Labin Republic | |||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1921 | |||||||||
Motto: Kova je nasa [1] "The mine is ours" | |||||||||
Status | Unrecognized state | ||||||||
Capital | Labin 45°05′N14°07′E / 45.083°N 14.117°E | ||||||||
Common languages | Italian, Croatian, and Chakavian | ||||||||
Government | Socialist republic | ||||||||
• Head of the miners committee | Giovanni Pippan | ||||||||
• Commander of the Red Guards | Francesco Da Gioz | ||||||||
Historical era | Interwar period | ||||||||
• Established | March 7, 1921 | ||||||||
• Disestablished | April 8, 1921 | ||||||||
Area | |||||||||
• Total | 325 km2 (125 sq mi) | ||||||||
Currency | Italian lira | ||||||||
| |||||||||
Today part of | Croatia |
The Labin Republic (Croatian : Labinska republika, Italian : Repubblica di Albona) [2] was a short-lived self-governing republic that was proclaimed by miners in the Istrian city of Labin (Albona) on March 7, 1921, [3] [4] during a mining strike. It was created in what has been described as the world's first anti-fascist uprising. [5] On April 8, the Italian administration in Istria suppressed the strike by force.
With the collapse of the Austro-Hungarian Empire following the end of the First World War, Italy was given the regions of Istria and parts of Dalmatia as part of the Treaty of Saint-Germain, as promised in the Treaty of London by the Triple Entente. [6] Italy began to revitalize and exploit the population and economic potential of the occupied territories.
Before Mussolini's March on Rome in Italy, fascists occupied the headquarters of the Workers' Committee in Trieste in 1921, set it on fire, and attacked representatives of the Raša (Arsa) Mining Trade Union. Prompted by this event and the exploitative character of the mine owners, the Società Anonima Carbonifera Arsa , a general strike of about two thousand miners broke out.
One of the causes of the strike was the decision by the mine owners not to pay a bonus for February 1921, because the miners had taken a day’s holiday to observe Candlemas on 2 February, although the management had abolished it as a holiday. "For the miners the Candlemas was, next to the feast of Santa Barbara, the most important day because February 2 symbolized the light." [7]
The men were of different origins - Croats, Slovenes, Italians, Germans, Czechs, Slovaks, Poles and Hungarians. They were led by Giovanni Pippan, sent by the Italian Socialist Party from Trieste. However on March 1, 1921, Pippan was caught by a group of fascists at the railway station in Pazin, where he was beaten. The news reached Labin the following day and on 3 March the miners assembled and decided to occupy the mine works in response. Augmented by the arrival of the peasants from the surrounding countryside, a "red guard" was organized as a security force tasked with maintaining order. [8]
The miners proclaimed the republic in the occupied mines on 7 March with the slogan, Kova je nasa ("The mine is ours"). They organized a government and the Red Guards as protection from the police, and started to manage the production of mines by themselves with the support of some farmers.
On April 8, 1921 the Italian administration in Istria, responding to requests for intervention from the mine owners, decided to suppress the republic using military force. [9] A thousand soldiers surrounded the mine and eventually succeeded after suppressing the strong resistance of the miners. The arrested miners were sent to prisons in Pola and Rovigno. The indictment charged 52 miners. [10] Lawyers Edmondo Puecher, Guido Zennaro and Egidio Cerlenizza successfully defended the accused, and the jury issued an acquittal. [10]
Although never established, the Labin Republic had left unrecoverable scars on Labinština, and it had a much wider echo. This cluster of events should be interpreted in the context of the circumstances at the time, particularly in the Italian Peninsula and Central Europe. The multi-ethnic, but unique armed resistance to overwhelming fascism paved the way for anti-fascism.
The story of the Labin Republic was the subject of a 1985 Yugoslav film, The Red and the Black (Serbo-Croatian : Crveni i crni). [11]
Istria is the largest peninsula within the Adriatic Sea. Located at the top of the Adriatic between the Gulf of Trieste and the Kvarner Gulf, the peninsula is shared by three countries: Croatia, Slovenia, and Italy, 90% of its area being part of Croatia. Most of Croatian Istria is part of Istria County.
Istria County is the westernmost county of Croatia which includes the majority of the Istrian peninsula.
Labin is a town in Istria, west Croatia, with a town population of 5,806 (2021) and 10,424 in the greater municipality.
Rabac is a Croatian resort town on Kvarner Bay, just southeast of Labin, in Istria.
Raša is a small town and a municipality in Istria, Croatia. The town was created in the 1930s as a coal mining town under the Italian government.
Matko Laginja was a Croatian lawyer and politician.
Koromačno is a small hamlet adjacent to the cement factory for which it was built in the early 1900 for the workers. It is also a small port to accept small cargo ships to carry the cement to other placed to be processed. It is located in the southernmost tip of the Labinština peninsula in Istria County in Croatia. It is nestled between Croatian: Crna Punta and Croatian: Ubac on the Gulf of Quarnero in the Adriatic Sea. It is one of the newest hamlet not even 100 years old. It is located about 15 km from Croatian: Labin / Italian: Albona, 1 km from Croatian: Brovinje, 3 km from Croatian: Skitača.
Istrian Italians are an ethnic group from the Adriatic region of Istria in modern northwestern Croatia and southwestern Slovenia. Istrian Italians descend from the original Latinized population of Roman Histria, from the Venetian-speaking settlers who colonized the region during the time of the Republic of Venice, and from the local Croatian people who culturally assimilated.
The Red and the Black is a 1985 Croatian language Yugoslav film directed by Miroslav Mikuljan, starring Bekim Fehmiu, Milan Štrljić, Olivera Ježina, and Radko Polič. The film is about the 1921 Labin Republic in Istria, during the world's first anti-fascist uprising.
Labinština is the geographical and historical name of the eastern part of Istria county in Croatia. It covers an area of approximately 220 km2 that is 25 km long and 13 km wide. Geographical borders in the west are the Raša river, and the bay of the same name, in the south and east the sea, and in the north Plomin Bay, the southern part of the Učka massif and Kvarner Bay, and, until the beginning of the 20th century, Lake Čepić. The center is Labin after which it is named. Labin was the head township of the Labinština or Agro Albonese under the Roman Empire, during the Venice Republic between 1365 and 1797, the Austrian rule between 1814-1918 and many other occupations by foreign armies.
The township Croatian: Cerovica / Italian: Cerovizza is bordered on the east by the sea of Quarnero from S.Martino to Brovinje; to the North by the Township Chermenizza; and to the East by the Township Croatian: Vlakovo, Istria. The head hamlet of the Township of Cerovica was Croatian: Skitača Italian: Schitazza which is located approximately 4 km north-east of Brovinje. In the hamlet of Skitača is the chapel of Saint Lucy of Albona which became a parish church for all of the Township of Cerovica. The small chapel was built in 1616 and became a Parish in 1632. The last time it was renovated was in the 1990s.
The Istrian Circle or Circle of Istria was a province of the Kingdom of Illyria from 1825 until 1849. It was formed by merging the circle of Trieste with the district of Pisino, thus reuniting most of the Istrian peninsula. In 1849 Illyria was reincorporated into the Austrian Empire and Istria returned to being a crownland (Kronland) of Austria as the March of Istria. The capital of the Istrian Circle was Pisino. The circle was divided into the following districts: Albona, Bellai, Buie, Capodistria, Cherso, Dignano, Lussino, Montona, Parenzo, Buzet, Pirano, Pisino, Rovigno, Pula, Veglia and Volosca.
Giovanni Pippan was an Italian labor leader and socialist, active in Italy, Croatia and the United States of America.
Msgr. Božo Milanović was a Croatian priest, theologian and politician from Istria. Along with Antonio Santin, Milanović was one of the greatest anti-fascists of Istria. He is credited with decisively contributing to the unification of Istria with Croatia.
Luka Kirac was a Croatian Catholic priest, revivalist of Croatian nationalism and right-wing politician.
Tone Peruško, was a Croatian educator, social worker and writer.
Adriana Prosenjak is a Croatian former handball coach and player.
Mate Blažina was a Croatian antifascist, military commander and Yugoslav National Hero. After the capitulation of Italy, he joined the partisan movement. He contributed to the liberation of Istria and Gorski Kotar, and for his bravery and actions was honored with the Order of the People's Hero and the Order of Bravery. Blažina died in action in Gorski Kotar, aged 20.
The Proština rebellion was a rebellion by peasants in Istria, then a territory of the Kingdom of Italy, against the fascist government. It began in early February 1921 and was quelled on 5 April 1921. Almost at the same time, a miners' uprising known as the Labin Republic took place in the neighboring Labin region. It was one of the first anti-fascism uprisings in Europe.
Costantino Costantini was an Istrian Italian lawyer and politician. He was Mayor of Pisino from 1919 until 1922. He was the son of former podestà (mayor) and politician Francesco Costantini. He has been credited as "one of the most illustrious figures of Istrian irredentism".