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・ Giuseppe Chiaramonte
・ Giuseppe Chiari (artist-composer-philosopher)
・ Giuseppe Chirichiello
・ Giuseppe Ciancabilla
・ Giuseppe Ciaranfi
・ Giuseppe Ciarrapico
・ Giuseppe Ciccimarra
・ Giuseppe Cilento
・ Giuseppe Cindolo
・ Giuseppe Cipriani
・ Giuseppe Cipriani (racing driver)
・ Giuseppe Ciribini
・ Giuseppe Cirò
・ Giuseppe Citterio
・ Giuseppe Civati
Giuseppe Cobolli Gigli
・ Giuseppe Cocconi
・ Giuseppe Coco
・ Giuseppe Colacicco
・ Giuseppe Colizzi
・ Giuseppe Collignon
・ Giuseppe Colnago
・ Giuseppe Colombani
・ Giuseppe Colombi
・ Giuseppe Colombo
・ Giuseppe Colosi
・ Giuseppe Colucci
・ Giuseppe Colucci (antiquarian)
・ Giuseppe Colucci (footballer)
・ Giuseppe Coluccio


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Giuseppe Cobolli Gigli : ウィキペディア英語版
Giuseppe Cobolli Gigli

Giuseppe Cobolli Gigli (28 May 1892 in Trieste – 22 July 1987 in Malnate) was an Italian politician, member of Benito Mussolini's fascist government from 1935 to 1939 as minister of Public Works.
== The dispute about the origins ==
According to Pietro Valente, Cobolli Gigli was born from Nicolò Cobol (Capodistria 1861 - Trieste 1931), elementary school teacher and Italian irredentist, to which Trieste has dedicated a Karst trail (the ''Napoleon'') for his creation of municipal recreation centers during the Habsburg times.〔(Brief notes about Nicolò Cobol (Cobolli). )〕 The name was later changed to Cobolli during the Fascism.
The addition of ''Gigli'' to the surname was related to the experience of irredentist fighting during the First World War. The unredeemed volunteer fighters in the Italian Army assumed a battle pseudonym to protect their families, and many joined it, as the war was over, to their last name, as element of honor〔(The Alarm ), September 2007〕
Again according to Valente, the children of Joseph Cobolli Gigli would be:
* Sergio, Marine guard on an anti-submarine engine during World War II
* Antongiulio, officer on the Russian Front, where he was wounded in combat
* Niccolò, fighter pilot, who died in the skies of Greece and was decorated with the Gold Medal for Military Valour Memorial
Other sources, less detailed, reported Cobolli Gigli as stemmic from a Slavic family.
According to Giacomo Scotti,〔 "''Giuseppe Cobolli Gigli, a minister of Public Works of the fascist era, son of Nikolaus Combol, Slovenian primary school teacher, born in 1863, the last name italianized spontaneously in 1928, since 1919 had given himself a pseudonym patriotic, Giulio Italico. Then when he became a fascist leader, he took a second surname, Gigli, giving itself a touch of nobility. "
According to Federico Vincenti, the father of Cobolli Gigli was the Slovenian Nikolaus Kobolj〔(Federico Vincenti article from the magazine of the Association National Partisans of Italy, which speaks of Cobolli Gigli / Kombol )〕
According to Claudio Sommaruga, Cobolli Gigli was the son of an elementary school teacher Nicholas Cobol, from Capodistria, and he first assumed the pseudonym of "Giulio Italico"〔(20commenti/radici 20fasciste 20foibe%%% 20 +. Claudio Sommaruga pdf ), "ROOTS OF FASCIST" Cave "
AND PRISONERS OF TITO, "ANPI Pianoro〕〔(Claudio Sommaruga, The sinkholes and Tito's partisans ) taken from "Review" magazine 's ANRP (National Association of Veterans from the prison of the Interior and the War of Liberation), March / April 2007〕 until Italianizing it in 1928 in the name Cobolli, and after becoming hierarch adding a second surname, Gigli.〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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