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                <title>Vincenzo Marcon “Davilla”:<lb/> A Controversial Protagonist of the Partisan
                    War in the Upper-Adriatic Littoral</title>
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                    <forename>Gabriele</forename>
                    <surname>Mastrolillo</surname>
                    <roleName>Research associate and teaching assistant of Contemporary
                        history</roleName>
                    <roleName>scientific director</roleName>
                    <affiliation>University of Trieste, Department of Political and Social
                        Sciences</affiliation>
                    <affiliation>Istituto Regionale per la Storia della Resistenza e dell’Età
                        Contemporanea nel Friuli Venezia Giulia, Trieste</affiliation>
                    <email/>gabriele.mastrolillo@dispes.units.it</author>
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                    <orgName xml:lang="en">Institute of Contemporary History</orgName>
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                        <addrLine>Privoz 11</addrLine>
                        <addrLine>SI-1000 Ljubljana</addrLine>
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                <title xml:lang="en">Contributions to Contemporary History</title>
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                <p>Contributions to Contemporary History is one of the central Slovenian scientific
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                <p>The journal is published three times per year in Slovenian and in the following
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                <p>Prispevki za novejšo zgodovino je ena osrednjih slovenskih znanstvenih
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            <docAuthor>Gabriele Mastrolillo<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn1" n="*"><hi rend="bold"
                        >Research associate and teaching assistant of Contemporary history,
                        University of Trieste, Department of Political and Social Sciences /
                        scientific director, Istituto Regionale per la Storia della Resistenza e
                        dell’Età Contemporanea nel Friuli Venezia Giulia, Trieste,</hi>
                    <ref target="mailto:gabriele.mastrolillo@dispes.units.it"><hi rend="bold"
                            >gabriele.mastrolillo@dispes.units.it</hi></ref>; ORCID:
                <ref target="https://orcid.org/0000-0002-3042-4395">0000-0002-3042-4395</ref></note></docAuthor>
            <docImprint>
                <idno type="cobissType">Cobiss tip: 1.01</idno>
                <idno type="DOI">https://doi.org/10.51663/pnz.64.3.08</idno>
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            <div type="abstract" xml:lang="sl">
                <head><hi rend="bold">IZVLEČEK</hi></head>
                <head>VINCENZO MARCON “DAVILLA”: KONTROVERZNI PROTAGONIST
                    PARTIZANSKE VOJNE V ZGORNJEM JADRANSKEM PRIMORJU</head>
                <p><hi rend="italic">Vincenzo Marcon (znan kot “Davilla”) je bil komunistični borec,
                        rojen v Trstu, ki je med letoma 1942 in 1943 vodil julijsko “zvezo”
                        Komunistične partije Italije (PCd’I – Partito Comunista d’Italia). Tega leta
                        ga je odstavilo novo vodstvo te organizacije (zbrano okoli Luigija
                        Frausina), ki je Marconovo linijo (osredotočeno na tesno sodelovanje s
                        slovenskim partizanskim gibanjem) nadomestilo z drugo, osnovano na enotnosti
                        italijanskih antifašističnih strank in gibanj, ki so sledila politiki
                        narodnoosvobodilnega odbora. Na podlagi analize dokumentacije italijanske
                        politične policije ter italijanskega in slovenskega komunističnega gibanja
                        članek prvič znanstveno analizira Marconovo vlogo v komunističnih vrstah med
                        “partizansko vojno” v zgornjem Jadranskem primorju.</hi></p>
                <p><hi rend="italic">Ključne besede: Vincenzo Marcon “Davilla”; italijanski odpor;
                        Komunistična partija Italije; Komunistična partija Slovenije; osvobodilna
                        Fronta; Julijska krajina.</hi></p>
            </div>
            <div type="abstract" xml:lang="en">
                <head><hi rend="bold">ABSTRACT</hi></head>
                <p><hi rend="italic">Vincenzo Marcon (known as “Davilla”) was a communist militant,
                        born in Trieste, who led the PCd’I (Partito Comunista d’Italia) Julian
                        “federation” between 1942 and 1943. That year, he was dismissed by the new
                        direction of that organisation, gathered around Luigi Frausin, who replaced
                        Marcon’s line (focused on a strong collaboration with the Slovenian partisan
                        movement) with another one based on the unity of the Italian antifascist
                        parties and movements following the politics of the Committees of National
                        Liberation. Thanks to the analysis of the documentation produced by the
                        Italian political police and the Italian and Slovenian communist movements,
                        this article provides the first scientific analysis of Marcon’s role in the
                        communist ranks in the Upper-Adriatic Littoral during the “partisan
                        war”.</hi></p>
                <p><hi rend="italic">Keywords: Vincenzo Marcon “Davilla”; Italian Resistance;
                        Communist Party of Italy; Communist Party of SLovenia; Liberation Front;
                        Julian March</hi></p>
            </div>
        </front>
        <body>
            <div>
                <head>Introduction</head>
                <p>“<hi rend="italic">Una trattazione approfondita merita la figura di Vincenzo
                        Marcon, che ha guidato, in nome del PCd’I [Partito Comunista d’Italia], la
                        maggior parte delle organizzazioni dei comunisti aderenti al PCd’I nella
                        zona</hi>,” the Julian March (“The figure of Vincenzo Marcon deserves a
                    detailed analysis. On behalf of the Communist Party of Italy, he led most of the
                    communist organisations associated with the PCd’I in the area”). These are
                    Rodolfo Ursini Uršič’s words, written in his autobiographical book, in which he
                    also defines Marcon as a somewhat neglected and not appropriately explored
                        figure.<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn2" n="1">Rodolfo
                        Ursini Uršič, <hi rend="italic">Attraverso Trieste. Un rivoluzionario
                            pacifista in una città di frontiera</hi> (Rome: Studio i, 1996), 8, 228.
                        After serving eight years of imprisonment for his antifascist activities,
                        Uršič joined the Slovenian partisan movement in September 1943. In October
                        1944, he was appointed the secretary of the KPS City Committee in Trieste. –
                        For more information about his biography as well as the biographies of the
                        other Italian and Slovenian communist leaders and militants mentioned in
                        this article, see “Indicazioni biografiche” in Zdenko Čepič, Damijan Guštin,
                        and Nevenka Troha, <hi rend="italic">La Slovenia durante la Seconda Guerra
                            Mondiale</hi> (Udine: IFSML, 2012), 391–413. Patrick Karlsen (ed.), <hi
                            rend="italic">Dizionario della Resistenza alla frontiera alto-adriatica.
                            1941</hi>–<hi rend="italic">1945</hi> (Udine: Gaspari, 2022), <hi
                            rend="italic">ad vocem</hi>. I would like to thank Patrick
                        Karlsen, who read the article before the submission, for his advice.</note></p>
                <p>In fact, Marcon (better known under his pseudonym Davilla/Davila) is one of the
                    several antifascist militants (especially communists) who have barely received
                    any historiographical attention. In Marcon’s case, this was due to his
                    disgraceful end: after having led the PCd’I “federation”<note place="foot"
                        xml:id="ftn3" n="2"> Also known as the Federal Committee. Due to the
                        clandestine nature of this structure, resulting from its illegal status that
                        the antifascist parties and movements were forced to act under between 1926
                        and 1943, no actual party structures with any apparent bureaucracy and
                        articulation existed in Trieste (or elsewhere in Italy). Instead, various
                        cells/groups/organisations tried to act as sections and federations of their
                        own party.</note> in the Julian March between 1942 and 1943, he was
                    dismissed by the new Italian communist leadership in that area, gathered around
                    Luigi Frausin, which formed in August 1943. Later, he was accused of being a spy
                    due to the discovery of evidence (not found by historians and therefore not
                    verifiable) of his double-dealing for the Italian political police as well as
                    the German authorities of the OZAK ( <hi rend="italic">Operationszone
                        Adriatisches Küstenland</hi>), the Operational Zone of the Adriatic Littoral
                    established by the German Reich in September 1943. For this reason, he was
                    summarily tried and then executed by the <hi rend="italic">garibaldini</hi>
                    (communist partisans). This was also the ultimate fate of a few other communists
                    who had fought in the Italian Resistance: I am referring to Libero (Riccardo
                    Fedel) and Facio (Dante Castellucci), both shot (like Marcon) by the “Garibaldi”
                    Brigades. While Fedel was executed by a firing squad in Romagna in June 1944
                    because he had been found guilty of embezzlement and insubordination,
                    Castellucci was shot in Lunigiana (northern Tuscany) the following month after
                    being accused of stealing.<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn4" n="3"> See Marcello
                        Flores and Mimmo Franzinelli, <hi rend="italic">Storia della Resistenza</hi>
                        (Rome, Bari: Laterza, 2022), 445–59.</note></p>
                <p>While their cases had been examined in detail by historiography,<note
                        place="foot" xml:id="ftn5" n="4"> Apart from the works quoted by Mirco
                        Dondi, “<hi rend="italic">Il conflitto interno al movimento di
                            Resistenza,</hi>” in Mirco Carrattieri and Marcello Flores (eds.), <hi
                            rend="italic">La Resistenza in Italia. Storia, memoria,
                            storiografia</hi> (Florence: goWare, 2018), 155–58 n. See Giorgio Fedel,
                            <hi rend="italic">Storia del comandante Libero. Vita, uccisione e</hi>
                        damnatio memoriae <hi rend="italic">del fondatore della Brigata partigiana
                            romagnola</hi> (Milan: Fondazione Comandante Libero, 2013). Pino I.
                        Armino, <hi rend="italic">Indagine sulla morte di un partigiano. La verità
                            sul comandante Facio</hi> (Turin: Bollati Boringhieri, 2023).</note> the
                    same was not true of Marcon. Even today, he is still unknown outside the
                    community of scholars of the Resistance in the Upper Adriatic, who have only
                    recently indirectly examined his political role.<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn6"
                        n="5"> Cfr. Ursini Uršič, <hi rend="italic">Attraverso Trieste</hi>, 172,
                        173, 201–09, 215, 216, 223, 224, 228–39, 253–55. Anna Di Gianantonio, <hi
                            rend="italic">È bello vivere liberi. Ondina Peteani. Una vita tra lotta
                            partigiana, deportazione ed impegno sociale</hi> (Trieste: IRSML FVG,
                        2007), 64–70. Patrick Karlsen and Luca G. Manenti, <hi rend="italic">“Si
                            soffre ma si tace”. Luigi Frausin, Natale Kolarič: comunisti e
                            resistenti</hi> (Trieste: IRSREC FVG, 2019), 104, 105, 108, 109, 116–25.
                        Flores and Franzinelli, <hi rend="italic">Storia della Resistenza</hi>, 19,
                        20, 419, 420. </note> For now, the only specific work about him is an
                    unpublished typewritten text<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn7" n="6"> Oskar
                        Ferluga, <hi rend="italic">Marcon Vincenzo “Davilla”. Raccolta di documenti
                            – testimonianze interviste – opinioni – sulla vita, la lotta e
                            l’uccisione di Davilla</hi> (Trieste, 2001). The typewritten text is
                        stored at the <hi rend="italic">Istituto Regionale per la Storia della
                            Resistenza e dell’Età Contemporanea nel Friuli Venezia Giulia</hi>,
                        Trieste (IRSREC FVG).</note> written by Marcon’s nephew to restore the man’s
                    honour. Its author, Oskar Ferluga, is credited with first attempting to
                    reconstruct Marcon’s biography by examining a small yet scientifically
                    interesting corpus of sources. However, I believe that the author’s evident goal
                    and sentimental attitude towards the subject of his research taint the
                    scientific quality of his work, in which he states Marcon’s innocence due to the
                    lack of evidence of his guilt. Instead, in this article, I specifically focus on
                    Marcon’s role in the partisan war, which took place in the Upper-Adriatic
                        Littoral,<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn8" n="7"> As it is known, the
                        military operations carried out by the partisans in the Upper Adriatic (or,
                        as suggested by Rolf Wörsdörfer, in the North-Eastern Adriatic) have been
                        defined in various ways, depending on the specific political-military actor:
                        for the Italians, they should be considered firstly as a local expression of
                        the Resistance against fascism and secondly as a national liberation
                        struggle against the Germans. Meanwhile, for the Slovenians and Croats, they
                        were part of the “national liberation struggle” against the Italian and
                        later German invaders. Consequently, I think using the term “partisan war”
                        is better because it is more neutral, as did by Rolf Wörsdörfer, <hi
                            rend="italic">Il confine orientale. Italia e Jugoslavia dal 1915 al
                            1955</hi> (Bologna: il Mulino, 2009), 159. On the other hand, I decided
                        to employ the geographical locution “Upper Adriatic” and not “North-Eastern
                        Adriatic” because the former has become frequently used in historiography
                        (see, for example, Karlsen, <hi rend="italic">Dizionario della Resistenza
                            alla frontiera alto-adriatica</hi>).</note> with the “simple” aim of
                    producing scientific research that is as detailed as possible, based especially
                    on the reports and notices produced by the Italian Ministry of Interior’s
                    General Directorate for Public Security ( <hi rend="italic">Direzione Generale
                        di Pubblica Sicurezza</hi>, hereafter PS), the reports and memorial notes
                    coming from the Italian communist circles of the Julian March, as well as the
                    documentation of the Communist Party of Slovenia (KPS) and the Liberation Front
                    (OF), published in two volumes and edited by the Institute for the History of
                    the Workers’ Movement, and the Archives of the Republic of Slovenia.<note
                        place="foot" xml:id="ftn9" n="8">
                        <hi rend="italic">Dokumenti ljudske revolucije v Sloveniji</hi> [<hi
                            rend="italic">DLR</hi>], <hi rend="italic">vol. 1–7</hi> (Ljubljana: Inštitut za zgodovino
                        delavskega gibanja, 1962–1989). <hi rend="italic">Dokumenti organov in
                            organizacij narodnoosvobodilnega gibanja v Sloveniji</hi> [<hi
                            rend="italic">DOONG</hi>] <hi rend="italic">vol. 8–12</hi> (Ljubljana: Arhiv Republike
                        Slovenije, 2001–2016). I would like to thank Ravel Kodrič for the linguistic
                        advice I needed to understand the contents of the documents published in
                        these collections and the book by Branko Babič, <hi rend="italic">Primorska
                            ni klonila: spomini na vojna leta</hi> (Koper: Lipa, 1982).</note></p>
                <p>Due to the lack of any documentation concerning Marcon and the absence of
                    biographic texts, it is impossible to reconstruct his profile in detail.
                    Moreover, in my opinion, his controversial demise and the opacity of his figure
                    have deterred scholars from conducting any specific research on the subject
                    until the 1990s. This partly happened to avoid casting a bad light on figures
                    such as Frausin, Vincenzo A. Gigante, and Mario Karis due to their role in the
                    Resistance and (in Karis’ case) after World War II. In fact, Frausin and Gigante
                    followed a political line (the Ciellenist one) that proved to be successful,
                    both in the Julian March and all over Italy, while Karis was among those who
                    contributed to the preparation of the trial for the crimes committed at the
                    Risiera di San Sabba between 16 February and 28 April 1976. Last but not least,
                    the equally dramatic death of Frausin and Gigante (both killed at the Risiera)
                        <note place="foot" xml:id="ftn10" n="9"> On Gigante (who led the PCd’I
                        Julian Federation after Frausin), see especially Corrado Pasimeni, <hi
                            rend="italic">Lotta al fascismo all’ombra di Stalin. La militanza di
                            Vincenzo Antonio Gigante</hi> (Lecce: Argo, 2008).</note> contributed to
                    creating an aura of martyrs around them as victims of Nazi-fascism. The
                    sentiment took hold in the Julian antifascist community, which, in my opinion,
                    acted as a deterrent from researching Marcon to avoid tarnishing his image. </p>
            </div>
            <div>
                <head>Leading the PCd’I Julian Branch</head>
                <p>Marcon was born in Trieste on 18 January 1907 in Via Commerciale, in the district
                    of Roiano, in a humble Italian-Slovenian family (his mother, Francesca Potocnik,
                    had Slovenian origins). After attending the “Industriali” high school, he was
                    sent to Genoa and Savona to serve in the navy. In February 1929, he returned to
                    Trieste and started working as a mechanic at the shop run by Luigi Schromek in
                    Via Udine. According to Ferluga, in these years, Marcon joined the communists of
                    Monfalcone and Trieste,<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn11" n="10"> Cf. Ferluga,
                            <hi rend="italic">Marcon Vincenzo</hi>, 3, 4, 8.</note> whose ethnic
                    structure changed after its annexation to the Kingdom of Italy as it lost much
                    of the non-Italian population: the number of its German and Slovenian residents
                    dropped to 20 % of the total population.<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn12" n="11"
                        > According to the 1921 census, it amounted to 238.587 people. See Roberto
                        Finzi and Franco Tassinari, “Le piramidi di Trieste.
                            Triestine e Triestini dal 1918 a oggi. Un profilo demografico,” in
                        Roberto Finzi, Claudio Magris, and Giovanni Miccoli (eds.), <hi
                            rend="italic">Il Friuli – Venezia Giulia</hi> (Turin: Einaudi, 2002),
                        300.</note> This change resulted from Trieste’s transformation from the
                    leading Central European port city in the Adriatic into an Italian provincial
                    city and had dramatic economic consequences. The context contributed to the
                    development of dissatisfaction and discontent in the local population and
                    indirectly to the rise of Marxism and thus the Italian Socialist Party led by
                    the maximalists (both nationally and in Trieste, in this case from April 1919).
                    Many Slavs joined, attracted and reassured by the Party’s internationalist
                    spirit and the consequent anti-nationalism.<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn13"
                        n="12"> See Elio Apih, <hi rend="italic">Trieste</hi> (Rome, Bari: Laterza,
                        1988), 107–09. Elio Apih, <hi rend="italic">Italia, fascismo e antifascismo
                            nella Venezia Giulia (1918–1943). Ricerche storiche</hi> (Rome, Bari:
                        Laterza, 2022), 37, 38, 48–55. On the developments of the left-wing parties
                        in Trieste shortly after the war, see especially Andrea Gobet, “Tra ‘novatori’ e ‘neroniani’. Socialisti e comunisti nel
                            primo dopoguerra a Trieste,” <hi rend="italic">Qualestoria</hi>, 1
                        (2012): 5–44.</note></p>
                <p>It is unclear when and thanks to whom Marcon joined the PCd’I, founded in Livorno
                    on 21 January 1921. Soon, the Party also became one of the main antifascist
                    forces in the Julian March, where it received 20,473 (or 14.1 %) and 20,765
                    votes (7.7 %), respectively, at the 1921 and 1924 general elections. The results
                    made the Julian March the fifth largest region in Italy in terms of the number
                    of votes cast for the communists.<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn14" n="13"> See
                        Luciano Patat, <hi rend="italic">Il Friuli Orientale fra le due guerre. Il
                            ruolo e l’azione del P.C.d’I.</hi> (Udine: IFSML, 1985), 324. As written
                        in the same work, at the 1921 elections, the province of Udine formed a
                        constituency with Veneto, while in 1924, it did so with the Julian
                        March.</note> It is very likely that in the dynamic communist milieu of
                    Julian March, Marcon had the idea of clandestinely emigrating to Yugoslavia in
                    December 1929, officially in search of work, by crossing the Italian-Yugoslav
                    border near Tarvisio on foot.<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn15" n="14"> Archivio
                        di Stato di Trieste, Questura di Trieste, Casellario di Polizia Giudiziaria,
                        b. 479, f. “Marcon Vincenzo di Andrea,” a note produced by the PS
                        commissioner, 8 April 1930. Ibid., a note produced by the Italian consul at
                        Ragusa (Dubrovnik), 6 April 1930.</note></p>
                <p>Between 1929 and 1935, Marcon lived as an emigrant between France, Yugoslavia,
                    Austria, and Eritrea. Because of the absence of any documentation regarding his
                    movements (except what was produced by the Italian PS),<note place="foot"
                        xml:id="ftn16" n="15"> See the documentation stored ibid.</note> the details
                    of his movements and the reasons for his emigration remain unknown. However, he
                    was likely a courier of the PCd’I, which had been declared illegal (the same as
                    all antifascist parties and movements) due to the Fascist Exceptional Law,
                    implemented in November 1926. Consequently, the Party had reconstituted itself
                    clandestinely with a dual leadership (known as the Foreign Centre and the Inner
                    Centre) and a precarious but tenacious network of clandestine groups in Italy,
                    especially in the central-northern areas.<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn17"
                        n="16"> See Paolo Spriano, <hi rend="italic">Storia del Partito comunista
                            italiano, vol. 2, Gli anni della clandestinità</hi> (Turin: Einaudi,
                        1969), 61–72. Albertina Vittoria, <hi rend="italic">Storia del PCI.
                            1921–1991</hi> (Rome: Carocci, 2006), 20–24. Alexander Höbel, “I rivoluzionari di professione,” in Silvio Pons
                        (ed.), <hi rend="italic">Il comunismo italiano nella storia del
                            Novecento</hi> (Rome: Viella, 2021), 75–92.</note></p>
                <p>On 16 December 1935, Marcon returned to Trieste, where, in November of the
                    following year, he first worked at a telephone equipment warehouse and then for
                    the Construction Circle associated with the Royal Italian Post Office. He ceased
                    working there due to his arrest on 2 April 1937.<note place="foot"
                        xml:id="ftn18" n="17"> See Ferluga, <hi rend="italic">Marcon Vincenzo</hi>,
                        11-14/4.</note> It seems that the incident resulted from treachery by a
                    police informant, who was aware of Marcon’s antifascist activities and suspected
                    that he was trying “<hi rend="italic">di procurarsi benemerenze nell’ambiente
                        sovversivo, in vista di un suo trasferimento in Francia</hi>” (“to procure
                    merit in the subversive circles, given his transfer to France”).<note
                        place="foot" xml:id="ftn19" n="18"> Archivio Centrale dello Stato (Roma),
                        Ministero dell’Interno, Direzione Generale di Pubblica Sicurezza, Divisione
                        Affari Generali e Riservati. Uffici dipendenti dalla sezione prima
                        (1894–1945), Ufficio confino di polizia (1926–1943) (ACS, MI, DGPS, AGR,
                        UCP), ff. Personali, b. 621, f. 9426 “Marcon Vincenzo di
                            Andrea,” a note produced by the Trieste <hi rend="italic"
                            >questore</hi> and addressed to the Trieste prefect, 9 April
                        1937.</note> It is conceivable that the political police had been watching
                    Marcon since his return to Trieste and had intensified their investigation of
                    him after his repeated attempts to emigrate. Furthermore, a letter written by
                    Marcon and intercepted by the police officers contributed to the latter’s
                    suspicions of him, as it was addressed to Albino Biziak, a communist militant
                    born in Trieste and described by Italian authorities as a “dangerous exile”
                    living at “Rue Carnot Maison Alfort – Seine France”.<note place="foot"
                        xml:id="ftn20" n="19"> Ibid., Casellario Politico Centrale (CPC), b. 3043,
                        f. “Marcon Vincenzo di Andrea,” a note produced by
                        the Trieste prefect and addressed to the CPC, 14 May 1937.</note> According
                    to the investigators, the letter represented one of the elements attesting to
                    Marcon’s connections with militant antifascism. Consequently, he was first
                    imprisoned in Trieste’s Coroneo prison before his “confinement odyssey” between
                    Apulia, Lazio, and Calabria, which lasted until 1 April 1942.<note place="foot"
                        xml:id="ftn21" n="20"> Ibid., UCP, ff. Personali, b. 621, f. 9426 “Marcon Vincenzo di Andrea,” a note produced by the
                        Cosenza prefect commissioner and addressed to the DGPS, 11 April 1942.
                            Ibid., a note produced by the Trieste <hi
                            rend="italic">questore</hi> and addressed to the Trieste prefect, 9
                        April 1937. See also Ferluga, <hi rend="italic">Marcon Vincenzo</hi>,
                        15–23.</note></p>
                <p>When his confinement ended, Marcon returned to Trieste and attempted to resume
                    contact with the embryonic groups of the PCd’I operating in the Julian March.
                    This occurred in the broader scenario of the relations between the PCd’I and the
                    KPS (founded in April 1937 as the Slovenian branch of the Communist Party of
                    Yugoslavia or the KPJ). The first direct contact between the two Parties had
                    been established already in June 1940, when the Italian Party sent one of its
                    leaders, Umberto Massola ( <hi rend="italic">nom de guerre</hi> “Quinto”), from
                    Paris to Ljubljana. Born in Pinerolo (Turin) in 1904 and a PCd’I militant since
                    the organisation’s establishment, he was a member of the Party Foreign Office,
                    the leading structure that had replaced the Central Committee (CC), the
                    Political Bureau, and the Secretariat. Massola remained in Ljubljana until July
                    1941. However, Tuti (Rigoletto Martini) arrived in Zagreb from Moscow three
                    months later. Both attempted to re-establish connections with the communist
                    groups in Milan and Turin and organise their return to Italy to reconstitute the
                    PCd’I Inner Centre. They had been sent to Yugoslavia for two reasons: on the one
                    hand, the Yugoslav extraneousness to the conflict (until April 1941, when Italy
                    attacked it) made it a safe place and an excellent base close to Northern Italy;
                    while on the other hand, a relatively strong communist party existed in
                    Yugoslavia, which had been tasked with providing the Italian communists with
                    financial and logistical aid. This also caused disagreements: according to
                    Massola, the Yugoslavs felt that their task justified their interference in the
                    actions of the Italian communists, which was the Italians perceived as an
                    attempt to control their activities. In the spring of 1942, Edvard Kardelj (born
                    in Ljubljana in 1910), one of the leaders of the KPS/KPJ and the Yugoslav
                    Resistance, in fact reported to Josip Broz “Tito” that because of the funding
                    that the KPS provided to Massola, the Slovenian party leadership had the right
                    to intervene in the management of that money and more generally in the PCd’I
                    activities. Tito informed the Communist International (Comintern) leadership of
                    the problematic relations between the two Parties. Consequently, the Comintern
                    Secretary Georgi Dimitrov sent a telegram claiming that the KPS leadership had
                    not only the right but also the duty to request their Italian counterparts to
                    report on their activities as well as to set up KPJ groups in the Istrian
                    localities (still under Italian rule) populated by Slovenians and Croats.
                    Kardelj communicated the same to Massola in a letter of 6 August 1942. However,
                    a failed dispatch of the five telegrams that Massola had addressed to Moscow
                    through the KPJ complicated the scenario. Consequently, Dimitrov was unaware of
                    Massola’s presence in Milan since the summer of 1941. This is a significant
                    detail, especially if we consider the difficulties faced by the Italian Party
                    and thus the disparity between the Yugoslav Party and its Slovenian branch,
                    which clearly declared its desire to reunify all territories considered
                    Slovenian, including Trieste, in October 1942.<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn22"
                        n="21"> On the relations between PCd’I and KPS at this point in history, see
                        especially Pierluigi Pallante, <hi rend="italic">Il P.C.I. e la questione
                            nazionale. Friuli – Venezia Giulia 1941–1945</hi> (Udine: Del Bianco,
                        1980), 45–60. Nevenka Troha, “Odnosi med jugoslovanskim oz. slovenskim in
                        italijanskim antifašističnim gibanjem v času med napadom na jugoslavijo in
                        kapitulacijo Italije (april 1941-september 1943),” <hi rend="italic"
                            >Borec</hi>, 526–528 (1994): 73–103. Ead. <hi rend="italic">Politika
                            slovensko-italijanskega bratstva (slovansko-italijanska antifašistična
                            unija v coni A Julijske krajine v času od osvoboditve do uveljavitve
                            mirovne pogodbe)</hi> (Ljubljana: Arhiv Republike Slovenije, 1998),
                        11–18. See also Apih, <hi rend="italic">Italia, fascismo e antifascismo
                            nella Venezia Giulia</hi>, 403-05. Paolo Spriano, <hi rend="italic"
                            >Storia del Partito comunista italiano, vol. 4, La fine del fascismo.
                            Dalla riscossa operaia alla lotta armata</hi> (Turin: Einaudi, 1973),
                        17, 22, 58, 59, as well as the recollection of one of the protagonists:
                        Umberto Massola, <hi rend="italic">Memorie 1939–1941</hi> (Rome: Editori
                        Riuniti, 1972), 85–97.</note></p>
                <p>The KPS was also the main component of the OF – the Slovenian People’s Liberation
                    Front, established in Ljubljana on 27 April 1941. This organisation directed the
                    Slovenian Resistance politically and militarily and had its groups (led by Oskar
                    Kovačič) in Trieste and Monfalcone since August 1941.<note place="foot"
                        xml:id="ftn23" n="22"> See Apih, <hi rend="italic">Italia, fascismo e
                            antifascismo nella Venezia Giulia</hi>, 395, 396. Pallante, <hi
                            rend="italic">Il P.C.I. e la questione nazionale</hi>, 43. Spriano, <hi
                            rend="italic">Storia del Partito comunista italiano,</hi> <hi rend="italic">vol. 4</hi>, 55.
                        Čepič, Guštin and Troha, <hi rend="italic">La Slovenia durante la Seconda
                            Guerra Mondiale</hi>, 15, 81–83, 150, 151. Nerina Fontanot, Anna Di
                        Gianantonio and Marco Puppini, <hi rend="italic">Contro il fascismo oltre
                            ogni frontiera. I Fontanot nella guerra antifascista europea
                            1919–1945</hi> (Udine: Kappa Vu, 2017), 76. Wörsdörfer, <hi
                            rend="italic">Il confine orientale</hi>, 179, 180. Karlsen, <hi
                            rend="italic">Dizionario della Resistenza alla frontiera
                            alto-adriatica</hi>, 43.</note></p>
                <p>In short, this was the general context of the relations between the Party to
                    which Marcon belonged to and its Slovenian counterpart when Marcon returned to
                    the Julian March in April 1942. Initially, for two months, he was hosted in
                    Ronchi dei Legionari by Vinicio Fontanot,<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn24"
                        n="23"> See Ferluga, <hi rend="italic">Marcon Vincenzo</hi>, 38–40.</note>
                    who was, in the meantime, organising an antifascist movement in and around
                    Monfalcone and trying to initiate the first attempt on the Italian communist
                    side to establish a guerrilla unit independent of the Slovenian ones. According
                    to Uršič, Marcon endorsed this attempt but suggested that Fontanot temporarily
                    associate the Italian recruits with Slovenian partisans to teach the Italians
                    urban guerrilla techniques.<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn25" n="24"> Cf. Ursini
                        Uršič, <hi rend="italic">Attraverso Trieste</hi>, 218, 219. See also Vinicio
                        Fontanot’s testimony in Fontanot, Di Gianantonio, and Puppini, <hi
                            rend="italic">Contro il fascismo oltre ogni frontiera</hi>, 70, 71, 242,
                        243.</note></p>
                <p>Giovanni Zol was another figure with whom Marcon came into contact a few months
                    after his return to Trieste. He was a worker born in Fiume Veneto (Pordenone) in
                    1908 and a member of the PCd’I since the 1920s. Like Marcon, he was confined to
                    the Tremiti islands (Apulia) and Calabria.<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn26"
                        n="25"> See <hi rend="italic">Giovanni Zol</hi> | <hi rend="italic">ANPI</hi>. <ref
                            target="https://www.anpi.it/biografia/giovanni-zol"
                            >https://www.anpi.it/biografia/giovanni-zol</ref>. Accessed 15 March
                        2024.</note> Their first meeting took place in July 1942. The two former
                    internees sought to reconstitute the PCd’I organisation in and around Trieste.
                    For this reason, they established contacts with the Slovenian liberation
                    movement, and on 31 August or 1 September 1942, Marcon met with the KPS CC
                    exponent Karlo (Albin Čotar). It seems that the meeting was unsuccessful.
                    Therefore, Marcon met the former mayor of Pocenia (Udine), Luigi Borghese, who
                    was a member of the KPS District Committee in Gorizia. Borghese arranged a
                    meeting between Marcon, Mirko Bračič, and Ahac (Dušan Pirjevec), the commander
                    and the political commissar of the “Isonzo” Detachment, respectively. The
                    meeting took place in agreement with the PCd’I Federation of Udine, which
                    authorised its secretary Lima (Mario Lizzero), the future political commissar of
                    the “Garibaldi Friuli” Divisions, to participate in that assembly, which was the
                    very first meeting between the PCd’I exponents in the Julian March and the
                    Slovenian partisans.<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn27" n="26"> See Ursini Uršič,
                            <hi rend="italic">Attraverso Trieste</hi>, 172, 173.</note></p>
                <p>In December 1942, Marcon met Darko Marušič, who had received the task of
                    reorganising the KPS and the OF in the Littoral region in February of that year.
                    This meeting was fruitful and followed by another one in which Nino (Jožko
                    Udovič), Rinaldo Rinaldi, and Cesare Gorian also participated on behalf of the
                    OF and as PCd’I delegates, respectively.<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn28" n="27"
                        > Cf. Galliano Fogar, <hi rend="italic">L’antifascismo operaio monfalconese
                            fra le due guerre</hi> (Milan: Vangelista, 1982), 249–51. Riccardo
                        Giacuzzo and Mario Abram, <hi rend="italic">Itinerario di lotta. Cronaca
                            della Brigata d’Assalto “Garibaldi-Trieste”</hi> (Rovinj: Unione degli
                        Italiani dell’Istria e di Fiume, 1986), 28. Ferluga, <hi rend="italic"
                            >Marcon Vincenzo</hi>, 45, 46. Flores and Franzinelli, <hi rend="italic"
                            >Storia della Resistenza</hi>, 19, 20.</note> The two sides agreed that
                    a joint struggle against fascism had to be organised. To this end, they sought
                    to establish joint committees of Italian and Slovenian workers. A new meeting
                    took place around 20 January 1943 in Vogrsko (Vipava Valley) at the headquarters
                    of the KPS Provincial Committee (PC) for the Littoral region. This time, the
                    meeting included Marcon and Branko Babič. The latter, born in the Karst village
                    of Dolina in 1912, was a member of the KPJ since 1935, and on 31 December 1942,
                    he was appointed secretary of the KPS PC for the Littoral. At this meeting, they
                    confirmed the line approved in the previous month, calling for the
                    reorganisation of the PCd’I in and around Trieste.<note place="foot"
                        xml:id="ftn29" n="28"> See Babič, <hi rend="italic">Primorska ni
                            klonila</hi>, 61. Ursini Uršič, <hi rend="italic">Attraverso
                            Trieste</hi>, 201–03. Fontanot, Di Gianantonio and Puppini, <hi
                            rend="italic">Contro il fascismo oltre ogni frontiera</hi>, 79,
                        80.</note> Specifically, as Babič himself recalled in a note that is not
                    dated but definitely originated after 1978,<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn30"
                        n="29"> It is understandable thanks to the quotation of the article authored
                        by Giorgio Iaksetich, “La Federazione di Trieste del P.C.I. nei primi mesi
                        dell’occupazione nazista,” <hi rend="italic">Storia contemporanea in
                            Friuli</hi> 8 (1977): 265–302.</note> the agreements reached in December
                    1942 focused on the establishment of a unified Italian-Slovenian workers’
                    organisation, initially known as <hi rend="italic">Delavsko bratstvo</hi>
                    (Workers’ Brotherhood) and later as <hi rend="italic">Delavska enotnost</hi>
                    (Workers’ Unity). Babič and Marcon also discussed the necessary ways of
                    intensifying cooperative relations between the two parties and clearly defined
                    the scope of the Parties’ activities. According to Babič’s memoirs, at the
                    beginning of their cooperation, Marcon criticised the struggle carried out by
                    the OF because, in his view, it was tainted by nationalism, unlike the “pure”
                    class struggle carried out by the PCd’I.<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn31" n="30"
                        > See Babič, <hi rend="italic">Primorska ni klonila</hi>, 61, 204.</note>
                    Despite these criticisms, the collaboration continued and led to the
                    establishment of the PCd’I District Committee for the Littoral, headed by
                    Marcon. This committee also had competencies in the industrial centres of
                    Monfalcone and Muggia and boasted about 550–600 members (400 of them in
                    Monfalcone). During this phase (which ended in September 1943), Babič
                    assiduously and fruitfully collaborated with Marcon,<note place="foot"
                        xml:id="ftn32" n="31"> Istituto Friulano per la Storia del Movimento di
                        Liberazione, Udine (IFSML), Fondo Giorgio Iaksetich, unnumbered b., <hi
                            rend="italic">Davilla</hi> (Branko Babič’s typewritten note, undated but
                        definitely written after 1978), 1, 2. See also Giacuzzo and Abram, <hi
                            rend="italic">Itinerario di lotta</hi>, 70, 71. Pallante, <hi
                            rend="italic">Il P.C.I. e la questione nazionale</hi>, 59. Čepič,
                        Guštin, and Troha, <hi rend="italic">La Slovenia durante la Seconda Guerra
                            Mondiale</hi>, 150.</note> especially after March 1943, when Babič
                    returned from Milan, where he had met with Quinto (Massola).<note place="foot"
                        xml:id="ftn33" n="32"> See Spriano, <hi rend="italic">Storia del Partito
                            comunista italiano,</hi> <hi rend="italic">vol. 4</hi>, 58, 68, 69. Vittoria, <hi rend="italic"
                            >Storia del PCI</hi>, 49, 50. Tommaso Baris, “La Resistenza e la nascita
                        della Repubblica,” in Pons, ed., <hi rend="italic">Il comunismo italiano
                            nella storia del Novecento</hi>, 133–35.</note></p>
                <p>As early as December 1942, Quinto had been contacted by the KPS CC to let him
                    know that they had established contacts with Davilla (Marcon), who had
                    complained about the precariousness (not to say absence) of a stable link with
                    the Milan Centre of his Party. These contacts continued and intensified after
                    the confirmation, which Babič obtained from Massola, concerning the actual role
                    played by Marcon as the Julian federal secretary of the PCd’I, authorised to
                    collaborate with the KPS and the OF.<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn34" n="33">
                        See Babič, <hi rend="italic">Primorska ni klonila</hi>, 68, 76, 84.</note>
                    The Slovenian CC also informed Massola of the precarious connection between the
                    Italian communist organisation in Trieste and its counterparts in the
                    surrounding area. Consequently, the KPS CC suggested he should send other
                    militants to Trieste to organise the Italian communists’ antifascist struggle
                    more efficiently.<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn35" n="34">
                        <hi rend="italic">DLR</hi>, <hi rend="italic">vol. 4</hi>, doc. 219, 314, 315.</note> This did not
                    imply the dismissal of Davilla, who was deemed a valuable element in a letter
                    dated 1 March 1943 and also sent by the KPS CC to Massola. It seems that the
                    Slovenian communists respected Marcon but considered him somewhat inexperienced,
                    so they proposed that he be joined by the more experienced cadres – also to
                    replace the cell division of Davilla’s organisation, which functioned using a
                    chain mechanism, with mass operations.<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn36" n="35">
                        Ibid., <hi rend="italic">vol. 6</hi>, doc. 2, 11.</note> For this reason, the Slovenians appointed
                    Franc (Jaka Platiša) to help Marcon organise the PCd’I District Committee for
                    the Littoral.<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn37" n="36"> Ibid., doc. 34,
                        81.</note> The communications sent by Babič to other members of the KPS CC
                    and also of its PC for the Littoral between April and June 1943 suggest that the
                    work carried out by Marcon and Platiša was satisfactory.<note place="foot"
                        xml:id="ftn38" n="37"> Ibid., doc. 53, 137. Ibid., doc. 69, 177. Ibid., doc.
                        110, 288. Ibid., <hi rend="italic">vol. 7</hi>, doc. 221, 674.</note></p>
                <p>The precariousness of the Italian communist organisation in the Julian March was
                    also reiterated by the PC for the Littoral to the KPS CC in a report of 17
                    January 1943, signed by Branko (Babič), Luka (Franc Leskošek), Primož (Aleš
                    Bebler), and Matevž (Anton Velušček). The last three were the political
                    secretaries of the KPS CC, the KPS PC for the Littoral, and the OF Littoral
                    Committee, respectively. The document explains that PCd’I groups in Trieste and
                    the surrounding area had sprung up spontaneously and were not associated with
                    their Party’s core. Davilla (Marcon) is listed as the supreme leader of these
                    groups, consisting of roughly a hundred people. Apparently, he had created a
                    chain organisation in which each person only maintained contact with another
                    two. Also because of this peculiar structure (intended to impede the Italian
                    authorities from detecting the organisation), Marcon’s way of leading the Party
                    was, in my opinion, considered sectarian. However, the situation in Monfalcone
                    was different because the Fontanot brothers had apparently organised a more
                    efficient network. Marcon’s evaluation that emerges from this document is
                    generally positive<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn39" n="38"> Ibid., <hi rend="italic">vol. 5</hi>, doc.
                        65, 216–18.</note> and was confirmed by Vlado (Babič) in a letter sent to
                    Blaž (Marušič) on 30 January 1943, in which Marcon is described as a “true
                    communist” as well as a promising operative, as he strived to intensify contacts
                    between the Trieste PCd’I groups and those in the neighbouring Istrian towns
                    such as Izola and Koper. However, Babič argued that Marcon was not clear about
                    the necessity of initiating mass activities to involve the local working class
                    as much as possible (within the limits of what was possible due to the political
                    context) rather than continuing the sectarian work. Consequently, he suggested
                    intensifying the collaboration with Marcon to help him develop such activities.
                        <note place="foot" xml:id="ftn40" n="39"> Ibid., doc. 118, 347, 348.</note>
                    It is also interesting that on 20 February 1943, Krištof (Kardelj), in a
                    communication sent on behalf of the KPS CC to the PC for the Littoral, argued
                    that as long as Trieste and neighbouring territories continued to be part of
                    Italy, it was necessary to encourage the development of groups linked to the
                    PCd’I in the centres with an Italian majority (like Trieste and Monfalcone),
                    while in the areas where the majority of the population was Slovenian, it was
                    necessary to establish the KPS cells instead. To this end, Kardelj suggested
                    that Marcon should be more frequently involved in the work of the KPS PC for the
                    Littoral and even hoped for his co-optation in that committee as an Italian
                        delegate.<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn41" n="40"> Ibid., doc. 179,
                        507.</note></p>
                <p>The documentation thus attests to a generally positive assessment of Marcon by
                    the KPS PC for the Littoral, which appreciated his good faith and willingness to
                    organise the work of the PCd’I to the best of his ability but criticised his
                    inexperience. This was one of the reasons for his sectarianism, which also
                    emerged from the communist press that was clandestinely produced at Marcon’s
                    initiative. For this reason, in a report of the KPS PC for the Littoral
                    concerning the political and military situation in the Littoral addressed to the
                    CC of its own Party on 8 July 1943, its authors Primož (Bebler), Matevž
                    (Velušček), and Ahac (Pirjevec) criticised Vlado (Babič) for having allowed the
                    publication of such materials and expressed a negative opinion of the Italian
                    communist organisation in Trieste. In fact, according to them, Trieste’s PCd’I
                    federation had to be “healed” through the work of some more experienced leaders
                    who were lacking at that time. For this reason, the authors of the report asked
                    their CC to submit a request to Quinto (Massola) and ask for authorisation to
                    act as instructors of the Italian communists living in Trieste.<note
                        place="foot" xml:id="ftn42" n="41">
                        <hi rend="italic">DOONG</hi>, <hi rend="italic">vol. 8</hi>, doc. 33, 124.</note></p>
                <p>As stated before, according to Babič’s recollections (which are not, however,
                    clearly reflected in Massola’s writings),<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn43"
                        n="42"> See Umberto P. Massola, “Una polemica tra comunisti italiani e
                        sloveni durante l’ultimo conflitto mondiale,” <hi rend="italic">Critica
                            marxista</hi>, 5 (1970), 209–21. Umberto Massola, “La direzione del Pci
                        in Italia. 1940–1943,” <hi rend="italic">Critica marxista</hi>, 2 (1976):
                        151–72. Massola, <hi rend="italic">Memorie</hi>.</note> in March 1943,
                    Massola confirmed to him that Marcon was indeed the PCd’I territorial secretary
                    for the Julian region. Consequently, the collaboration between Babič and Marcon
                    became fruitful and prompted the former to suggest the co-optation of the latter
                    as a representative of the Italian national group in the Littoral Liberation
                    Council, which worked as the Slovenian Partisan government of the region.<note
                        place="foot" xml:id="ftn44" n="43"> IFSML, Fondo Giorgio Iaksetich,
                        unnumbered b., <hi rend="italic">Davilla</hi> (typescript by Branko Babič,
                        undated but written after 1978), 3. See also Babič, <hi rend="italic"
                            >Primorska ni klonila</hi>, 204, 205.</note> Marcon was indeed co-opted
                    into that structure, as evidenced by his participation in the meeting of 20
                    September 1943, where he intervened with a report that the Italian community in
                    the Littoral had organised around 600-700 partisans, mostly workers from
                    Monfalcone, who, however, were in dire need of equipment, clothing, and food.
                    Therefore, he urgently requested that better equipment and all the necessities
                    be provided for them.<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn45" n="44">
                        <hi rend="italic">DOONG</hi>, <hi rend="italic">vol. 11</hi>, doc. 129, 468.</note> The fact that
                    he was among the signers of the <hi rend="italic">Proclamation of the National
                        Liberation Council for the Slovenian Littoral</hi>, dated 11 September 1943,
                    is no less important. This proves his membership in that structure, which,
                    through this document, announced its own Constitution right after the Cassibile
                    armistice between Italy and the United States and indicated that its goal was to
                    mobilise all the civilian and military forces of the Littoral to jointly fight
                    the German forces and prepare for the annexation of the Littoral to Slovenia and
                    therefore to Yugoslavia.<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn46" n="45"> Ibid., <hi rend="italic">vol.
                        12</hi>, doc. 233, 582–85.</note> As Patrick Karlsen noted, Marcon’s membership
                    in that council was a move that backfired on him when the Frausin-led leading
                    group arose because the latter rejected the Slovenians’ declared annexationist
                    intentions of the Littoral<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn47" n="46"> See Patrick
                        Karlsen, <hi rend="italic">Frontiera rossa. Il Pci, il confine orientale e
                            il contesto internazionale. 1941–1955</hi> (Gorizia: LEG, 2018),
                        36–42.</note> and interpreted (perhaps instrumentally) Marcon’s accession to
                    that council as proof of his submission to the Slovenian cause and thus a
                    national betrayal.<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn48" n="47"> Ursini Uršič, <hi
                            rend="italic">Attraverso Trieste</hi>, 234, 235.</note></p>
                <p>The notices and reports of the Italian PS authorities represent another valuable
                    source for understanding Marcon’s role in Julian communism. The Italian PS
                    considered him “ <hi rend="italic">il principale esponente del movimento e, come
                        tale, assieme allo Zol aveva stabilito contatti con emissari partigiani
                        raggiungendo un accordo per una comune azione diretta a provocare la caduta
                        del Regime Fascista</hi>”<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn49" n="48"> ACS, MI,
                        DGPS, AAGGRR, CPC, b. 3043, f. “Marcon Vincenzo di Andrea,” report written
                        by the Trieste prefect, T. Tamburini, and addressed to the DAGR and to the
                        general inspector of PS comm. dott. T. Petrillo stationed at Milano police
                        headquarters and also to the PS Special Inspectorate for the Julian March,
                        15 April 1943, 17, 18.</note> (“the leading figure of the [Julian communist]
                    movement. As such, he and Zol had established contacts with the partisan
                    emissaries and reached an agreement for a joint action to ensure the fall of the
                    fascist regime”). In April 1943, investigations carried out jointly by the
                    Command of the XXIII Carabinieri Army Corps (the “Novara” Division), the Trieste
                    PS, and the Trieste sector of the <hi rend="italic">Organizzazione per la
                        Vigilanza e la Repressione dell’Antifascismo</hi> (OVRA, Organisation for
                    the Vigilance and Repression of Anti-Fascism, the name by which the Political
                    Police Division was known) concluded with the discovery of the Italian
                    clandestine communist movement in the Littoral, led by Marcon, Zol, and Bruno
                    Lapajne and divided into four groups headed by Bisiani, Giacomo Silvestri,
                    Giuseppe Mezgec, and Guido Tomasi. In total, the movement consisted of 25 active
                    members plus two other militants (Mario Karis, a 32-year-old labourer, and Carlo
                    Barut, a 28-year-old welder), who were part of an autonomous group led by the
                    32-year-old labourer Bruno Zanghirella.<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn50" n="49">
                        Ibid., 1–16. The last page of this report (i.e. the list of the militants).
                        Ibid., b. 2661, f. “Karis Mario di Mario”. Blaž (Marušič) informed Primož
                        (Bebler) on that issue in a report in which he noticed Marcon’s
                        non-involvement in that event: <hi rend="italic">DLR</hi>, <hi rend="italic">vol. 5</hi>, doc. 158,
                        444, 445.</note></p>
            </div>
            <div>
                <head>From Dismissal to Death</head>
                <p>In August 1943, the return of the first-generation leaders of Julian communism –
                    Luigi Frausin, Natale Kolarič, Giordano Pratolongo, Lino Zocchi, Leopoldo
                    Gasparini, Luigi Facchin, and Giorgio Iaksetich, who were all much more
                    experienced than Marcon – to Trieste from their confinement in Ventotene marked
                    a point of no return in Marcon’s career. The line taken by the new leadership
                    was to recognise the territories compactly inhabited by Slovenians as part of
                    Yugoslavia, while the decision concerning the mixed areas (primarily Trieste)
                    had to be postponed until the end of the war.<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn51"
                        n="50"> See the various solutions advanced by the PCI reported in Pallante,
                            <hi rend="italic">Il P.C.I. e la questione nazionale</hi>,
                        99–101.</note> In the meantime, the new leadership of the Partito Comunista
                    Italiano (PCI, the Italian Communist Party, the new name adopted by the PCd’I in
                    May 1943) also implemented the policy of unity of the Italian antifascist forces
                    in Trieste (the same as all over Italy), which resulted in the creation of the
                    so-called <hi rend="italic">Comitati di Liberazione Nazionale</hi> (CLN,
                    National Liberation Committees). Consequently, under Marcon’s direction, the
                    Trieste-Julian federation/organisation was independent of the PCd’I Inner Centre
                    and therefore left to its own devices. Thus, it considered the close
                    collaboration with the OF more desirable. However, under Frausin’s leadership,
                    the Julian federation became integrated into the national leadership of its own
                    Party and started carrying out a clear political strategy, perfectly in tune
                    with that advocated by the PCI national leadership. This change also occurred as
                    an indirect consequence of the geopolitical changes brought about by the fall of
                    the fascist regime and the armistice of Cassibile.<note place="foot"
                        xml:id="ftn52" n="51"> See ibid., pp. 65–67, 94. Karlsen and Manenti, <hi
                            rend="italic">“Si soffre ma si tace,”</hi> 121–24.</note></p>
                <p>In other words, in August 1943, the leaders who were more “professional
                    revolutionaries” than Marcon returned, just as the KPS had hoped in the previous
                    months. This was the context in which Frausin’s leadership disavowed Marcon’s
                    actions and removed him as federal secretary. To get him away from Trieste, the
                    new local PCI leadership sent him to the front. Firstly, he fought in the
                    Gorizia area with the Monfalcone workers’ unities and then in the “Garibaldi”
                    ranks in Friuli, where he became the battalion commander and secretary of the
                    PCI’s internal organisation of an unknown brigade.<note place="foot"
                        xml:id="ftn53" n="52"> IFSML, Fondo Giorgio Iaksetich, unnumbered b., <hi
                            rend="italic">Davilla</hi> (typescript by Branko Babič, undated but
                        written after 1978), 3, 4. See also Babič, <hi rend="italic">Primorska ni
                            klonila</hi>, 201, 205, 206.</note></p>
                <p>After his departure, not much more was known about him, not even the name of the
                    military formations in which he served, which partly caused the subsequent
                    events. According to Ferluga, Marcon left Trieste on 11 September 1943 and
                    arrived in Carnia, where he was assigned to the “Isonzo” Brigade.<note
                        place="foot" xml:id="ftn54" n="53"> See Ferluga, <hi rend="italic">Marcon
                            Vincenzo</hi>, 123, 124, 137.</note> On the other hand, Bruno Steffè (an
                    officer of the “Garibaldi Fontanot” Brigade) confirmed that Marcon, together
                    with a small group of people from Trieste, joined the 1<hi rend="superscript"
                        >st</hi> “Garibaldi Friuli” Brigade shortly after its establishment on 10
                    October 1943 at the behest of Andrea (Lizzero), who had entrusted its command to
                    Maks (Karis),<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn55" n="54"> See Bruno Steffè, <hi
                            rend="italic">La lotta antifascista nel basso Friuli e
                            nell’Isontino</hi> (Milan: Vangelista, 1975), 102.</note> the former
                    commander of the 1<hi rend="superscript">st</hi> “Garibaldi” Detachment founded
                    in March 1943 following a decision that, according to Lizzero, had also been
                    made in consultation with Marcon himself.<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn56"
                        n="55"> See Mario Lizzero, <hi rend="italic">Memorie di un “sovversivo”.
                            1928–1943</hi> (Flavio Fabbroni ed.) (Udine: IFSML, 2018),
                    152.</note></p>
                <p>In the meantime, it seems that the KPS PC for the Littoral became aware that in
                    1933, Marcon had been expelled from the communist movement by the <hi
                        rend="italic">Parti Communiste Français</hi> for political and moral
                    unworthiness. It was precisely at this stage (i.e. from September 1943 onwards)
                    that rumours about Marcon began to mingle with the communist circles in the
                    Littoral. According to the gossip, Marcon was a provocateur<note place="foot"
                        xml:id="ftn57" n="56"> IRSREC FVG, Fondo Giorgio Iaksetich, b. 1, f. 4, <hi
                            rend="italic">Al Comitato regionale per Trieste del P.C.S.</hi>,
                        unsigned document dated 10 December 1943. See also ibid., b. 4, f. 38,
                        typewritten notes containing various depositions against Marcon,
                        undated.</note> on the payroll of the Italian PS and even the German <hi
                        rend="italic">Geheime Staatspolizei</hi> (Gestapo). He was considered
                    responsible for some arrests that had taken place among the PCd’I ranks in
                    Trieste and its surroundings in the second half of November 1943.<note
                        place="foot" xml:id="ftn58" n="57"> IFSML, Fondo Giorgio Iaksetich,
                        unnumbered b., [Babič], <hi rend="italic">Davilla</hi>, 4, 5. See also Babič,
                            <hi rend="italic">Primorska ni klonila</hi>, 205.</note> Moreover,
                    according to a testimony given by Lizzero to Iaksetich, during his Partisan
                    activities, Marcon had promoted “<hi rend="italic">iniziative di azioni
                        temerarie che costarono la vita di combattenti</hi>” (“reckless actions that
                    cost the lives of the fighters”). This was a further element that the regional
                    PCI leadership considered, contributing to Marcon’s death sentence.<note
                        place="foot" xml:id="ftn59" n="58"> See Lizzero’s quotation in Iaksetich,
                        “La Federazione di Trieste del P.C.I. nei primi mesi dell’occupazione
                        nazista,” 269, 270.</note> Moreover, Maks (Karis)<note place="foot"
                        xml:id="ftn60" n="59"> See Ferluga, <hi rend="italic">Marcon Vincenzo</hi>,
                        88, 89.</note> blamed the outcome of the battle of Vedronza on 1 November
                    1943, which the Partisans of the “Pisacane” Battalion (part of the 1<hi
                        rend="superscript">st</hi> “Garibaldi Friuli” Brigade) lost, on Marcon’s
                    suspected activities as an informer.<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn61" n="60">
                        See Steffè, <hi rend="italic">La lotta antifascista nel basso Friuli e
                            nell’Isontino</hi>, 102, 103.</note></p>
                <p>Karis was one of Marcon’s main accusers. He was a communist, born in Trieste in
                        1911.<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn62" n="61"> ACS, MI, DGPS, AGR, CPC, b.
                        2661, f. “Karis Mario di Mario,” first page of the file.</note> On 1 August
                    1930, he was sentenced to two years in prison, three years of special
                    surveillance by the PS, and disqualified from any public office for two years.
                        <note place="foot" xml:id="ftn63" n="62"> Ibid., note produced by the
                        Trieste prefect, No. 3535-31, 21 March 1931. See also ibid., <hi
                            rend="italic">Scheda di segnalazione di detenuto condannato dal
                            Tribunale Speciale per la Difesa dello Stato nell’udienza del 5 febbraio
                            1931</hi>. Ibid., note produced by the Trieste prefect and addressed to
                        the CPC, No. 14685-31, 2 March 1931.</note> After serving his sentence in
                    the prison of Viterbo (Lazio),<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn64" n="63"> Ibid.,
                        note produced by the Trieste prefect and addressed to the CPC, No. 11469, 2
                        December 1932.</note> he arrived in La Spezia to fulfil his military
                    obligations in the navy.<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn65" n="64"> Ibid., note
                        produced by the Trieste prefect and addressed to the CPC, No. 2050, 30 March
                        1932.</note> In Liguria, he was once again reported for antifascist
                    activities in 1934<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn66" n="65"> Ibid., note produced
                        by the Trieste prefect and addressed to the CPC No. 37076, 17 April
                        1934.</note> and sentenced to sixteen years’ imprisonment (two of which were
                    pardoned) as well as permanently disqualified from public office and probation.
                        <note place="foot" xml:id="ftn67" n="66"> Ibid., <hi rend="italic">Scheda di
                            segnalazione di detenuto condannato dal Tribunale Speciale per la Difesa
                            dello Stato nell’udienza del 17 novembre 1934</hi>.</note> Having
                    benefited from the ten-year amnesty, he completed his sentence on 11 January
                        1940<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn68" n="67"> Ibid., note produced by the
                        Trieste prefect and addressed to the CPC No. 039118, 15 January 1940.</note>
                    and returned to the Julian March, where he joined the communist circles and
                    contributed to the formation of the 1<hi rend="superscript">st</hi> “Garibaldi”
                    Detachment following an agreement with Lizzero.<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn69"
                        n="68"> Ursini Uršič, <hi rend="italic">Attraverso Trieste</hi>, 214,
                        215.</note></p>
                <p>The presence of Karis’ name on a list of spies and provocateurs, drawn up by the
                    PCd’I at an unspecified date (though certainly during the 1930s), which the
                    Party circulated among its groups to warn the activists against such
                    individuals, is far from irrelevant. This document came into the possession of
                    the Italian PS authorities<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn70" n="69"> ACS, MI,
                        DGPS, AGR, CPC, b. 2661, f. “Karis Mario di Mario,” circular produced by the
                        DGPS, AGR, 1<hi rend="superscript">st</hi> section with the subject “Elenco di spie pubblicato dal partito comunista”
                        (list of spies published by the Communist Party), 28 December 1934.</note>
                    that carried out an investigation in Trieste to ascertain why Karis was
                    mentioned on that list. They realised that it was because, after his arrest in
                    November 1930, Karis had revealed information leading to the arrest of other
                    communist militants.<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn71" n="70"> Ibid., note
                        produced by the Trieste prefect and addressed to the CPC No. 441/07204, 9
                        April 1935.</note></p>
                <p>In 1969, he had the opportunity to elaborate on what had happened in 1943.
                    However, his claims must be considered with an appropriate distance, also due to
                    the suspicions expressed about him by the PCd’I leadership in the 1930s.
                    According to his recollections, on 1 April 1943, he joined the 4 <hi
                        rend="superscript">th</hi> company of the 3<hi rend="superscript">rd</hi>
                    Slovenian Battalion, stationed in Collio. Later (apparently under Lizzero’s
                    orders), he and four other Partisans (a Florentine known as Spartaco, the
                    Monfalcone-born Giovanni Fiori <hi rend="italic">alias</hi> Franco, Luigi
                    Sgerovello from Clap, and Antonio De Torre from Rome) reached the Clap
                    recruitment centre near Faedis (in eastern Friuli), where they were supposed to
                    remain until the end of April 1943. There, the priest of Clap recognised them as
                    Partisans. Shortly afterwards, a sweep took place, and consequently, Karis and
                    his fellows decided to leave the location. Marcon interpreted their escape from
                    Clap as desertion. Because of the seriousness of this accusation, Karis and the
                    others reached Udine to explain themselves to Lizzero, who accepted their
                    version of events and agreed to their transfer to Trieste via Ronchi dei
                    Legionari, where they met with “D’Arco” (Giuseppe Pezza).<note place="foot"
                        xml:id="ftn72" n="71"> Also known as Darko Peca (see Karlsen and Manenti,
                            <hi rend="italic">“Si soffre ma si tace,”</hi> 137).</note> After they
                    arrived in a safe house that Pezza made available to them in Trieste, they were
                    joined by “Guido” Marsi,<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn73" n="72"> He was almost
                        certainly Enzo Marsi, whose alias was Giulio, so “Guido” can be considered a
                        simple mistake. In 1944, Marsi was the liaison officer between the Trieste
                        federation of the PCI and the “Garibaldi Trieste” Brigade as well as a
                        German informer since August 1944. Apparently, at that point, after being
                        pulled over on the road between Miramare and Duino, he started working for
                        the Gestapo and was very likely responsible for the arrests of Giorgio and
                        Luigi Frausin (see ibid<hi rend="italic">.</hi>, 180, 183, 184).</note> who,
                    according to Karis, had been sent by Marcon. Marsi ordered them to leave Trieste
                    within 24 hours, which they did not do. Two days later, the group (composed of
                    Maks, Franco, De Torre, and the relay girl Ondina Peteani) was caught by six <hi
                        rend="italic">carabinieri</hi>, who, according to Karis, had tracked them
                    down following an informer’s report. The militants tried to escape, but there
                    was a shootout with the <hi rend="italic">carabinieri</hi> in which De Torre and
                    Franco were wounded. Following these events, Karis became the political
                    commissar of the “Garibaldi Friuli” Brigade, which, according to his memoirs,
                    received an order from Marcon in December 1943 to be disbanded. It seems that
                    this order was contested by Lizzero and Banfi (Vincenzo Marini),<note
                        place="foot" xml:id="ftn74" n="73"> IFSML, Fondo Vincenzo Marini, b. 17, f.
                        262 “Mario Karis,” <hi rend="italic">Scheda della conversazione con Maks
                            (Mario Karis) e Terzo (Sfiligoj Giorgio), a Moncorona il 6 dicembre
                            1969</hi>, 1, 2, 4, 5. See also ibid<hi rend="italic">.</hi>, f. 270
                        “Ondina Peteani,” <hi rend="italic">Ondina PETEANI da Ronchi. Attualmente
                            risiede a Trieste</hi> (Marini’s typescript, dated April 1971) and
                        IRSREC FVG, Fondo Giorgio Iaksetich, b. 4, f. 38, typewritten notes
                        concerning various depositions against Marcon, undated. See also Giacuzzo
                        and Abram, <hi rend="italic">Itinerario di lotta</hi>, 28, 29 (where it is
                        written that Fiore was known as Cvetko among the Slovenians). Ferluga, <hi
                            rend="italic">Marcon Vincenzo</hi>, 82–84. Steffè, <hi rend="italic">La
                            lotta antifascista nel basso Friuli e nell’Isontino</hi>, 81, 82. Ursini
                        Uršič, <hi rend="italic">Attraverso Trieste</hi>, 224. Di Gianantonio, <hi
                            rend="italic">È bello vivere liberi</hi>, 69, 70.</note> who had been,
                    together with Lizzero and Sergio Visintin, among the architects of the
                    clandestine reconstitution of the PCd’I in the Julian March in the 1930s. During
                    the Resistance, Karis was first among the leaders of the “Garibaldi” Battalion
                    stationed in Collio and then one of the leading executives of the
                    “Garibaldi-Natisone” Division.<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn75" n="74"> See
                        Patat, <hi rend="italic">Il Friuli Orientale tra le due guerre</hi>, 317
                        n.</note></p>
                <p>Karis also claimed he had met Sfinx (Nerone Sorta) and Gianna (Vittoria
                    Giacomelli) in Cussignacco to discuss Marcon’s actions in January 1944. They
                    informed him that Marcon was an OVRA confidant and, as such, he had to be
                    considered responsible for the arrests that had taken place in Trieste and the
                    surrounding area in the previous months. At Karis’ request, Sorta and Giacomelli
                    signed a statement that Karis consigned to the Party.<note place="foot"
                        xml:id="ftn76" n="75"> IRSREC FVG, Fondo Giorgio Iaksetich, b. 1, f. 4, <hi
                            rend="italic">Memorie di Mario Karis</hi>, undated and unpublished
                        notes; see also ibid., b. 4, f. 38, typewritten notes
                        concerning various depositions against Marcon, undated.</note></p>
                <p>After World War II, other protagonists of the Resistance in the Julian March also
                    expressed their opinions about the “Davilla case”. One of them was Vinicio
                    Fontanot, who recalled that Bonomo Tominez (born in Muggia in 1902, an early
                    leader of the PCd’I Julian branch and a member of the Insurrectionist
                    Triumvirate for Triveneto during the Resistance) had advised him to sever all
                    contacts with Marcon.<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn77" n="76"> Ibid., b. 4, f.
                        38, typewritten notes concerning various depositions against Marcon,
                        undated.</note> Pratolongo (born in Trieste in 1905, one of the founders of
                    the PCd’I in the Julian March and among the leaders of the Julian federation
                    between August 1943 and January 1944, when the PCI Internal Centre transferred
                    him to Turin)<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn78" n="77"> See Spriano, <hi
                            rend="italic">Storia del Partito comunista italiano, vol. 4,</hi> 336.
                        Vittorio Vidali, “Presentazione,” in <hi rend="italic">Giordano Pratolongo
                            nella lotta antifascista e nell’insurrezione nazionale</hi> (Trieste:
                        Grafad, 1974), 5, 9.</note> argued, on his part, that until 11 September
                    1943, the communists in Trieste had not established a foothold in the factories
                    at the behest of Marcon, who believed they were full of provocateurs. Instead,
                    according to Pratolongo, Marcon had not wanted to create groups in the factories
                    because the communists on site had shown intolerance for his system of work and
                    his “moral and political dishonesty”. He also reported that the communist
                    circles in Trieste were subject to a climate of suspicion and fear because
                    Marcon had, on many occasions, made serious accusations against some
                        activists.<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn79" n="78"> IRSREC FVG, Fondo
                        Giorgio Iaksetich, b. 4, f. 38, typewritten notes concerning various
                        depositions against Marcon, undated.</note></p>
                <p>A certain Domenico Riva Ribarich also testified that Marcon had denounced three
                    Slovenian militants (Marušič, Cotar, and Udovič) to the Italian PS authorities,
                    who (according to Riva) promptly located and arrested them thanks to Marcon’s
                        tip.<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn80" n="79"> Ibid.</note> Riva presented an
                    undated written testimony in which he claimed that Marcon “<hi rend="italic">fu
                        l’autentica anima nera dei Nazisti: costui sarebbe riuscito a infiltrarsi
                        tra i partigiani agendo con tale astuzia da farsi nominare commissario
                        politico</hi>” (“was a real black Nazi soul: he managed to infiltrate the
                    Partisans and act so cunningly that he was appointed political commissar”). The
                    same accuser also stated that, following the fall of fascism, Marcon fled from
                    Trieste, “ <hi rend="italic">lasciando in balia a se stessa la Federazione del
                        PCI e l’organizzazione da lui creata</hi>” (“leaving the PCI federation and
                    the organisation he had created to fend for itself”).<note place="foot"
                        xml:id="ftn81" n="80"> Ibid., b. 1, f. 4, undated deposition of D. Riva
                        Ribarich.</note> This accusation is objectively wrong since, as we have
                    seen, Marcon was deprived of his role and sent to the front.</p>
            </div>
            <div>
                <head>Conclusion</head>
                <p>Due to the rumours in the communist circles regarding suspicions of provocation,
                    financial malversations, and dangerous recklessness regarding his political
                    activities, the Julian leadership of the PCI investigated Marcon and gathered
                    unclear evidence (not found by historians)<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn82"
                        n="81"> Ibid., CD report addressed to the Communist organisation committee
                        within the “Garibaldi” military formation.</note> that prompted the
                    communist leadership to sentence him to death. The sentence was carried out by a
                    “Garibaldi” Partisan firing squad in Pesarina Valley (Carnia) in June 1944.<note
                        place="foot" xml:id="ftn83" n="82"> See Ferluga, <hi rend="italic">Marcon
                            Vincenzo</hi>, 191.</note></p>
                <p>However, after the war, some of Marcon’s associates maintained that he had been
                    innocent. These included Peteani<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn84" n="83"> See
                        Ondina Peteani’s letter addressed to Rodolfo Ursini Uršič, undated, quoted
                        in Di Gianantonio, <hi rend="italic">È bello vivere liberi</hi>, 68.</note>
                    and especially Babič. He felt that Marcon’s death sentence was unjustified
                    because there was no irrefutable evidence of his treason and double-dealing. In
                    a note, he wrote that he had always rejected the idea of Marcon being a traitor
                    and an agent of the Italian and/or German political police. Babič’s firm opinion
                    was based on the fact that in the spring of 1943, Marcon had arranged for him a
                    safe house in Trieste, which was never discovered by the Italian and German
                    authorities. “ <hi rend="italic">Davilla sapeva chi ero. È difficile credere che
                        mi avrebbe protetto dalla polizia per chi sa quali motivi se veramente fosse
                        stato un suo agente</hi>” (“Davilla knew who I was. It is hard to believe he
                    would have protected me from the police for unknown reasons if he had really
                    been their agent”).<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn85" n="84"> IFSML, Fondo
                        Giorgio Iaksetich, unnumbered b., [Babič], <hi rend="italic">Davilla</hi>,
                        4, 5.</note> Babič reiterated this position in his autobiography, arguing
                    that the charges against Marcon had been opaque and traceable to particular
                    testimonies. For this reason, Babič stated that the indictment had been
                    superficial, confusing, and insufficient to warrant a death sentence.<note
                        place="foot" xml:id="ftn86" n="85"> Babič, <hi rend="italic">Primorska ni
                            klonila</hi>, 204–08.</note></p>
                <p>Ursič was also convinced of Marcon’s innocence and claimed that the latter had
                    been accused of Trotskyism merely to facilitate his dismissal.<note place="foot"
                        xml:id="ftn87" n="86"> Ursini Uršič, <hi rend="italic">Attraverso
                            Trieste</hi>, 235, 236.</note> This is definitely not an irrelevant and
                    circumstantial element because according to the anti-Trotskyist propaganda,
                    promoted since the end of the 1930s by the “mainstream” communist movement (i.e.
                    the Comintern, which, as of the late 1920s, had in fact been completely
                    subjugated to the Kremlin), Trotskyists were considered agents provocateurs
                    associated with the Gestapo and (in the Italian case) the OVRA. <note
                        place="foot" xml:id="ftn88" n="87"> About this topic, see (concerning the
                        Italian case) Gabriele Mastrolillo, “Il PCd’I e la dissidenza comunista
                        italiana (1929–1938),” <hi rend="italic">Rivista storica del
                        socialismo</hi>, 2 (2023), 5–30.</note> The fact that these same accusations
                    were levelled at Marcon was definitely not coincidental. </p>
                <p>Last but not least, after World War II, when Lizzero returned to the “Marcon
                    affair” (not mentioned in his memoirs,<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn89" n="88">
                        See <hi rend="italic">supra</hi>, No. 55.</note> which is very significant),
                    he defined the decision to execute him as “a serious and irreparable” mistake.
                    He stated that one of the reasons for Frausin’s determination to pursue the
                    investigation into Marcon was his resentment because Marcon had previously
                    expelled Frausin’s nephew, Giorgio, from the PCd’I federation.<note place="foot"
                        xml:id="ftn90" n="89"> See Ferluga, <hi rend="italic">Marcon Vincenzo</hi>,
                        113, 161, 162. Karlsen and Manenti, <hi rend="italic">“Si soffre ma si
                            tace,”</hi> 121.</note> Being expelled from the Party in such a tragic
                    context meant depriving the expelled activist of the material benefits and
                    security of being part of a network, albeit a precarious one, such as the PCd’I.
                    Consequently, the expelled member was more vulnerable, as he was more easily
                    tracked down by the Italian and German OZAK authorities and therefore more
                    exposed to the risk of losing his life. </p>
                <p>Because of the failure to find the documentation that the PCI collected against
                    Marcon and the lack of any clear information about the extent of this evidence,
                    it is impossible to ascertain what evidence of Marcon’s double-dealing the Party
                    actually possessed. Thus, it is also not possible to express a clear
                    historiographical judgement about his political actions, nor can we hypothesise
                    that such documentation has been preserved in other archival collections.
                    Confidential information, such as that regarding the “Davilla affair”, could
                    only have been shared within the inner circle of the local cadres, whose
                    documentation ultimately became part of the IRSREC FVG and IFSML archives.
                    Consequently, the “Davilla affair” remains one of the episodes that are, in my
                    opinion, impossible to judge objectively. As far as I am concerned, it is only
                    possible to hypothesise that the (understandable) psychosis of the Party leaders
                    regarding their potential exposure to actions of double agents, who could
                    jeopardise not only the political actions of the Party but also the lives of the
                    activists themselves, may have prompted the PCI regional leaders to take drastic
                    actions against Marcon despite the vagueness of the accusations and also in the
                    light of the criticism aimed at his political line. </p>
                <figure>
                    <head>Picture 1: Marcon’s mugshots, taken by the Italian PS and stored in ACS, MI, DGPS,
                        AAGGRR, CPC, b. 3043, f. “Marcon Vincenzo di Andrea” (auth. No. 2431/2024). </head>
                    <graphic url="slika1.jpg"/>
                </figure>
            </div>
        </body>
        <back>
            <div type="bibliography">
                <head>Sources and Literature</head>
                <list>
                    <head>Archival sources</head>
                    <item>ACS – Archivio Centrale dello Stato (Rome, Italy): <list type="unordered">
                            <item>Ministero dell’Interno, Direzione Generale di Pubblica Sicurezza,
                                Divisione Affari Generali e Riservati. Uffici dipendenti dalla
                                sezione prima (1894-1945), Casellario Politico Centrale
                                (CPC).</item>
                            <item>Ministero dell’Interno, Direzione Generale di Pubblica Sicurezza,
                                Divisione Affari Generali e Riservati. Uffici dipendenti dalla
                                sezione prima (1894-1945), Ufficio confino di polizia
                                (1926-1943).</item>
                        </list></item>
                    <item>AST – Archivio Storico (Trieste, Italy):<list type="unordered">
                            <item>Questura di Trieste, Casellario di Polizia Giudiziaria.</item>
                        </list></item>
                    <item>IFSML – Istituto Friulano per la Storia del Movimento Liberazione (Udine,
                            Italy):<list type="unordered">
                            <item>Fondo Giorgio Iaksetich.</item>
                            <item>Fondo Vincenzo Marini.</item>
                        </list></item>
                    <item>IRSREC FVG – Istituto regionale per la storia della Resistenza e dell’Età
                        contemporanea (Trieste, Italy):<list type="unordered">
                            <item>Fondo Giorgio Iaksetich.</item>
                        </list></item>
                </list>
                <listBibl>
                    <head>Collections of primary sources and memoirs</head>
                    <bibl>Babič, Branko. <hi rend="italic">Primorska ni klonila: spomini na vojna
                            leta</hi>. Koper: Lipa, 1982.<hi rend="italic">Dokumenti ljudske
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            </div>
            <div type="summary">
                <docAuthor>Gabriele Mastrolillo</docAuthor>
                <head>VINCENZO MARCON “DAVILLA”: KONTROVERZNI PROTAGONIST PARTIZANSKE VOJNE V
                    ZGORNJEM JADRANSKEM PRIMORJU</head>
                <head>POVZETEK</head>
                <p>Vincenzo Marcon (bolj znan pod psevdonimom Davilla/Davila) je eden od
                    protifašističnih borcev (predvsem komunistov), ki jim zgodovinopisje namenja le
                    malo pozornosti. Komunistični borec, rojen v Trstu, je med letoma 1942 in 1943
                    vodil julijsko “zvezo” Komunistične partije Italije (PCd’I – Partito Comunista
                    d’Italia). Tega leta ga je odstavilo novo vodstvo te organizacije (zbrano okoli
                    Luigija Frausina), ki je Marconovo linijo (osredotočeno na tesno sodelovanje s
                    slovenskim partizanskim gibanjem) nadomestilo z drugo, osnovano na enotnosti
                    italijanskih antifašističnih strank in gibanj, ki so sledila politiki
                    narodnoosvobodilnega odbora. Pozneje je veljal za vohuna zaradi odkritja dokazov
                    (ki jih zgodovinarji niso prejeli in jih zato ni mogoče preveriti) o njegovem
                    dvojnem delovanju v korist italijanske politične policije in tudi nemških
                    oblasti Operativne cone Jadransko primorje (OZAK – Operationszone Adriatisches
                    Küstenland), ki jo je septembra 1943 ustanovil nemški rajh. Zato so mu
                    garibaldinski (tj. komunistični) partizani sodili po hitrem postopku in ga nato
                    usmrtili. </p>
                <p>Njegov kontroverzni konec in nejasnosti v zvezi z njegovo vlogo sta vse do
                    devetdesetih let prejšnjega stoletja raziskovalce odvračala od konkretnih
                    raziskav na to temo. Delno je to mogoče pripisati temu, da so se hoteli izogniti
                    metanju slabe luči na osebnosti, kot so Frausin, Vincenzo A. Gigante in Mario
                    Karis, zaradi njihove vloge v odporniškem gibanju in (v Karisovem primeru) po
                    drugi svetovni vojni. Frausin in Gigante sta sledila politični liniji (liniji
                    italijanskega narodnoosvobodilnega odpora), ki se je izkazala za uspešno tako v
                    Julijski krajini kot po vsej Italiji, medtem ko je bil Karis med tistimi, ki so
                    sodelovali pri pripravi sojenja za zločine, storjene v Rižarni pri Sv. Soboti,
                    ki je potekalo od 16. februarja do 28. aprila 1976. Navsezadnje je enako
                    dramatična smrt Frausina in Giganteja (oba sta bila ubita v Rižarni) prispevala
                    k ustvarjanju njune podobe mučenikov za svobodo in žrtev nacifašizma, ki se je
                    zasidrala v čustvih antifašistične skupnosti Julijske krajine, kar je po mojem
                    mnenju raziskovalce odvračalo od preučevanja Marcona, saj je niso hoteli
                    omadeževati. </p>
                <p>Na podlagi analize dokumentacije italijanske politične policije ter italijanskega
                    in slovenskega komunističnega gibanja članek prvič znanstveno analizira
                    Marconovo vlogo v komunističnih vrstah med “partizansko vojno” v zgornjem
                    Jadranskem primorju.</p>
            </div>
        </back>
    </text>
</TEI>
