonia massacre was a war crime by German soldiers against POWs of the Italian 33rd Infantry Division Acqui on the island of Cephalonia Greece in September 1943 following the Italian armistice during the Second World War 1 2 3 About 5 000 soldiers were executed and around 3 000 more drowned Massacre of the Acqui DivisionThe island of CephaloniaLocationCephalonia Ionian Islands Kingdom of GreeceCoordinates38 15 N 20 35 E 38 25 N 20 59 E 38 25 20 59Date21 26 September 1943Attack typeMass murderSummary executionDeaths6 470 killed 1 315 killed in action against German forces 300 German soldiers were killed in action prior to the surrender of the Italians 5 155 prisoners of war executed including General Antonio Gandin Approximately another 3 000 POWs drowned after their transport ships were sunk by Allied aircraft and sea mines amounting to 9 500 Italian soldiers being killed of the 12 000 strong divisionVictimsRoyal Italian Army 33rd Infantry Division Acqui PerpetratorsGerman Army 1st Mountain Division 104th Jager Division Gen Hubert LanzLt Col Johannes BargeMaj Harald von HirschfeldFollowing the decision of the Italian government to negotiate a surrender to the Allies in 1943 the German Army tried to disarm the Italians during Operation Achse On 13 September the Italians of the Acqui resisted and fought the Germans on the island of Cephalonia By 22 September the last of the Italian resistance surrendered after running out of ammunition A total of 1 315 Italians were killed in the battle 5 155 were executed by 26 September and 3 000 drowned when the German ships taking the survivors to concentration camps were sunk by the Allies It was one of the largest prisoner of war massacres of the war along with the Katyn massacre 4 5 and it was one of many atrocities committed by the 1st Mountain Division German 1 Gebirgs Division 6 Contents 1 History 1 1 Background 1 2 Battle with the Germans 1 3 Massacre 1 4 Aftermath 2 Prosecution 3 Interpretations and perspectives on the Cephalonia Massacre the historical debate in Italy 4 Commemoration 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksHistory editBackground edit nbsp General Antonio Gandin commander of the Acqui DivisionSince the fall of Greece in April May 1941 the country had been divided in occupation zones with the Italians getting the bulk of the mainland and most islands The Acqui Division had been the Italian garrison of Cephalonia since May 1943 7 and consisted of 11 500 soldiers and 525 officers It was composed of two infantry regiments the 17th and the 317th the 33rd artillery regiment the 27th Blackshirt Legion with the XIX Blackshirt Battalion and support units Furthermore its 18th Regiment was detached to garrison duties in Corfu The Acqui also had naval coastal batteries torpedo boats and two aircraft 7 From 18 June 1943 it was commanded by the 52 year old General Antonio Gandin a decorated veteran of the Russian Front where he earned the German Iron Cross 4 The Germans decided to reinforce their presence throughout the Balkans following Allied successes and the possibility that Italy might seek accommodation with the Allies On 5 6 July Lt Colonel Johannes Barge arrived with 2 000 men of the 966th Fortress Grenadier Regiment including Fortress Battalions 810 and 909 and a battery of self propelled guns and nine tanks 7 After Italy s armistice with the Allies in September 1943 General Gandin found himself in a dilemma one option was surrendering to the Germans who were already prepared for the eventuality and had begun disarming Italian garrisons elsewhere or trying to resist 8 Initially Gandin requested instructions from his superiors and began negotiations with Barge 9 On 8 September 1943 the day the armistice was made public General Carlo Vecchiarelli commander of the 170 000 strong Italian army occupying Greece telegrammed Gandin his order essentially a copy of General Ambrosio s promemoria 2 from Headquarters Vecchiarelli s order instructed that if the Germans did not attack the Italians the Italians should not attack the Germans Ambrosio s order stated that the Italians should not make common cause with the Greek partisans or even the Allies should they arrive in Cephalonia 10 In the case of a German attack Vecchiarelli s order was not very specific because it was based on General Pietro Badoglio s directive which stated that the Italians should respond with maximum decision to any threat from any side 7 The order implied that the Italians should defend themselves but did not explicitly state so At 22 30 hours of the same day Gandin received an order directly from General Ambrosio to send most of his naval and merchant vessels to Brindisi immediately as demanded by the terms of the armistice Gandin complied thus losing a possible means of escape 10 To make matters even more complicated Badoglio had agreed after the overthrow of Mussolini to the unification of the two armies under German command in order to appease the Germans Therefore technically both Vecchiarelli and Gandin were under German command even though Italy had implemented an armistice agreement with the Allies 10 That gave the Germans a sense of justification in treating any Italians disobeying their orders as mutineers or francs tireurs 7 which at that time the laws of war considered unlawful combatants subject to execution on capture At 9 00 hours on 9 September Barge met with Gandin and misled him by stating that he had received no orders from the German command The two men liked each other and they had things in common as Gandin was pro German and liked Goethe Indeed Gandin s pro German attitude was the reason he had been sent by General Ambrosio to command the Acqui Division fearing he might side with the Germans against the evolving plot to depose Mussolini Ambrosio wanted Gandin out of Italy Both men ended their meeting on good terms agreeing to wait for orders and also that the situation should be resolved peacefully 10 nbsp nbsp The two orders 1027 CS and 1029 CS received by Gandin from the Italian Comando Supremo ordering him to resist the German forces On 11 September the Italian High Command sent two explicit instructions to Gandin to the effect that German troops have to be viewed as hostile and that disarmament attempts by German forces must be resisted with weapons That same day Barge handed Gandin an ultimatum demanding a decision given the following three options 10 Continue fighting on the German side Fight against the Germans Hand over arms peacefully Gandin brought Barge s ultimatum to his senior officers and the seven chaplains of the Acqui for discussion Six of the chaplains and all of his senior officers advised him to comply with the German demands while one of the chaplains suggested immediate surrender However Gandin could not agree to join the Germans because that would be against the King s orders as relayed by Badoglio He also did not want to fight them because as he said they had fought with us and for us side by side On the other hand surrendering the weapons would violate the spirit of the armistice 10 Despite the orders from the Italian GHQ Gandin chose to continue negotiating with Barge 9 10 nbsp Barge s telegram to his superiors reporting Gandin s decision to hand over only heavy weaponry and the German troops readiness to attackGandin finally agreed to withdraw his soldiers from their strategic location on Mount Kardakata the island s nerve centre 10 in return for a German promise not to bring reinforcements from the Greek mainland and on 12 September he informed Barge that he was prepared to surrender the Acqui s weapons 9 10 as Lt Colonel Barge reported to his superiors in the XXII Mountain Corps However Gandin was under pressure not to come to an agreement with the Germans from his junior officers who were threatening mutiny 10 The Acqui s detached regiment on Corfu not commanded by Gandin also informed him at around midnight 12 13 September by radio communication that they had rejected an agreement with the Germans Gandin also heard from credible sources that soldiers who had surrendered were being deported and not repatriated 10 On 13 September a German convoy of five ships approached the island s capital Argostoli 10 Italian artillery officers on their own initiative ordered the remaining batteries to open fire sinking two German landing craft and killing five Germans 7 10 Under these circumstances that same night Gandin presented his troops with a poll essentially containing the three options presented to him by Barge 10 11 Join the Germans Surrender and be repatriated Resist the German forces The response from the Italian troops was in favour of the third option by a large majority but there is no available information as to the exact size of the majority 10 and therefore on 14 September Gandin reneged on the agreement refusing to surrender anything but the division s heavy artillery and telling the Germans to leave the island demanding a reply by 9 00 the next day 9 Battle with the Germans edit As the negotiations stalled the Germans prepared to resolve the crisis by force and presented the Italians with an ultimatum which expired at 14 00 hours on 15 September 12 On the morning of 15 September the German Luftwaffe began bombarding the Italian positions with Stuka dive bombers 4 On the ground the Italians initially enjoyed superiority and took about 400 Germans prisoner 7 On 17 September however the Germans landed the Battle Group Hirschfeld composed of the III 98 and the 54th Mountain Battalions of the German Army s elite 1st Mountain Division together with I 724 Battalion of the 104th Jager Division under the command of Major Harald von Hirschfeld 4 The 98th Gebirgsjager Regiment in particular had been involved in several atrocities against civilians in Epirus in the months preceding the Acqui massacre 13 At the same time the Germans started dropping propaganda leaflets calling upon the Italians to surrender The leaflets stated Italian comrades soldiers and officers why fight against the Germans You have been betrayed by your leaders LAY DOWN YOUR ARMS THE ROAD BACK TO YOUR HOMELAND WILL BE OPENED UP FOR YOU BY YOUR GERMAN COMRADES 10 Gandin repeatedly requested help from the Ministry of War in Brindisi but he did not get any reply 10 He even went so far as sending a Red Cross emissary to the Ministry but the mission broke down off the coast of Apulia and when it arrived three days later at the Italian High Command in Brindisi it was already too late 10 In addition 300 planes loyal to Badoglio were located at Lecce near the southernmost point of Italy well within range of Cephalonia and were ready to intervene But the Allies would not let them go because they feared they could have defected to the German side Furthermore two Italian torpedo boats already on their way to Cephalonia were ordered back to port by the Allies for the same reasons 10 Despite help for the Italians from the local population including the island s small ELAS partisan detachments 14 the Germans enjoyed complete air superiority and their troops had extensive combat experience in contrast with the conscripts of Acqui who were no match for the Germans In addition Gandin had withdrawn the Acqui from the elevated position on Mount Kardakata and that gave the Germans an additional strategic advantage 10 After several days of fighting at 11 00 hours on 22 September following Gandin s orders the last Italians surrendered having run out of ammunition and having lost 1 315 men 8 According to German sources the losses were 300 Germans and 1 200 Italians 10 15 Greek partisans were also killed fighting alongside the Acqui 15 Massacre edit nbsp Major Harald von Hirschfeld commander of the Gebirgsjager troops on Cephalonia The massacre started on 21 September and lasted for one week 16 After the Italian surrender Hitler had issued an order allowing the Germans to summarily execute any Italian officer who resisted for treason and on 18 September the German High Command issued an order stating that because of the perfidious and treacherous behaviour of the Italians on Cephalonia no prisoners are to be taken 17 10 18 The Gebirgsjager soldiers began executing their Italian prisoners in groups of four to ten 4 The Germans first killed the surrendering Italians where they stood using machine guns When a group of Bavarian soldiers objected to this practice they were threatened with summary execution themselves citation needed After this stage was over the Germans marched the remaining soldiers to the San Teodoro town hall and had the prisoners executed by eight member detachments 7 General Gandin and 137 of his senior officers were summarily court martialled on 24 September and executed their bodies discarded at sea 18 The divisional infantry commander General Luigi Gherzi had already been executed on 22 September immediately after his capture while the fighting was still ongoing nbsp Padre Romualdo Formato one of the seven chaplains of the Acqui Division Romualdo Formato one of Acqui s seven chaplains and one of the few survivors wrote that during the massacre the Italian officers started to cry pray and sing Many were shouting the names of their mothers wives and children 8 According to Formato s account three officers hugged and stated that they were comrades while alive and now in death they would go together to paradise while others were digging through the grass as if trying to escape In one place Formato recalled the Germans went around loudly offering medical help to those wounded When about 20 men crawled forward a machine gun salvo finished them off 18 Officers gave Formato their belongings to take with him and give to their families back in Italy The Germans however confiscated the items and Formato could no longer account for the exact number of the officers killed 10 The executions of the Italian officers were continuing when a German officer came and reprieved Italians who could prove they were from South Tyrol as that region had been annexed by Hitler as a German province after 8 September Seeing an opportunity Formato begged the officer to stop the killings and save the few officers remaining The German officer responded and told Formato that he would consult with his commanding officer 19 When the officer returned after half an hour he informed Formato that the killings of the officers would stop The number of Italian surviving officers including Formato totaled 37 After the reprieve the Germans congratulated the remaining Italians and offered them cigarettes 10 The situation remained unstable however Following the reprieve the Germans forced twenty Italian sailors to load the bodies of the dead officers on rafts and take them out to sea The Germans then blew up the rafts with the Italian sailors on board 7 10 20 Alfred Richter an Austrian and one of the participants in the massacre recounted how a soldier who sang arias for the Germans in the local taverns was forced to sing while his comrades were being executed The singing soldier s fate remains unknown 10 Richter stated that he and his regiment comrades felt a delirium of omnipotence during the events Most of the soldiers of the German regiment were Austrians 10 According to Richter the Italian soldiers were killed after surrendering to the soldiers of the 98th Regiment He described that the bodies were then thrown into heaps all shot in the head Soldiers of the 98th Regiment started removing the boots from the corpses for their own use Richter mentioned that groups of Italians were taken into quarries and walled gardens near the village of Frangata and executed by machine gun fire The killing lasted for two hours during which time the sound of the shooting and the screams of the victims could be heard inside the homes of the village 21 The bodies of the ca 5 000 men who were executed were disposed of in a variety of ways Bodies were cremated in massive wood pyres which made the air of the island thick with the smell of burning flesh 10 or moved to ships where they were buried at sea 8 10 22 23 Others according to Amos Pampaloni one of the survivors were executed in full sight of the Greek population in Argostoli harbour on 23 September 1943 and their bodies were left to rot where they fell while in smaller streets corpses were decomposing and the stench was insufferable to the point that he could not remain there long enough to take a picture of the carnage 24 Bodies were thrown into the sea with rocks tied around them In addition the Germans had refused to allow the Acqui soldiers to bury their dead 10 A chaplain set out to find bodies discovering bones scattered all over 10 The few soldiers who were saved were assisted by locals and the ELAS organisation 16 One of the survivors was taken heavily wounded to a Cephalonian lady s home by a taxi driver and survived the war to live in Lake Como 8 An additional three thousand of the survivors in German custody drowned when the ships Sinfra Mario Roselli and Ardena transporting them to concentration camps were sunk by Allied air raids and sea mines in the Adriatic 22 25 These losses and similar ones from the Italian Dodecanese garrisons were also the result of German policy as Hitler had instructed the local German commanders to forgo all safety precautions during the transport of prisoners regardless of losses 25 In a book review published by Corriere della Sera other estimates of the Italian soldiers massacred at Cephalonia range between 1 650 3 800 26 Aftermath edit nbsp Italian soldiers taken prisoner by the Germans in Corfu September 1943 The events in Cephalonia were repeated to a lesser extent elsewhere In Corfu the 8 000 strong Italian garrison comprised elements of three divisions including the Acqui s 18th Regiment On 24 September the Germans landed a force on the island characteristically codenamed Operation Treason and by the next day they were able to induce the Italians to capitulate 27 All 280 Italian officers on the island were executed during the next two days on the orders of General Lanz in accordance with Hitler s directives The bodies were loaded onto a ship and disposed of in the sea 27 Similar executions of officers also occurred in the aftermath of the Battle of Kos where between 96 and 103 Italian officers were shot along with their commander 28 In October 1943 after Mussolini had been freed and established his new Fascist Republic in Northern Italy the Germans gave the remaining Italian prisoners three choices Continue fighting on the German side Forced labour on the island Concentration camps in Germany Most Italians opted for the second choice 10 In January 1944 a chaplain s account reached Benito Mussolini after Aurelio Garobbio a Swiss Fascist from the Italian speaking Canton of Ticino informed him about the events Mussolini became incensed that the Germans would do such a thing although he considered the Acqui division s officers more so than its soldiers traitors Nevertheless in one of his exchanges with Garobbio after Garobbio complained that the Germans showed no mercy he said But our men defended themselves you know They hit several German landing craft sinking them They fought how Italians know how to fight 10 Prosecution edit nbsp General Lanz commander of the XXII Mountain Corps at the Nuremberg Trials To date he is the only person to have served a prison sentence for the events in Cephalonia 29 Major Harald von Hirschfeld was never tried for his role in the massacre since he did not survive the war in December 1944 he became the Wehrmacht s youngest general officer and was killed while fighting at the Dukla Pass in Poland in 1945 4 Only Hirschfeld s superior commander General Hubert Lanz was sentenced to 12 years imprisonment at the so called Southeast Case of the Nuremberg Trials for the Cephalonia massacre as well as the participation of his men in other atrocities in Greece like the massacre of Kommeno on 16 August 1943 6 He was released in 1951 4 and died in 1982 Lt Colonel Barge was not on the island when the massacre was taking place He was subsequently decorated with the Knight s Cross of the Iron Cross for his service in Crete He died in 2000 9 The reason for Lanz s light sentence was that the court at Nuremberg was deceived by false evidence and did not believe that the massacre took place despite a book about the massacre by padre Formato published in 1946 a year before the trial 10 30 Because there was doubt as to who issued what order Lanz was only charged with the deaths of Gandin and the officers 10 Lanz lied in court by stating he had refused to obey Hitler s orders to shoot the prisoners because he was revolted by them He claimed that the report to Army Group E claiming 5 000 soldiers were shot was a ruse employed to deceive the army command in order to hide the fact that he had disobeyed the Fuhrer s orders He added that fewer than a dozen officers were shot and the rest of the Acqui Division was transported to Piraeus through Patras 30 In his testimony Lanz was assisted by affidavits from other Germans such as General von Butlar from Hitler s personal staff who was involved in the Ardeatine massacre The Germans were with Lanz in September 1943 and swore that the massacre had never taken place In addition for reasons unknown the Italian side never presented any evidence for the massacre at the Nuremberg trials It is speculated that the Italians reeling from armistice terms highly unfavourable for their country refused to cooperate with the trial process Given the circumstances the court accepted Lanz s position that he prevented the massacre and that the event never happened Consequently Lanz received a lighter sentence 30 than General Rendulic for his misdeed in Yugoslavia who was released in late 1951 nevertheless after only three years of imprisonment 31 Lanz s defence emphasised that the prosecution had not presented any Italian evidence for the massacre and claimed that there was no evidence the Italian headquarters in Brindisi had ever instructed Gandin and his Division to fight Therefore according to the logic of the defence Gandin and his men were either mutineers or franc tireurs and did not qualify for POW status under the Geneva conventions 30 The Germans justified their behaviour by claiming the Italians were negotiating the surrender of the island to the British 16 The German claim was not entirely unfounded in the Greek mainland an entire division went over to the Greek guerrillas and in the Dodecanese the Italians had joined forces with the British resulting in a two month German campaign to evict them 32 An attempt to revisit the case by the Dortmund state prosecutor Johannes Obluda in 1964 came to naught as the political climate in Germany at the time was in favour of putting the war behind 18 In 2002 Dortmund prosecutor Ultrich Maasss reopened a case against certain persons responsible for the massacre 4 16 In his office along with a map of the world Maasss displayed a map of Cephalonia with the dates and locations of the executions as well as the names of the victims 16 No indictments or arrests resulted from Maasss investigation 23 Ten ex members of the 1st Gebirgs Division have been investigated out of 300 still alive 4 In 2013 Alfred Stork 1923 28 October 2018 a 90 year old German ex corporal was sentenced in absentia to life imprisonment for his role in the massacre by a military court in Rome 33 Interpretations and perspectives on the Cephalonia Massacre the historical debate in Italy editIn Italy the traditional interpretation of the Cephalonia Massacre places the event in the context of the Resistance against Nazi fascism Within this framework there are readings that view the soldiers of the Acqui Division as genuine anti fascists There are also interpretations that see them as patriots who decided not to surrender their weapons and decided to fight and die for their country In both cases the resistance nature of the event lies in the awareness of choice which transforms those soldiers from mere executors of orders into volunteer fighters Despite the Acqui Division having fought the Germans following an order from the Supreme Command in fact the majority of its troops expressed the desire to oppose the Germans before such order arrived on the island According to this interpretation the choice to resist the Germans voluntary and conscious was also majority if not plebiscitary therefore the Division faced the clash as a compact force From this point of view the well established disputes that emerged before the battle between the rebel officers and the hesitator Gandin are interpreted as the opposition between the impetuosity of young men eager to fight and the wise family man negotiating with the Germans who would like to save the honor of the arms and the lives of his soldiers a simple generational contrast that does not question the unity of intentions between the commander and his subordinates These are the pillars upon which the idea of Cephalonia as the first act of the Resistance 34 is based often mentioned in memoirs and present in the work of authoritative historians From the very beginning polemical readings of the facts have opposed the canonical interpretation on the one hand some survivors expressed very critical judgments against the actions of General Gandin considered too weak or even intending to betray to bring the Division into the German field on the other hand others accused some young officers predominantly reserves identifying in their rebellion against Gandin the main cause of a useless clash and the fierce reprisal that followed The fracture among the survivors corresponds to two historiographical interpretations of the facts that although diametrically opposed can both be traced within the realm of revisionism understood as criticism of the dominant thought The historical researcher Massimo Filippini 35 accuses the young rebel officers The main culprit among the many who immediately sided with the clash against the Germans is identified in the person of Captain Renzo Apollonio to whom Filippini also attributes the disgrace of having collaborated with the Germans after the battle According to Filippini Apollonio and the others were guilty of insubordination conspiracy and rebellion hindering Gandin s work who far from wanting to betray was only seeking a peaceful and above all honorable solution to the complicated situation in which the Division found itself Note that the hypothesis of incitement together with a critical judgment on the action of Apollonio has recently been taken up by a historian of undisputed value such as Elena Aga Rossi 36 But Filippini s revisionism goes further he is indeed one of the supporters of the legitimacy of the execution of Italian prisoners basing his affirmation on the well known argument that in the absence of a declaration of war these were to be considered franc tireurs an argument devoid of legal basis as detailed by Marco De Paolis 37 Opposed to those of Filippini and Aga Rossi are the theses of the historian Paolo Paoletti 38 the main accuser of Gandin according to whom the general acted with the intention of leading the Division into the German field after the armistice Paoletti goes beyond the accusations of ineptitude and weakness commonly directed at the general by his detractors Gandin from the outset intended to hand over the armed division to the Germans to continue fighting alongside them and to this end negotiated with them Reversing Filippini s view according to Paoletti the young rebel officers and in particular Captain Renzo Apollonio were heroes whose initiative thwarted the plan of the traitor Gandin Therefore Gandin betrayed his own country trying to bring the Division over to the enemy s side but he also betrayed the Germans when forced by his subordinates he ordered the Acqui to fight against the Wehrmacht for this reason according to Paoletti Gandin was not shot alongside the other officers More recently interpretations have been added to the canonical and revisionist readings of the affair shifting the choice of the soldiers of the Acqui from the ideological sphere to the moral one According to Gian Enrico Rusconi 39 the first desire of those men was to return home but not at all costs keeping their weapons safely and honorably as befits a soldier who has done his duty This is a significant downsizing of the epic of Cephalonia which however does not deprive the soldiers of the Acqui of a heroic aspect not the heroism of the political martyr or the soldier faithful to the extreme sacrifice but that of the good family man who tries to make his way back home refusing to yield to dishonorable compromises Even Patrizia Gabrielli 40 proposes an unconventional reading of the facts according with her the distance from home the loss of the role of head of the family now fully covered by the women at home the apathy and frustration due to the long inactivity may have pushed those men to fight to reclaim against the humiliating conditions imposed by the Germans their dignity which actually never failed during that apparent holiday that unlike what is described in the film Mediterraneo did not make them lose their sense of responsibility Finally Silvio Olivero 41 tries to mediate between the different interpretations Olivero noting the diversity of views that characterized the soldiers of the Acqui in the approach to the clash and the multiplicity of possible motivations that led them to fight all plausible and worthy of being remembered identifies the main merit of those men precisely in their capacity to smooth over differences According to Olivero Moved by such different motivations loyalty to the Crown military obedience anti fascism the desire for redemption the desire to return home honorably the soldiers of the Acqui were therefore the first Italians to leave behind the fierce divisions that in Italy would have caused countless deaths 42 in Cephalonia the divisions that in Italy would have led to civil war were revealed but the soldiers of the Acqui knew how to overcome them they were the first fighters of the Resistance but also and above all the first Italians who regained unity by overcoming the differences that opposed them 43 Commemoration edit nbsp The Italian President Giorgio Napolitano in Cephalonia during remembrance ceremonies in honour of the soldiers of the 33rd Infantry Division Acqui In the 1950s the remains of about 3 000 soldiers including 189 officers were exhumed and transported back to Italy for burial in the Italian War Cemetery in Bari The remains of General Gandin were never identified 4 The subject of the massacre was largely ignored in Italy by the press and the educational system until 1980 when the Italian President Sandro Pertini a former partisan unveiled the memorial in Cephalonia The massacre provided the historical background to the 1994 novel Captain Corelli s Mandolin 44 17 Despite the recognition of the event by Pertini it was not until March 2001 that another Italian President Carlo Azeglio Ciampi visited the memorial again and even then he was most likely influenced by the publicity generated by the impending release of the Hollywood film Captain Corelli s Mandolin based on the novel with the same name 10 Thanks to these actions today a large number of streets in Italy are named after Divisione Acqui During the ceremony Ciampi referring to the men of the Acqui Division declared that their conscious decision was the first act of resistance by an Italy freed from fascism and that they preferred to fight and die for their fatherland 21 The massacre of the Acqui Division is emerging as a subject of ongoing research 45 and is regarded as a leading example of the Italian Resistance during World War II 46 In 2002 the Italian post issued the commemorative stamp Eccidio della Divisione Aqui 47 The Presidents of Greece and Italy periodically commemorate the event during ceremonies taking place in Cephalonia at the monument of the Acqui Division 48 49 An academic conference about the massacre was held on 2 3 March 2007 in Parma Italy 50 Cephalonia s Greco Italian Society maintains an exhibition called The Mediterraneo Exhibition next to the Catholic church in Argostoli where pictures newspaper articles and documents showcasing the story of the massacre are displayed 51 52 See also editMassacre of Kos List of massacres in Greece War crimes of the WehrmachtReferences edit Massacre details in German Archived from the original on 16 February 2012 Retrieved 3 September 2008 O Reilly Charles T 2001 Forgotten Battles Italy s War of Liberation 1943 1945 Lexington Books ISBN 978 0 7391 0195 7 Italian presidents to attend events on Cephallonia Wednesday 24 April 2007 Greek Embassy in Washington D C Archived from the original on 10 February 2012 a b c d e f g h i j Massacres and atrocities of WWII Almost unknown outside of Italy this event ranks with Katyn as one of the darkest episodes of the war The German 11th Battalion of Jager Regiment 98 of the 1st Gebirgs Mountain Division commanded by Major Harald von Hirschfeld arrived on the island and soon Stukas were bombing the Italian positions Rizospastis in Greek 3 September 2000 Prepei na shmeiw8ei pws ta biblia gia th sfagh twn Italwn stratiwtwn ths Kefalonias h megalyterh sfagh aixmalwtwn toy B Pagkosmioy Polemoy ektos aytoy toy Mpernier einai to ena kalytero apo to allo Translation It must be noted that the books about the massacre of the Italian soldiers in Cephalonia the biggest massacre of prisoners of war in WWII except the one by Bernier are one better than the other a b Morder unterm Edelweiss noch immer unter uns Murderers under the Edelweiss still among us in German a b c d e f g h i Tucker Spencer 2005 Encyclopedia of World War II A Political Social and Military History ABC CLIO pp 313 314 ISBN 1 57607 999 6 a b c d e To Vima The massacre of the Acqui Division in Greek 25 November 2008 O dioikhths ths italikhs froyras strathgos Gkantin bre8hke tote se dilhmma na parado8ei stoys Germanoys h na toys xtyphsei Apo to dilhmma ton ebgalan oi fantaroi toy poy apofasisan na antista8oyn stoys Germanoys oi opoioi sth syntomh maxh poy akoloy8hse eixan baries apwleies Omws stis 22 Septembrioy ta pyromaxika twn Italwn sw8hkan kai stis 11 to meshmeri ypswsan leykh shmaia a b c d e Ein Offizier im falschen Licht in German Lippische Landes Zeitung Translation by Google a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj Farrell Nicholas 2004 Mussolini A New Life Sterling Publishing Company Inc pp 423 428 ISBN 1 84212 123 5 Comments common cause Ambrosio s tactics and Badoglio s paradox on page 423 Corfu info and poll on bottom of page 424 no match reference Hitler s orders delirium of omnipotence and Austrian origin on page 425 Refusal to bury dead on page 427 A N P I Il sacrificio della Divisione Acqui in Italian Archived from the original on 12 April 2001 Retrieved 6 December 2014 Schreiber Gerhard 1990 Die italienischen Militarinternierten im deutschen Machtbereich 1943 bis 1945 Verraten verachtet vergessen in German Oldenburg Wissenschaftsverlag pp 157 159 ISBN 978 3 486 55391 8 Meyer Hermann Frank Die 1 Gebirgs Division in Epirus im Sommer 1943 hfmeyer com accessed 6 December 2014 Interview with the real Corelli in Greek Rizospastis Milne Seumas 28 July 2000 Greek myth The Guardian Retrieved 14 January 2017 a b c d e Greek Holocaust PDF in Greek Holocaust gr Archived from the original PDF on 10 February 2012 Retrieved 6 September 2008 H dikaiologia ths germanikhs Dioikhshs gia th sfagh poy egine einai oti oi Italoi eixan er8ei se epafh me toys Aggloys kai ekanan diapragmateyseis mazi toys gia thn paradosh toy nhsioy stoys Symmaxoys Toys Kalokairinoys mhnes kata th diarkeia ths nazistikhs Katoxhs Translation The German justification for the massacre that happened was that the Italians came in contact with the British and were negotiating the surrender of the island to the allies during the German occupation of Cephalonia in the summer of 1943 and O Eisaggeleas ths germanikhs polhs Ntortmoynt eisagei se dikh toys ypey8ynoys gia ta egklhmata poy dieprax8hsan sthn Kefallwnia se baros ths italikhs Merarxias Akoyi sth diarkeia toy B Pagkosmioy Polemoy Ston toixo toy grafeioy toy Ultrich Maaos einai anarthmenoi dyo xartes O enas deixnei thn yfhlio kai o allos apeikonizei th nhso Kefallhnia panw ston opoio anagrafontai oi hmeromhnies sfaghs ths Merarxias Akoyi apo thn Bermaxt Merarxia Entelbais ka8ws kai onomata Italwn stratiwtikwn poy ektelesthkan opws kai oi topo8esies poy 4 phgh holocaust gr sfagias8hkan Mia ebdomada dihrkesan oi ekteleseis Elaxistoi Italoi diesw8hsan ki ayto xarh sthn an8rwpia twn katoikwn toy nhsioy kai sth drasthriothta toy E L A S a b Corelli s comrades That same day military records show the German Gen Hubert Lanz reported from Cephalonia to Berlin Final mopping up is under way General Gandin and his staff were captured Special treatment in compliance with Fuhrer Order a b c d Bonisch Georg June 2003 Bache von Blut Der Spiegel in German Google translation Recount of the Acqui massacre spiegel de accessed 6 September 2014 in German Mosley Ray 2004 Mussolini The Last 600 Days of Il Duce Taylor Trade Publications p 22 ISBN 1 58979 095 2 a b Nazi massacre on island idyll BBC co uk 26 March 2001 accessed 6 December 2014 a b Hollywood goes to Italy Historical Context Italy invaded Greece on 28 October 1940 with 7 divisions of the 9th and 11th Armies By 22 November the Italians were pushed back into Albania The Germans had to come to their aid But when the Italian government decided to negotiate a surrender to the Allies the German Army tried to disarm the Italians in what they called Operation ACHSE On 29 September 1943 on the island of Cephalonia the Germans fought the Italians of the Aqui A total of 1315 were killed in battle 3 000 were drowned when the German ships taking them to concentration camps were sunk by mines and 5 325 were executed In general the Germans did not battle or massacre the Italians in other areas a b Venturi Marcello White Flag in Kefalonia in Greek Archived from the original on 21 July 2011 Mentions the fires Google translation Willan Philip 11 April 2001 The real Captain Corelli The Guardian London UK Retrieved 12 May 2010 The Guardian UK Quote In an entry dated 23 September 1943 Corporal Richter registers the execution of Italian soldiers in Argostoli harbour in full sight of Greek civilians and with the bodies left to rot in the autumn heat In one of the small streets the smell is so bad that I can t even take a picture he reports a b Verletzung der Menschenrechte im Seekrieg 1939 1945 Transporte von Kriegsgefangenen Internierten oder Fluchtlingen Carioti Antonio Caduti di Cefalonia il conteggio infinito Corriere della Sera a b Kriegsverbrechenm der1 Retrieved 14 January 2017 Massacres and Atrocities of WWII members iinet net au accessed 6 December 2014 Lanz Retrieved 14 January 2017 a b c d Lamb Richard 1996 War in Italy 1943 1945 A Brutal Story Da Capo Press pp 134 35 ISBN 0 306 80688 6 Achleitner Josef 13 April 2015 Lothar Rendulic Der Mann der fur Hitler die Ostmark halten sollte nachrichten at Damals Vor 100 Jahren in German OONachrichten Retrieved 4 May 2015 Levi Aldo Fioravanzo Giuseppe 1972 Avvenimenti in Egeo dopo l armistizio Rodi Lero e isole minori in Italian Rome Ufficio Storico della Marina Militare Historical Department of the Italian Navy 90 year old former Nazi soldier handed life sentence for role in Greek massacre Speech by the President of the Republic Carlo Azeglio Ciampi at the commemoration of the Italian Fallen of the Acqui Division in Cephalonia Cephalonia March 1st 2001 Filippini Massimo 2004 La tragedia di Cefalonia Una verita scomoda Roma IBN ISBN 978 88 7565 015 5 Aga Rossi Elena 2016 Cefalonia La resistenza l eccidio il mito Bologna Il Mulino ISBN 978 88 15 26515 9 De Paolis Marco Insolvibile Isabella 2017 Cefalonia Il processo la storia i documenti Roma Viella ISBN 8867289195 Paoletti Paolo 2007 Cefalonia 1943 una verita inimmaginabile Franco Angeli ISBN 8846482921 Rusconi Gian Enrico 2004 Cefalonia Quando gli italiani si battono Einaudi ISBN 8806169289 Gabrielli Patrizia 2020 Prima della tragedia Militari italiani a Cefalonia e Corfu Bologna Il Mulino ISBN 8815275576 Olivero Silvio 2021 Vieni che ne vedrai delle belle Lucca Tralerighe Libri ISBN 883287198X Olivero Silvio 2021 Vieni che ne vedrai delle belle Lucca Tralerighe Libri p 105 ISBN 883287198X Olivero Silvio 2021 Vieni che ne vedrai delle belle Lucca Tralerighe Libri p 106 ISBN 883287198X Holmes Professor Richard The D Day Dodgers BBC the massacre of the Acqui division on the island of Cephalonia the background to Louis de Bernieres Captain Corelli s Mandolin was a cruel fact Ricerca Italiana Archived from the original on 15 February 2012 Retrieved 8 September 2008 in about 30 pages touching mainly upon several of the better known episodes such as the massacre of the Acqui division in Cefalonia and Corfu as well as the fate of several other military units Rossi Elena Aga and Agarossi Elena A Nation Collapses The Italian Surrender of September 1943 Cambridge University Press 2000 p 6 ISBN 0 521 59199 6 S p A Poste Italiane Poste Italiane Filatelia e filatelia poste it Archived from the original on 13 May 2019 Retrieved 25 July 2017 Greek Italian presidents to attend events on Cephallonia Wednesday Athens New Agency 25 April 2007 President of the Republic Karolos Papoulias will travel to the Ionian island of Cephallonia on Wednesday where together with Italian President Giorgio Napolitano he will attend events commemorating the sacrifice of Italian soldiers of the Acqui Division and Greek resistance fighters against the German occupation Thousands of Italian soldiers of the brigade Acqui who had surrendered to German occupation forces on the island in September 1943 after Italy s capitulation were massacred by the Nazis Two hundred Greek resistance fighters were also killed by the Germans The two presidents will hold talks after the various ceremonies Similar events were held in March 2001 in the presence of then presidents of the two countries Kostis Stephanopoulos and Carlo Azeglio Ciampi Monumento della Divisione Aqui Archived from the original on 10 February 2012 Retrieved 6 December 2014 Conference MyKefalonia com Archived from the original on 5 October 2011 Retrieved 6 December 2014 Gill John and Edwards Nick The Rough Guide to the Ionian Islands Kefallonia Corfu Ithaca Lefkas Paxos Zakynthos Rough Guides 2003 p 196 ISBN 1 84353 067 8 in Greek Monument to the Acqui Division Archived 21 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine kefalonianet gr accessed 6 December 2014 External links edit nbsp Media related to Massacre of the Acqui Division at Wikimedia Commons War crimes forum in Italian L eccidio della Divisione Acqui Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Massacre of the Acqui Division amp oldid 1210771933, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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