List of massacres in Italy

Last updated

The following is a list of massacres that have occurred in Italy and its predecessors (numbers may be approximate): they are divided by the presence of culpability or not.

Contents

List parameters

A massacre is the killing of a large number of people, especially those who are not involved in any fighting or have no way of defending themselves.

The following are the parameters used to create the list:

List of culpable massacres

Archaic Italy

NameDateLocationDeathsPerpetratorsNotes
Battle of Selinus 409 BC Selinus Carthaginian Army 16,000 citizens of Selinus killed in battle and massacre by Carthaginian Army under Hannibal Mago. City razed. [1]
Battle of Himera 409 BC Himera Carthaginian Army3,000 Greek prisoners of war tortured and sacrificed by Carthaginian Army under Hannibal Mago. City razed. [2]
Siege of Akragas December 406 BC Akragas Carthaginian Army Greek population massacred by Carthaginian Army under Himilco [3]
Siege of Motya Summer 398 BC Motya Syracuse Phoenician population of Motya killed by Greek troops during assault on the city.

Roman Italy

NameDateLocationDeathsPerpetratorsNotes
Agathocles' coup 317 BC Syracuse Agathocles' army4,000 wealthy Syracusans killed by Agathocles
Ausona massacre 314 BC Ausona Republican Roman Army Entire Aurunci people exterminated by Roman army
Gela massacre311 BC Gela Agathocles' army4,000 Geloans slaughtered by Agathocles and their property stolen
1st Cluviae massacre311 BC Cluviae Samnites Roman prisoners of war killed by Samnites
2nd Cluviae massacre311 BCCluviaeRepublican Roman ArmyAdult male population of Cluviae put to death by Roman army under consul Gaius Junius Bubulcus Brutus
Battle of Torgium305 BCTorgium Agathocles' army4,000–7,000 troops of Deinocrates slaughtered by Agathocles after their surrender on promises of mercy
Aequi massacre304 BC Aequi Republican Roman ArmyMajority of Aequi people killed by Roman army
Messana massacre289 BC Messina Mamertines Population of Messana murdered by mercenary Mamertines
Rhegium massacre280 BC Rhegium Campanian mercenariesMale population of Rhegium massacred by rebellious Campanian mercenaries of Rome
Taurasia massacre November 218 BC Taurasia Carthaginian ArmyPopulation of the Taurini capital of Taurasia exterminated by Carthaginian Army under Hannibal after three-day siege. [4]
Casilinum massacre  [ it ]August 216 BC Casilinum Republican Roman ArmyPro-Carthaginian population of Casilinum killed by Roman garrison. [5]
Leontini massacre 214 BC Lentini Republican Roman Army2,000 Roman deserters flogged and beheaded by troops of Marcus Claudius Marcellus. [6]
Enna massacre 213 BC Enna Republican Roman ArmyDefenceless crowd massacred by Roman garrison under governor Lucius Pinarius. [7]
Battle of Capua 211 BC Teanum, Cales Republican Roman Army53 Capuan aristocrats executed by Roman Army under Quintus Fulvius Flaccus. [8]
Agrigentum massacre 210 BC Agrigento Republican Roman ArmyAgrigentan elites massacred by Roman army under consul Marcus Valerius Laevinus. Population sold to slavery. Town looted. [9]
Tarentum massacre 209 BC Tarentum Republican Roman ArmyPopulation massacred by Roman Army under proconsul Fabius Maximus, 30,000 sold to slavery. [10]
Enna massacre 135 BCEnna Slave rebels Slaves under Eunus massacre town population and rape women
Asculum massacre 89 BC Asculum Republican Roman Army Population massacred by Roman Army under consul Pompeius Strabo
Rome massacres 87 BC Rome Gaius Marius Several hundred supporters of Sulla massacred by Marius' rampaging army
Sulla's proscriptions 82 BC Roman Italy Sulla 4,700 enemies of the state murdered on orders of Sulla
Appian Way crucifixions 71 BC Via Appia Republican Roman Army6,000 slave rebel prisoners crucified by Marcus Licinius Crassus
Proscription of 43 BC 43 BC Roman Italy Second Triumvirate 2,000 enemies of the Second Triumvirate murdered [11]
Tiberius' purge Late 31Roman Italy Imperial Roman Army Sejanus and his supporters killed on orders of Tiberius. [12]
Ticinum massacre 13 August 408 Ticinum Imperial Roman Army 7 high-ranking supporters of Stilicho killed by Roman army at the instigation of Olympius. Many civilians in Ticinum killed afterward. [13]
Massacre of Goths Late 408Roman ItalyImperial Roman ArmyThousands of Gothic soldiers in the Roman Army and their families killed in anti-Germanic pogrom. [14]

Ostrogothic Italy

NameDateLocationDeathsPerpetratorsNotes
Siege of Ravenna (490–493) 5 March 493 Ravenna Ostrogothic Kingdom Odoacer and his men massacred by Ostrogoths under Theoderic the Great
Siege of Naples (536) November 536 Naples Byzantine army Naples sacked and the population massacred by Byzantine army under Belisarius
Ravenna massacre537 Ravenna Ostrogothic KingdomRoman aristocratic hostages executed on orders of Witiges
Milan massacre March 539 Mediolanum Ostrogothic KingdomMale population of Milan slain by Ostrogothic troops after siege. Women enslaved. [15]
Ticinum massacre539Ticinum Merovingian Franks Gothic women and children sacrificed alive by Franks under Theudebert I [16]
Totila's sack of Rome 550 Rome Ostrogothic KingdomPopulation of Rome massacred after siege by Ostrogothic troops under Totila. Women spared.
Massacre of aristocratic childrenLate 552Po ValleyOstrogothic Kingdom300 Roman aristocratic children killed by Ostrogoths

Medieval Italy

NameDateLocationDeathsPerpetratorsNotes
Siege of Syracuse (877–878) 21 May 878 Syracuse Aghlabids 4,000 Syracusans massacred by Aghlabid Muslim army [17]
Sack of Taormina 1 August 902 Taormina AghlabidsTaormina burned and population massacred
Fatimid sack of Genoa 16 August 935 Genoa Fatimid navy Male population of Genoa exterminated by Fatimids, women and children enslaved
Siege of Rometta May 965 Rometta Kalbids Population of Rometta massacred, survivors enslaved, city colonized by Muslims. [18]
Siege of Crema 1159 Crema, Lombardy Holy Roman Empire Imperial army under Frederick Barbarossa executes 40 hostages
Palermo massacre1161 Palermo Christian mobMuslim population of Palermo slaughtered by Christian mob
Salerno massacreLate 1194 Salerno Holy Roman EmpireImperial army under Henry VI, Holy Roman Emperor sacks Salerno, massacres and enslaves population
Sicilian Vespers 1282 Sicily Ghibelline Sicilians 3,000 French men and women killed by rebels
Lucera massacre 1300 Lucera Kingdom of Naples Muslim population of Lucera massacred and 9,000 sold to slavery
Cesena bloodbath 1 February 1377 Cesena Papal States 2,500 people massacred by Breton troops under Cardinal Robert of Geneva during the War of the Eight Saints
Lozio massacre  [ it ]25 December 1410 Lozio Federici familyNobili family exterminated as part of the struggle between the Guelphs and Ghibellines.
Massacre of the Trinci  [ it ]10 January 1421 Nocera Umbra Pietro di RasigliaPietro di Rasiglia kills most of the Trinci family in a personal vendetta
Varano massacre  [ it ]10 October 1434 Camerino Rebels4 members of the Varano family killed by rebels outside a church in Camerino.
Chiavelli massacre  [ it ]26 May 1435 Fabriano RebelsRebels massacre 14 people, including 5 Chiavellis
Massacre of the Assumption 15 August 1474 Modica Christian mobChristians kill 360 Jews in Modica's La Giudecca
Otranto massacre 11 August 1480 Otranto Ottoman Empire Ottoman Turks massacre and enslave the population of Otranto

Early Modern Italy

NameDateLocationDeathsPerpetratorsNotes
Sack of Rapallo 8 September 1494 Rapallo Swiss mercenaries Swiss mercenaries under French command slaughter the population of Rapallo
Sack of Mordano  [ it ]20 October 1494 Mordano French Army and Swiss mercenariesMordano sacked by French and Swiss troops
Sack of FivizzanoOctober 1494 Fivizzano French Army
Sack of Castel Fiorentino20 October 1494 Castel Fiorentino French Army
Sack of Monte FortinoJanuary 1495 Montefortino French Army
Sack of Monte San GiovanniFebruary 1495 Monte San Giovanni Campano French Army
Sack of GaetaJune 1495 Gaeta French Army
Sack of ToscanellaJune 1495 Toscanella French Army
Sack of Ponte di SaccoJuly 1496 Ponsacco Florentine Army
Sack of Rocca d'ArazzoAugust 1499 Rocca d'Arazzo French Army
Sack of AnnoneAugust 1499 Annone French Army
Sack of ForlìJanuary 1500 Forlì French Army and Swiss mercenaries
Sack of TortonaFebruary 1500 Tortona Swiss mercenaries
Sack of FaenzaApril 1501 Faenza Gascons, Swiss, Italians
Sack of Capua25 July 1501 Capua French ArmyCapua sacked by French troops
Sack of FossombroneOctober 1502 Fossombrone Borgia's troops
Sack of RiminiOctober 1503 Rimini Borgia's troops
Sack of TreviglioMay 1509 Treviglio Venetian Army
Sack of PeschieraMay 1509 Peschiera French Army
Sack of MonseliceAugust 1509 Monselice Army of the Holy Roman Empire
Venetian Army
Sack of FeltreAugust 1509 Feltre Army of the Holy Roman Empire
Venetian Army
Sack of LegnanoMay 1510 Legnano French Army
Barbarano massacreMay 1510 Barbarano Mossano Army of the Holy Roman Empire [19] [20]
Sack of MonseliceJuly 1510 Monselice Spanish Army
Army of the Holy Roman Empire
Sack of Brescia 18 February 1512 Brescia French ArmyBrescia sacked by troops of Gaston of Foix, Duke of Nemours
Sack of Ravenna 12 April 1512 Ravenna French ArmyRavenna sacked by French troops after the Battle of Ravenna (1512).
Sack of Prato  [ it ]29 August 1512 Prato Spanish ArmyPrato sacked by Spanish troops
Sack of LodiMay 1516 Lodi Swiss mercenaries
Sack of ComoDecember 1521 Como Spanish Army
Sack of Genoa30–31 May 1522 Genoa Spanish ArmyGenoa sacked by Spanish troops
Sack of Rome (1527) 6 May 1527RomeArmy of the Holy Roman Empire
Spanish Army
Rome sacked by troops of Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor
Sack of Pavia (1527) October 1527 Pavia French Army
Venetian Army
Sack of Pavia  [ it ]May 1528PaviaArmy of the Holy Roman Empire
Spanish Army
Sack of Pavia  [ it ]September 1528PaviaArmy of the Holy Roman Empire
Spanish Army
Massacre of Waldensians in Calabria May/June 1561Calabria Roman Inquisition
Spanish Army
600–6,000 Waldensians killed by Inquisitorial and Spanish forces
Valtellina massacre 18–23 July 1620 Valtellina Catholics300–600 Protestants killed by pro-Spanish Catholics
Piedmontese Easter April 1655 Piedmont Savoyard Army Waldensians killed by ducal troops [21] [22] [23]
Lauria massacre 9 August 1806 Lauria Grande Armée City destroyed and population massacred by French Army under Marshal André Masséna

Risorgimento

NameDateLocationDeathsPerpetratorsNotes
Cesena and Forlì massacres  [ it ]January 1832 Papal States Papal States Papal troops suppress liberal rebellion and kill 38. [24]
Ten Days of Brescia 1 April 1849 Brescia Austrian Army16 Brescians executed by Austrian Army [25]
Cignoli family massacre  [ it ]20 May 1859 Torricella Verzate Austrian ArmyAustrian troops under Karl von Urban execute 9 civilians. [26]
Bronte riots  [ it ]2 August 1860 Bronte Red Shirts16 people killed in the riots, 5 sentenced to death as rioters by a drumhead court [27] [28]
Montefalcione massacre 9 July 1861 Montefalcione Royal Italian Army Mass shooting of civilians and former Sicilian soldiers. [29]
Auletta massacre  [ it ]28 July 1861 Auletta Bersaglieri
Hungarian Legion
Royal troops attack civilian population of Auletta. 45–130 killed and 200 arrested. [30]
Ruvo del Monte massacre  [ it ]10 August 1861 Potenza Royal Italian Army
National Guard
Royal Army and National Guard round up civilian population and shoot 30 pro-Bourbon partisans [31] [32]
Pontelandolfo and Casalduni massacre  [ it ]14 August 1861 Province of Benevento BersaglieriBersaglieri soldiers kill 13 civilians [33]
Pietrarsa massacre  [ it ]6 August 1863 Portici BersaglieriRoyal troops kill 4 Officine di Pietrarsa workers and wound 17. [34]
Turin Massacre (1864) 21 September 1864 Piazza Castello, Turin Royal Italian Army
Carabinieri
Royal Army and Carabinieri kill unarmed civilians
Seven and a Half Days Revolt 16-22 September 1866 Palermo Unknown (tens or hundreds estimated)Royal Italian ArmyRoyal Italian Army suppress rebellion mainly against enforced conscription

Kingdom of Italy

NameDateLocationDeathsPerpetratorsNotes
Caltavuturo massacre 20 January 1893 Caltavuturo Royal Italian Army and Carabinieri 13 Fasci Siciliani protesters shot dead by soldiers and policemen. [35]
Giardinello massacre 10 December 1893 Giardinello Royal Italian Army11 Fasci Siciliani protesters shot dead by soldiers and guards. [36]
Lercara Friddi massacre 25 December 1893 Lercara Friddi Royal Italian Army7–11 Fasci Siciliani protesters shot dead by soldiers. [37]
Bava Beccaris massacre 9 May 1898 Milan Royal Italian Army Italian Army troops under General Fiorenzo Bava Beccaris fired on rioters, killing hundreds. [38]
Buggerru massacre  [ it ]4 September 1904 Buggerru Royal Italian ArmyArmy troops kill 4 protesting miners in Sardinia [39] [40]
Itri massacre  [ it ]13 July 1911 Itri CarabinieriCarabinieri kill Sardinian workers in mainland Italy because they refused to pay protection to the local mafia [41]
Red Week (Italy) 7 June 1914 Ancona 3Carabinieri
Ancona revolt [ it]25-28 June 1920 Ancona 9Royal Italian Army [42]
Panicale massacre  [ it ]15 July 1920 Panicale CarabinieriCarabinieri suppress farmers' demonstration [43]
Palazzo d'Accursio massacre  [ it ]21 November 1920 Bologna Red GuardsRed Guards kill 10 Italian Socialist Party officials with hand grenades [44]
Canneto Sabino massacre  [ it ]11 December 1920 Province of Rieti CarabinieriCarabinieri kill 11 protesting workers [45]
Castello Estense massacre  [ it ]20 December 1920 Ferrara Fascists and socialists4 fascists and 2 socialists killed in street fight [46]
Empoli massacre  [ it ]1 March 1921 Empoli Red Guards and Italian Communist PartyRed Guards and Communists kill 9 soldiers [47]
Diana hotel massacre  [ it ]23 March 1921MilanAnarchistsAnarchists kill 21 in bombing [48] [49] [50]
Sarzano massacre  [ it ]21 July 1921 Sarzana CarabinieriCarabinieri kill 11 fascists [51] [52] [53] [54]

Fascist Italy

NameDateLocationDeathsPerpetratorsNotes
1922 Turin massacre 20 December 1922 Turin SquadrismoFascist Squadrismo under Piero Brandimarte kill 11 communists and trade unionists
Librizzi massacre  [ it ]25 June 1925MessinaRosario TranchitaSpree shooting [55] [56] [57] [58] [59] [60]
San Giovanni in Fiore massacre  [ it ]2 August 1925 San Giovanni in Fiore SquadrismoFascist Squadrismo kill communists, socialists and farmers [61]
Victor Emmanuel III of Italy assassination attempt  [ it ]12 Aprll 1928MilanUnknownA bomb concealed in a lamppost exploded in Milan, Italy just before 10 a.m, killing 20 people. It was probably an attempt on the life of King Victor Emmanuel III as it went off ten minutes ahead of a royal procession to open the city's fair. [62] [63] [64]
Gruaro massacre  [ it ]March 1933 Gruaro Authorities28 children killed by vaccine [65] [66]

Second World War

NameDateLocationDeathsPerpetratorsNotes
Biscari massacre 14 July 1943 Biscari (now Acate) United States Army, 180th Infantry Regiment POWs killed by US troops in two incidents [67]
Canicattì massacre 14 July 1943 Canicattì United States ArmyUS troops under Colonel McCaffrey fired on looters [68] [69]
Castiglione massacre  [ it ]12–14 August 1943 Castiglione di Sicilia 1st Fallschirm-Panzer Division Hermann Göring 1st Fallschirm-Panzer Division Hermann Göring massacres 16 civilians and wounds 20. [70]
Boves massacre 8 September 1943 Boves 1st SS Panzer Division Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler Mass killing by German occupation troops under Joachim Peiper
Lake Maggiore massacres September–October 1943 Lake Maggiore 1st SS Panzer DivisionMurder of 56 predominantly Italian Jews despite strict German orders not to carry out any violence against civilians
Caiazzo massacre 13 October 1943 Caiazzo 29th Panzergrenadier Regiment Mass killing by German occupation troops under Lt. Richard Heinz Wolfgang Lehnigk-Emden
Ardeatine massacre 24 March 1944 Rome Schutzstaffel, SD, Gestapo Mass killing by German occupation troops (SD-Gestapo led by Herbert Kappler) [71]
Guardistallo massacre 19 June 1944 Guardistallo 19th Luftwaffe Field Division57 Italian civilians killed in massacre by Luftwaffe Field Division [72]
Piazza Tasso massacre 17 July 1944 Florence Italian fascist militia, German Army5 Italian civilians killed in massacre by Fascists and German Army
Sant'Anna di Stazzema massacre 12 August 1944 Sant'Anna di Stazzema 16th SS Panzergrenadier Division Reichsführer-SS, 36th Brigata NeraMass killing by German occupation troops (16th SS Division) and Italian collaborators (16th Brigade) [73] [74] [75]
San Terenzo Monti massacre 17–19 August 1944 Fivizzano 16th SS Panzergrenadier Division159 Italian civilians killed by SS soldiers as reprisal for partisan activity
Padule di Fucecchio massacre 23 August 1944Padule di Fucecchio, Tuscany 26th Panzer Division Up to 184 Italian civilians as a reprisal for a partisan attack on two German soldiers. Massacre carried out by soldiers of the 26th Panzer Division. [76]
Vinca massacre 24–27 August 1944Fivizzano16th SS Panzergrenadier Division162 Italian civilians killed by SS soldiers as reprisal for partisan activity
Certosa di Farneta massacre 2 September 1944 Certosa di Farneta 16th SS Panzergrenadier DivisionMass killing by 16th SS Division of 44 civilians at monastery in near Lucca [77]
Marzabotto massacre 29 September 1944 Marzabotto 16th SS Panzergrenadier DivisionMass killing by German occupation troops (16th SS) [78]
Via Maqueda massacre  [ it ]19 October 1944Palermo139th Infantry Regiment "Bari"Royal Italian troops massacre protesting civilians, with 24 killed and 158 injured. [79]
Bombing of Gorla 20 October 1944 Milan United States Army Air Forces USAAF bombers discarded their payload on a densely inhabited area, killing hundreds, including 184 pupils of the Gorla elementary school.
Porzûs massacre 7 February 1945Porzûs, Faedis Communist partisansCommunist partisans executed 17 members of the Catholic partisan brigade Brigata Osoppo.
Salussola massacre 9 March 1945 Salussola Blackshirts 20 Italian partisans tortured and executed by Fascist Blackshirts [80]
Rovetta massacre 28 April 1945 Salussola Italian partisans43 National Republican Guard prisoners executed by partisans from the Brigata Camozzi, Brigate Garibaldi and Brigate Fiamme Verdi. [81]
Schio massacre 6 July 1945 Schio PartisansA group of ex-partisans of the Garibaldi Partisan Division "Ateo Garemi" and officers of the auxiliary partisan police kill suspected fascists among 99 inmates detained in the city jail.
Villarbasse massacre 20 November 1945 Villarbasse Bandits3 of the perpetrators were sentenced to death; this was the last time the death penalty was applied in Italy

Republic of Italy

NameDateLocationDeathsPerpetratorsNotes
Via Medina massacre  [ it ]11 June 1946NaplesUnknown9 monarchists killed and hundreds wounded by bomb [82] [83]
Vergarola explosion 18 August 1946 Pula Unknown65 killed by detonated explosives
Portella della Ginestra massacre 1 May 1947 Piana degli Albanesi BanditsAttack on May Day celebrations by bandits [84]
Melissa massacre  [ it ]29 October 1949 Calabria PolicePolice kill three demonstrating peasants. 15 wounded. [85]
Modena United Foundries massacre  [ it ]9 January 1950 Modena Carabinieri
Police
Authorities kill 6 and injure 200 protesters [86]
Trieste revolt  [ it ]5–6 November 1953 Trieste Allied Military Government for Occupied Territories
Venezia Giulia Police Force
6 killed by officers of the Venezia Giulia Police Force [87]
Reggio Emilia massacre  [ it ]7 July 1960 Reggio Emilia PolicePolice shoot and kill five demonstrators. At least 21 injured. [88]
Ciaculli massacre 30 June 1963 Ciaculli Mafiacar bombing of police by Mafia [89]
Malga Sasso massacre 9 September 1966 Brenner South Tyrolean Liberation Committee 3 policemen killed by South Tyrolean secessionists
Cima Vallona massacre 25 June 1967 San Nicolò di Comelico South Tyrolean Liberation Committee 4 soldiers killed by South Tyrolean secessionists
Viale Lazio massacre 10 December 1969 Palermo MafiaClan warfare by Mafia [90]
Piazza Fontana bombing 12 December 1969 Milan Ordine Nuovo Bombing by right-wing terrorists [91]
Gioia Tauro massacre [ it]22 July 1970 Gioia Tauro Vito Silverini, Vincenzo Caracciolo and Giuseppe ScarcellaTrain derailed by explosive. Six killed and 77 wounded. [92] [93] [94]
Peteano massacre 31 May 1972 Sagrado Ordine NuovoThree Carabinieri killed in right-wing terrorist bombing
Milan police HQ massacre 17 May 1973MilanGianfranco Bertoli4 killed and 52 injured in bombing.
Argo 16 bombing 23 November 1973 Marghera UnknownA C-47 aircraft called the Argo 16 is bombed by unknown terrorists, killing all four people on board.
1973 Rome airport attacks and hijacking 17 December 1973 Fiumicino Palestinian terrorists Airport terminal invasion, firebombing and hijacking of two aircraft by Palestinian terrorists
Piazza della Loggia bombing 28 May 1974 Brescia Ordine NuovoBombing by right-wing terrorists [95]
Italicus Express bombing 4 August 1974 San Benedetto Val di Sambro Ordine Nero Bombing by right-wing terrorists [96]
Querceta massacre  [ it ]22 October 1975 Querceta, Seravezza, Lucca, Tuscany Massimo Battini and Giuseppe Federigi (Lotta Armata Comunista) [97] Murder of 3 police Officers by Subversive group Lotta Armata Comunista. [98] [99]
Via Caravaggio massacre  [ it ]30–31 October 1975NaplesUnknownUnsolved murder of Santangelo family [100]
Acca Larentia killings 7 January 1978 Rome Left-wing extremistsKilling of right-wing activists by left-wing terrorists
Kidnapping of Aldo Moro 16 March 1978 - 9 May 1978 Rome Red Brigades 5 police officers killed instantly and Aldo Moro killed after two months
Via Schievano massacre  [ it ]8 January 1980Milan Red Brigades Red Brigades shoot and kill three police officers [101] [102]
Ustica massacre 27 June 1980 Tyrrhenian Sea near Ustica UnknownAirplane brought down by a terrorist bomb or air-to-air missile (findings disputed) [103]
Bologna Station massacre 2 August 1980 Bologna Nuclei Armati Rivoluzionari bombing by right-wing terrorists [104]
Circonvallazione massacre 16 June 1982PalermoMafia
Salerno massacre  [ it ]26 August 1982 Salerno Red BrigadesOne soldier and two policemen killed by Red Brigades terrorists [105] [106]
Via Carini massacre 3 September 1982PalermoMafiaAttack on gen. Carlo Alberto dalla Chiesa
Via Pipitone massacre [ it]29 July 1983PalermoMafiaCar bombing by Mafia, Rocco Chinnici killed [107]
Torre Annunziata massacre  [ it ]26 August 1984 Torre Annunziata Mafia7 injured [108] [109]
Train 904 bombing 23 December 1984 San Benedetto Val di Sambro MafiaTerrorist attack by Mafia [110]
Pizzolungo massacre 2 April 1985 Erice MafiaAttack on magistrate C Palermo by Mafia [111]
Fiumicino massacre 27 December 1985 Rome Abu Nidal Organization Attack at Rome's international airport, probably carried out by Abu Nidal Organization, who also struck at Vienna's international airport on the same day [112]
1988 Naples bombing 14 April 1988Naples Japanese Red Army 4 Italians and 1 American killed by Japanese Red Army car bomb.
Carretta case  [ it ]4 August 1989 Parma Ferdinando CarrettaFerdinando Carretta kills his parents and younger brother. [113] [114]
Pescopagano massacre 24 April 1990 Pescopagano Camorra 5 killed in inter-criminal conflict, 7 injured [115]
Gela massacre  [ it ]27 November 1990 Gela MafiaMafia killings [116]
Sinnai massacre  [ it ]8 January 1991 Sinnai UnknownUntil 26 January 2024, Beniamino Zuncheddu was considered guilty, but has been acquitted [117] [118]
Capaci bombing 23 May 1992 Capaci MafiaAttack on magistrate G Falcone by Mafia [119]
Via D'Amelio massacre 19 July 1992 Palermo MafiaAttack on magistrate P Borsellino by Mafia [120]
Via dei Georgofili massacre 27 May 1993 Florence MafiaCar bomb by Mafia [121]
Via Palestro massacre 27 July 1993 Milan MafiaCar bombing by Mafia [122]
Chilivani massacre  [ it ]16 August 1995 Ozieri Graziano Palmas, Andrea Gusinu2 Carabinieri and one bandit killed [123]
Ferdinand Gamper serial killings8 February 1996 - 1° March 1996 South Tyrol Ferdinand GamperAlso known as "The monster of Merano"
Buonvicino massacre [ it]19 November 1996 Buonvicino, Calabria Alfredo ValenteThe police officer Alfredo Valente shot and killed six members of his ex-wife's family with a pistol. He was arrested at another location. [124]
Erba Massacre [ it]11 December 2006 Erba, Lombardy Couple Olindo Romano and Angela Rosa BazziThe Couple Olindo Romano and Angela Rosa Bazzi Kills Four people including a 2-Year old Baby [125] [126] [127]
Castel Volturno massacre 18 September 2008 Castel Volturno Casalesi clan Seven people, including six African immigrants killed at random by the Casalesi clan.
2011 Florence shootings 13 December 2011 Florence, Tuscany Gianluca CasseriA member of CasaPound opened fire in a suburb market where many Senegalese immigrants were selling goods before committing suicide [128]

List of non-culpable massacres and natural disasters

Roman Italy

NameDateLocationDeathsNotes
Fidenae amphitheater disaster 27 AD Fidenae 20,000+
Eruption of Vesuvius 24 October 79 AD Naples 1,500-3,500possibly up to 16,000 deaths. One of the deadliest eruption in European history. Ejecting molten rock, pulverized pumice and hot ash at 1.5 million tons per second, ultimately releasing 100,000 times the thermal energy of the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
Circus Maximus partial collapse284 or 286 AD Rome 13,000Collapse of a wall of Circus Maximus. [129]
Circus Maximus partial collapse140 AD Rome 1,112Collapse of the upper tier of the Circus Maximus. [130]

Medieval Italy

NameDateLocationDeathsNotes
1169 Sicily earthquake 4 February 1169 Ionian Sea, near Catania 15,000-25,000Nearly all Catania people killed. Caused tsunami.
1222 Brescia earthquake 25 December 1222 Capriano del Colle 10,000+
1348 Friuli earthquake 25 January 1348 Tolmezzo, Venzone and Gemona del Friuli 10,000The earthquake hit in the same year that the Great Plague ravaged Italy.
1456 Central Italy earthquakes 5 December 1456 Pontelandolfo 30,000-70,000Largest earthquake on the Italian Peninsula.

Modern Italy

NameDateLocationDeathsNotes
1627 Gargano earthquake 30 July 1627 San Severo 5,000The largest and deadliest seismic event ever recorded in the Apulia region. Caused tsunami.
1638 Calabrian earthquakes 27 March 1638Near Savuto river9,581-30,000
1693 Sicily earthquake 11 January 1693Near Catania 60,000Almost two-thirds of the entire population of Catania were killed. The main quake had an estimated magnitude of 7.4 on the moment magnitude scale, the most powerful in Italian recorded history
1703 Apennine earthquakes 14 January 1703 Norcia, Montereale, L'Aquila 10,000+
Brescia explosion 18 August 1769 Brescia 3,000A Lightning bolt caused the explosion of a gunpowder depot, destroying one-sixth of the city.
1783 Calabrian earthquakes 4 February 1783 Palmi, Calabria 32,000-50,000The earthquakes occurred over a period of nearly two months. Caused tsunami.
1805 Molise earthquake 26 July 1805 Bojano-Macchiagodena 5,573
1857 Basilicata earthquake 16 December 1857 Montemurro 10,000At the time it was the third-largest known earthquake.
Limito rail disaster [ it]28 November 1893 Pioltello 40

XX and XXI centuries

NameDateLocationDeathsNotes
1905 Calabria earthquake 8 September 1905Epicenter near Vibo Valentia 557-2,500Caused a tsunami.
SS Sirio sinking 4 August 1906Near Cape Palos, Cartagena, Spain.

(**)

295-500The shipwreck gained notoriety because the captain, Giuseppe Piccone, abandoned ship at the first opportunity.
1907 Calabria earthquake 23 October 1907 Ferruzzano 167
1908 Messina earthquake 28 December 1908 Strait of Messina 75,000 - 82,000One of the worst earthquakes in the 20th century. Caused a tsunami.
1915 Avezzano earthquake 13 January 1915 Avezzano 29,978 - 32,610
1919 Verona Caproni Ca.48 crash 2 August 1919 Verona 14/15/17 (sources vary)
1920 Garfagnana earthquake 7 September 1920 Garfagnana 171
Gleno Dam failure 1 December 1923 Bergamo 356
SS Principessa Mafalda sinking 25 October 1927near the Abrolhos Archipelago, 80 miles off Salvador de Bahia, Brazil

(**)

314The sinking resulted in the greatest loss of life in Italian shipping and the largest ever in the Southern Hemisphere in peacetime, with the ship that was called "the Italian Titanic" [131]
Emilio Materassi's car crash at 1928 Italian Grand Prix 9 September 1928 Monza 28 Emilio Materassi and 27 spectators were killed when Materassi's car crashed into a grandstand; worst accident after the 1955 Le Mans disaster.
1930 Irpinia earthquake 23 July 1930 Aquilonia, Campania 1404
Molare dam disaster [ it]13 August 1935 Molare 111
SS Orazio sinking [ it]21 January 194035 miles off Toulon, France.

(**)

108(See List of maritime disasters in the 20th century for further details.)
Galleria delle Grazie human stampede [ it]23 October 1942 Genoa 354People were killed by stampede during an attack by the RAF Bomber Command in WWII as they made their way into Galleria delle Grazie, a railway tunnel in use as an air-raid shelter. Rushing down the 150 steps leading underground into the shelter, people fell on top of one another in a crush, accounting for the extremely heavy toll of the stampede. [132]
Caterina Costa explosion 28 March 1943 Naples 600+
Balvano train disaster 3 March 1944 Balvano 517+The deadliest railway accident in Italian history.
SS Charles Henderson explosion9 April 1945 Bari 542
Superga air disaster 4 May 1949 Turin 31
1951 Polesine flood [ it]14 November 1951 Province of Rovigo 101 (over 180,000 homeless)Heavy social and economic consequences
Sinnai flight crash [ it]26 January 1953 Sinnai 19
BOAC Flight 781 crash 10 January 1954Near Elba island 35
South African Airways Flight 201 crash 8 April 1954 Mediterranean Sea between Naples and Stromboli 21
1954 Ribolla disaster 4 May 1954 Ribolla 43
Sabena Flight 503 crash 13 February 1955 Monte Terminillo, Rieti 29
SS Andrea Doria sinking 25 July 1956Near the coast of Nantucket, Massachusetts

(**)

46
1957 Mille Miglia accident 12 May 1957 Guidizzolo (near Mantua)13Driver Alfonso de Portago, his co-driver/navigator, Ed Nelson and nine spectators was killed when Portago and Nelson ploughed into spectators. The Italian government decreed the end of the Mille Miglia race.
British European Airways Flight 142 collision 22 October 1958 Nettuno, near Anzio 31
Wolfgang von Trips's car crash at 1961 Italian Grand Prix 10 September 1961 Monza 15 Wolfgang Von Trips and 14 spectators were killed when Von Trips' car was thrown amidst the audience
1962 Irpinia earthquake 21 August 1962 Irpinia 16
Enrico Mattei air disaster 27 October 1962 Bascapè, near Pavia 3Enrico Mattei killed together with 2 friends
Vajont disaster 9 October 1963 Vajont 1,917 (and 1,300 definitively missing)
1966 flood of the Arno and 1966 Venice flood 4 November 1966 Florence, Grosseto, Pisa, Pontedera, Venice 101 in Tuscany, 1 in VeniceWorst serie of floods in centuries and worst flood in the Florence's history since 1557.
1968 Belice earthquake 14 January 1968Western Sicily 231+New towns constructed
Sinking of the SS London Valour 9 April 1970 Geneva 20
SS Heleanna fire [ it]28 August 1971Off Torre Canne 41. [133]
1971 RAF Hercules crash 9 November 1971Off the coast of Livorno by Meloria shoal 52Worst Italian Army accident since WWII
1976 Cavalese cable car crash 9 March 1976 Cavalese 43
1976 Friuli earthquake 6 May 1976 Gemona del Friuli 990 (and over 3,000 injured)Famous for its fast recover
Mount Serra Air disaster [ it]3 March 1977 Calci 44
Alitalia Flight 4128 crash 23 December 1978 Tyrrhenian Sea, off Palermo 108
Serafino Ferruzzi's personal jet disaster [ it]10 December 1979 Forlì 5Serafino Ferruzzi died together with 4 other people
1980 Irpinia earthquake 13 November 1980 Castelnuovo di Conza and Campania 2,483 - 4,900Famous for its slow and corrupted rebuild period
Vignola palace fire [ it]25 April 1982 Todi 35 (+40 injured)
Champoluc cable car crash [ it]13 February 1983 Champoluc 11A man, Maurizio Maria Verna (a 29 years old turinese) survived, by not using the cable car, and then died hours later in the Cinema Statuto Fire, in Turin.
Cinema Statuto fire 13 February 1983 Turin 64Largest disaster after World War II in Turin. The accident prompted a wave of reforms in the laws about public buildings, making fireproof materials and firefighting equipment mandatory for every public space.
Nervi highway disaster [ it]18 December 1983 Genoa 35
Val di Stava dam collapse 19 July 1985 Tesero 268
Elisabetta Montanari explosion [ it]13 March 1987 Port of Ravenna, Ravenna 13
Valtellina disaster 28 July 1987 Valtellina 53
Aero Trasporti Italiani Flight 460 crash 15 October 1987Mount Crozza, Conca di Crezzo, Province of Como 37
Uganda Airlines Flight 775 crash 17 October 1988 Rome-Fiumicino Airport, Rome 33
Collapse of the Civic Tower of Pavia 17 March 1989 Pavia 4
Crotone rail disaster [ it]16 November 1989 Crotone 12
1990 Carlentini earthquake 13 December 1990Near Augusta, Sicily 19
Moby Prince disaster 10 April 1991 Livorno 140
Banat Air Flight 166 crash 13 December 1995 Sommacampagna near Verona Airport, Verona 49
1997 Umbria and Marche earthquake 26 September 1996 Annifo and Umbria-Marche territory11There were several thousands of foreshocks and aftershocks from May 1997 to April 1998.
Sinking of F174 25-26 December 199635 km off-shore of Portopalo di Capo Passero 283 (+27 lost)
1998 Cavalese cable car crash 3 February 1998 Cavalese 20Caused by a human error of a USAF pilot
Via Vigna Jacobini building collapse [ it]16 December 1998 Rome 27
Linate Airport disaster 8 October 2001 Milan 118The deadliest accident in Italian aviation history.
Via Ventotene gas explosion [ it]27 November 2001 Rome 8
2002 Pirelli Tower airplane crash 18 April 2002 Milan 3 (and 60 injured)Cause not clear; officially a suicide of the pilot.
2002 Molise earthquakes 31 October 2002 San Giuliano di Puglia 29Most deaths caused by the collapse of a school in San Giuliano di Puglia.
City-Jet 124 flight crash [ it]24 February 2004 Sinnai 6
Crevalcore train crash January 2005 Crevalcore 17 (and 80 injured)Two consecutive human errors
2009 L'Aquila earthquake 6 April 2009 L'Aquila 308 (and over 1500 injured)
2009 Italian Air Force C130 disaster [ it]24 November 2009 Pisa 5
Costa Concordia disaster 13 January 2012 Isola del Giglio 34
2012 Emilia earthquake 20-29 May 2012 Finale Emilia 27
Collision of Jolly Nero and the control tower of Genoea harbour [ it]7 May 2013 Genoa 9 (and 6 injured)The ship Jolly Nero collided with the control tower of the port of Genoa, making it collapse and nearly killing all the people inside it.
2013 Monteforte Irpino bus crash 28 July 2013near Neaples 40
2013 Lampedusa migrant shipwreck 3 October 2013Near Lampedusa island359+
Cargo Gökbel sinking [ it]28 December 2014Near Marina di Ravenna (Ravenna) shore6
MS Norman Atlantic fire [ it]28 December 2014 Strait of Otranto 11
2016-2017 Amatrice earthquake 24 August 2016 Accumoli, Amatrice 299(Link to the italian wiki page: )
January 2017 Central Italy earthquakes and Rigopiano avalanche 18 January 2017 Farindola 34Rigopiano avalanche caused 29 deaths alone.
2017 Turin stampede 2 June 2017 Turin 3More than 1,500 injured
Pioltello train derailment 25 January 2018 Pioltello 3 (and 46 injured)
Collapse of the Morandi Bridge 14 August 2018 Genoa 43 (and 16 injured)
Corinaldo stampede 8 December 2018 Corinaldo 6
Stresa–Mottarone cable car crash 23 May 2021 Mottarone 14
2022 Marmolada serac collapse 3 July 2022 Marmolada 11

(**) For the Italian law, all the Italian ships are considered Italian territory.

See also

For Italians massacred outside Italy

Citations

  1. Diodorus Siculus 13.57.6
  2. Diodorus Siculus 13.62.4
  3. Diodorus Siculus 13.90.1
  4. Polybius, The Histories, III.61.
  5. Livy 2006, p. 155.
  6. Livy 2006, p. 229.
  7. Livy 2006, p. 239.
  8. Livy 2006, pp. 329–330.
  9. Livy 2006, p. 362.
  10. Livy 2006, p. 401.
  11. Dio, Cassius (1917). "XLVII". Roman History, Books 46–50 (Loeb Classical Library, Vol. V). [Earnest Cary, Trans.] Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. ISBN   9780674990913 . Retrieved 1 August 2018.
  12. Tacitus, Annals VI.19
  13. John Matthews, Western Aristocracies and Imperial Court AD 364–425, Oxford: University Press, 1990, p. 281.
  14. The Cambridge Ancient History Volume 13, (Cambridge University Press, 1998), page 125.
  15. Procopius, History of the Wars VI.XXI
  16. Procopius, History of the Wars VI.XXV
  17. Vasiliev 1968, pp. 76, 77.
  18. Kaldellis 2017, p. 45.
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Leoluca Bagarella is an Italian criminal and member of the Sicilian Mafia. He is from the town of Corleone. Following Salvatore Riina's arrest in early 1993, Bagarella became the head of the stragist strategy faction, opposing another faction commanded by the successor designate Bernardo Provenzano, creating a real rift in Cosa Nostra. Bagarella was captured in 1995, having been a fugitive for four years, and sentenced to life imprisonment for Mafia association and multiple murders.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Dukedom of Bronte</span>

The Dukedom of Bronte was a dukedom with the title Duke of Bronte, referring to the town of Bronte in the province of Catania, Sicily. It was granted on 10 October 1799 at Palermo to the British Royal Navy officer Horatio Nelson by King Ferdinand III of Sicily, in gratitude for Nelson having saved the kingdom of Sicily from conquest by Revolutionary French forces under Napoleon. This was largely achieved by Nelson's victory at the Battle of the Nile (1798), which extinguished French naval power in the Mediterranean, but also by his having evacuated the royal family from their palace in Naples to the safety of Palermo in Sicily. It carried the right to sit in parliament within the military branch. The dukedom does not descend according to fixed rules but is transferable by the holder to whomsoever he or she desires, strangers included. Accompanying it was a grant of a 15,000 hectare estate, centered on the ancient monastery of Maniace, five miles north of Bronte, which Nelson ordered to be restored and embellished as his residence – thenceforth called Castello di Maniace. He appointed as his resident administrator Johann Andreas Graeffer, an English-trained German landscape gardener who had recently created the English Garden at the Royal Palace of Caserta in Naples. Nelson never set foot on his estate, as he was killed in action six years later at the Battle of Trafalgar.

Casteldelci is a comune (municipality) in the province of Rimini, in the Italian region of Emilia-Romagna, located about 140 kilometres (87 mi) southeast of Bologna and about 55 kilometres (34 mi) south of Rimini.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Florestano Vancini</span> Italian film director and screenwriter

Florestano Vancini was an Italian film director and screenwriter.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Portella della Ginestra massacre</span> 1947 mass killing by Sicilian separatists in Piana degli Albanesi, Sicily, Italy

The Portella della Ginestra massacre refers to the killing of 11 people and 27 wounded during May Day celebrations in Sicily on 1 May 1947, in the municipality of Piana degli Albanesi. Those held responsible were the bandit and separatist leader Salvatore Giuliano and his gang, although their motives and intentions are still a matter of controversy.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Palazzo Cesi-Gaddi war crimes archive</span>

The Palazzo Cesi-Gaddi war crimes archive or armoire of shame is a wooden cabinet discovered in 1994 inside a large storage room in Palazzo Cesi-Gaddi, Rome which, at the time, housed the chancellery of the military attorney's office. The cabinet contained an archive of 695 files documenting war crimes perpetrated on Italian soil under fascist rule and during Nazi occupation after the 8 September 1943 armistice between Italy and Allied armed forces. The actions described in the records spanned several years and took place in various areas of the country, from the southern city of Acerra to the northern province of Trieste and as far east as the Balkans; it remains unclear, to this day, how the archive remained concealed for so long, and who gave the order to hide the files in the immediate post-war period.

The Acca Larentia killings, also known in Italy as the Acca Larentia massacre, were a double homicide that occurred in Rome on 7 January 1978. The attack was claimed by the self-described Nuclei Armati per il Contropotere Territoriale. Members of militant far-left groups were charged but acquitted, and the culprits were never identified.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Via D'Amelio bombing</span> 1992 Mafia killing in Palermo, Italy

The via D'Amelio bombing was a terrorist attack by the Sicilian Mafia, which took place in Palermo, Sicily, Italy, on 19 July 1992. It killed Paolo Borsellino, the anti-mafia Italian magistrate, and five members of his police escort: Agostino Catalano, Emanuela Loi, Vincenzo Li Muli, Walter Eddie Cosina, and Claudio Traina.

The Rivera massacre was a spree shooting that occurred on 4 March 1992, in several towns in the Canton of Ticino, Switzerland. Erminio Criscione, an Italian emigrant, shot six people dead and wounded six others. He hanged himself while in custody five days later.

Giuseppe Casarrubea was an Italian historian and author.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Italian Communist Party (2016)</span> Political party in Italy

The Italian Communist Party is a minor communist party in Italy.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Alcamo Marina Massacre</span>

The Massacre of Alcamo Marina refers to a double murder that occurred on 27 January 1976 in a Carabinieri station at Alcamo Marina, situated in the province of Trapani in the Italian island of Sicily. In the middle of the night, unknown gunmen broke into the station and shot dead two Carabinieri officers. Initially the Red Brigades were suspected, although they denied having anything to do with the attack, but eventually some youngsters from the area, including Giuseppe Gulotta, were arrested and convicted, and then absolved after more than 30 years. The Gulotta case represents one of the worst cases of miscarriage of justice and unjust detention in Italian history: Gulotta spent 22 years in jail and was then acquitted during a revisal of the trial, which took place after one of the Carabinieri officers involved in the investigation admitted that Gulotta's confession was obtained through torture and intimidation.

Events during the year 2021 in Italy.

This is a list of Italian television related events from 1992

The following is a list of events during the year 2022 in Italy.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Fragheto massacre</span> World War II massacre near Casteldelci, Italy

The Fragheto massacre was the massacre of 30 Italian civilians and 15 partisans in Fragheto, a frazione of Casteldelci in central-northern Italy, on 7 April 1944, during World War II, by soldiers of the German 356th Infantry Division. After partisans belonging to the Eighth Garibaldi Brigade ambushed troops approaching the hamlet, fourteen soldiers of the Sturmbattaillon OB Sudwest conducted house-to-house searches and summarily killed civilians. Representing 40% of the hamlet's population, many of the victims were elderly people, women, or children. A further seven partisans and one civilian were shot the next day at Ponte Carrattoni, at the confluence of the Senatello and Marecchia.

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