Italian partisan republics

The Italian Partisan Republics or Free Zones were the provisional state entities created by Italian partisans in areas liberated from the joint Nazi-Fascist occupation (or temporarily free for other reasons) in the summer of 1944, during the Second World War.[1] Located in mountainous and hilly territories of Northern Italy (along the arc of the Alps and the Northern Apennines), they were universally short-lived, with most of them being reconquered by the Wehrmacht within weeks of their formal establishments and re-incorporated into the Italian Social Republic.

Flag of the National Liberation Committee.

Description

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It was an overall phenomenon of areas that had been liberated by the partisans or had found themselves temporarily free from the rule and occupation of Nazi Germany and the Italian Social Republic for various reasons, and which have been managed and administered in different forms: either by real "Governments", either by the partisan groups themselves, or by autonomous institutions, always inspired by the creation of a democratic experience.[1]

Some of them had the time to produce a relatively structured administrative organization and legislative norms whose principles later passed into the Italian Constitution.[2]

List of Italian Partisan Republics

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See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b Smuraglia, Carlo (September 2014). "Dalle repubbliche alla Repubblica" [From the republics to the Republic]. Patria Indipendente (in Italian). Vol. Speciale 70° Liberazione. ANPI.
  2. ^ "1944 – Le Repubbliche Partigiane" [1944 – The Partisan Republics]. 1944-repubblichepartigiane.info (in Italian). Centro Studi Luciano Raimondi. Retrieved 15 October 2022.