Cesare Battisti (politician)

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Bust of Cesare Battisti by Adolfo Wildt at the Bolzano Victory Monument in the capital of South Tyrol

Cesare Battisti (4 February 1875 – 12 July 1916) was an Italian politician of Austrian citizenship, who became a prominent Irrendentist at the start of the First World War.

Biography

He was born the son of a merchant at Trento, a city with a predominantly Italian-speaking population, which at the time was part of the Cisleithanian crown land of Tyrol in Austria-Hungary. Battisti attended the University of Florence, where he became a follower the Italian irredentism movement, aiming at the unification of his Trentino homeland with the Kingdom of Italy, though contrary to activists like Ettore Tolomei and Gabriele d'Annunzio, he did not claim the predominantly German-speaking areas of South Tyrol up to the Brenner Pass.

A journalist by profession and a member of the Social Democratic Workers' Party of Austria, he was elected as a representative to the Tyrolean Landtag assembly at Innsbruck as well as to the Austrian Imperial Council (Reichsrat) at Vienna in 1911, where he vainly tried to obtain a status of autonomy for the Trentino region. Disgruntled by Austro-Hungarian attitudes to minorities in their empire, Battisti agreed to construct a military guide for the Italians to Austrian provinces that bordered Italy.[1]

When Austria-Hungary mobilised in August 1914, Battisti fled to the Kingdom of Italy with his family where he held public meetings demanding Italy join the Triple Entente forces against Austria.[2] With Italy's entry into World War I following the 1915 London Pact, though still an Austrian citizen, Battisti fought against the Austro-Hungarian Army in the Alpini Corps at the Italian Front.

Execution photo
Cesare Battisti is remembered at Via Cesare Battisti near Piazza Venezia in Rome

After the Battle of Asiago he was captured by the Austrian forces on 10 July 1916 and faced a court-martial in his hometown Trento at the Castello del Buonconsiglio, charged with high treason. Though Battisti officially enjoyed parliamentary immunity, he was sentenced to death by strangulation. He requested a military execution by firing squad so as to not dishonor the Italian Army uniform, but the judge denied his request, and instead procured for him some shabby civilian clothes. Dressed in these, he was executed (hanged and garrotted) the same day, the brutality of which was increased by the fact that the executioner Joseph Lang botched the job and Battisti actually was hanged twice.

The smiling execution squad posed with his body for photographs, which later published did severe damage to the Austrian reputation. The author Karl Kraus applied a picture as frontispiece of his 1922 play Die letzten Tage der Menschheit (The Last Days of Mankind). Battisti is considered a national hero in Italy and several memorials were dedicated to him, in Rome as well as in his hometown Trento and at the Bolzano Victory Monument, both Austrian cities until 1918.

See also

References

  1. Mark Thompson (2008) The White War: Life and Death on the Italian Front, 1915-1919, Faber and Faber, London p98
  2. Mark Thompson (2008) The White War: Life and Death on the Italian Front, 1915-1919, Faber and Faber, London p99

Works

  • Opere geografiche, Trento, La Finestra editrice, 2005
  • Scritti politici, Trento, La Finestra editrice, 2006
  • Guida alle Giudicarie, Monauni editore, Trento 1909
  • Il Trentino, Novara 1910.

Bibliography

  • Stefano Biguzzi, Cesare Battisti, UTET, 2008
  • Karl Kraus, Gli ultimi giorni dell'umanità. Vienna, 1918 (1922)
  • Massimo Tiezzi, L'eroe conteso. La costruzione del mito di Cesare Battisti negli anni 1916-1935, Trento, Museo Storico in Trento, 2007
  • Diego Leoni (a cura di), Come si porta un uomo alla morte: la fotografia della cattura e dell'esecuzione di Cesare Battisti, Museo storico in Trento-Provincia di Trento, 2008

External links


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