It Was Not Always Awarded with Swords and Those That Were Have the Swords Suspended by a Ring Attached to the Center of Two Cros

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

It Was Not Always Awarded with Swords and Those That Were Have the Swords Suspended by a Ring Attached to the Center of Two Cros striking medals as it’s gilded and is quite different than the ubiquitous cross patee. In this case, the cross is a 35mm bronze gilt cross with the tips of the straight arms curving slightly outwards (Figure 25). The obverse has a five-arched crown over the stylized A for Ftirst Adolf* in the center intersection of the four arms with FOR on the top arm, and TREUE DIENST bracketing the central A, and with 1914 on the bottom arm. The seriffed inscription, FI)R/TREUE DIENST, translates as "For Faithful Service." The reverse is plain but polished. It is suspended from a 39mm cornflower-blue ribbon with three 4.5ram white stripes; one in the center and two inset lmm from the edge. The non-combatant ribbon is white with three red stripes with light-blue edges. Figure 26: Full-size Schwarzburg-Sonderhausen traditional modified medal bar with the Honor Cross *Note: World War I issues do not carry the royal cipher replaced with the World War I Veteran’s Organization of Prince Adolf-Georg but of Prince Adolf. Medal (Deutscher Reichskreigerbund Kyffhiiuser- DRKB), which should have a black and white ribbon. Waldeck The Principality of Waldeck had existed since 1625 and was tiny with an area of 411 square miles. It had a population of only 63,000 citizens in 1914. The Princely Waldeck Merit Medal, 4th Class with Swords was only awarded 4,205 times making it scarce to find on a medal bar (Figure 27). It was instituted in March 1915 and eventually the silver-minted medals were made of a silvered alloy, which are thicker than the original silver medals. The obverse has the three-arch-crowned Gothic initials FB centered (for Friedrich who was the Prince Figure 25: Full-size Schaumburg-Lippe traditional of Waldeck and Pyrmont and Bathildis who was the modified medal bar. princess). The reverse consists of the centered inscription F~R/VERDIENST in gothic letters. Schwarzburg The Principality of Schwarzburg-Sonderhausen became a German state in 1697 and by 1914 only had a popula- tion of just 93,000. The Silver Medal for Merit in War was originally instituted for the Franco-Prussian War but re-instituted on August 21, 1914 for Sergeant Maj ors (Feldwebels) and enlisted men. The obverse of the 40mm medal is the cypher of two intertwined Gs with a three- arched crown above and 1914 below (Figure 26). The two Gs represent the two sons of Count Giinther when he divided his realm into two states in 1552.The reverse has Figure 27: Full-size Waldeck traditional medal bar. a laurel wreath with VERDIENST/IM/KRIEG, or "Merit in War," centered in the middle. It is suspended from a It was not always awarded with swords and those that striking 28ram dark blue ribbon with three 3mm yellow were have the swords suspended by a ring attached to stripes. For non-combatants, the ribbon had two 3mm the center of two crossed-swords that are suspended yellow stripes set .5mm from the edge, while auxiliaries from a white 26mm wide ribbon with black, red/ had a plain dark-blue ribbon. The medal was originally orange and yellow 2mm side stripes inset lmm from minted in silver but was struck later in silvered bronze, the edge. The black, red/orange and yellow stripes are iron or zinc. the same color as the current German flag. 14 JOMSA Wiirttemberg The obverse shows the right profile of the King of Wiirttemberg with the inscription, WILHELM II The Kingdom of Wtirttemberg was one of the earlier KOENIG VON WUERTEMBERG ("Wilhelm II King German states having been founded in 1083, and by 1914 of Wtirttemberg"). The reverse consists of the inscription it had a population of 2.5 million. The Silver Military in seriffed capitals DEM/VERDIENSTE surrounded by Merit Medal was originally instituted in 1892 but on a wreath of laurel leaves. Below the inscription is a tiny September 25, 1914 the ribbon was changed to that in Star of David. As mentioned the ribbon was changed to Figure 28. a 26ram yellow ribbon with two 4ram black side stripes inset 2mm from the edge. References Danner, Dave. "German States EK2 Equivalents." www. Wehrmacht- Awards.com. Feb. 2001. Dorling, Taprell H. and Alec A. Purves Ed.. Ribbons and Medals. London: Osprey Pub. Co.,1983. Lumsden, Robin. Medals and Decorations of Hitler’s Germany. Osceola: MBI Pub. Co. 2011. Nimmergut, Jorg. Deutsche Orden Und Ehrenzeichen 1800 - 1945. Regenstauf: Battenberg, 2008. Previtera, Stephen T. The Iron Time: A History of the Iron Cross. Richmond: Winidore Press, 2007. Purves, Alec A. The Medals and Decorations of the Great War 1914- Figure 28: Full-size Wi~rttemberg traditional medal bar. 1918. London: J.B. Hayward & Son, 1975. Robinson, Janet and Joe Robinson. Handbook ofImperial Germany. Bloomington: Author House, 2009. Yanacek, Thomas M. Parade Medals Bars of the Third Reich. Atglen: Schiffer Military History, 2008. BOOK REVIEW Lest We Forget: Masterpieces of Patriotic Jewelry that expand upon the role that the items played and Military Decorations by Judith Price. Taylor in commemorating the history of war and peace. Trade Publishing, 2011. Hardcover, 160 pages with numerous color illustrations. ISBN: 978-1589796867. Some of the items discussed and illustrated in the $29.95 (to be published 11 November 2011). "War" section are: Lafayette’s Cross of the Order of Saint-Louis; nine Civil War Corps badges; Fabergd This book by Judith Price, the President of the National Eagle trays from 1914 and items of military jewelry Jewelry Institute, commemorates the Institute’s fifteenth by Tiffany & Co. Items in the "Valor" section include: exhibition related to jewelry: "War and Peace: a Capture of Andrd; two Medals of Honor; French Masterpieces of Patriotic Jewelry and Decorations." Marshal Alphonse Juin’s Distinguished Service Medal, It features 150 items of military jewelry and military numerous foreign decorations awarded to British Field medals, orders and decorations loaned to the exhibition Marshal Edmund Allenby; and a number of marshals’ by some of the most important military museums in batons. The "Memories" section includes the 1861 Fort the United States, Britain and France, including the Sumter decoration awarded to Major Robert Anderson; British Museum, the West Point Museum, the Imperial and numerous sweetheart pins, brooches, and badges War Museum, the British Museum, the National Army from various wars. Items in the "Peace" section include: Museum, the Patton Museum of Cavalry and Armor a George Washington Peace Medal, c. 1776; Indian and the Eisenhower Presidential Museum and Library. peace medals awarded by presidents from Washington to Harrison; and numerous pieces of patriotic jewelry The book is divided into four sections: "War, .... Valor," to commemorate the end of the two world wars. "Memories" and "Peace." Each section describes orders, decorations, medals and military jewelry appropriate While this book contains items other than medals, the to that section with excellent color illustrations. excellent color photos and the interesting text will In addition, each section includes interviews with provide an excellent "read" for any medal collector. experts from several of the above-named institutions, Vol. 62, No. 6 (November-December 2011) 15 MEDALS HONORING THE ITALIAN IRREDENTISTS DANIEL E. SPEIR The polyglot empire that was Austria-Hungary contained conspired to assassinate Franz Josef during an upcoming a great many ethnic non-German and non-Magyar citizens visit to that city.4 On September 16, 1882, Oberdan within its borders. During the rise of nationalism in the crossed the border from Italy into Austria-Hungary with last half of the nineteenth century, a significant number two "Orsini" bombs,s He had been betrayed, however, of the empire’s ethnic Italian citizens became dedicated and Austrian police quickly arrested him with the bombs irredentists, in that they renounced the jurisdiction of in his possession. Oberdan was tried and convicted by Austria-Hungary, and anticipated the day when Italian- court-martial in Trieste for desertion and conspiracy to speaking telTitories within the empire would become part kill the emperor, and subsequently sentenced to death. of Italy. It fact, the term "irredentist" originated from the Oberdan’s reported last words before being hanged on Italian word irredenta, meaning "unredeemed.’’~ Most December 20, 1882, were, "Long live Italy! Long live Italian irredentists resided in what today consists of the free Trieste! Out with the foreigners!" in short order, northeastern Italian regions of Veneto, Fruili, Venezia, Oberdan’s martyrdom inspired the creation of no less that Guili and Trentino. 49 irredentist "Oberdan societies" in Italy and Austria.~ During the revolutionary turmoil of 1848-1849, Italian In 1915, when Italy entered the First World War on nationalists and irredentists made their first concentrated the side of the Allies, many irredentists welcomed the efforts to wrest ethnic Italian provinces from the opportunity to fight the detested Austrians. Damian Austrians. Lombardy and Venezia, taking advantage of Chiesa was born an Austro-Hungarian subject in Trento in the revolutions throughout the empire, revolted. After 1894, but rejected Austrian authority at an early age. As a regaining its military composure, Austria sent an army to young man he attended the School of Naval Engineering crush the Italian rebels. Fighting was bitter, but eventually in Genoa and when Italy entered the war, Chiesa enlisted the superior numbers, equipment and training of the in the Italian Army under the pseudonym of "Mario Austrians prevailed. It was not until the conclusion of Angelotti." Subsequently commissioned as a lieutenant the Franco-Austrian war of 1859 that most of Lombardy in the 9th Infantry Regiment, Chiesa and his men were was finally ceded to Italy (i.e. the kingdom of Piedmont- tasked with constructing a gun emplacement on Mount Sardinia) by way of France.
Recommended publications
  • Between the Local and the National: the Free Territory of Trieste, "Italianita," and the Politics of Identity from the Second World War to the Osimo Treaty
    Graduate Theses, Dissertations, and Problem Reports 2014 Between the Local and the National: The Free Territory of Trieste, "Italianita," and the Politics of Identity from the Second World War to the Osimo Treaty Fabio Capano Follow this and additional works at: https://researchrepository.wvu.edu/etd Recommended Citation Capano, Fabio, "Between the Local and the National: The Free Territory of Trieste, "Italianita," and the Politics of Identity from the Second World War to the Osimo Treaty" (2014). Graduate Theses, Dissertations, and Problem Reports. 5312. https://researchrepository.wvu.edu/etd/5312 This Dissertation is protected by copyright and/or related rights. It has been brought to you by the The Research Repository @ WVU with permission from the rights-holder(s). You are free to use this Dissertation in any way that is permitted by the copyright and related rights legislation that applies to your use. For other uses you must obtain permission from the rights-holder(s) directly, unless additional rights are indicated by a Creative Commons license in the record and/ or on the work itself. This Dissertation has been accepted for inclusion in WVU Graduate Theses, Dissertations, and Problem Reports collection by an authorized administrator of The Research Repository @ WVU. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Between the Local and the National: the Free Territory of Trieste, "Italianità," and the Politics of Identity from the Second World War to the Osimo Treaty Fabio Capano Dissertation submitted to the Eberly College of Arts and Sciences at West Virginia University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Modern Europe Joshua Arthurs, Ph.D., Co-Chair Robert Blobaum, Ph.D., Co-Chair Katherine Aaslestad, Ph.D.
    [Show full text]
  • Guglielmo Oberdan
    Mirko Riazzoli [email protected] Guglielmo Oberdan Guglielmo Oberdan nacque a Trieste il 1º febbraio del 1858. Il suo nome originariamente fu un altro, ossia Wilhelm Oberdank. Fu il figlio illegittimo di Josepha Maria Oberdank, una slovena di Gorizia, e del soldato veneto Valentino Falcier, arruolato nell'esercito austro-ungarico e che la lasciò prima del parto. A causa della sua illegittimità e dell'abbandono operato dal padre, prese il cognome materno (la madre si sposò nell'estate 1862 con un altro uomo, Francesco Ferencich, che provvide al mantenimento di entrambi). In gioventù decise di italianizzare il proprio nome e cognome in Guglielmo Oberdan, una scelta con ampia valenza politica. La sua propensione pro italiana maturò durante gli studi superiori, iniziati nel 1869: in questo periodo iniziò a leggere il periodico mazziniano “Gazzettino Rosso” e si iscrisse alla Civica Scuola di Ginnastica, retta dall'irredentista Gregorio Draghicchio (1851-1902). Fu in questo periodo che entrò in contatto con Riccardo Zampieri (1859-1930, giornalista), Adolfo Liebmann, Domenico Giovanni Battista, detto Menotti Delfino (1858-1937, tenore) ed altri che diverranno esponenti dell'irredentismo. Fondò con i suoi amici la Società di mutuo soccorso per studenti bisognosi, sciolta dopo un anno dalle autorità. Trascorse i primi anni di vita in una città segnata dai contrasti fra i fedeli all'Austria e gli irredentisti. Si distinse nelle attività scolastiche e nel 1877, grazie ad una borsa di studio del comune di Trieste (ottenuta per aver terminato “con distinzione” il corso di studi), poté iscriversi al Politecnico di Vienna (giunse in città il 13 giugno), ove studiò per divenire ingegnere.
    [Show full text]
  • Accepted Manuscript
    Culture, Resistance and Violence: Guarding the Habsburg Ostgrenze with Montenegro in 1914 Cathie Carmichael, School of History, University of East Anglia, Norwich, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland1. CONTACT Cathie Carmichael [email protected] ABSTRACT Between 1878 and 1918 the Eastern border (Ostgrenze) of the Habsburg Monarchy and in particular the mountainous regions between Hercegovina and Montenegro posed security challenges. The people of the region had strong local traditions and a reputation for armed resistance to outside authority (having fought against Ottoman power for centuries). In 1878, the village of Klobuk had tried to fight off the Habsburg invader and had only slowly been subdued. In the following years, the new authorities built up a formidable line of defence along their new border with Montenegro including the garrisons at Trebinje, Bileća and Avtovac. After the annexation of Bosnia and Hercegovina in 1908, the security situation became tense, a situation exacerbated by fear of South Slav expansion after the Balkan Wars of 1912-13 (which went hand in hand with a wave of propaganda that depicted the Serbs and Montenegrins as violent by nature). As a result, Orthodox Serbs living along the Montenegrin border were increasingly viewed with suspicion. During the crisis of the summer of 1914, many men from the villages closest to the border were either hanged or deported. The implementation and interpretation of Habsburg military regulations (Dienstreglement) meant that the Orthodox population in the border areas suffered disproportionately in 1914. KEYWORDS Habsburg Monarchy, 1914, Violence, First World War, Montenegro, Hercegovina, Orthodox Serbs Introduction In 1878 after the Congress of Berlin had created new opportunities, the armies of Austria- Hungary marched into the Ottoman Provinces of Bosnia and Hercegovina.
    [Show full text]
  • Guglielmo Oberdan in Immagini D'epoca Tratte Da Internet GUGLIELMO OBERDAN Wilhelm Oberdank (Trieste, 1º Febbraio 1858 – Trieste, 20 Dicembre 1882)
    Guglielmo Oberdan in immagini d'epoca tratte da Internet GUGLIELMO OBERDAN Wilhelm Oberdank (Trieste, 1º febbraio 1858 – Trieste, 20 dicembre 1882) Guglielmo Oberdan è il nome italianizzato di Wilhelm Oberdank, figlio illegittimo di Josepha Maria Oberdank, slovena di Gorizia, e del soldato veneto Valentino Falcier. Nacque a Trieste nell’Impero Austro- ungarico il 1º febbraio 1858, venne educato in un ambiente di cultura italiana e maturò ideali patriottici e irredentisti che lo spinsero a italianizzare il suo nome in “Guglielmo Oberdan”. Nel 1877 grazie ai suoi meriti scolastici ottenne una borsa di studio e poté iscriversi al politecnico di Vienna. L’anno seguente fu chiamato alle armi, nell’ambito della spedizione di occupazione della Bosnia-Erzegovina da parte dell’Austria sancita dal congresso di Berlino. Oberdan si rifiutò di combattere nell’armata austriaca e, grazie all’aiuto di alcuni patrioti italiani, fuggì a Roma dove proseguì gli studi in Ingegneria e strinse contatti con il movimento irredentista. Nel 1882 Oberdan decise, con altri irredentisti, di organizzare un attentato ai danni dell’imperatore austriaco Francesco Giuseppe, in visita a Trieste. Questo atto sensazionale aveva l’esplicito fine di risollevare il patriottismo italiano fiaccato dalla scomparsa di Garibaldi avvenuta proprio in quell’anno. Oberdan, entrato clandestinamente a Trieste, fu scoperto e arrestato. Condannato a morte dalla giustizia austriaca per diserzione e cospirazione, avendo confessato le intenzioni di attentare alla vita dell'imperatore Francesco Giuseppe, fu impiccato a Trieste il 20 dicembre 1882. L’Italia lo considera un martire dell’irredentismo e gli ha dedicato un mausoleo a Trieste. E’ ricordato anche nella celeberrima canzone del Piave, in una targa scritta da Carducci a Bologna, e in innumerevoli vie e lapidi e targhe come quella della nostra scuola (vedi Gobbi, 1927, pp.
    [Show full text]
  • BETWEEN EMPIRE and NATION STATE. URBAN SPACE and CONFLICTING MEMORIES in TRIESTE (19Th–EARLY 20Th CENTURY)
    JOURNAL OF ARCHITECTURE AND URBANISM ISSN 2029-7955 / eISSN 2029-7947 2015 Volume 39(1): 17–27 doi:10.3846/20297955.2015.1031441 Theme of the issue “Center and periphery: borderline cities and borderlines of cities” Žurnalo numerio tema „Simbolizmo tradicija architektūroje“ BETWEEN EMPIRE AND NATION STATE. URBAN SPACE AND CONFLICTING MEMORIES IN TRIESTE (19th–EARLY 20th CENTURY) Andrea GRIFFANTE Departement of History, Faculty of Humanities, Vytautas Magnus University, K. Donelaičio g. 52-216, 44244 Kaunas, Lithuania E-mail: [email protected] Received 18 November 2014; accepted 9 March 2015 Abstract. Cities are particular spaces in which such a fight for territory occurs. By their own nature, cities imply a work of trans- formation and appropriation of territory into a narrative construct or text. In the 19th and early 20th century, Trieste underwent a transformation of its own urban space that expressed the existence and concurrence of different national narratives. In the 18th and 19th centuries the Trieste’s coastline performed the cosmopolitan elite’s identity by highlighting the relation between social status, ethnic origins of elite’s member, and the individuals’ conscience of participating in the exceptionality of a city ‘without history.’ As the elite’s economic ground changed, the representation of identity in space changed consequently. The consolidation of fascist regime supported the construction of a new myth of Trieste characterized by an old Roman origin and the heroic efforts of its inhabitants to join the ‘Motherland’ that led to the creation of a new main urban axis constellated with sites highly representative of Trieste’s ‘Latinity’ and permeated by a sense of collective participation in historical continuity.
    [Show full text]
  • Mark Cornwall
    ANNUAL LECTURE A Typology of Traitors in Late Nineteenth Century Austria-Hungary Mark Cornwall FOUNDATION FOR AUSTRIAN STUDIES A Typology of Traitors in Late Nineteenth Century Austria-Hungary A heroic portrayal of the execution of the ‘traitor’ Lajos Batthyány in 1849 (French lithograph, c.1850). A Typology of Traitors in Late Nineteenth Century Austria-Hungary Mark Cornwall I begin this first Austrian Studies Lecture with a dramatic event that occurred in Prague on the evening of 27 October 1866. In the aftermath of the Austro-Prussian War, Emperor Franz Joseph was on a tour of Bohemia, studying the region but also bringing it both material and moral support. According to one Prague newspaper, the visit was a great success: ‘Over everything there has radiated a spirit of attachment and loyalty towards the common state and its ruler, that genuine Austrian idea [echter österreichischer Gedanke] and that steadfast love for the fatherland’. The emperor even told the Czech patriot František Palacký that he had encountered ‘ein treues Volk’. It all seemed to disprove the rumours circulating during the recent Prussian occupation, that Bohemia was a hostile territory whose inhabitants were keen to secede from the Habsburg empire.1 Yet Franz Joseph’s visit was also disturbed by a strange incident. One evening, he attended a performance of Smetana’s Bartered Bride at the Czech Provisional Theatre by the Vltava River; Smetana had just become principal conductor, and this opera had had its premiere there that spring. After the first act, the emperor left the theatre and entered his waiting carriage, whereupon an assassination attempt took place.
    [Show full text]
  • Irredentismo Italiano (1880 – 1915). Irredenti, Irredentisti E Irredenti Irredentisti Italian Irredentism (1880-1915)
    ZBD # 11 Irredentismo Italiano (1880 – 1915). Irredenti, irredentisti e irredenti irredentisti Italian irredentism (1880-1915). Unredeemed, irredentist and unredeemed irredentist Renate Lunzer Università di Vienna (Austria) [email protected] Artículo recibido el 23/12/2017, aceptado el 10/01/2018 y publicado el 30/01/2018 Reconocimiento-No comercial-Sin obras derivadas 3.0 License 15] RIASSUNTO: Dopo una breve spiegazione del termine e del fenomeno storico “irredentismo italiano” l’articolo verte sul concetto della “redenzione” nel senso politico e (pseudo) religioso. Sacerdote e cantore più efficace di questa fascinosa ambiguità risulta Gabriele D’Annunzio, che saldò il mito nazionale con quello soteriologico. Uno sguardo sulle città simbolo dell’irredentismo, Trento e Trieste, si arresta su due figure di spicco o, se si vuole, due martiri: Guglielmo Oberdan, attentatore senza attentato a Francesco Giuseppe, e Cesare Battisti, protagonista di una vera tragedia tra socialismo internazionale e interventismo guerriero del 1915. Voci di intellettuali e scrittori italiani e austriaci accompagnano le varie vicende del 25) movimento irredentista italiano anche oltre il 1918, fino all’irredentismo inverso dei - sudtirolesi degli anni 1960/70. Infine si commemora una politica che ha il coraggio di non credere in “redenzioni” e di contentarsi del “parecchio” che si ottiene senza (pp. 14 (pp. spargimento di sangue. Parole chiave: Irredentismo italiano; Redenzione; Trento; Trieste; Gabriele D’Annunzio ∫ 3576 - ABSTRACT: After a brief explanation of the term and the historical phenomenon known as “Italian irredentism”, the article deals with the concept of “redemption” in a N: 2255 N: political and (pseudo) religious sense. Effective priest and singer of this charming SS I ambiguity is Gabriele D’Annunzio, who settled the national myth with this curse.
    [Show full text]
  • Autoethnography and Postmemory: a Methodology for the Use of Film Forms As Research
    Alphaville: Journal of Film and Screen Media no. 17, 2019, pp. 64–79 DOI: https://doi.org/10.33178/alpha.17.04 Autoethnography and Postmemory: A Methodology for the Use of Film Forms as Research Romana Turina Abstract: Practice as Research (PaR), and Practice-led Research, as studied by Hazel Smith, Roger T. Dean, and Graeme Sullivan, are increasingly being implemented in a wide range of disciplines. In this article, I will report on the methodological trajectory of my creative practice, an autoethnographic work that used film forms as research. The process progressed on three levels of investigation: the narrative, the epistemological, and the ontological. It developed from my personal experience and research in the archive, as a network of references supporting and responding to the needs of producing films through the exploration of prior film methodologies, and elaborating novel forms of mediation of history, memory, and postmemory. Introduction My recent research through creative practice focused on a case of silenced history and investigated its possible mediation in the film form. The case study regarded Trieste, and the northeastern part of present-day Italy. Trieste was a multiethnic Austrian port from 1382 to 1918, before being annexed by Italy after the end of the First World War. In the city, cultural and social affiliations varied but often coagulated around the three major ethnic groups: Austrian, Italian, and Slovenian. However, as Alexandra Kersevan and Michael Ebner analyse, between 1918 and 1943 the Fascist regime forcefully Italianised, exiled or imprisoned the indigenous Slav population of the area (Ebner 189−191, 260−261).
    [Show full text]
  • Situating Charlotte
    SITUATING CHARLOTTE: Reading Politics in Portraits of Belgian Princess Charlotte, Vicereine of Lombardy-Venetia, Empress of Mexico by LINDA MACNAYR A thesis submitted to the Department of Art History in conformity with the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy Queen’s University Kingston, Ontario, Canada November 2008 Copyright © Linda MacNayr, 2008 To Kelby MacNayr and Noah MacNayr-Heath ii Abstract The political significance of portraits of Charlotte of Saxe Coburg Gotha (1840- 1927) has been obscured by her historical liminality and by romantic myths that have prevailed since the late nineteenth century and influenced interpretations of her visual representations. This thesis reassembles a wide range of images of Charlotte and analyzes these as sequential representations of an individual participating, across diverse cultures, in defining episodes of the nineteenth century. Strategies of allegory, programmatic intertextuality, and revisionism are revealed when these images are read within their political circumstances of production and complicate the dominance of a few late, iconic portraits of Charlotte and their entrenched associations. The use of costume, essential in certain portraits commissioned during Charlotte’s childhood in Belgium, is revisited in images depicting her during a brief position as Vicereine of Lombardy- Venetia and in another dating from her role - of equal brevity but indelible historical resonance - as Empress of Mexico. The significance of dress is explored in relation to agency and political influence and as demonstrating compliance with, or negotiation of, gender conventions. Charlotte’s public life was abruptly terminated upon her 1866 return to Europe by a diagnosis of ‘madness.’ Napoleon III was withdrawing troops supporting the Mexican Empire and her journey was made seeking to reverse this decision.
    [Show full text]
  • Disability, Race, and the Politics of Memory Susanne C. Knittel
    Uncanny Homelands: Disability, Race, and the Politics of Memory Susanne C. Knittel Submitted in partial fulfillment of the Requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY 2011 ©2011 Susanne C. Knittel All Rights Reserved Abstract Uncanny Homelands: Disability, Race, and the Politics of Memory Susanne C. Knittel This dissertation is an interdisciplinary and comparative study of German and Italian memory culture after 1945. It examines how the interaction between memorials, litera‐ ture, historiography, and popular culture shapes a society’s memory and identity. I focus on two marginalized aspects of the memory of the Holocaust: the Nazi “euthanasia” program directed against the mentally ill and disabled, and the Fascist persecution of Slovenes, Croats, and Jews in and around Trieste. I couple my analysis of memorials to these atrocities with an examination of the literary and artistic representations of the traumatic events in question. My work thus expands the definition of site of memory to encompass not only the specific geographical location of a historical event but also the assemblage of cultural artefacts and discourses that accumulate around it over time. A “site” therefore denotes a physical and a cultural space that is continuously re‐defined and rewritten. The two memorials I analyze, Grafeneck and the Risiera di San Sabba, bookend the Holocaust, revealing a trajectory from the systematic elimination of socially undesirable people, such as the mentally ill and disabled, to the full‐scale racial purifica‐ tion of the “final solution.” The lack of survivor testimony about these sites has been a major factor in their continued marginalization within the discourse on Holocaust mem‐ ory, which is why it is all the more important to consider the way these events figure in other genres and other media, such as novels, short stories, poems, biographies, TV‐ dramas, and theatre plays.
    [Show full text]
  • Quotidian Intimidation and Mussolini's Special Tribunal in Istria and the Eastern Borderlands Maura Hametz Old Dominion University, [email protected]
    Old Dominion University ODU Digital Commons History Faculty Publications History 2018 Quotidian Intimidation and Mussolini's Special Tribunal in Istria and the Eastern Borderlands Maura Hametz Old Dominion University, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.odu.edu/history_fac_pubs Part of the European History Commons, Legal Commons, and the Political History Commons Repository Citation Hametz, Maura, "Quotidian Intimidation and Mussolini's Special Tribunal in Istria and the Eastern Borderlands" (2018). History Faculty Publications. 38. https://digitalcommons.odu.edu/history_fac_pubs/38 Original Publication Citation Hametz, M. (2018). Quotidian intimidation and Mussolini's Special Tribunal in Istria and the Eastern Borderlands. Acta Histriae, 26(4), 1125-1142. doi:10.19233/AH.2018.47 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the History at ODU Digital Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in History Faculty Publications by an authorized administrator of ODU Digital Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. ACTA HISTRIAE • 26 • 2018 • 4 Received: 2018-07-11 DOI 10.19233/AH.2018.47 Original scientific article QUOTIDIAN INTIMIDATION AND MUSSOLINI’S SPECIAL TRIBUNAL IN ISTRIA AND THE EASTERN BORDERLANDS Maura HAMETZ Old Dominion University, Norfolk, VA 23529, USA e-mail: [email protected] ABSTRACT The article examines the Special Tribunal for the Defense of the State’s use of the “no grounds to proceed” ruling to intimidate anti-fascists and extend the fascist govern- ment’s power in the Adriatic borderlands. It demonstrates how the Tribunal’s judges used their sentencing prerogatives to support repression in Istria and cloak persecution in the mantel of legal action in defense of the state.
    [Show full text]