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Errico Malatesta
Errico Malatesta: born in Santa Maria Capua Vetere, Italy 1853, died in Rome 1932.
Important Italian anarchist militant & thinker; member of the Naples section of the International Working Men's Association (IWMA); from 1872 member of the Fraternité intime, derived from Bakunin's earlier inner group of 1864; imprisoned many times for his revolutionary activities from 1873 on & repeatedly forced into exile to evade imprisonment; developed in 1876 together with Covelli & Carlo Cafiero a theory of anarchist communism.
Malatesta took part in the abortive uprising of Benevento in the Neapolitan mountains in 1877; published a weekly La Questione Sociale in Florence 1883-1884, resumed in Argentina 1885-1889 & again in Paterson, New Jersey, USA around 1900; opposed the Marxists at the London International Socialist Conference of 1896; prepared the unsuccesful anarchist revolt before & during the Red Week of the Romagna in June 1914; edited Umanità nova Milan/Rome 1920-1921 & Pensiero e Volontà 1924-1926.
Malatesta lived virtually under house arrest by the Fascist government during the last years of his life.
Timeline
1853 - Born in Caserta Province, S.Italy.
1867 - At the age of 14, Malatesta is arrested for writing a letter to King Victor Emmanuel II complaining about a local injustice.
1871 - Having been expelled from medical school for joining a demonstration, Malatesta becomes a member of the Italian section of the International He also trains himself as a mechanic and electrician.
1872 - Meets Bakunin in Switzerland.
1877 - With fellow anarchists Andrea Costa and Carlo Cafiero, he leads an armed band into two villages in Campania, where they burn the tax registers and declare an end to Victor Emmanuel's reign. The townspeople welcome them but refuse to join the insurrection. The group is broken up by the arrival of troops soon after.
1878 - Malatesta leaves Italy to visit friends in Eygpt. The Italian government takes steps to prevent his return. He travels to Geneva, where he befriends Kropotkin and Elisée Reclus. Forced to leave a few months later, he visits Rumania and Paris.
1881 - Malatesta takes up residence in London.
1883 - Returns to Italy, where he writes, Between Peasants, in which he advocates anarcho-communism.
Leaving London in 1882 Malatesta went to Egypt where he fought with the Egyptians against Britishcolonialists. The following year he returned clandestinely to Italy. Settling in Florence he founded the weekly La Questione Sociale, the first serious anarchist newspaper to be published in Italy. It was in La Questione Sociale that Malatesta's most popular and widely read pamphlet Fra Contadini appeared in 1884. That same year he was arrested and sentenced to 3 years imprisonment, and while waiting to servehis sentence he went to Naples and helped to nurse the victims of a cholera epidemic (as did many other anarchists and socialists).
1884-5 - Visits Florence, assists in a cholera epidemic in Naples. He is arrested and sentenced to three years imprisonment for his writing. He jumps bail and sails to Buenos Aires, where he spends the next four years, spreading anarchist ideas among Italian immigrants there.
1889 - Returns to London.
1891 - Publishes the influential pamphlet Anarchy and visits Spain during the Jerez uprising.
1892-3 - Witnesses the general strike for universal sufferage in Belgium and recognizes the limitations of this technique.
1896 - Organizes the London Congress of the Second Internationale.
1897 - Malatesta returns secretly to Italy, where he edits the anarchist paper L'Agitazione. During this period, rising prices and poor harvests result in peasant uprisings.
1898 - He is arrested in the city of Ancona following riots there, and charged with "criminal association". Convicted of belonging to a seditious organization, Malatesta is sentenced to imprisonment on the island of Lampedusa.
1899 - He escapes by boat during a storm and returns to London. He then visits the U.S., where he meets with Italian and Spanish anarchist groups in New Jersey. During a heated discussion at an anarchist meeting, he is shot in the leg.
1900 - Malatesta returns to London. Following the assasination of King Umberto by an Italian anarchist from New Jersey, Malatesta is watched by British police.
1907 - He attends an international anarchist conference in Amsterdam. Also present are Emma Goldman and Rudolf Rocker.
1909 - He and Rudolf Rocker are imprisoned for three months on charges of criminal libel. He is considered for deportation, but the attempt is dropped when supporters organize a demonstration in Trafalgar Square.
1910 - Malatesta is suspected of involvement in the Houndsditch Murders. Three policemen were shot during a jewel robbery in London's East End. The thieves tunneled in from an empty house nearby. A search revealed a card with Malatesta'sname on it. The investigation revealed that, several months earlier, one of the thieves had contacted an anarchist group in the area, claiming to be an out-of-work mechanic. He was introduced to Malatesta, who was working as a mechanic at the time. Malatesta gave him a card of introduction to his suppliers. The thief used the card to buy tools (including a welding torch) that were used in the robbery. Malatesta was found innocent and the thieves were killed in a police raid on their hideout.
1913 - He again returns to Italy to take part in planned anti-clerical and anti-parliamentary demonstrations in Ancona.
1914 - A general strike begins when two demonstrators are killed by police in Ancona. Known as "Red Week", troops in the area fraternize with protesters while Malatesta and his fellow anarchists attempt to organize a revolt against the government. Their plans are frustrated when the General Confederation of Labor (which controlled most of Italy's trade unions) calls off the strike. Malatesta returns to London.
During WWI a few anarchists -- most prominently, Peter Kroptkin -- issued a Manfiesto in support of the Allies; most anarchists opposed choosing between oppresors, & Malatesta was a prominent opponent of Kropotkin & the other signatories to the "Manifeste des sieze" (Manifesto of the 16).
1919 - Malatesta returns to Italy, where he starts the first anarchist daily, Umanità Nova It is a period of turmoil prior to Mussolini's ascent to power.
1920 - (October) He urges that workers strike and occupy their factories. Metalworkers in Milan and Turin do so. Other strikes follow, but the Socialist Party and the General Confederation of Labor convince the workers to end the strike. Malatesta and 81 other anarchists are arrested.
1921 -(July) Malatesta goes on a hunger strike to protest the delay in being brought to trial. He is found not guilty and released, two months before the facists gain power.
1924-6 - Despite harrasment and censorship, Malatesta publishes the journal Pensiero e Volontà In 1926, Mussolini silences all independent press.
1932 - Malatesta dies.
Errico Malatesta
An Italian communist-anarchist who promoted revolution through direct action, land seizure & the general strike. Born with great wealth, he spent all of it on radical causes until he was buried in a pauper's grave. He organized numerous demonstrations, radical newspapers, & workers's insurrections in Europe & Argentina despite constant exile & arrest. Frequently escaped execution & often traveled in disguise.
The Anarchist Encyclopedia Graphics & Archive Collection, see
http://recollectionbooks.com/bleed/Encyclopedia/Malatesta/Related links on the web see,
http://dwardmac.pitzer.edu/anarchist_archives/malatesta/malatestabio.html
http://flag.blackened.net/revolt/anarchists/malatesta.html
http://flag.blackened.net/revolt/ws/errico48.html
http://www.cosmicbaseball.com/98aar.html#malatesta
http://www.geocities.com/CapitolHill/6170/malatesta_project.html
http://www.etext.org/Politics/Spunk/library/pubs/cw/sp001669/malasynd.htmlUpdated December 2001; two corrections made, Feb 2002
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