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Italiano:

FIUME:
A WONDERFUL STORY
The city of
Fiume, Rijeka today (Croatia), belonged to Italy from 1924 to 1945.
After the II
World War, with the Peace Treaty of Paris 10th of february 1947, Fiume, first militarily occupied, then
given and annexed to the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, held with
a communist government.
Istrian map
In 1939, the
city counted 58.616 inhabitants and on November 30, 1945 they were 47.839.
These last ones were denied the right of self-determination they were
granted only the possibility to choose between the two new governments. This
grant was linked to the recognition of the language used by the occupying
authority.
It has been
calculated that more than the 80% of the population have chosen the exodus
to Italy.
Our
Museum-Archive in Rome has been created to commemorate the injustice
suffered by a blameless people.
Today Fiume
belongs to the Republic of Croatia and counts approx. 167.000 inhabitants
(source: De Agostini – Atlante 1997), of which ca. 4.000 officially belong
to the Italian minority represented by the Italian Community with its own
law and seat.
The city
finds its origin in the ancient roman town Tarsatica, which is presumed to
be founded in 35 BC during the Reign of Ottaviano Augusto and destroyed by
the barbarians invasions between the VI and VII century.
At the
beginning of the II century, in the same area Flumen (Latin name) was reborn
translated by the Croatians as Reka, Rika or Rijeka.
In 1465 the
city, also known as Terra Sancti Viti, passes from the “signoria” government
of the Frangipani’s family to that of the Walsee and at the end of the
Hapsburg.
Federico the
IIIrd recognized the rights of the city consolidated municipal autonomy.
At the
beginning, in the documents of the public administration, it was common the
use of Latin, while later the Italian language appeared.
Fiume - Piazza delle Erbe e Torre Civica
The dialect
from Veneto, mainly that one spoken in the area surrounding Fiume, was
associated with the use of the Ciakavo Croatian dialect (municipally
confirmed in 1876 for the public education and named “illirico”). In this
kind of dialect many influences and words from the Veneto dialect were
present.
Fiume has
never been submitted to Venice. Venice only governed it briefly in 1508
after having destroyed it at least twice. In 1779, for a decretum by Maria
Teresa from Austria, it became “Corpus Separatum” of the Hungarian Reign as
part of the Hapsburg Empire.
Between 1809
and 1813 Fiume was occupied by Napoleon’s troops and between 1813 and 1822
it was again submitted to Austria.
In 1822 Fiume
was again under the Hungarian sovereignty and it passed under the Croatians
from 1848 to 1868. But the city, after some vicissitudes, decided to send
its own representatives anymore to the Diet of Zagabria. Fiume was again
under Hungary, that recognized its right of autonomy within the Crown of
Saint Stephen, through a new Statute.
In 1905 it
was created the “Giovine Fiume”, a student movement inspired by irredentism
in favour of Italy.
At the end of
the I World War the deputy from Fiume Andrea Ossoinack, at the Hungarian
parliament, claimed for his city the right of self-decision. On October 30,
1918, while without any kind of power it was constituted an “Italian
National Council”, presided over by Antonio Grossich. The aim was claiming
the annexation of Fiume to Italy so opposing to a “Croatian National
Council” claiming the annexation of Fiume to Croatia, the new constituted
Serbian, Croatians and Slovene Reign (S.H.S).
During the
diplomatic negotiations for the Peace Treaty, prevailed the will of the
American President Wilson who defended the idea to create an autonomous
government for Fiume.
The Italian
protest was evident in the deed of Gabriele D’Annunzio (1919) who occupied
militarily the city declaring it annexed to the Italian Reign.
Gabriele D'Annunzio
Rejected by
the Italian Government, D’Annunzio resisted creating “La Reggenza Italiana
del Carnaro” provided with a constitution and a government of its own.
On Christmas
1920, the deed was put to an end through an army fight between Italian
government troops and soldiers who fought for D’Annunzio.
On November
12, 1920, an agreement between Italy and the Reign of Serbians, Croatians
and Slovenians created the “Free State of Fiume”, which was born with a
proper constitution. It was regularly elected and its first President was
Riccardo Zanella.
On March 30,
1922, D’Annunzio’s soldiers who had remained in the city together with
fascists gave end to the Free State experience. After sour internal
conflicts, on January 27th, 1924, during the first government of Benito
Mussolini, it was reached an agreement with Yugoslavia through the Treaty of
Rome. This treaty granted the annexation of the city of Fiume to Italy.
The Governor
Giardino, on the 16th of March, in the presence of Majesty King Vittorio
Emanuele, with all solemnity, proclaimed to a huge mass of people, the
historical event.
At the
beginning of the II World War, Fiume participated in the army effort with
the Italian Nation. In 1941 Italy invaded Yugoslavia unifying Fiume to the
close Croatian city Sussak. It was elected as chief town of province of an
area that comprehended centers with an absolute Croatian and Slovenian
ethnic majority.
On September
the 8th, 1943, as a consequence of the armistice proclaimed by General
Badoglio, the Third German Reich considered Fiume “an area of operations of
the Adriatic area”. Fiume became subjected, in the administration and
militarily, to the German Authority, even if its legal belonging to the
Italian Sovereignty still formerly remained.
On the 3rd of
May 1945 entered the city the Yugoslavian troops. Fiume then knew a hard
dictatorial government with a communist imprint. It caused, in a few years,
many victims in the ethnic Italian population. The unpopular politics was
the reason of the total exodus of the native population. Although the
dramatic events and the uncountable changing suffered by the city, the
painful history of its cultural identity of Italian character was defined: a
WONDERFUL STORY.
Our Society
of Studies is now trying to save, to promote and to protect it from the
deforming passions of caused by politic. Perhaps we have been successfull. |