List of Italian concentration camps

Italian concentration camps include camps from the Italian colonial wars in Africa as well as camps for the civilian population from areas occupied by Italy during World War II. Memory of both camps were subjected to "historical amnesia". The repression of memory led to historical revisionism in Italy[1] and in 2003 the Italian media published Silvio Berlusconi's statement that Benito Mussolini only "used to send people on vacation".[2][3]

Colonial wars

There were numerous war crimes conducted by the Italian Army in the colonies. In Cyrenaica alone between 1929 and 1933 over 40,000 people were killed and 80,000 locked up in concentration camps,[4] out of a total population of just 193,000. According to the historian Ilan Pappé, the fascist regime between 1928 and 1932 killed half the Bedouin population either directly or by starvation in the fields.[5] According to the historian Angelo Del Boca, in 1933, of the approximately 100,000 Libyans deported from Jebel Achdar and Marmarica, more than 40,000 died in the camps.[6]

Name of the campLocation of campPresent-day countryDate of establishmentDate of disestablishmentEstimated number of prisonersEstimated number of deaths
NocraNocraEritrea1930s1941 1,500[7]
AbyarAbyarLibya193019333,123[8] 
AgedabiaAjdabiyaLibya1930193310,000[8]1,500[9]
El AgheilaEl AgheilaLibya1930193310,900[8] 
Marsa BregaBregaLibya1930193321,117[8] 
Sid Ahmed el MaghrunEl MagrunLibya1930193313,050[8]4,500[9]
SoluchSuluqLibya1930193320,123[8]5,500[9]
DernaDernaLibya19301933145[8]
ApolloniaApolloniaLibya193019331,354[8]
BarceBarceLibya19301933538[8]
DrianaDrianaLibya19301933225[8]
NufiliaNufiliaLibya19301933375[8]
DananeMogadishuSomalia193519416,000[8]3,175[10]
Total~44 675[11]

World War II

Name of the campLocation of localityPresent-day countryDate of establishmentDate of disestablishmentEstimated number of prisonersEstimated number of deaths
BakarBakarCroatia31 December 19421 July 1943893[12]100–120[13]
BolzanoSouth TyrolItalySeptember 8, 1943April 29 and May 3, 194511,000 
CampagnaSalernoItaly15 June 194019 September 1943  
ChiesanuovaPaduaItalyJune 1942   
Ferramonti di TarsiaCosenzaItalysummer 19404 September 19433,800 
GiadoJadu, LibyaLibyaJanuary 194224 January 19433,146[14]562
GonarsPalmanovaItalyMarch 19428 September 19437,000453; >500
MamulaMamula islandMontenegro30 May 194214 September 19432,322200[15]
MonigoTrevisoItaly1 July 1942May 194510,000187–225
MolatMolatCroatia28 June 19428 September 194320,000[16]c. 1,000[16]
PisticciSoutheast of Pisticci in Camporotondo[17]Italy[17]1939[17]September 13, 1943[17]Capacity of 1,000[17]Not stated[17]
Rab, separate camps for Slovenes/Croats and JewsRab (Arbe) islandCroatiaJuly 194211 September 194310,000; 15,0002,000; >3,500; 4,000
Renicci di AnghiariArezzoItalyOctober 1942   
Risiera di San Sabba[18]TriesteItalyOctober 1943April 1945> 11,5004,000–5,000[19]
ViscoPalmanovaItalywinter 1942   
ZlarinZlarinCroatiaMarch 1943June 19432,50026
Campo di FossoliCarpiItalyMay 1942March 1944  

References

Works cited

External links

  • campifascisti.it, Online Research project
  • "The Last Witnesses", 2013 Exhibition at National Museum for Contemporary History (Slovenia) documenting photos and interviews with survivors