List of stumbling blocks in the metropolitan city of Florence

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Stumbling blocks in San Casciano in Val di Pesa

The list of stumbling blocks in the metropolitan city of Florence contains the stumbling blocks in the metropolitan city of Florence , the capital of Tuscany and the surrounding area. Stumbling blocks 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 in front of the victim's last self-chosen place of residence. Its name is in Italian: Pietre d'inciampo .

The first installation in the metropolitan city of Florence took place on January 10, 2018 in San Casciano in Val di Pesa .

Some of the tables can be sorted; the basic sorting is done alphabetically according to the family name.

San Casciano in Val di Pesa

image translation Location Name, biography
Stumbling block for Giacomo Modigliani (San Casciano in Val di Pesa) .jpg
HERE LIVED
GIACOMO MODIGLIANI
BORN 1891
ARRESTED 10/17/1943
deported
Fossoli
MURDERED 1944
AUSCHWITZ
Via Roma 32/34
San Casciano in Val di Pesa
Erioll world.svg
Giacomo Modigliani , born on September 3, 1891 in Florence,
Elena Castelli , born on August 28, 1906, also in Florence, and
Vittorio Modigliani , born on December 19, 1935 in Florence, were an Italian family of Jewish origin who were part of the Nazi regime was exterminated as part of the Shoah .
Stumbling stone for Paolo Sternfeld (San Casciano in Val di Pesa) .jpg
HERE LIVED
PAOLO STERNFELD
BORN 1888
ARRESTED 10/17/1943
deported
Fossoli
MURDERED 1944
AUSCHWITZ
Via Roma 32/34
San Casciano in Val di Pesa
Erioll world.svg
Paolo Sternfeld was born on January 8, 1888 in Venice , the son of Giacomo Sternfeld (1848-1921) and Giovanna Tedesco (1856-1938). He had four brothers, Giorgio (1878-1939), Oscar (1880-1944), Giacomo Guido Dante Campostella (1881-1954), Enrico (1891-1918), and a little sister, Paola, who was, however, already at the age of two Years ago. He married Olga Castelli, Elena Castelli's sister (see above). His wife's family owned property in San Casciano, although their primary residence was in Florence. The Sternfeld couple probably moved to San Casciano as early as 1942 to be safe from the bombing raids on Florence. There, however, Paolo Sternfeld was arrested by Nazi troops on October 17, 1943 because of his Jewish descent and deported to the Fossoli transit camp . On April 5, 1944, he was deported from Fossoli in convoy No. 9 to the Auschwitz concentration camp , where he arrived on the 10th of the month. He did not survive the Shoah .

The fate of his wife is unknown.

Florence

image translation Location Name, biography
Stumbling block for Adriana Castelli (Florence) .jpg ADRIANA CASTELLI
LIVED HERE
BORN 1886
ARRESTED 1.3.1944
DEPORTED
AUSCHWITZ
MURDERED 10.4.1944
Piazza delle Cure 7
Florence Erioll world.svg
Adriana Castelli was born in Livorno on December 2, 1886 . Her parents were Giulia Caro and Cesare Castello. Adriana had two sisters. She was married to Giulio Levi and had three sons with him: Cesare (1908), Sergio (1910) and Aldo (1911).

Adriana Castelli was arrested in Florence on March 1, 1944, along with her husband and son Aldo, and was then imprisoned in the city prison for a few weeks. The family was then transferred to the Fossoli transit camp , from where they were deported to Auschwitz on April 5 with transport number 9 .

When Adriana Castelli and her husband Giulio arrived in Auschwitz on April 10, they were immediately murdered.

Stumbling block for Amelia Gallico (Florence) .jpg AMELIA
GALLICO LIVED HERE BORN IN
1893
ARRESTED 6/11/1943
DEPORTED
AUSCHWITZ
MURDERED
Via Marsala 2
Florence
Erioll world.svg
Amelia Gallico was born in Florence on February 24, 1893 . She was the daughter of the couple Elena Galletti and Cesare Gallico. Amelia was married to Augusto Gallico and had two sons with him: Sergio (1918) and Lucio (1933).

Amelia Gallico was arrested with her husband and two sons on November 6, 1943 in Florence . After a few days of imprisonment, she was deported to Auschwitz on November 9 with Transport No. 3 , where she arrived on November 14.

Amelia Gallico did not survive the Shoah .

Stumbling stone for Augusto Gallico (Florence) .jpg HERE LIVED
AUGUSTO GALLICO
BORN 1892
ARRESTED 06/11/1943
deported
AUSCHWITZ
MURDERED
Via Marsala 2
Florence
Erioll world.svg
Augusto Gallico was born in Florence on September 25, 1892 . His parents were Laudonia Bemporad and Augusto Gallico. He was married to Amelia Gallico and had two sons with her: Sergio (1918) and Lucio (1933).

Together with his wife and two sons, Augusto Gallico was arrested on November 6, 1943 in Florence . After a few days in prison, the family was deported to Auschwitz on November 9 with Transport No. 3 .

Presumably, all family members were murdered immediately upon their arrival on November 14th.

Stumbling stone for Lucio Gallico (Florence) .jpg LUCIO GALLICO
LIVED HERE
BORN 1933
ARRIVED 11/6/1943
DEPORTED
AUSCHWITZ
MURDERED 11/14/1943
Via Marsala 2
Florence
Erioll world.svg
Lucio Gallico was born on January 28, 1933 in the city of Tunis , Tunisia . His parents were Augusto and Amelia Gallico. Lucio had an older brother named Sergio.

On November 6, 1943, Lucio was arrested together with his parents and brother in Florence . After three days in prison, the family was deported to Auschwitz on November 9 with Transport No. 3 .

When the family arrived on November 14th, 10-year-old Lucio was registered with the letter S and immediately murdered.

Stumbling stone for Sergio Gallico (Florence) .jpg SERGIO GALLICO
LIVED HERE
BORN 1918
ARRESTED 11/6/1943
DEPORTED
AUSCHWITZ
MURDERED 11/14/1943
Via Marsala 2
Florence
Erioll world.svg
Sergio Gallico was born on July 20, 1918 in Bettola , a small municipality in the province of Piacenza . He was the firstborn of the couple Amelia and Augusto Gallico. His younger brother Lucio would not be born until 15 years later, on January 28, 1933.

On November 6, 1943, Sergio was arrested together with his parents and brother in Florence . After a few days in prison, the family was deported to Auschwitz on November 9 with Transport No. 3 .

Presumably the whole family was murdered immediately after arriving in Auschwitz on November 14, 1943.

Stumbling block for Abramo Genazzani (Florence) .jpg ABRAMO GENAZZANI
LIVED HERE
BORN 1896
ARRESTED 27.2.1944
DEPORTED
AUSCHWITZ
MURDERED
Via del Proconsolo 6
Florence
Erioll world.svg
Abramo Genazzani was born in Livorno on August 27, 1896 as the eldest of three children of the couple Ildegonda Secondina Severi and Sabato Eugenio Genazzani . His younger siblings were named Elena (1898) and Davide (1907).

After his sister Elena was arrested in November 1943, Abramo suffered the same fate a few weeks later, on January 15, 1944. After his arrest in Florence , he was imprisoned there for a few months until he was transferred to the Fossoli transit camp . Starting from Verona, Abramo was deported on August 2, 1944 with Transport No. 15 to the Buchenwald concentration camp , where he arrived on August 4 after a two-day journey.

Like his sister Elena and his brother Davide, Abramo Genazzani also did not survive the Shoah . The date and place of his murder are unknown.

Stumbling block for David Genazzani (Florence) .jpg HERE LIVED
DAVID Genazzani
BORN 1907
ARRESTED 05/19/1944
deported
AUSCHWITZ
MURDERED 03/10/1945
Buchenwald
Via Ghibellina 102
Florence
Erioll world.svg
David Genazzani was born in Florence on November 30, 1907, the last child of the couple Ildegonda Secondina Severi and Sabato Eugenio Genazzani . Davide had two older siblings: Abramo (1896) and Elena (1898). Davide Genazzani was married to Enrichetta Ambonetti.

A few months after his older brother was arrested in January, Davide was also arrested on May 19, 1944. After his arrest in Grassina, a suburb of the metropolitan city of Florence, Davide was detained in Florence prison for a week until he was taken to the Fossoli transit camp . On August 2, 1944, he and his brother Abramo were deported from Verona to the Buchenwald concentration camp on Transport No. 15 . Upon his arrival on August 4th, Davide was registered with matriculation number 44516.

Davide Genazzani died on March 10, 1945 in Buchenwald .

Stumbling block for Elena Genazzani (Florence) .jpg HERE LIVED
ELENA Genazzani
BORN 1898
ARRESTED 05/24/1944
deported
AUSCHWITZ
DIED 02/12/1945
Via del Proconsolo 6
Florence
Erioll world.svg
Elena Genazzani was born in Florence on July 10, 1898 . She was the daughter of the couple Ildegonda Secondina Severi and Sabato Eugenio Genazzani. The couple also had two sons: Abramo (1896) and Davide (1907). Elena was married to Guido Renzo Melli and had a son with him: Mario (1924).

Elena was arrested in Florence on November 30, 1943 and was subsequently imprisoned in the city's prison. After more than six months, she was transferred to the Fossoli transit camp and from there on June 26, 1944, was deported to Auschwitz on transport No. 13 . When she arrived at the concentration camp on June 30, Elena Genazzani was registered with the matriculation number A-8478.

Elena Genazzani died on February 12, 1945, shortly after the liberation of Auschwitz .

Stumbling stone for Amalia Koretz (Florence) .jpg AMALIA KORETZ
LIVED HERE
BORN 1871
ARRESTED 16.1.1944
DEPORTED
AUSCHWITZ
MURDERED 6.2.1944
Piazza Massimo D'Azeglio 12
Florence
Erioll world.svg
Amalia Koretz was born on March 15, 1871. Your exact place of birth is not known, but it is probably in Czechoslovakia . Her parents were Lea Vedebi and Ferdinando Koretz.

She was married to Giuseppe Siebzehner, who was born in Vienna , and had two sons named Giorgio and Federico with him.

On January 16, 1944, Amalia Koretz and her husband were arrested by the German SS. The arrest took place in a nursing home in Florence , where the elderly couple had found refuge. The couple were then imprisoned in Milan prison. On January 30th, the couple were deported to Auschwitz on Transport No. 6 .

When she arrived at Auschwitz on February 6, 1944, Amalia Koretz was registered with the letter S and immediately murdered.

Stolperstein for Aldo Levi (Florence) .jpg
ALDO LEVI LIVED HERE
BORN 1911
ARRESTED 01/03/1944
DEPORTED
AUSCHWITZ
MURDERED 01/20/1945
Piazza delle Cure 7
Florence Erioll world.svg
Aldo Levi was born on July 24, 1911 as the son of Adriana Castelli and Giulio Levi in Fauglia , in the province of Pisa . He had two older brothers, Cesare and Sergio.

Aldo studied law and worked as a lawyer. After the introduction of the Italian Race Laws in 1938, he tried to find work in England , but returned to Florence a little later, unsuccessfully .

Aldo was lured into a trap on March 1, 1944, and then arrested with his parents in Florence . After being detained in the city jail for a few weeks, the family was taken to Fossoli transit camp . On April 5, all three were deported to Auschwitz on Transport No. 9 . When she arrived on April 10, Aldo's parents were murdered immediately.

Aldo himself died almost a year later, on January 20, 1945, a few days before the liberation of Auschwitz , on one of the so-called death marches .

Stolperstein for Clotilde Levi (Florence) .jpg
CLOTILDE LEVI LIVED HERE, BORN IN
1864
ARRIVED JAN. 1944
DEPORTED
AUSCHWITZ
MURDERED
Piazzale Donatello 15
Florence
Erioll world.svg
Clotilde Levi was born in Florence on July 17, 1864 . Her parents were Clelia Cave and Carlo Levi. Clotilde was married to Leonardo Nissim.

At the beginning of 1944 she was arrested in Florence and was subsequently imprisoned in Milan prison. On January 30, 1944, Clotilde was deported from Milan to Auschwitz on Transport No. 6 .

Clotilde Levi was registered with the letter S immediately after her arrival in Auschwitz on February 6, 1944, and was murdered.

Stumbling stone for Giulio Levi (Florence) .jpg
GIULIO LEVI LIVED HERE
BORN 1878
ARRESTED 01/03/1944
DEPORTED
AUSCHWITZ
MURDERED 04/14/1944
Piazza delle Cure 7
Florence Erioll world.svg
Giulio Levi was born on November 24th 1878 in Casale Monferrato , in the province of Alessandria . His parents were Adele Ottolenghi and Teodoro Levi and he had three brothers, one of whom was named Armando (1876).

Giulio was married to Adriana Castelli and the couple had three sons: Cesare (1908), Sergio (1910) and Aldo (1911).

Giulio Levi worked at the land registry in Florence .

On March 1, 1944, Giulio was arrested in Florence along with his wife and son Aldo and then held in the city's prison. After a few weeks of imprisonment, the three of them were taken to the Fossoli transit camp and from there on April 5th deported to Auschwitz on Transport No. 9 .

Upon his arrival on April 10th, Giulio Levi was immediately murdered, as was his wife Adriana.

His son Aldo died about a year later on one of the so-called death marches .

Stolperstein for Lucia Levi (Florence) .jpg
LUCIA LEVI LIVED HERE
BORN 1879
ARRESTED APRIL 1944
DEPORTED
AUSCHWITZ
MURDERED 06/30/1944
Via Giovanni Bovio 7 Lucia Levi was born on August 29, 1879 in Bagno a Ripoli , a parish in the metropolitan city of Florence . She was the youngest daughter of the couple Vittorio Sforni and Ottavia Levi. Lucia was Alberto Levy's widow.

Lucia was arrested in Florence and subsequently held in the city's prison. She was later transferred to the Fossoli transit camp . From there, Lucia was deported to Auschwitz on June 26, 1944 with Transport No. 13 .

Upon her arrival at the concentration camp on June 30th, Lucia Levi was registered with the letter S and immediately murdered.

Lucia Levi was the last representative of the Sepharid Levi family to have lived in Florence for centuries. Lucia's ancestors had been civil servants and clerks in the Jewish community of Florence for decades. Her grandfather Salvatore was a respected land manager and head of the Tempio Levantino .

Stumbling stone for Noemi Levi (Florence) .jpg
NOEMI LEVI LIVED HERE
BORN 1911
ARRESTED 6/02/1944
DEPORTED
AUSCHWITZ
MURDERED 02/26/1944
Via del Gelsomino 29
Florence
Erioll world.svg
Noemi Levi was born in Florence on April 14, 1911, the first child of Rina Procaccia and Rabbi Rodolfo Levi . Noemi had two siblings, Elio (1912) and Lea (1921).

Noemi was arrested with her parents on February 6, 1944 in Florence . After spending two days in the city's prison, the family was transferred to the Fossoli transit camp . On February 22, 1944, he was deported to Auschwitz with Transport No. 8.

When they arrived at the concentration camp on February 26, 32-year-old Noemi and her parents were registered with the letter S and immediately murdered.

Stolperstein for Rodolfo Levi (Florence) .jpg
RODOLFO LEVI LIVED HERE
BORN 1882
ARRESTED 6/02/1944
DEPORTED
AUSCHWITZ
MURDERED 02/26/1944
Via del Gelsomino 29
Florence
Erioll world.svg
Rodolfo Levi was born in Florence on April 2, 1882 . His parents were Settimia Gennazzani and Raimondo Levi. Rodolfo was married to Rina Procaccia and they had three children together: Noemi, Lea and Elio.

Rodolfo Levi attended one of the Convegni di Studi Ebraici , training centers for the maintenance and study of Jewish culture. Rodolfo also took a Hebrew course that was held at the Istituto di Studi Superiori . At the age of less than 30, Rodolfo Levi was appointed rabbi of the Jewish community in Lisbon .

In 1910 he married Rina (Ester) Procaccia. Their daughter Noemi was born in 1911 and their son Elio in 1912. In 1915 Rodolfo Levi was appointed rabbi of Pitigliano , a small community in the province of Grosseto . Between 1920 and 1926 he was vice rabbi and director of the Talmud Torà Institute in Rome . During this time, in 1921, his third child, Lea, was born. In 1926 Rodolfo Levi was called to Modena to take up the vacant post as head of the Jewish community and rabbi. From 1925 Levi's name was on the list of 25 rabbis recognized by the Unione delle Comunità Israelitiche . From the data on this list it emerged that Levi was not a member of the fascist party and rumors arose that he harbored liberal and democratic ideas. After he and several other Italian rabbis published a letter in 1937 in which they clearly took a stand against the fascist propaganda and the forced assimilation of the Jews, the Convegno di Studi Ebraici was closed on March 28th and every one of Levi's actions was strictly prohibited taken a close look.

Rodolfo Levi was arrested in Florence on February 6, 1944 . The arrest of his wife and daughter Noemi, as well as the Sinigaglia family, who lived in the same house, followed immediately. After two days, Rodolfo Levi's family was transferred to the Fossoli transit camp on February 8, and from there they were deported to Auschwitz on February 22 with transport No. 8 .

After arriving at the concentration camp on February 26th, he was registered with the letter S and immediately murdered.

Stumbling stone for Giorgio Levi Delle Trezze (Florence) .jpg HERE LIVED
GIORGIO
LEVI DELLE Trezze
BORN 1870
ARRESTED 02/21/1944
deported
AUSCHWITZ
MURDERED 04/10/1944
Via Giovanni Bovio 1 Giorgio Levi delle Trezze was born on September 7, 1870, the youngest child of the couple Giuseppina Levi and Cesare delle Trezze. He completed his engineering studies at the University of Padua and married the Russian Xenia Poliakov, whom he had met in Paris .

Giorgio Levi delle Trezze was made consul of Persia during his life and King Umberto I gave him the title of baron .

The couple moved to Rome and lived there in a villa in the wealthy Via Boncompagni that was restored by Giorgio's cousin Carlo Pincherle Moravia. Giorgio and Xenia used their wealth for all kinds of charitable purposes: for example, they were among the main founders of the Orfanotrofio isrealitico di Roma , the Jewish orphanage in Rome, built in 1902 , and played a key role in the construction of the Umberto I Ospedale , the Venetian hospital near Cannaregio and the Jewish ghetto, involved.

The couple owned homes in both Rome and Florence . In the latter they were arrested by Germans on February 21, 1944. After a short time they were taken from Florence to the Fossoli transit camp . A few weeks later, on April 5, Giorgio Levi delle Trezze and Xenia Poliakov were deported from there on Transport No. 9 to Auschwitz .

Upon their arrival at the concentration camp on April 10, both were registered with the letter S and immediately murdered.

Stumbling block for Mario Melli Genazzani (Florence) .jpg HERE LIVED
MARIO
MELLI Genazzani
BORN 1924
ARRESTED 05/24/1944
deported
AUSCHWITZ
MURDERED December 1944
Via del Proconsolo 6
Florence
Erioll world.svg
Mario Melli Genazzani was born on December 7, 1924 in Florence . He was the first and only child of the couple Elena Genazzani and Guido Renzo Melli.

Mario's mother Elena and his uncle Abramo had been arrested in November and January respectively. The arrest of the almost 20-year-old Mario took place on April 30, 1944 in Florence . After his arrest, he was held in the city prison for a few weeks and then in the Fossoli transit camp . On June 26, 1944, he was deported on Transport No. 13 from Fossoli to Auschwitz , where he arrived on June 30.

Mario Melli died on November 30, 1944.

Stumbling block for Giulia Pacifici (Florence) .jpg HERE LIVED
GIULIA PACIFICI
BORN 1884
ARRESTED 04/27/1944
deported
AUSCHWITZ
MURDERED 05/23/1944
Via Marsala 2
Florence
Erioll world.svg
Giulia Pacifici was born in Florence on September 14, 1884 . Her parents were Giuditta Da Fano and Cesare Pacifici. Giulia was married to Alfonso Gallico.

Giulia Pacifici was arrested in Florence on April 27, 1944 and taken to the Fossoli transit camp , where she was detained for a few weeks. On May 16, she was deported to Auschwitz on Transport No. 10 .

Upon arrival at the concentration camp on May 23, Giulia Pacifici was registered with the letter S and murdered immediately.

Stumbling stone for Xenia Haya Poliakov (Florence) .jpg XENIA HAYA
POLIAKOV LIVED
HERE
BORN 1872
ARRESTED 02/21/1944
DEPORTED
AUSCHWITZ
MURDERED 04/10/1944
Via Giovanni Bovio 1
Florence
Erioll world.svg
Xenia Haya Poliakov was born in Moscow on September 3, 1872 . Her parents were Rosalia Wydrina and Lazzaro Poliakoff, a billionaire banker. Xenia was married to Giorgio Levi delle Trezze, whom she had met in Paris .

Giorgio and Xenia used their wealth for all kinds of charitable purposes: for example, they were among the main founders of the Orfanotrofio isrealitico di Roma , the Jewish orphanage in Rome, built in 1902 , and significantly involved in the construction of the Umberto I Ospedale , the Venetian hospital near Cannaregio and the Jewish ghetto .

The couple were arrested on February 21, 1944 at their home in Florence . After a few weeks of imprisonment, they were transferred to the Fossoli transit camp and from there they were deported to Auschwitz on April 5 with Transport No. 9 .

After arriving at the concentration camp on April 10, Xenia, like her husband Giorgio, was registered with the letter S and murdered immediately.

Stumbling block for Amelia Procaccia (Florence) .jpg AMELIA PROCACCIA
LIVED HERE
BORN 1897
ARRESTED 6.2.1944
DEPORTED
AUSCHWITZ
MURDERED
Via del Gelsomino 29
Florence
Erioll world.svg
Amelia Procaccia was born in Florence on July 20, 1897 . She was the daughter of the couple Fortunata Genazzani and Angelo Procaccia. Her two sisters were called Rina (Ester) and Vittoria.

Amelia was married to Angelo Sinigaglia and the couple had a daughter named Alda (1933).

In February 1944, Amelia was arrested in Florence , along with her own family and her sister's family, and was then briefly imprisoned in the city's prison and then in the Fossoli transit camp . Her sister and her family were deported to Auschwitz at the end of February , Amelia only in April. Transport No. 9 left the Fossoli transit camp on April 5, 1944 and reached Auschwitz on April 10.

Amelia Procaccia did not survive the Shoah .

Stumbling block for Rina Procaccia (Florence) .jpg HERE LIVED
RINA Procaccia
BORN 1884
ARRESTED 02/06/1944
deported
AUSCHWITZ
MURDERED 26/02/1944
Via del Gelsomino 29
Florence
Erioll world.svg
Rina (Ester) Procaccia was born in Florence on May 6, 1884 . Her parents were Fortunata Genazzani and Angelo Procaccia. She had two sisters, Amelia and Vittoria. In 1910, Rina Procaccia married Rodolfo Levi, the newly appointed rabbi of Lisbon's Jewish community . The couple had three children: Noemi (1911), Elio (1912) and Lea (1921).

On February 6, 1944, Rina was arrested in Florence with her daughter Noemi, her husband and the family of her sister Amelia, who lived in the same house. After a few days in the city's prison, the family was taken to the Fossoli transit camp and deported to Auschwitz on February 22nd with Transport No. 8 .

Together with Noemi and her husband Rodolfo, Rina was registered with the letter S immediately after arriving at the camp on February 26 and murdered.

Stumbling stone for Giuseppe Siebzehner (Florence) .jpg GIUSEPPE SEVENTEEN
LIVED
HERE,
BORN 1863
ARRESTED 16.1.1944
DEPORTED
AUSCHWITZ
MURDERED 6.2.1944
Piazza Massimo D'Azeglio 12
Florence
Erioll world.svg
Giuseppe (Joseph) Siebzehner was born on September 2, 1863 in Vienna . His parents were Maria Vivanti, daughter of a wealthy Jewish family from Mantua , and Giorgio Siebzehner, son of a Polish merchant family from Gmina Kańczuga , a community in southeast Poland .

Giuseppe was married to Amalia Koretz and had two sons with her: Giorgio (1895) and Federico (1900).

After brief stays in Trieste and Como , Giuseppe Siebzehner and his wife settled in Florence in 1892 . In 1902 he took over the business called Grande Emporio Duilio , which the Papalini brothers had founded in 1888. Giuseppe Siebzehner was considered a very avant-garde businessman and this was reflected in the very modern management of his business. After the expansion of the Florentine headquarters, it was renamed Emporio Duilio 48 in 1907 . This remained in the possession of the Siebzehner family for a long time and then passed to the Bemporad family through the marriage of a daughter.

After the introduction of the Italian Racial Law in 1938, the administration of the Siebzehners department store was transferred to a fascist because the law forbade Jews to own a business with more than 100 employees.

On January 16, 1944, 80-year-old Giuseppe Siebzehner and his wife Amalia Koretz were arrested by the German SS. The arrest took place in a nursing home in Florence , where the elderly couple had found refuge. They were then imprisoned in Milan prison. On January 30th, the couple were deported to Auschwitz on Transport No. 6 .

It is unclear whether Giuseppe died on the train ride to Auschwitz , or was murdered on his arrival on February 6th. His wife Amalia did not survive the Shoah either.

Stumbling block for Alda Sinigaglia (Florence) .jpg HERE LIVED
ALDA SINIGAGLIA
BORN 1933
ARRESTED 02/06/1944
deported
AUSCHWITZ
MURDERED 04/10/1944
Via del Gelsomino 29
Florence
Erioll world.svg
Alda Sinigaglia was born in Florence on January 27, 1933 . Her parents were Amelia Procaccia and Angelo Sinigaglia.

In February 1944, Alda was arrested in Florence along with her parents and the family of her aunt Rina and held first in the city prison and then in the Fossoli transit camp . On April 5, 1944, Alda and her parents were deported on Transport No. 9 from the Fossoli transit camp to Auschwitz .

When she arrived on April 10th, 11-year-old Alda was registered with the letter S and immediately murdered.

Stumbling block for Angelo Sinigaglia (Florence) .jpg ANGELO
SINIGAGLIA LIVED HERE BORN IN
1902
ARRESTED 6/02/1944
DEPORTED
AUSCHWITZ
MURDERED 13/03/1945
MAUTHAUSEN
Via del Gelsomino 29
Florence
Erioll world.svg
Angelo Sinigaglia was born in Modena on August 24, 1902 . His parents were Amelia Teglio and Enrico Sinigaglia. Angelo was married to Amelia Procaccia and the couple had a daughter, Alda (1933).

He was arrested in Florence in February 1944 with his wife, daughter and his sister-in-law Rina's family . This was followed by weeks of imprisonment, first in Florence prison , then in Fossoli transit camp . On April 5, 1944 Angelo was deported to Auschwitz together with his wife and daughter in Transport No. 9 .

After arriving at the concentration camp on April 10, 11-year-old Alda was murdered immediately, and her mother presumably suffered the same fate. Angelo was sent to the camp and died almost a year later, on March 13, 1945.

Laying data

  • January 10, 2018: Via Roma 32/34, Val di Pesa (Giacomo Modigliani, Paolo Sternfeld)
  • January 9, 2020: Piazza Donatello 15, Florence (Clotilde Levi); Via del Gelsomino 2, Florence (Rodolfo & Noemi Levi, Rina & Amelia Procaccia, Alda & Angelo Sinigaglia); Via Ghibellina 102, Florence (David Genazzani); Via del Proconsolo 6, Florence (Elena & Abramo Genazzani, Mario Melli Genazzani)
  • January 23, 2020: Piazza d'Azeglio 12, Florence (Giuseppe Siebzehner, Amalia Koretz); Via delle Cure 7, Florence (Aldo & Giulio Levi, Adriana Castelli); Via Bovio 1 and 7, Florence (Giorgio Levi delle Trezze, Xenia Haya Poliakov, Lucia Levi); Via Marsala 2, Florence (Amelia, Augusto, Lucio & Sergio Gallico, Giulia Pacifici)

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. CDEC Digital Library : Sternfeld, Paolo , accessed on May 24, 2019
  2. CDEC: Castelli, Adriana , accessed June 18, 2020.
  3. CDEC: Gallico, Amelia , accessed June 27, 2020.
  4. CDEC: Gallico, Augusto , accessed June 27, 2020.
  5. CDEC: Gallico, Lucio , accessed June 27, 2020.
  6. CDEC: Gallico, Sergio , accessed June 27, 2020.
  7. CDEC: Genazzani, Abramo , accessed June 15, 2020.
  8. Gli ebrei deportati dal Veneto (1943–1945): Genazzani Abramo , accessed on June 15, 2020.
  9. CDEC: Genazzani, Davide , accessed June 15, 2020.
  10. Gli ebrei deportati dal Veneto (1943–1945): Genazzani Davide , accessed on June 15, 2020.
  11. CDEC: Genazzani, Elena , accessed June 15, 2020.
  12. a b : CDEC: Koretz, Amalia , accessed on June 27, 2020.
  13. a b SIUSA: Duilio 48 di GF & E.Siebzehner & C. sas: [1] , accessed on June 27, 2020.
  14. moked - Il portale dell'ebraismo italiano: [2] , accessed on June 27, 2020.
  15. CDEC: Levi, Aldo , accessed June 18, 2020.
  16. ^ I nomi della Shoah italiana: Clotilde Levi , accessed on June 22, 2020.
  17. CDEC: Levi, Clotilde , accessed June 22, 2020.
  18. CDEC: Levi, Giulio , accessed June 18, 2020.
  19. ^ I nomi della Shoah italiana: Lucia Levi , accessed on June 24, 2020.
  20. CDEC: Levi, Lucia , accessed June 24, 2020.
  21. moked - Il portale dell'ebraismo italiano: [3] , accessed on June 24, 2020.
  22. CDEC: Levi, Noemi , accessed June 24, 2020.
  23. Giulio Pacifici: Il rabbino Rodolfo Levi 1882-1944 in La Rassegna di Mensile Israel , Vol 81, No.. 1, 2015, pp. 51-65.
  24. CDEC: Levi, Rodolfo , accessed June 24, 2020.
  25. moked - Il portale dell'ebraismo italiano: [4] , accessed on June 24, 2020.
  26. CDEC: Levi delle Trezze, Giorgio , accessed June 24, 2020.
  27. CDEC: Melli, Mario , accessed June 15, 2020.
  28. CDEC: Pacifici, Giulia , accessed June 24, 2020.
  29. moked - Il portale dell'ebraismo italiano: [5] , accessed on June 24, 2020.
  30. CDEC: Poliakoff, Xenia , accessed June 24, 2020.
  31. CDEC: Procaccia, Amelia , accessed June 25, 2020.
  32. CDEC: Procaccia, Rina , accessed June 24, 2020.
  33. a b CDEC: Siebzehner, Joseph , accessed June 27, 2020.
  34. moked - Il portale dell'ebraismo italiano: [6] , accessed on June 27, 2020.
  35. CDEC: Sinigaglia, Alda , accessed June 25, 2020.
  36. CDEC: Sinigaglia, Angelo , accessed June 25, 2020.