ITALY: Commemorative Medal for the Expedition
to Fiume in 1919.
Obverse: Roman Eagle and Gladius Swords.
Inscribed: "HIC MANEBIMUS OPTIME" (Here we
will remain most excellently: Marcus Furius
Camillus' response to the Roman senators who
were ready to abandon Rome during the Gaul i
nvasion in 390BC).
Reverse: "AI LIBERATORI XII SETTEMBRE
MCMXIX, FIUME D’ITALIA", (To the Liberators
12 Sep. 1919, Italian Fiume).
The medal was instituted in 1919 by Gabriele
d'Annunzio, initially as an unofficial award of the
Italian Regency of Carnaro (Fiume).
It was awarded to the 2500 volunteers (called
"Legionnaires") who participated in the unofficial
expedition to seize control of the port of Fiume
that following the Treaty of Saint Germain between
Austria and the Allies at the end of WW1 had been
granted to Yugoslavia.
The medals, despite being unmarked, were
designed by Adolfo De Carolis and produced by
Johnson in Milan.
Fiume, on the Adriatic coast opposite Trieste, had
majority Italian population so d'Annunzio's
expedition that seized the city on behalf of Italy
(and established the Italian Regency of Carnaro)
won huge popular support.
Italy however, forced d'Annunzio to evacuate the
city in 1920 by bombing his headquarters.
In 1924 with the Treaty of Rome, Italy officially
annexed Fiume.
Following the end of WW2, with the Paris Peace
Treaty in 1947, Italy was forced to cede Fiume to
Yugoslavia.
Today Fieme (now called Rijeka) belongs to
Croatia.
The medal became an official Italian award in
1926.
This is an example of the 3rd emission of the
medal, issued in 1935.
Weight of the medal: 32gr.
Note that the medal is heavily copied and the
genuine examples are scarce.
FULL SIZE
Expedition to Fiume - 1919
Item 100% original - original ribbon
Condition as on the photos
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