List of stumbling blocks in Emilia-Romagna
The list of stumbling blocks in the province of Reggio nell'Emilia contains the stumbling blocks in the Italian province of Reggio Emilia , which remind of the fate of the people from this region who were murdered, deported, expelled or driven to suicide by the National Socialists . The stumbling blocks were laid by Gunter Demnig . As a rule, they are moved before the victim's last self-chosen place of residence. Its name is in Italian: Pietre d'inciampo .
Some of the tables can be sorted; the basic sorting is done alphabetically according to the family name.
overview
The Stolpersteine in Reggio nell'Emilia are dedicated to people of Jewish origin who were either deported to extermination camps by the Nazi regime and murdered or who died in their hiding place. The only survivor, Giorgio Melli, whose parents were both murdered by the Nazi regime, died in a nursing home at the age of 57. At the synagogue in Via Aquila 3A in Reggio nell'Emilia there are two plaques to the right and left of the entrance, one of which is dedicated to the ten deportees and murdered.
The stumbling blocks of Castelnovo ne 'Monti are dedicated to communists who were arrested in a Nazi raid on October 8, 1944, abducted and murdered in March and April 1945 before the collapse of the Hitler regime.
The stumbling blocks of Cadelbosco di Sopra and Guastalla are reminiscent of soldiers of the Italian army who refused to serve the Nazi regime after the armistice of Cassibile , were deported to Germany and were used there as military internees for forced labor. Many died as a result of the cruel treatment.
Cadelbosco di Sopra
Castelnovo ne 'Monti
Stumbling block | translation | Place of installation | Name, life |
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INELLO
LIVED HERE BEZZI, BORN IN 1902, CAPTURED 8.10.1944 CASA DEL FASCIO INTERNED IN THE FOSSOLI CAMP DEPORTED 1944 KAHLA MURDERED 14.3.1945 |
Via Umberto Monti, 9 |
Inello Bezzi , born in 1902, was a communist and an explicit opponent of fascism and National Socialism. He was arrested as part of a large-scale raid by the Nazi regime in the Appennines on October 8, 1944, taken to the Fossoli transit camp and deported from there to Kahla in Thuringia . In 1944 and 1945, one of the REIMAHG's underground armaments projects was carried out in the vicinity of Kahla . 15,000 forced laborers were deported from their home countries to Germany for this project in order to mass-build the Messerschmitt Me 262 jet fighter . The inhumane working conditions and the hustle and bustle resulted in 2,800 to 6,000 victims of REIMAHG, most of them Italians . Inello Bezzi was murdered on March 14, 1945. | |
ANSELMO
GUIDI LIVED HERE BORN IN 1898 CAPTURED 8.10.1944 CASA DEL FASCIO INTERNED IN THE FOSSOLI CAMP DEPORTED 1944 KAHLA MURDERED 03.26.1945 |
Isolato Maestà, 3 | Anselmo Guidi died on March 26, 1945 at the age of 17 as a forced laborer in the Reimahg armaments factory near Kahla . | |
RENATO EGIDIO
GUIDI LIVED HERE BORN IN 1927 CAPTURED 8.10.1944 CASA DEL FASCIO INTERNED IN THE FOSSOLI CAMP DEPORTED 1944 KAHLA MURDERED 6.3.1945 |
Isolato Maestà, 3 | Renato Guidi died on March 19, 1945 at the age of 46 as a slave labor in the Reimahg armaments plant near Kahla . | |
PIERINO
RUFFINI LIVED HERE, BORN IN 1901 CAPTURED 8.10.1944 CASA DEL FASCIO INTERNED IN THE FOSSOLI CAMP DEPORTED 1944 KAHLA MURDERED 02.27.1945 |
Isolato Maestà, 3 | Pierino Ruffini died on February 19, 1945 at the age of 43 as a forced laborer in the Reimahg armaments plant near Kahla . | |
UGOLINO
SIMONAZZI LIVED HERE, BORN IN 1901 CAPTURED 8.10.1944 CASA DEL FASCIO INTERNED IN THE FOSSOLI CAMP DEPORTED 1944 BRANDENBURG 7 HAVEL MURDERED 13.3.1945 |
Via Roma, 80 |
Ugolino Simonazzi , born in 1901, was a communist and an explicit opponent of fascism and National Socialism. He was arrested as part of a large-scale raid by the Nazi regime in the Appennines on October 8, 1944, taken to the Fossoli transit camp and then to the Brandenburg-Görden prison . There he was murdered on March 13, 1945. | |
HERE LIVED
FRANCESCO TOSCHI BORN 1902 CAPTURED 08/10/1944 CASA DEL FASCIO interned in the camp Fossoli deported in 1944 KAHLA MURDERED 03/30/1945 |
Via I ° Maggio, 2 |
Francesco Toschi , born in 1902, was a communist and an explicit opponent of fascism and National Socialism. He was arrested during the raid by the Nazi regime in the Appennines on October 8, 1944, taken to the Fossoli transit camp and deported from there to Kahla in Thuringia . Like another 15,000 deportees from various countries, he had to do forced labor under inhumane working conditions for the German armaments industry. Francesco Toschi was murdered on March 30, 1945. | |
ERMETE
ZUCCOLINI LIVED HERE BORN IN 1909 CAPTURED 8.10.1944 CASA DEL FASCIO INTERNED IN THE FOSSOLI CAMP DEPORTED 1944 KAHLA MURDERED 1.4.1945 |
Vicolo Costole |
Ermete Zuccolini , born in 1909, was a communist and an explicit opponent of fascism and National Socialism. He was arrested during the raid by the Nazi regime in the Appennines on October 8, 1944, taken to the Fossoli transit camp and deported from there to Kahla in Thuringia . Like another 15,000 deportees from various countries, he had to do forced labor under inhumane working conditions for the German armaments industry. Ermete Zuccolini was murdered on April 1, 1945. |
Correggio
Stumbling block | translation | Place of installation | Name, life |
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LUCIA FINZI
LIVED HERE BORN 1894 ARRESTED 8/12/1943 PRISON REGGIO EMILIA INTERNED CAMP FOSSOLI DEPORTED 1944 AUSCHWITZ MURDERED 02/26/1944 |
Piazza di San Quirino 4b |
Lucia Finzi was born on December 14, 1894 to Fanny and Raffaele Finzi. When the National Socialists arrogant rulership over large parts of Italy in 1943, her parents and sister had already died. Her brother fled and Lucia Finzi was alone. She was able to hide for a while, but returned to her hometown, was arrested by the SS on December 8, 1943 and taken first to Reggio nell'Emilia prison and then to Fossoli transit camp . The apartment was confiscated from the Germans. She was deported to Auschwitz-Birkenau in the same transport that young Primo Levi was on . She did not survive the Holocaust .
In January 2014 the exhibition “In Absentia” was shown in the Museo Il Correggio, which was dedicated to the memory of Lucia Finzi and other Jewish victims from the region. |
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CLAUDIO SINIGAGLIA
LIVED HERE BORN IN 1895 FOLLOWS ITALIAN RACE LAWS 1938 HIDDEN IN SASSUOLO 1943 DEPLOYED MEDICAL AID DIED ON 12/24/1944 |
Via Mandrio (corner of Via San Martino) |
Claudio Sinigaglia was born on December 3, 1895 in San Martino in Rio . He had at least three siblings: Guglielmo (1881–1950), who became a doctor, Lucia and Gilda (1897–1945). He served in World War I, was injured, and honored for his bravery. After studying law , he practiced as a lawyer in Bologna . After the Nazi regime came to power in Italy, the family's villa in Correggio was confiscated and Claudio Sinigaglia had to go into hiding. He suffered from diabetes and was dependent on insulin. Although his sister Gilda was taking care of him, he ran out of insulin. He fell into a diabetic coma and died on Christmas Eve 1944 in his hiding place in San Michele dei Mucchietti . | |
GILDA SINIGAGLIA
LIVED HERE BORN IN 1897 FOLLOWS ITALIAN RACE LAWS 1938 HIDDEN IN SASSUOLO 1943 DEPOSED OF MEDICAL AID DIED ON April 2nd, 1945 |
Via Mandrio (corner of Via San Martino) |
Gilda Sinigaglia was born in 1897. She came from a traditional and influential family from Correggio, who also took part in political life after the unification of Italy. Her older brother Guglielmo (1881–1950) became a doctor, her younger brother Claudio (1895–1945) a lawyer. She also had a sister, Lucia, about whom nothing is known. From 1938 she too suffered from the racial laws of the Mussolini regime, from 1943, after the Nazi regime came to power in Italy, she, like her siblings, had to fear for her life. The family's villa was confiscated by the Germans, her brother Claudio was hiding in San Michele dei Mucchietti and she was trying to provide him with food and insulin. Her brother died on Christmas Eve 1944. Gilda Sinigaglia had contracted pneumonia while on a supply trip that could not be treated due to the Nazi persecution pressure. She died in hiding on April 2, 1945. |
Guastalla
Stumbling block | translation | Place of installation | Name, life |
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GINO BENATTI
LIVED HERE BORN 1923 CAPTURED 9.9.1943 DEPORTED 1943 NEUENSTADT MURDERED ON A KOCHER 8.4.1945 |
Via Portamurata, 46 | Gino Benatti was born in 1923. He was a driver, was arrested on September 9, 1943 in Goito and died on April 8, 1945 at the age of 22 in a prison camp in Neuenstadt am Kocher . A German family lived near the camp who kept bringing the inmates to eat and who also looked after his grave after Benatti's death. | |
HERE LIVED
IVO CARRA BORN 1922 CAPTURED 09/09/1943 deported in 1943 LIPSIA MURDERED 03/14/1944 |
Via Cavallo, 9 | Ivo Carra was born in 1922. After the armistice in Cassibile , he was arrested by the Nazi regime in Trieste on September 9, 1943 and then deported to Germany. He was killed on March 14, 1944 in Leipzig . | |
ALFREDO
NOSARI LIVED HERE, BORN IN 1922 CAPTURED 9.9.1943 DEPORTED 1943 STIERINGEN MURDERED October 1, 1944 |
Via Staffola, 37 | Alfredo Nosari, born in 1922, was the younger brother of Athos Nosari. He was stationed in Montenegro and was arrested by the Nazi regime on September 9, 1943 after the Cassibile armistice and deported to Lorraine. He died on October 1, 1944 in Stieringen of complications from tuberculosis. | |
ATHOS NOSARI
LIVED HERE BORN 1916 CAPTURED 9.9.1943 DEPORTED 1943 LUCKENWALDE MURDERED 27.5.1944 |
Via Staffola, 37 | Athos Nosari, born in 1916, was the brother of Alfred Nosari. After the armistice of Cassibile in Gorizia, he was arrested by the Germans on September 9, 1943 and deported to the main camp III A in Luckenwalde. There he was murdered by the Nazi regime on May 27, 1944. | |
FERMINO
TONIATO LIVED HERE BORN IN 1922 CAPTURED 8.9.1943 DEPORTED 1943 CROATIA DEPORTED 1943 ALFEN STUKENBROCK DIED 6.5.1945 CORREGGIO |
Piazza Mazzini | Fermino Toniato was born in 1922. He came from a family with 19 children who lived in the Palazzo Ducale in Guastalla. He was a soldier in the Italian army, was arrested by the Nazi regime on September 8, 1943 in Istria and interned in Stalag 326 von Alfen- Stukenbrock . There he became seriously ill and was sent home. He died on May 6, 1945 in a sanatorium in Correggio . |
Reggio nell'Emilia
Stumbling block | translation | Place of installation | Name, life |
---|---|---|---|
HERE LIVED
PAOLO BONVENTURA BORN 1870 DOGS ITALIAN RACE LAWS 1938 ARRESTED 04/12/1943 PRISON REGGIO EMILIA DIED 02/13/1944 |
Via Baruffo, 1st floor |
Paolo Bonaventura, born in 1870, was a retired math teacher and an ardent anti-fascist. He was arrested on December 4, 1943, a Sabbath , for both his political stance and his Jewish origin . He died in Reggio Emilia prison on February 13, 1944. | |
HERE LIVED
ADA CORIN ALDI BORN 1877 ARRESTED 04/12/1943 PRISON REGGIO EMILIA internment camp Fossoli deported in 1944 AUSCHWITZ MURDERED 02/26/1944 |
Viale Monte Grappa, 18 |
Ada Corinaldi was born on March 3, 1877 in Reggio Emilia into a wealthy family. Her father Cesare Corinaldi was a merchant, her mother Elvira Ravà a landowner. She had four brothers and a younger and an older sister, Olga and Bice. The three sisters remained unmarried and lived comfortably in Viale Monte Grappa. On Saturday, December 4, 1943, they were arrested and taken to the Carcere di San Tommaso. Her fingerprints were probably taken there, but she was released the following day. They were arrested again, taken to the Fossoli transit camp and deported to Auschwitz-Birkenau on February 22, 1944 . In November 1949, the Reggio nell'Emilia court found that the three elderly women were most likely murdered on February 26, 1944 in the gas chambers of Auschwitz. | |
HERE LIVED
BICE CORIN ALDI BORN 1883 ARRESTED 04/12/1943 PRISON REGGIO EMILIA internment camp Fossoli deported in 1944 AUSCHWITZ MURDERED 02/26/1944 |
Viale Monte Grappa, 18 |
Bice Corinaldi was born on December 16, 1873 in Reggio Emilia as the daughter of Cesare Corinaldi and Elvira Ravà. The family was well-to-do and also had basic assets. Bice Corinaldi had six siblings, including sisters Ada (born 1877) and Olga (born 1888). Three of her brothers had important roles in public administration: Mario in the prefecture of Bologna, Guido in the municipality of Reggio nell'Emilia and the youngest, Gino, was the head of the Florence city building department. The fourth brother, Ugo Corinaldi, takes care of the family assets. The three sisters remained unmarried and lived together in Viale Monte Grappa. On a Sabbath in December 1943 they were first arrested, finally again released, then arrested again and over the transit camp Fossoli to Auschwitz-Birkenau deported. It is very likely that the three older women were murdered together in the gas chamber on February 26, 1944. | |
HERE LIVED
OLGA CORIN ALDI BORN 1883 ARRESTED 04/12/1943 PRISON REGGIO EMILIA internment camp Fossoli deported in 1944 AUSCHWITZ MURDERED 02/26/1944 |
Viale Monte Grappa, 18 |
Olga Corinaldi was born in Reggio Emilia on August 9, 1888. She was the daughter of the merchant Cesare Corinaldi and the landowner Elvira Ravà and had six siblings, including two older sisters: Ada (born 1877) and Bice (born 1873). All three remained unmarried and lived together in Viale Monte Grappa. Two of her brothers, Guido and Ugo, died before the Italian race laws were introduced in Italy in 1938. Brother Gino worked as the head of the Florence building department. Brother Mario Corinaldi returned to Reggio nell'Emilia from Bologna, where he had worked as Consigliere of the Prefecture, to look after his elderly sisters. Mario and his wife were on vacation when the three sisters were arrested in December 1943. The couple was finally able to hide under a false name in a clinic for nervous diseases in Modena and thus survive the Holocaust, while Ada, Bice and Olga Corinaldi were deported to Auschwitz-Birkenau on February 22, 1944 , and most likely immediately after their arrival on 26 February 1944 were murdered in the gas chamber. | |
HERE LIVED
LINA Jacchia IN MELLI BORN 1889 ARRESTED 08/12/1943 PRISON VARESE internment camp Fossoli deported in 1944 AUSCHWITZ MURDERED 26/02/1944 |
Via Emilia San Pietro, 22 |
Lina Jacchia was born on December 29, 1889 in Venice to Israele Jacchia and Emma Castelfranco. On February 14, 1915, she married Benedetto Melli from Modena in her hometown, moved with him to Reggio nell'Emilia and ran a knick-knack and textiles shop with him. The couple had a son, Giorgio, born in 1919, who was no longer allowed to study after the introduction of Italian race laws in 1938. Giorgio Melli then went to Switzerland, the parents wanted to follow him, but were arrested just before the border in Porto Ceresio , subsequently deported to Fossoli and later to Auschwitz-Birkenau . In all probability Lina Jacchia in Melli and her husband were murdered there on February 26, 1943 in the gas chamber.
As a result, her son lost his mind and died in 1977 in the Villa Santa Chiara nursing home in Verona. |
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HERE LIVED
IDA LIUZZI BORN 1877 DOGS ITALIAN RACE LAWS 1938 HIDDEN ALBINEA 1943 DIED 08/16/1944 |
Via Roma, 7 |
Ida Liuzzi was born in 1877. After the National Socialists came to power in Italy in 1943, she had to go into hiding in Borzano . She fell ill in her hiding place, a barn, could not call for help and died on August 16, 1944 on the wooden floor of the barn. | |
BENEDETTO MELLI
LIVED HERE BORN 1890 ARRESTED 8/12/1943 PRISON VARESE INTERNED CAMP FOSSOLI DEPORTED 1944 AUSCHWITZ MURDERED 26/02/1944 |
Via Emilia San Pietro, 22 |
Benedetto Melli was born on January 17, 1890 in Modena to Sammele Melli and Malvina Padova. He had two brothers: Guido, born on May 8, 1896 in Reggio nell'Emilia , and Adolfo. On February 14, 1915, he married Lina Jacchia, who was born there in Venice. The couple settled in Reggio nell'Emilia, moved into an apartment in Via Emilia San Pietro and ran a knick-knack shop nearby where they also sold textiles. The couple had a son, Giorgio, born in 1919. After the introduction of racial legislation in Italy in 1938, he was expelled from the university and then went to Switzerland to continue his studies. After the National Socialists came to power in Italy, the parents decided to follow their son to Switzerland. They reached Porto Ceresio in the province of Varese , were arrested there, transferred to the Varese prison on December 28, 1943 and later to the Fossoli transit camp . There Benedetto Melli was elected Kapo and tried in vain to smuggle a list of names out of the camp. The couple were deported to Auschwitz-Birkenau on February 22, 1944, where it is very likely that they were murdered in the gas chamber on February 26, 1944.
Son Giorgio and brother Adolfo survived the Holocaust , but the son was so severely traumatized by the loss of his parents that he lost his mind. He died in 1977 in the Villa Santa Chiara nursing home in Verona. Brother Guido, who ran a similar business in Modena as the Mellis in Reggio nell'Emilia, was a staunch socialist. His undoing was the fact that - in front of his own business - he slapped a high-ranking fascist. He was arrested on December 12, 1943, was taken to Auschwitz III Monowitz and murdered there. |
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GIORGIO
MELLI LIVED HERE BORN IN 1919 FOLLOWS ITALIAN RACE LAWS 1938 REFUGEE SWITZERLAND |
Via Emilia San Pietro, 22 |
Giorgio Melli, born in Reggio nell'Emilia in 1919, was the son of Benedetto Melli and Lina Jacchi, who ran a textile and knick-knack shop. The young man attended the Liceo Ariosto, but was no longer allowed to study at a university in his home country after the introduction of the Italian race laws in 1938. He then went to Lausanne in Switzerland, where he completed an engineering degree. The parents wanted to follow him, but were arrested just before the border in Porto Ceresio and subsequently, in all probability, murdered in the gas chamber in the Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration camp on February 26, 1943 . Giorgio Melli continued to teach at the University of Lausanne for a while, then returned to Italy, lost her mind due to the severe trauma and died in 1977 in the Villa Santa Chiara nursing home in Verona. | |
HERE LIVED
DANTE PADOA BORN 1883 DOGS ITALIAN RACE LAWS 1938 HIDDEN Costabona 1943 DIED 04/08/1944 |
Via Umberto Cagni, 4 |
Dante Padoa was born in 1883. He was persecuted due to the racist laws of Italy from 1938 and lost his job with the Italian Post . He went into hiding in Costabona in the municipality of Villa Minozzo in 1943 and died of a heart attack on August 4, 1944 while trying to escape through the woods during a cleanup. | |
BEATRICE RAVÀ
LIVED HERE IN RIETTI BORN IN 1877 ARRESTED 4.12.1943 PRISON REGGIO EMILIA INTERNED CAMP FOSSOLI DEPORTED 1944 AUSCHWITZ MURDERED 26.2.1944 |
Via Monzermone, 8 |
Beatrice Ravà in Rietti was born on May 1st, 1877 in Via dell'Aquila 3 in Reggio nell'Emilia . Her father, Serse Ravà, an upholsterer, was 24 at the time, her mother, Clelia Mortara, 26. She had a brother, Gino, who survived the Holocaust . Her father was the overseer of the synagogue in Via dell'Aquila until his death, and his brother succeeded him.
On August 31, 1908, she married Angelo Rietti and moved into an apartment with him in Via Monzermone, in what was then the ghetto. The couple had two daughters: Iole, born on January 22, 1910, and Ilma, born on May 9, 1913. The husband died on February 25, 1925 and she subsequently earned a living as a room landlady. Both daughters remained unmarried and continued to live with their mother. After the German occupation of Italy in 1943, the announcement was made to Beatrice Ravà in Rietti that Jewish and cultural property would be confiscated. When she confirmed acceptance of the document on December 11, 1943, she was already in Carcere di San Tommaso. She and her daughters were arrested on Saturday, December 4th. The three women were taken to the Fossoli transit camp via a stopover and deported to the Auschwitz extermination camp on February 22, 1944 , where all three were gassed on February 26, 1944. Her brother Gino was able to get himself and his children Fausto and Lindo to safety in time. |
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HERE LIVED
ILMA Rietti BORN 1913 ARRESTED 04/12/1943 PRISON REGGIO EMILIA internment camp Fossoli deported in 1944 AUSCHWITZ MURDERED 02/26/1944 |
Via Monzermone, 8 |
Ilma Rietti, born on May 9, 1913 in Reggio nell'Emilia, was the younger daughter of Beatrice Ravà in Rietti and the upholsterer Serse Ravà. The questionnaire for the censuses of 1931 and 1936 shows that she first worked as a shorthand typist and later at the telephone company Telefoni Italia Media Orientale (TIMO, later SIP, now Telecom Italia ). After the introduction of the Italian race legislation in 1938 , she lost her job. Together with her mother and sister, Ilma Rietti was arrested on December 4, 1943 and deported to Auschwitz-Birkenau via two intermediate stops . During the selection at the ramp, she is said to have been chosen for forced labor together with her sister Iole. However, the two did not want to leave their elderly mother alone and consequently all three women were murdered in the gas chambers on February 26, 1944. | |
IOLE RIETTI
LIVED HERE BORN 1910 ARRIVED 12/4/1943 REGGIO EMILIA PRISON FOSSOLI CAMP DEPORTED 1944 AUSCHWITZ MURDERED 02/26/1944 |
Via Monzermone, 8 |
Iole Rietti, born on January 22nd, 1910 in Reggio nell'Emilia, was the elder daughter of Beatrice Ravà in Rietti and the upholsterer Serse Ravà. The survey form for the 1936 census shows that she was a housewife. Their membership of the razza ebraica , the "Jewish race", is also noted there. Together with her mother and sister, Iole Rietti was arrested on December 4, 1943 and deported to the Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration camp via two intermediate stops . During the selection at the ramp, she is said to have been selected for forced labor together with her sister Ilma. However, the two did not want to leave their elderly mother alone and consequently all three women were murdered in the gas chambers on February 26, 1944. | |
ORESTE SINIGAGLIA
LIVED HERE BORN 1881 ARRESTED 02/02/1943 PRISON REGGIO EMILIA INTERNED CAMP FOSSOLI DEPORTED 1944 AUSCHWITZ MURDERED 02/26/1944 |
Via Monzermone, 10 |
Oreste Sinigaglia, born on December 11, 1881 in Milan , was the son of Angelo Sinigaglia. His mother's name is not known. He was a furniture dealer and, according to the population register, came from Viadana to Reggio nell'Emilia on August 24, 1904 . On November 10th of the same year he married Alice Liuzzi and moved into an apartment in Via Monzerone. The couple had two children: Elvira and Cesare (1906–1954). For decades he ran a prestigious shop in Via dell'Aquila until he was arrested by the SS on December 2, 1943 and taken to the Fossoli transit camp . The fate of the wife and daughter is unclear. On February 22, 1944, he was deported to the Auschwitz extermination camp , in Transport No. 8 together with 649 other victims, where Oreste Sinigaglia was murdered on February 26, 1944. |
Cavriago
In Cavriago , a total of five stumbling blocks were laid in memory of Enea Pozzi , Giovanni Bernuzzi , Vittorio Mariani , Umberto Montanari and Mario Vincenzo Gualerzi in 2019 .
Further relocations
city | Surname | Location |
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Fariolo | Dino Peretti | Via Pian del Pre, 26 |
Gombio | Roberto Carlini di Felina | Via Pian del Lago, 17 |
Reggio nell'Emilia | William Bertoni | Fogliano, Via William Bertoni |
Reggio nell'Emilia | Giovanni Ganassi | Via del Portone, 8 (una dei laterali di c. Garibaldi) |
Reggio nell'Emilia | Ettore Guidetti | Gardenia, via Antonio Piccinini |
Reggio nell'Emilia | Mario Sguazzini | Viale Risorgimento, 7 |
Laying data
The Stolpersteine in Emilia-Romagna were laid by Gunter Demnig personally on the following days:
- January 9, 2015: Correggio (Piazza di San Quirino 4b) and Reggio nell'Emilia (Via Emilia San Pietro 22, Viale Monte Grappa 18, Via Monzermone 8 and 10)
- January 13, 2016: Castelnovo ne 'Monti (Via I ° Maggio 2, Via Roma 80, Via Umberto Monti 9, Vicolo Costole), Correggio (Via Mandrio) and Reggio nell'Emilia (Via Baruffo 1, Via Roma 7, Via Umberto Cagni 4)
- January 14, 2017: Reggio Emilia (Via Antonio Piccinini (Gardenia), Via del Portone 8, Viale Risorgimento 7, Via William Bertoni (Fogliano))
- January 15, 2017: Cadelbosco di Sopra , Castelnovo ne 'Monti (Isolato Maestá 3), Fariolo, Gombio, Guastalla
- January 16, 2017: Parma
Claudia Nissen-Roth , the mayor of Kahla , and Markus Gleichmann from the historical center traveled to lay the stumbling blocks for the REIMAHG victims Anselmo Guidi, Renato Guidi and Pierino Ruffini (all from Castelnovo ne 'Monti) and Roberto Carlini (from Gombio) and the Walpersberg Research Association.
swell
- Reggio nell'Emilia on gedenkorte-europa.eu, the homepage of Gedenkorte Europa 1939–1945 , accessed on October 20, 2015
- http://www.bresciaoggi.it/territori/città/il-ribelle-torna-a-nuova-vita-una-raccolta-di-scritti-d-epoca-1.3953735?refresh_ce
- Storage point: PIETRE D'INCIAMPO - Stolpersteine ( memento from October 21, 2015 in the web archive archive.today ) , accessed on April 19, 2016
Individual evidence
- ↑ a b c d e f g h ISTORECO (Istituto per la storia della Resistenza e della società contemporanea in Provincia di Reggio Emilia): Pietre d'inciampo. Viaggio di Memoria. Il futuro non si cancella. ( Memento of the original from April 15, 2016 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. , accessed on April 16, 2016 (with a group picture of the sisters Ilma and Iole Riette and their mother Beatrice, portrait photographs by Lucia Finzi and Oreste Sinigaglia)
- ↑ Memorial sites: Memorial plaques at the synagogue , with a picture of the plaque, accessed on October 20, 2015
- ↑ Birgit Klausmann-Molter: PONS Global Dictionary (Italian / German), Klett, Stuttgart 1986, p. 126: " catturare (persona) catch, grab, (fare prigionere) capture."
- ↑ http://gazzettadireggio.gelocal.it/reggio/cronaca/2017/01/10/news/pietre-d-inciampo-altri-15-omaggi-ai-morti-del-nazismo-1.14695306
- ↑ http://www.deutschlandfunkkultur.de/die-toten-von-treuenbrietzen.1134.de.html?dram:article_id=177121v
- ↑ Thuringian Association of the Persecuted of the Nazi Regime - Association of Antifascists and Study Group of German Resistance 1933–1945 (Ed.): Heimatgeschichtlicher Wegweiser zu places of resistance and persecution 1933–1945, series: Heimatgeschichtliche Wegweiser Volume 8 Thüringen, Erfurt 2003, p. 213 ff., ISBN 3-88864-343-0
- ↑ a b c d e f ISTORECO (Istituto per la storia della Resistenza e della società contemporanea in Provincia di Reggio Emilia): Il 13 gennaio la posa di dieci nuove Pietre a Reggio, Correggio e Castelnovo Monti , November 30, 2015, accessed on 17th April 2016
- ↑ a b c d Thüringische Landeszeitung (Weimar): Italy trip because of stumbling blocks , January 14, 2017, accessed on May 9, 2017
- ^ I Nomi della Shoa italiana: Lucia Finzi , accessed on November 15, 2015
- ↑ Silvia Parmeggiani: “pietra d'inciampo” per ricordare la deportata ( page no longer available , search in web archives ) Info: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. , Gazzetta di Reggio , January 8, 2015, accessed April 15, 2016
- ↑ a b c d e f g Adriano Asti: L'omaggio di Reggio Emilia ai deportati ebrei , Gazzetta di Reggio, January 10, 2015, accessed on April 15, 2016
- ^ Gazzetta di Reggio: Mostra “In absentia” storia di Lucia Finzi e degli ebrei emiliani , January 19, 2014, accessed on April 15, 2016
- ↑ Antonio Zambonelli: Ebrei reggiani tra leggi razziali ed Olocausto. (2 "parte) ( Memento of the original from April 15, 2016 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link has been inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this note. , In: Ricerche Storiche, Anno XXIII, N. 62/63, September 1898, p. 18, accessed April 15, 2016
- ↑ Commune di Correggio: La posa di due “pietre d'inciampo” a ricordo di Gilda e Claudio Sinigaglia , January 12 and 13, 2016, accessed on April 15, 2016
- ↑ a b c d e Gazzetta di Reggio : La Bassa ricorda i suoi martiri , 294 di 2318, accessed on May 9, 2017
- ↑ a b c d e f g h Enciclopedia storica dell'ebraismo reggiano: Gli ebrei reggiani dal 1918 al 1945 , accessed on April 15, 2016
- ^ A b c Adriano Arati: Shoah, dieci nuove pietre d'inciampo a Reggio Emilia , Gazzetta di Reggio, January 4, 2016, accessed April 17, 2016
- ↑ Pietre d'inciampo anche a Cavriago per non dimenticare. Reggionline, il quoditiano di Reggio Emilia, detailed report with photos, from January 19, 2019, accessed on January 24, 2019
- ^ Reggio Sera: Pietre d'Inciampo a Reggio, Correggio e Castelnovo Monti , January 14, 2016, accessed on May 12, 2017
- ↑ Comune di Parma: “Pietre d'inciampo”, un progetto per ricordare , accessed on May 10, 2017
- ↑ Gazzetta di Parma : Source pietre davanti alle case chi fu deportato , January 17, 2017 (with a picture of Demnig during a transfer), accessed on May 10, 2017
- ^ Il Resto del Carlino: Gli studenti in Turingia, sulle orme dei compaesani deportati , December 3, 2015, accessed on May 9, 2017
Web links
- stolpersteine.eu , Demnig's website