Cervi Brothers
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Cervi Brothers | |
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![]() Stamp of Kyrgyzstan with the seven Cervi Brothers | |
Cause of death | Murder |
Nationality | Italian |
Awards | ![]() |
The Cervi Brothers (
After the
Alcide Cervi, who was suffering from bad health, was able to escape sometime later after the Allies bombed the prison. Their story was told, among others, by him. He survived the end of World War II and died in 1970.[1]
The seven brothers were named[2] Gelindo (b. 1901); Antenore (b. 1906); Aldo (b. 1909); Ferdinando (b. 1911); Agostino (b. 1916); Ovidio (b. 1918); and Ettore (b. 1921). They had two sisters, Diomira and Rina. Aldo Cervi is survived by a son, Adelmo,[3] who was seven months old when his father was executed.

Tributes
For their actions of resistance, the brothers were posthumously awarded the Silver Medal of Military Valor, and their surname, Cervi, can be found in street names around Italy. A school in Collegno, near Turin, is named in their honour.
Multiple songs have been written in tribute to the brothers:
- Compagni Fratelli Cervi (anonymous)
- Sette fratelli (Mercanti di Liquore and Marco Paolini)
- La pianura dei sette fratelli (Gang , also by Modena City Ramblers in Appunti partigiani[4][5])
- Campi Rossi (Casa del Vento)
- Papà Cervi raggiunge i sette figli (Eugenio Bargagli)
There is also the 1968 film The Seven Cervi Brothers (I sette fratelli Cervi), directed by Gianni Puccini.
References
- ^ Alcide Cervi, I miei sette figli (My seven sons), edizione Einaudi 2010.
- ^ "The story of Cervi". Retrieved 4 March 2011.
- OCLC 881381450.
- ^ Canzoni contro la guerra - La pianura dei sette fratelli
- ^ "Appunti partigiani". Archived from the original on 11 September 2011. Retrieved 3 July 2012.