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Italian Corsicans

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The typical Genoese architecture of Bastia, capital of Corsica during the five centuries of the Republic of Genoa domination

Italian Corsicans were Italian-speaking people from the island of Corsica, who promoted the union of Corsica with Italy. They were so termed by Irredentists in the Kingdom of Italy after Italian unification in the late 19th century and during the country's Fascist period.

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[edit] History

Corsica was considered Italian (ethnically, linguistically and historically) until 1768, when the Republic of Genoa, which had ruled the island for centuries, ceded the island to France, one year before the birth of Napoleon Bonaparte in the capital city of Ajaccio. Under French rule, the use of the Corsican language, which is closely related to standard Italian, has gradually declined and has been replaced by French. Giuseppe Garibaldi promoted the unification of the Corsican Italians to Italy when Rome was annexed to the Kingdom of Italy, but Victor Emmanuel II did not agree to it.

The process of the Italian irredentism only marginally affected Corsica, and only during the Fascist rule of Benito Mussolini were the first organizations promoting strongly the unification of the island to the Kingdom of Italy founded.[1]

Before World War I in Livorno, professor Francesco Guerri founded the review "Corsica antica e moderna", inspired on the "Archivio storico di Corsica" of Gioacchino Volpe. Petru Rocca created in the 1920s the Partito autonomista of Corsica (of which was segretary) with the support of monsignor Domenico Parlotti and dr. Croce, director of the "Archivi di Stato della Corsica".

Before and during World War II, Corsican intellectuals staged pro-Italian propaganda and cultural activities in Italy (mainly in the "Gruppi di Cultura Corsa"). These included Marco Angeli, Bertino Poli, Marchetti, Luccarotti, Grimaldi and Petru Giovacchini (he was later proposed as a possible governor of Corsica if Italy had annexed it).[2] The most renowned was Petru Giovacchini, who considered Pasquale Paoli (the hero of Corsica) as the precursor of the Corsican irredentism in favor of the unification of the island to Italy.[3]

The "Gruppi di Cultura Corsa" of Giovacchini reached a membership of 72,000 members by 1940, according to the historian R.H. Rainero in his book "Mussolini e Pétain. Storia dei rapporti tra l’Italia e la Francia di Vichy".[4]

Map showing dialects of Italian, in which it is possible to see the relationship between the Corsican dialect and the northern Sardinian dialect

In November 1942 the VII Army Corps of the Regio Esercito (WWII) pacifically occupied Corsica, still under the formal sovereignty of Vichy France. Because of the lack of partizan resistance and to avoid problems with Marshal Philippe Pétain, no Corsican units were formed under Italian control (except for a labour battalion formed in March 1943).

Some Corsican military officials collaborated with Italy, as the retired Major Pantalacci (and his son Antonio), colonel Mondielli and colonel Petru Simone Cristofini (and his wife, the first Corsican female journalist Marta Renucci).[5]

After the war, nearly one hundred collaborators or autonomists (included the intellectuals) were put on trial by the French authorities in 1946 and found guilty. Eight of them were sentenced to death, but only colonel Cristofini was executed.

The Italian irredentistic movement in Corsica has died out, but movements for independence from France (like the Corsica Nazione, Partitu di a Nazione Corsa) and the rebel organization called National Front for the Liberation of Corsica) are currently active.

[edit] Petru Cristofini

Colonel Petru Simone Cristofini was born in Calenzana (near Calvi, Corsica) on 26 May 1903 and in 1939 became a captain of the 3rd Algerine Fusiliers regiment. He was initially a supporter of Pétain. After the Allied occupation of French North Africa he commanded the Phalange Africaine.

In Tunisia he was wounded in an eye and, before returning to Corsica (where he supported pro-Italy secessionists), he met Mussolini in Rome and actively collaborated with the Italian forces in Corsica during the first months of 1943. In the island he worked with Petru Giovacchini (the possible governor of Corsica if the Axis had won the war). Cristofini, as head of the Ajaccio troops, helped the Italian Army to control successfully the Resistance opposition in Corsica, before the Italian Armistice in September 1943.

Colonel Cristofini was put on trial for treason after the Allied occupation of Corsica and sentenced to death. He tried to kill himself, and was executed while he was dying in November 1943.[6]

[edit] Language

The influence of Pisa in Corsica can be seen in the Romanesque-Pisan style of the Church of Aregno

While most Corsicans spoke the Corsican dialect at home, until the first half of the 19th-century Italian was the language most publicly spoken and written on the island. The first Corsican Constitution, for the short-lived Corsican Republic established in 1755, was written in Italian and Paoli proclaimed Italian as the official language of Corsica. Italian was the 'language of culture'[clarification needed] in Corsica until the end of XIX century. Even Paoli's second Corsican Constitution, for the Anglo-Corsican Kingdom in 1794, was in Italian.[7] In the second half of the 19th century French replaced Italian, mainly because of Napoleon III. The Corsican dialect started to be used by Corsican intellectuals.

The actual Corsican language is directly related to the Tuscan dialect of Pisa, an Italian city that dominated the island before Genoa. In the north of the island (Calvi), there is a local dialect very similar to the medieval Genoese. In the mountainous interior of Corsica there are a significant number of villages where nearly all the inhabitants speak Corso, a medieval Pisan dialect mixed with Sardinian words.[8]

The extreme similarity of the Corso to Italian can be seen in an example phrase:
Corso: Sò natu in Corsica è g'aghju passatu i megli anni di a mio ghjuventù
Italian: Sono nato in Corsica e ci ho passato i migliori anni della mia gioventù
English: I was born in Corsica and spent the best years of my youth there
Nearly 12% of Corsicans speak Italian, while three-quarters understand it thanks to the television programmes from Italy.[9]

The irredentist Marco Angeli di Sartèna wrote the first book in "Corso" (titled Terra còrsa) in 1924 and many lyrics (titled Malincunie) in Ajaccio. He created and wrote the newspaper «Gioventù» of the "Partito Corso d'azione", partially in Italian and Corsican.

Italian Corsicans fluently speak French, most of them are second-language speakers.

[edit] Pasquale Paoli and Italian Irredentism

Pasquale Paoli was considered by Niccolo Tommaseo, who collected his Lettere (Letters), as one of the precursors of Italian irredentism.

Monument to Pasquale Paoli, the Corsican hero who made Italian the official language of his Corsican Republic in 1755

The "Babbu di a Patria" (father of Corsica), as Pasquale Paoli was nicknamed by the Corsican Italians, wrote in his Letters [10] the following message in 1768 against the French invaders: We (Corsicans) are Italians by birth and feelings, but first of all we feel Italian by language, roots, customs, traditions and all the Italians are all brothers for History and for God....As Corsicans we do not want to be slaves nor "rebels" and as Italians we have the right to be treated like all the other Italian brothers.... Either we 'll be free or we'll be nothing...Either we'll win or we'll die (against the French) with our weapons in our hands...The war against France is just and holy as the name of God is holy and just, and here on our mountains will appear for all Italy the sun of liberty.. ("Siamo còrsi per nascita e sentimento ma prima di tutto ci sentiamo italiani per lingua, origini, costumi, tradizioni e gli italiani sono tutti fratelli e solidali di fronte alla storia e di fronte a Dio… Come còrsi non vogliamo essere né schiavi né "ribelli" e come italiani abbiamo il diritto di trattare da pari con gli altri fratelli d’Italia… O saremo liberi o non saremo niente… O vinceremo con l’onore o soccomberemo (contro i francesi) con le armi in mano... La guerra con la Francia è giusta e santa come santo e giusto è il nome di Dio, e qui sui nostri monti spunterà per l’Italia il sole della libertà…")

Pasquale Paoli even wanted the Italian language to be the official language of his Corsican Republic. His Corsican Constitution of 1755 was in Italian and was used as a model for the American constitution of 1787. Furthermore, in 1765 Paoli founded in the city of Corte the first University of Corsica (where the teaching was done in Italian).

[edit] Literature

The Italian language, promoted by the Corsican Italians, had been the language of culture in Corsica since the Renaissance. Many Corsican authors wrote an extensive literature in Italian in the last centuries.

In the 14th century there was La Cronica of Giovanni della Grossa (1388-1464), Pier Antonio Monteggiani (1464-1525) and Marcantoni Ceccaldi (1526-1559). Storia di Corsica was published in 1594 by Anton Pietro Filippini. In the XV and XVI centuries there were Ignazio Cardini (1566-1602), Pietro Cirneo (1447-1507), Guiglielmo Guglielmi di Orezza (1644-1728) with A Malannata and Ottave giocose.

In the 18th century the Accademia dei Vagabondi was founded in Bastia, following the model of the Italian "Accademie". Angelo Francesco Colonna wrote Commentario delle glorie e prerogative del Regno e Popoli di Corsica in 1685.

During the Corsican Republic of Pasquale Paoli there were Giulio Matteo Natali (Disinganno intorno alla Guerra de Corsica in 1736), Don Gregorio Salvini (Giustificazione della Revoluzione di Corsica (1758-1764)) and the same Pasquale Paoli (Corrispondenza (published only in 1846).

The Genoese gate at Bonifacio castle

During the 19th century in Bastia Salvatore Viale wrote La Dionomachia in 1817, Canti popolari corsi in 1843 and Dell'uso della lingua patria in Corsica in 1858.

Many Corsican authors (who wrote in Italian) were influenced by the ideals of the Italian Risorgimento during the second half of the 19th century, such as Giuseppe Multado, Gian Paolo Borghetti, Francesco Ottaviano Renucci (Storia della Corsica dal 1789 al 1830 and Novelle storiche corse). Even the Italian Nicolo Tommaseo collected the Canti popolari corsi (with points of view of Italian irredentism) and made a compilation of the letters (Lettere di Pasquale de Paoli) of Pasquale Paoli.

Santu Casanova founded the famous literary review A Tramuntana (published in Ajaccio between 1896 and 1914) and wrote in Italian Meraviglioso testamento di Francesco in 1875 and La morte ed il funerale di Spanetto in 1892. He is considered the link between the old generations of Corsican writers who wrote in Italian language and the new ones, who started to use the Corsican language.

During the first half of the 20th century the most important Corsican publication in Italian was the literary review A Muvra of Petru Rocca. Other Corsican authors in Italian were Versini Maiastrale, Matteu Rocca (I lucchetti in 1925), Dumenicu Carlotti (Pampame corse in 1926), Ageniu Grimaldi and Ugo Babbiziu (Una filza di francesismi colti nelle parlate dialettali corse in 1930).

The Corsican Italians who promoted the ideal of Corsican irredentism published mainly in Italy, because of the persecutions from the French regime in the island in the first half of the XX century.

Thus Petru Giovacchini wrote the poems Musa Canalinca and Rime notturne in 1933 in Corsica, but successively wrote and published Aurore, poesie corse, Corsica Nostra and Archiatri pontifici corsi in Rome (the last, while he was in exile in 1951, a few years before his premature death).

The irredentist Marco Angeli published in Milano Gigli di Stagnu and Liriche corse in 1934 and Bertino Poli wrote Il pensiero irredentista corso e le sue polemiche in Florence in 1940.

[edit] Notable Corsican Italians

Small list of renowned Corsican Italians:

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ http://www.cg06.fr/culture/pdf/rr187-rivendicazionefascista.pdf
  2. ^ "SATVRNIA TELLVS :: Mostra argomento - Petru Giovacchini, un patriota esule in patria". Saturniatellus.com. http://www.saturniatellus.com/portale/viewtopic.php?p=8218. Retrieved on 2008-12-30. 
  3. ^ Mastroserio, Giuseppe. Petru Giovacchini – Un Patriota esule in Patria. pag 114
  4. ^ Rainero, R.H. Mussolini e Pétain. Storia dei rapporti tra l’Italia e la Francia di Vichy (10 giugno 1940-8 settembre 1943) pag 29
  5. ^ Vita e Tragedia dell'Irredentismo Corso, Rivista Storia Verità
  6. ^ Il Martirio di un irredento: il colonnello Petru Simone Cristofini. Rivista Storia Verità
  7. ^ CIDRP Cumpagnìa. "The Kingdom Anglo-Corsican". Pasqualepaoli.com. http://www.pasqualepaoli.com/english/royaume.htm. Retrieved on 2008-12-30. 
  8. ^ "Giovanni Armillotta: "I vincoli ultramillenari fra Pisa e la Corsica"". Foreignaffairs.tripod.com. http://foreignaffairs.tripod.com/armillotta/pisa94_corsica.html. Retrieved on 2008-12-30. 
  9. ^ Vignoli, Giulio. Gli Italiani Dimenticati. pag 126
  10. ^ N. Tommaseo. "Lettere di Pasquale de Paoli" (in Archivio storico italiano, 1st series, vol. XI).

[edit] Bibliography

  • Durand, Olivier. La lingua còrsa. Paideia Editrice, Brescia, 2003 ISBN 88-394-0674-3
  • Fusina, Jacques. Parlons Corse. Éditions L'Harmattan, Paris, 1999
  • Mastroserio, Giuseppe. Petru Giovacchini – Un Patriota esule in Patria. Editrice Proto. Bari, 2004.
  • Melillo, A.M. Profilo dei dialetti italiani: Corsica. Pacini Editore. Pisa, 1977.
  • Rainero, R.H. Mussolini e Pétain. Storia dei rapporti tra l’Italia e la Francia di Vichy (10 giugno 1940-8 settembre 1943). Ussme Ed. Roma, 1990.
  • Saint-Blancac, C. La Corsica. Identità Etnico-Linguistica e Sviluppo. CEDAM, Padova, 1993
  • Tommaseo, Niccoló. Lettere di Pasquale de Paoli. Archivio storico italiano, 1st series, vol. XI. Roma
  • Vignoli, Giulio. Gli Italiani Dimenticati Ed. Giuffè. Roma, 2000
  • Vita e Tragedia dell'Irredentismo Corso, Rivista Storia Verità, n.4, 1997
  • Il Martirio di un irredento: il colonnello Petru Simone Cristofini. Rivista Storia Verità, n.11, 1998.

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